No they didn't plow my road. You don't have to gaslight me. Entirely service full of people trying to contact 311 to get them to come out and put out I'd invite you to come out and see it yourself but you need an all-wheel drive car. |
There is no point in digging my car out until they plow the road and then I will dig it out. I've lived through dozens of snow storms including 2016 when I don't think they plowed for a week. |
Yes, teachers got paid for the one snow day, but that is it. And their professional day for grading was taken away. They won't get that time back. And if you think it is that easy to send out a few assignments, then you should be able to go online and print off a couple of activities for your kid. They are on your time now, you need to take care of them. |
Many independent off-site childcares used to follow MCPS office closures-- open when offices were open even when schools were closed, but closed when MCPS offices are closed. Now that Taylor is letting central office staff have a paid snow day off every single time schools are closed and there's no "offices open but schools closed" status anymore, private child care providers are having to change their approach because schools are generally closed for so long for each weather event. Not all of them have made the pivot yet (especially since Taylor has not officially announced that he is no longer using the Code Orange "offices open, schools closed, child care programs in schools allowed to open based on local discretion" status anymore) but more and more of them are. They know it doesn't make sense for private businesses to stay closed for however long it takes to get 200+ MCPS schools cleared out after every storm. Code Orange used to be a good guideline for when it was safe and reasonable for most workers to be out on the streets, and so they let MCPS handle that decisionmaking for them. But if they're never going to use it, it isn't anymore. |
Technically teachers are not getting paid. Our paychecks are staying the same, but there will be days tacked on either the end of the year or before that are in place of the snow days. We don't get additional pay for those days since we are only paid for the 180 contracted days. |
I do not understand what you are saying. They aren’t docking teachers salaries for this week right? Then they are getting paid. And how was their grading day taken away? Why can’t you do the grading from home? We all worked from home Monday and Tuesday (I’m on metro now heading into the office). I just would really like the HS teachers to send out an email saying — the next reading assignment will be pages x-y in the book, the reading guide is available here: “. Or “the next unit for Spanish class will be food and restaurants. The vocab list is here and the quizzes are here.” The kids are all going to have to do double work next week to make up — why can’t they get started on th reading this week? |
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https://imgur.com/a/WLFuFyc
Current state of MLK MS. They wont have this cleared for awhile |
+1 it's really embarrassing that the county government is completely open, not even liberal leave, and MCPS won't open offices so people can get childcare. They probably feel really proud of themselves for sticking it to families and workplaces which is just pathetic |
| Yesterday I saw a metro bus and a semi both stuck navigating corners with high snow piles. It seems like most roadway entrances are much more narrow making bus driving really tough out there. |
It must be really hard for them. If only MCPS had an option to close schools due to the difficult conditions for buses but keep offices open so child care can operate given everything else is open and people are expected to go to work (unless you work for MCPS then you won't so much as send an email) |
Teachers aren't paid the way you think they are. They get a set amount of money for the school year and are expected to work a certain number of days. The pay is divided among the number of paychecks they will receive - and some elect to have their checks spread over 10 months and others over 12. So, come the end of the year when they have to work those extra days because they are off today and tomorrow, they will not receive additional pay and they will be working beyond the number of contracted days if they have to work today and tomorrow. All that means is that their work schedule is shifted from today and tomorrow to days later in June and by asking them to work today and tomorrow, you are asking that they work for free because it would be beyond the contracted days for which they are paid. |
Keep sending those emails. And looking for new childcare. |
There are zero providers aside from a private nanny (and part time nannies are not only expensive but difficult to find) that drop kids of at or pick up kids from our school. |
So are they going to add a grading day at the end of the year after grades have already been turned in? I'm not following. |
Spouse of a long term care facility worker here. Like hospitals, they can't and don't close. Ever. Not during Covid. Not during snow. Our lifestyle has always been that at first sign of snow, spouse packs a bag, sleeping bag, pillow, and air mattress and we don't see them until the snow is pretty much cleaned up. It's been up to a week some years. We also have always had a four wheel drive vehicle that can manage bad weather - though this storm was a challenge. It becomes all hands on deck for them and if you don't make plans to stay, they will send someone to pick you up and you have to find your way to the closest road that can be navigated. As for childcare, I never used MCPS based childcare because I didn't want the risk of being tied to the school closure schedule. I found other care that worked for our lifestyle, which is that both parents work but in snow, I am the only parent that can parent. And, I used a lot of leave which meant some years we didn't have much or any left for vacation. |