You need to stop watching the news until you get medication. Your anxiety is preventing you from reading and understanding the reports. No, they're not predicting something that is significantly more severe than other thunderstorms we regularly experience. It is mostly that they're more confident in their prediction at this time than was historically common. And the storm is expected to be bigger than most. But relatively high confidence in a big storm is not the same thing as a particularly severe storm. |
If teachers are stuck at schools with students into the evening tomorrow, I don’t want to hear another word about making up missed days in June. Not a single word. We as a society put way to much on teachers. |
NP. Er, the forecasts I’m seeing literally say “severe.” |
teachers won't be stuck at school into evening. If the storm is really, MCPS will definitely call an early dismissal. The last dismissal is late elementary schools at 1:20. Teachers and students can be home by 2 or 2:30. If someone is really concerned, just keep your kids at home. It will be too crazy to announce a school closure right now. |
And is this the first time you've seen a thunderstorm forecast use that term? |
Correction: it will be crazy to announce a school closure now. |
Maybe you should bother to get the facts right before you sling insults. The PP didn't use the word kiddo. The Wash Post meteorologist did. Do you still think he sounds juvenile? |
Yes, they literally are predicting a much more significant storm. You have some sort of comprehension issue. Or maybe a mental health issue. |
Overnight? No, just close tomorrow. |
Fascinating how so many MCPS parents on the DCUM message boards are suddenly also expert meteorologists. Capital Weather Gang: https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2026/03/15/dc-severe-storm-forecast-tornadoes-damaging-winds/ "D.C. averages about a dozen severe storm outlooks per year from the Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center that are issued the day before potential storms. That number rises to around 20 outlooks on the day storms are expected. Most are marginal or slight risks (Levels 1-2 of 5), with a handful reaching enhanced risk (Level 3). A Level 4 risk occurs less than once every other year on average." Matthew Cappucci: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AusS7iwHY/ " MONDAY, March 16 looks to be a real-deal severe weather outbreak with the risk of tornadoes, including perhaps a few significant (EF2+) and/or long-track in the Mid-Atlantic. The Storm Prediction Center's forecast, issued Sunday, certainly hints at the possibility of a memorable event. Our "parameter space" will be exceptional; a juiced-up atmosphere with moderate to extreme shear (spin)... and the likelihood of several rotating supercell thunderstorms to take advantage, especially in southern Virginia and North Carolina. I'm really watching the Richmond to Raleigh to Virginia Beach corridor as having the greatest threat of long-track supercells. Then we ALSO have a destructive squall line coming in in the afternoon with 60-75 mph straight-line winds and embedded kinks of spin that could also produce quick-hitting tornadoes. School districts should spend Sunday reviewing their severe weather plan, communicating with parents and/or adjusting activities and schedules as needed." |
| Now weather reports are saying tornados starting at 10:00 am….anyone else see that? |
| Maybe they could move up the early dismissal- say 3.5 hours early? |
Busses are not available that early. |
Capital Weather gang posted this several hours ago: "The storms’ timing still needs to be pinned down, but they are most probable between about 1 and 7 p.m. Monday, when an organized and violent squall line is expected to pass. That said, widely scattered showers and storms, some of which could be intense, are possible before this window, as early as 9 or 10 a.m" |
Sorry, you are not getting free overnight babysitting. |