Schools closed for students Monday Feb 2

Anonymous
PG closed, Fairfax closed. Why are you folks coming at MCPS with the torches?
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


The idea is that once the snow days are used, they need to be replaced with in person learning days. Yes, remote days are better than nothing. But “nothing” is not what is being advocated for


Last year, the three snow days that MCPs failed to budget for were added as end June half days where MCPS encouraged students not to come in and said no instruction would be done. That is nothing.


+1 Last year MCPS shortchanged kids on their education with those June days where most teachers just showed videos. This year we have even more snow days and February is just starting.

Meanwhile, half of MCPS kids can’t read or do math at grade level and some say it’s fine to lose the instructional time and just ask Maryland to waive the number of required days.


The argument shouldn't be "Are virtual days a perfect replacement for in person learning?". We know they're not. They are, however, better than the BS half days the school added at the end of last year, and probably will add again.


Why are you comparing an idealized notion of virtual against the worst possible implementation off make days. You should instead compare it to using the contingency days already on the calendar.

And even if it would somehow be better for some students, you still be need to plan for how to deal with everyone else.


It’s not true virtual learning and only a short period. People who cannot handle their needs need to put them in child care and think through parenting.


That's one of the things you've failed to address. How do you expect a group of 30-50 kids at a child care program to join and effectively participate in virtual days?

Your plan continues to be for MCPS to ignore them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


Literally every study about virtual learning that was done after the pandemic? Google is your friend


Pandemic virtual and real virtual are very different. This would not be real virtual but better than nothing. Mine will get academics while school is out as we will make sure of it. It’s sad you don’t care.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


The idea is that once the snow days are used, they need to be replaced with in person learning days. Yes, remote days are better than nothing. But “nothing” is not what is being advocated for


Last year, the three snow days that MCPs failed to budget for were added as end June half days where MCPS encouraged students not to come in and said no instruction would be done. That is nothing.


+1 Last year MCPS shortchanged kids on their education with those June days where most teachers just showed videos. This year we have even more snow days and February is just starting.

Meanwhile, half of MCPS kids can’t read or do math at grade level and some say it’s fine to lose the instructional time and just ask Maryland to waive the number of required days.


The argument shouldn't be "Are virtual days a perfect replacement for in person learning?". We know they're not. They are, however, better than the BS half days the school added at the end of last year, and probably will add again.


Why are you comparing an idealized notion of virtual against the worst possible implementation off make days. You should instead compare it to using the contingency days already on the calendar.

And even if it would somehow be better for some students, you still be need to plan for how to deal with everyone else.


It’s not true virtual learning and only a short period. People who cannot handle their needs need to put them in child care and think through parenting.


That's one of the things you've failed to address. How do you expect a group of 30-50 kids at a child care program to join and effectively participate in virtual days?

Your plan continues to be for MCPS to ignore them.


Yes, it was done before.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


I know several businesses that were closed Wednesday. Colleges were closed all week. On Thursday at least colesville and Georgia were still ending lanes abruptly. Streets weren’t close to wide enough for buses. I understand the frustration about today, but frustrations about last week are inconsistent with reality.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:PG closed, Fairfax closed. Why are you folks coming at MCPS with the torches?


Why would we complain about PGCPS and FCPS when we're all presumably in MoCo? The parents in those counties can worry about the sad state of their own school systems. We've got enough problems with MCPS.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


The one thing I will say in MCPS's defense here (and I want them to at least move to virtual), is that people have done a TERRIBLE job clearing the sidewalks this past week. Moreover, there has been no sense of neighborhood or civic service in terms of getting the places where kids wait for the bus cleared. In a neighborhood, we all know where the kids need to stand, but a lot of homeowners stop just short of that corner, because it's not "their" corner to clear.

If you want kids back in school, make sure they have a safe place to walk/stand at 6:50 tomorrow morning.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


The one thing I will say in MCPS's defense here (and I want them to at least move to virtual), is that people have done a TERRIBLE job clearing the sidewalks this past week. Moreover, there has been no sense of neighborhood or civic service in terms of getting the places where kids wait for the bus cleared. In a neighborhood, we all know where the kids need to stand, but a lot of homeowners stop just short of that corner, because it's not "their" corner to clear.

If you want kids back in school, make sure they have a safe place to walk/stand at 6:50 tomorrow morning.


Yes. And having lived up north, I get the frustration because yes snow can be piled up and a walking hazard forever in colder climates. However, the absolute mess on sidewalks and bus stops is I think much worse here than what I’ve experienced elsewhere, because the community is not used to doing their part.
Anonymous
This thread is an infuriating race to the bottom. Virtual learning is terrible for many students. The half days shoved in at the end of the year are worthless. Parents should not be focused on which is worse. They should be raising hell with MCPS AND the county for the insanely bad faith efforts to remove snow adequately such that kids cannot return to school buildings over a week after snow has stopped. That is crazy full stop and Taylor’s emails blaming the county only demonstrate he was incredibly ineffective at advocating for the VERY large number of students and families he represents. Unacceptable full stop. On top of that we should start school early enough to have multiple snow days built into each year AND enough teacher work days.

Stop the in fighting and direct your energy into letters to MCPS and the board of ed.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


The one thing I will say in MCPS's defense here (and I want them to at least move to virtual), is that people have done a TERRIBLE job clearing the sidewalks this past week. Moreover, there has been no sense of neighborhood or civic service in terms of getting the places where kids wait for the bus cleared. In a neighborhood, we all know where the kids need to stand, but a lot of homeowners stop just short of that corner, because it's not "their" corner to clear.

If you want kids back in school, make sure they have a safe place to walk/stand at 6:50 tomorrow morning.


Kids can walk/stand on snow. They've been doing it all week. It is unreasonable to expect all sidewalks and bus stops to be clear. No northern district would wait for that. They'd have to close schools until the spring.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


If public schools only needed to educate the top 50% of students, they'd have a much easier problem on their hands. But no matter how convenient it would be for you, they can't just ignore the other students.


This whole if every single kid can’t learn, none will is so foolish and shortsighted.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


The idea is that once the snow days are used, they need to be replaced with in person learning days. Yes, remote days are better than nothing. But “nothing” is not what is being advocated for


Last year, the three snow days that MCPs failed to budget for were added as end June half days where MCPS encouraged students not to come in and said no instruction would be done. That is nothing.


+1 Last year MCPS shortchanged kids on their education with those June days where most teachers just showed videos. This year we have even more snow days and February is just starting.

Meanwhile, half of MCPS kids can’t read or do math at grade level and some say it’s fine to lose the instructional time and just ask Maryland to waive the number of required days.


The argument shouldn't be "Are virtual days a perfect replacement for in person learning?". We know they're not. They are, however, better than the BS half days the school added at the end of last year, and probably will add again.


Why are you comparing an idealized notion of virtual against the worst possible implementation off make days. You should instead compare it to using the contingency days already on the calendar.

And even if it would somehow be better for some students, you still be need to plan for how to deal with everyone else.


Because the worst possible implementation of makeup days was exactly what MCPS chose last year when we had only three snow days to make up by adding those half days in end June and saying no new instruction would occur and schools encouraging students not to attend.

Now we have 5 snow days to makeup with two months remaining and you think magically MCPS will implement 5 perfect makeup days with the three contingency days many have said it doesn’t want to use (plus whatever new snow days happen in February/March)? You must be using you day off from school to day drink because there’s no way that’s happening.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


The one thing I will say in MCPS's defense here (and I want them to at least move to virtual), is that people have done a TERRIBLE job clearing the sidewalks this past week. Moreover, there has been no sense of neighborhood or civic service in terms of getting the places where kids wait for the bus cleared. In a neighborhood, we all know where the kids need to stand, but a lot of homeowners stop just short of that corner, because it's not "their" corner to clear.

If you want kids back in school, make sure they have a safe place to walk/stand at 6:50 tomorrow morning.


That only works if there are sidewalks.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are very few school districts that are completely closed tomorrow or not doing virtual learning. MCPS should be ashamed.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2026/02/01/school-delays-dc-maryland-virginia-snow-storm/

Alexandria City Public Schools: Virtual learning
Anne Arundel County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday.
Arlington County Public Schools: Closed; two-hour delay Tuesday
Calvert County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Charles County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Culpeper County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
D.C. Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fairfax County Public Schools: Closed
Falls Church City Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Fauquier County Public Schools: Closed
Howard County Public Schools: Two-hour delay Monday and Tuesday
Loudoun County Public Schools: Two-hour delay
Montgomery County Public Schools: Closed
Pr. George’s County Public Schools: Two-hour delay; Code Orange
Prince William County Public Schools: Closed
Spotsylvania County Public Schools: Remote learning Monday and Tuesday; 12-month employees to report on time.
Stafford County Public Schools: Closed


Nah, but thanks for posting info we all already knew?


If you already knew this, why are people constantly posting that it's impossible to open or offer virtual learning because of kids with IEPs or equity or snow? Nearly every other school district is open or virtual tomorrow.


BLAME YOURSELF. PARENTS are why MCPS won't pivot to virtual.


Where did parents say they would prefer to have their kids shortchanged with well under the required 180 days instead of having virtual instruction?

Where did parents tell the MCPS central office not to submit a contingency virtual learning plan like so many other Maryland school districts did?

McPS should blame itself for its inability to function..


Parents don't want virtual. They want real school days.


That's what you want. We want our kids to get an education - in person or virtual, but virtual with live teaching.


You wouldn't get it. Not enough students would show up. Even fewer would participate. No new material could be covered.


You don't know that. All we have is last year's example where MCPS added half days in end June and showed videos and few kids showed up because MCPS encouraged them now to show up because "they knew people had already made other plans".


Of course we know kids wouldn't join and participate.

And that's putting aside the fact that no one has come up with a plausible way to either provide special education supports and services during those days, or provide compensatory services after the fact. You just want to forget about those students, just like you did during covid.



We get it. So you'd rather everyone have zero instruction and lose out on instructional time. MCPS can apply for a waiver to offer 177 days of instruction rather than 180, add in some half days in June and encourage parents not to send their kids, and unlike the other DC area schools that were open last week and are open next week, MCPS staff can get some extra days off.


You're not getting virtual. You know that. If you actually cared about instructional time, then you'd pressure the BoE and Taylor to use the contingency days we have. The real ones.

That you're not interested in doing that suggests education is not what's really motivating you.


You have no idea what is motivating an anonymous poster. And no, I don't agree with you that virtual learning is not an option-- my kids did almost a year of virtual learning during the COVID years, and I know MCPS can do it.

I don't work for MCPS, and only learned that MCPS failed to submit a virtual learning plan for approval to the state of Maryland yesterday, unlike many other Maryland schools. MCPS central office could do its job and try to submit it now, because there are two months of winter left and it's probable that there are more snow days.



We know it isn't an option this year. There isn't time to put together a plan and seek public comment. That would take at least a couple of months for a real plan and a meaningful public comment period.

So if education is your priority, you'd be advocating for March 20, April 15, and June 18 make up days. Ideally Presidents' Day too.

But the pp already said the quiet part out loud by admitting she just doesn't want make up days.


Of course parents want make up days. Why wouldn't we want them? It's our kids losing out on the education we pay for with our taxes. It's the teachers who prefer to have them as additional holidays.
-Why wait til March 20? Why not February 17? I would bet there are fewer students travelling for Presidents day than for spring break.
-April 15 is a Wednesday off in the middle of the week. Most parents hate that.
-June 18 is a useless day. It's too late in the school year to offer meaningful instruction and teachers use it as an excuse to just show videos for a half day. I would much rather have a virtual learning day than that.


I don't want them made up. We have other activities planned. (and not travel, school related). Stop blaming teachers. We could have had school this past week via assignments or virtual. We had one teacher send out assignments via email so clearly it can be done. That teacher put a lot of effort into it.

here aren't a lot of choices here. You either:
1) Open schools in less than optimal weather conditions (cue the people screaming that we don't care if their child dies slipping on ice and falling into traffic.)
2) Develop a functional virtual learning plan that is contingency for bad weather weeks like this one and use it (Except that MCPS never made a virtual learrning plan that the State of Maryland required, unlike other school districts, and apparently people on this forum say it will take them months to make one up.)
3) Do make up days, recognizing that people have made plans thinking that school is out.
4) Shortchange kids of the 180 days of education required by law and apply to the state of Maryland to get a waiver to miss several days of instruction this year.

I prefer #3, and that BOE requires that MCPS develop #2 starting now, so we don't have this same conversation next year.


#1--having grown up in a colder weather state--the level of incompetence MCPS shows around weather issues astonishes me.


+1. Not just incompetence but the projection of helplessness. We can't react like a southern state while being positioned in the mid-Atlantic.


Yes, Taylor and the CO need to go. Hire a team from a northern state.


I don’t agree with pinning this on MCPS. So much of this is on MoCo as a county. The school district only has so much control. And PG county is now closed today as well. We are not out of line with peers.


Many things reopened in MoCo last Tuesday. Pretty much everything else on Wednesday. MCPS is the outlier in the county. The county sufficiently cleared roads and most major sidewalks. People have been out and about for nearly a week, including kids. But MCPS has unnecessary and unreasonable expectations, with no plan to achieve them.


The one thing I will say in MCPS's defense here (and I want them to at least move to virtual), is that people have done a TERRIBLE job clearing the sidewalks this past week. Moreover, there has been no sense of neighborhood or civic service in terms of getting the places where kids wait for the bus cleared. In a neighborhood, we all know where the kids need to stand, but a lot of homeowners stop just short of that corner, because it's not "their" corner to clear.

If you want kids back in school, make sure they have a safe place to walk/stand at 6:50 tomorrow morning.


+1.

Maybe there needs to be more communication with the community about clearing the sidewalks and bus stops and explaining why it’s important. I think a lot of of this is common sense that is not common anymore. Possibly people have moved in from other areas that they just don’t know.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The simple truth is, you don't actually care if the school accommodates kids with special needs. That's not unique to virtual. I'm sure you don't care about those students in-person, too.

But if you actually want virtual to come back, you're going to need to come up with plan for them.


Virtual worked much better for my SN kid. It also gave us extra time for tutoring and therapies. Every child is different. Given the low in person test scores, clearly in person isn’t working too for many kids.


As bad as in person is, virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids


What's your evidence of that? And actually you should cite evidence that virtual is worse than doing nothing at all which is the current MCPS status quo.


At this point it should be obvious but you are free to Google it if you don't understand


If it's so obvious to you, why don't you share your evidence. You're the one saying that virtual is worse for the vast majority of kids than having no instruction at all. Are these just your opinions that you're stating as facts?


If public schools only needed to educate the top 50% of students, they'd have a much easier problem on their hands. But no matter how convenient it would be for you, they can't just ignore the other students.


This whole if every single kid can’t learn, none will is so foolish and shortsighted.


This is the reality in person so should we stop in person as there are a core group failing and not learning?
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