Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tuesday should be another delayed opening
It's still icy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what this means for MAP testing? My kid has MAPm on the calendar today.
WHO CARES??? Your kid's school will figure out and let families know the updated plan. Of all the things, you are concerned about that???
Anonymous wrote:Tuesday should be another delayed opening
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's slippery out there people. This was the wrong decision. It did NOT melt at 17 degrees!!!!
A+ trolling. Would read again.
Wrong not to have closed. A two hour delay did nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's slippery out there people. This was the wrong decision. It did NOT melt at 17 degrees!!!!
A+ trolling. Would read again.
Wrong not to have closed. A two hour delay did nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop replying to trolls. Just report the posts. 🙄
The delay is to give building services time to reapply ice melt on areas that melted today and refrozen. They also want it to be light outside so people can see what they are walking on. I know of two people seriously injured slipping on ice outside of school buildings. The delay helps minimize that risk.
I doubt they were "seriously injured." Maybe a broken arm, but even they they hopefully got a neurological workup to check for problems affecting their balance. And likely they weren't wearing appropriate shoes. You can hurt a lot of different ways when you make bad choices.
We didn't get enough snow for it to take long to clear. They worked today. That should have been enough. They didn't need a delay to do some clean-up in the morning. If they did a decent job today, there won't be anything to do. It didn't get warm enough today to melt the snow, even in the sun.
One person severely broke their ankle and was out for six months after surgery putting in pins. The other had a severe concussion-out for a couple of months. Serious enough for you? Black ice in the dark is no joke.
Things that never happened for $200, Alex.
Next time at least stick within the right order of magnitude for recovery of the issues you reference.
Black ice is really dangerous, especially when you cannot see it. HS kids can walk around 2 miles to school without sidewalks and busy roads.
If there are no sidewalks, then you don't need to worry about slipping on ice. You're not going to slip when walking in the snow on the lawns.
You really need to work on your problem solving abilities.
No one walks on lawns. No room. They walk on the streets.
Side streets are generally fine, too, but if you're scared of that there's certainly "room" on the lawns and right-of-ways
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a 2 hour delay-not the end of the world. I'd much rather be safe than sorry in situations like this, but it's pretty clear that many of you don't prioritize that.
No one has articulated a coherent reason to delay. It's well below freezing now. It's going to stay well below freezing through the delayed opening. There's no refreezing problem, and a delay won't allow the snow to melt before opening.
The email included several reasons. It's a done deal. Move on.
Could actually move to a closed. Buses can't start at 6am nor at 8am. They could start probably at 2pm tho if temps are climbing up on Monday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's slippery out there people. This was the wrong decision. It did NOT melt at 17 degrees!!!!
A+ trolling. Would read again.