Our bus never showed up either. I suppose we could have waited all day for it to "eventually" arrive, but after 20+ minutes of waiting, we drove the kids. Based on the loooong line of cars at school, our bus wasn't the only one missing in action.
As I look out my window at about 2 inches of snow and the snow continuing to come down, I am baffled that there was no delay. Yes, some roads are slippery and I don't think this was a good call. What is the afternoon drive going to look like?? Bad call MCPS! |
+ 1,000,000 Either stay home or allow time to get there. The End |
Let's see. The weather forecast called for snow beginning before dawn and lasting a few hours. 1 - 2 inches forecast for the lower county and 1 inch for the upper county.
Smart parents would plan to get up a half an hour early and get a head start on what MIGHT be a tricky commute. Stupid parents get up at the regular time, look outside and see snow, and then take to the Internet to whine about the decision of the school system. God help the next generation. |
I briefly glanced outside the window and see the snow is still coming down. How would a 2 hour delay have helped anything today? |
I'm in Bethesda. My neighborhood street is clear. It was clear when I went out at 8 this morning and is clear now. I didn't drive down every street in my neighborhood this morning but they seemed mostly clear curb to curb. There is definitely snow on the grass and sidewalks of course. I'm just glad DC is in school. |
I almost got hit 2 times by drivers who were going too fast for the conditions. One minivan could not stop as she was traveling down a hill. I saw her coming, so I stopped to let her run the stop sign and watched as she plowed into a neighbor's yard. Another Mercedes must have thought it was the Daytona 500 and was weaving between cars and almost hit me head on in front of the Elementary school. In that situation, I tried stopping (even though I was on my side of the road) but was sliding with the antilock brakes kicking in. He missed me by only inches.
A delayed opening would have helped a lot. The roads are almost clear now. |
A delayed opening would have only possibly helped the elementary schools. The HS and MS students just would have been on the roads instead at the time the ES were on the road. |
Buses came late. Principal showed up late. Teachers came late. Everyone was late today. It was unavoidable because Montgomery County failed to treat the roads in advance. |
It's not aligned to the new curriculum and there is a state-wide petition to not even take it this year because the test, and its results, are irrelevant because of this. Twenty-two school districts, including MCPS, have asked permission to not give it but Gov. O'Malley has denied the request. And yes, many principals share this sentiment (at least in elementary--can't speak for middle schools). When they switch to PARCC next year, everyone will surely go back into full test-prep mode. |
A delayed opening would have afforded the teachers more time to get to school. My HS child had no teachers for the first two periods . . . |
Well your high school's teachers should have left their homes a little earlier then. |
So, PP, she answered your question. I guess by your silence you LOVE her response? |
I teach HS. My colleague left his house at 5:30am and didn't get here utnil 7:45. how much earlier should he have left?!?!?!!?!? |
Well put, pp. I hate all those people from up North, Chicago or wherever talking about us like we're weenies. Just go back where you're from if it's so great. |
I walked my son to his MCPS elementary this AM, saw no problems other than slightly more traffic (but not epic traffic.) Saw plenty of teachers and kids already there. Drove into my office in downtown DC, again saw no problems and actually had a quick ride. Anyone who can't drive in an inch of snow needs to learn - that is normal conditions for this area and you can't demand that the world shut down for perfectly normal weather conditions. |