I’m more worried about your kid forgetting things after being out of school a few days. I grew up in NY and we had Feb break. Schools were closed for an entire week every year. They still do this. We had winters break and spring break too. |
You can cry all you want- contracts are legally binding documents that prevent employers from being able to abuse you by doing things like forcing you to shovel snow on school property when you were hired to teach. You need to get a grip on reality. |
+1 I suspect that PP would be a tad upset if their place of employment called employees in to shovel. But let’s be honest. Most posters here don’t understand teaching, teaching contracts, etc. |
| The schools are likely fine. It is the neighborhood streets, bus stops and sidewalks. |
With that attitude it won’t be “fine” for weeks. When did it become necessary for every piece of snow or ice to be cleared. This is weak and soft. |
I am an employment lawyer. I certainly have a grip on this reality. So you can stop your lecture. You can focus on the contract. Or you can focus on the practical reality. The most successful workplaces generally have employers and employees that take the latter approach. Here, there is a problem (need to clear school walkways and lots). There is also a large workforce that can be part of the solution. The answer seems obvious. An example: I went to a smaller private day school (not in this area). After big snowstorms, the faculty and the principal (even nearby parents/students) always pitched in to help our maintenance department clear the school grounds. The school would give everyone a free pizza lunch. It was fun and effective. The result: we always reopened quickly after storms. It was a win-win for everyone. That’s the reality — you can either focus on what everyone can do to help schools be open or try and push the problem off to someone else. FCPS and its defenders too often take the second path. |
Abuse! lol. You sound like a lazybones |
Exactly. Another example: Even in places that get punch more snow than here (including where I grew up, so I speak from experience), bus stops and small streets were not cleared immediately after storms. But that wasn’t an excuse to cancel school. You stood on a snowbank to wait for the bus. If your road wasn’t clear, you trekked to a main road to get the bus. If you couldn’t make it to school, you don’t go. But school was open. And almost always no later than the day after the storm. |
Ok lawyer. Let me know how cool you think it is when your client gets upset with you so your firm has you go clean the toilets. |
| So what exactly is going to change between monday and Tuesday. Did reid work with vdot to clear the sidewalks? How can they open school ever again without addressing the sidewalks? Maybe she should use one of her 10 body guards? |
No, I’m an LCPS teacher happily getting ready to go to work today because my district didn’t close again 🤣 enjoy yelling on internet all day. |
Further evidence that parents view teachers not as trained professionals, but as their personal lackeys. Sigh. |
For the thousandth time, VDOT doesn’t clear sidewalks. You and your neighbors have to get out there and shovel them. No one is coming to save you. You have to have some responsibility for your community. |
I have no idea what analogy you are trying to make but let me keep it simple. Law firms need to serve their clients to stay in business. If I needed to help shovel out the office to help us stay open, I would do it in a heartbeat. |
VDOT should remove the 8ft pile of ice slabs that they plowed into the corners of the school intersection until the sidewalks and crosswalks. |