Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:apologize for providing my child with a normal school day so his schedule and my work was not disrupted? I think a "your welcome" is more in order!
+1
+1000!!!
100 percent agree.Anonymous wrote:apologize for providing my child with a normal school day so his schedule and my work was not disrupted? I think a "your welcome" is more in order!
Anonymous wrote:apologize for providing my child with a normal school day so his schedule and my work was not disrupted? I think a "your welcome" is more in order!
+1
apologize for providing my child with a normal school day so his schedule and my work was not disrupted? I think a "your welcome" is more in order!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shutting down tons of metro buses that many students use is also an issue.
Sounds like some of these parents should have driven their previous snow flakes. I looked at the weather and determined on my own to take my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree - it wasn't the school system's fault - it was that the roads were not at all cleared. Even by this afternoon the main road in front of my child's school had not been cleared.
DC has never had the ability to actively clear the streets during a rush hour snowstorm. That isn't DCPS's fault, but it is DCPS's responsibility to take it into account when making decisions.
How would DCPS know that at 5 a.m. plows hadn't been sent out? Blame DPW, not DCPS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree - it wasn't the school system's fault - it was that the roads were not at all cleared. Even by this afternoon the main road in front of my child's school had not been cleared.
DC has never had the ability to actively clear the streets during a rush hour snowstorm. That isn't DCPS's fault, but it is DCPS's responsibility to take it into account when making decisions.
How would DCPS know that at 5 a.m. plows hadn't been sent out? Blame DPW, not DCPS