How will a bus arrive if the roads are not passable? Should parents be calling you when that happens?? |
🙄 I know it’s fun to roast people who disagree with you, but my personal situation is fine. My kids are fine. I always shovel my sidewalk. We got our car out. Their school looks okay. I have bigger concerns about some of the schools I have seen in our broader area. Some of the totally unshoveled sidewalks are on major roads near schools. I’ve walked around and some areas are no problem but in other places walking on the compacted snow and ice is extremely slippery. I agree MCPS needs to prioritize opening, but I’m not sure they can or will tomorrow. It’s a very large county with localized problem spots. That said, one of my kids in particular would really benefit from going to school tomorrow. We’ll have to see. |
The major thoroughfares are clear. If anything, MCPS should create central bus stops that avoid the smaller neighborhood streets right now. It works perfectly fine for the magnet schools. Or just drive your kid or carpool with other parents. It's not that difficult. |
I’m going to call this bubble thinking. While it might be the norm in your neighborhood to be at home and drive your kids, believe it or not there are many families who don’t have this opportunity. They have to be at work and their friends and neighbors who go to the same school, also need to be at work and cannot drive their kids or any other kids to school. I’m going to be yelled at, but this is why I was advocating for people to shovel their sidewalks the day after the storm so that you wouldn’t have snow cementing. It was hard work then but I think it’s even harder work now. The sidewalks in my middle and elementary school zone neighborhood are about 60/40 shoveled. |
Kids can walk in the street. Get the crossing guards to do a walking school bus. The solution is not to throw up our collective hands and say "oh well, can't do anything, no school!" |
I agree with this. It sucks to miss so much school but conditions are bad outside. Screaming and crying about it won’t change anything. Try meditation. Sometimes you have to just accept what Mother Nature throws at you. Our kids will be fine |
You won’t. I am a heavy adult woman who doesn’t sink. But the issue isn’t undisturbed snow. It’s the piles of irregular broken chunks of ice on the corners. Residential neighborhoods are often OK, but major thoroughfares, like Rockville Pike and Georgia Ave often have piles that are hard to cross blocking the corner. |
Please tell me how those poor kids in Minnesota, Alaska, and Wisconsin ever survive! We should not be closed just because its cold and there's snow/ice on the ground. If that was the criteria, some states would never have school in the winter. |
And typically if kids are crossing major thoroughfares there are already crossing guards out there. The crossing guards can help the kids navigate... |
They'll be fine if they go to school, too. Maybe y'all some just accept that? |
Unfortunately for you, school districts don’t follow the precept of rugged individualism these days. |
This snowcrete is an anomaly. Ask your friends from Northern states. |
Some of the parents here just want to wrap up their kid in bubble wrap and never let them outside... |
It actually is difficult and when you don’t acknowledge it, you seem crazy and people will dismiss your posts. This is not an easy decision for MCPS. Opening schools with 50% students showing up is not a win for MCPS. |
50% is a win over 0%. You seem crazy when you don't acknowledge that. |