All classrooms have evacuation locations—hallways or rooms away from exterior doors and windows. Unsafe rooms evacuate to there, and wait. There is no learning happening when hundreds of kids are in a hallway for hours. My entire department is in trailers. I imagine we will all be told to relocate to the auditorium tomorrow and will just be trying to maintain relative calm. |
Capital Weather Gang and some of the other local weather people are talking about the risk of tornados in the late morning. These are called "squall-line tornadoes" - they are weaker and short-lived, but can be very deadly because they pop up quickly and with no warning. Because the storm line moves quickly, the tornado can form and hit a location extremely fast. They are also obscured by rain, so they are really hard to see. |
Are the emergency plans posted somewhere where parents can access them? It would be good to know ahead of time what the schools would do if truly severe weather occurs. |
Sure. It’s right here in this regulation: https://go.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/Board.nsf/files/DQTUUM7DC4A0/$file/R8625.pdf |
https://go.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/Board.nsf/files/DQTUUM7DC4A0/$file/R8625.pdf |
Thank you. My child has to ride the school bus home, so it was good to read about the bus policy. For other parents, just so you know, school buses do not operate normally during a tornado warning or severe weather emergency. If buses have not yet left the school, their departure is delayed until conditions are safe. If buses are already transporting students when severe weather develops, drivers may be directed to return to the nearest school or safe building to shelter students. Students are kept inside buildings rather than traveling because sheltering in a structure is safer than being on a bus during a tornado-producing storm. Normal bus routes resume only after the warning has ended and officials determine it is safe. |
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Saw this on Twitter by a local metrologlist. I would love to get an email from FCPS addressing all of his bullet points.
Tweet: DMV school districts – as we said Thursday/Friday, it's imperative you have a severe weather plan and don't try to "wing it." Nobody has any excuse to be caught with their pants down. Ask yourselves the following: – If a tornado warning is issued, where will the kiddos shelter? – If kiddos are on the bus, do the bus drivers know what to do? – How will bus drivers be notified of warnings? – Will dismissal occur if storms are approaching? Will dismissal be delayed? – Have parents been clued in about the approaching severe weather? |
Sounds like it would be almost impossible for a bus driver to have warning or really any time to even react to a squall-line tornado. |
Tornados are now forcasted to begin as early as 10:00 am. |
Given that the storm is supposed to be hazardous from 10:00 am - 8:00 pm or later, its possible that students and staff could be stuck at school until after dark. |
I’m an administrator and am happy to answer these: 1. Every school has places designated where students need to go. Kids in trailers and above the first floor all have places in the hallways and interior spaces on the first floor that are away from exterior glass. 2. Yes. They go to the nearest school immediately. 3. They would get a message on their radio from a dispatcher as they are driving. 4. If there is a tornado warning just as dismissal is approaching, it would be delayed. This has happened in the past, and there is no reason why it wouldn’t happen again. No administrator wants to send children out into a dangerous weather event. It’s easier to keep them inside. 5. At this moment on a Sunday afternoon, parents have not been told about possible severe weather from FCPS. One assumes they are checking their own news and weather outlets. |
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In 2007 or 2008, a tornado warning was issued in the Springfield area after high school busses were on the road and most high schoolers dropped off and right before middle school dismissal. Middle schools and elementary schools there had to go to their tornado locations and stay there until the threat passed (maybe an hour?) and everyone was very late getting home.
I can’t imagine what a more prolonged threat of severe weather would look like. The students were so scared! Some schools have not practiced their tornado drills this year. Many are doing them this week. My school has a ton of windows and my classroom is assigned to a hallway to crouch in that I am not convinced would protect us from flying debris. There are windows on either end of the hallway. |
I'm signing out my high schoolers for 1....can you imagine all the young drivers on the road. Just no. |
They cancel for a few snowflakes so why not close for actual dangerous weather? |
I'm seeing a morning round and an evening round starting at 3-7? |