Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is barely a storm, and it just feels like schools are looking for any reason to cancel.
I mean, there was a legit tornado in Annapolis. I think the worst of it went north of DC but the risk is there. Of course, the worst of the rain seems to have hit precisely at my kid’s pick-up time, but no one could predict that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm picking up my kids early. We walk a mile through pretty dense, mature trees. I hate to do it, but it's my job to keep my kids safe.
I find it odd that you felt the need to write such a defensive comment lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kipp closed at 12 and two rivers closed at 1:15
Well autonomy and all.
Two Rivers closes at 1:15 every Wednesday, geniuses.
Anonymous wrote:This is barely a storm, and it just feels like schools are looking for any reason to cancel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kipp closed at 12 and two rivers closed at 1:15
Well autonomy and all.
Two Rivers closes at 1:15 every Wednesday, geniuses. Anonymous wrote:Kipp closed at 12 and two rivers closed at 1:15
Anonymous wrote:Barely raining where we live. But, sure, let's take kids out of school again. It's not like they are incredibly far behind or anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This all seems very odd to me. Normally this type of weather forecast would never be enough to close schools. What's different?
The amount of rain (people trying to drive home). The winds, the tornado threat. There are lots of issues. You may not have been around about 10 years ago when DCPS closed for a hurricane. But it has happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I super doubt it. They closed early once a few years ago because of hurricane-level winds (I think it was a teacher conference day, so school was closed anyway, but they closed the buildings to cancel the conferences and any day-off camps)Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks. I’m not actually worried about the storm, just wondering how DCPS is likely to handle it. I recall hearing they’re very conservative about closings for winter weather so wondered if they’d be the same for this.
You super doubt it? Are you 12? Do adults talk like this?
Anonymous wrote:I super doubt it. They closed early once a few years ago because of hurricane-level winds (I think it was a teacher conference day, so school was closed anyway, but they closed the buildings to cancel the conferences and any day-off camps)Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thanks. I’m not actually worried about the storm, just wondering how DCPS is likely to handle it. I recall hearing they’re very conservative about closings for winter weather so wondered if they’d be the same for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This all seems very odd to me. Normally this type of weather forecast would never be enough to close schools. What's different?
It's that the worst of the weather (along with likely floods) will be arriving as the usual rush hour/end of day traffic is peaking. MCPS has significantly more bus transportation of students and just generally more transportation logistics to worry about, as well as some parts of the county that are significantly more rural than D.C., so I'm not surprised they closed early while D.C. didn't.