Anonymous wrote:Shoveling it out - of course we shoveled our car out. However, my street still hasn't been plowed. So you too assume everyone has an SUV. Regardless of what the carpool looks like, not everyone has an SUV. Driving on unplowed roads is not safe for anyone. Ignorant to think people can make it in. Go walk around and see. Not everyone has a heated driveway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just came from downtown DC to Bethesda (in an uber bc my alley is a sheet of ice and my low to ground car cannot clear it, not one car or truck has even attempted to drive down it) and the difference between DC and Montgomery County is like night and day. Connecticut and Mass Ave are one lane in each direction, Mass has a large snow pile in the middle. The only fully clear road I saw was Wisconsin. The roads around the Cathedral are not clear and the sidewalks are worse. My uber driver said most of DC is in terrible shape. So if you’re in MoCo, please realize your experience is not necessarily everyone’s.
We drove around this morning, it is fine. The parking lot is even open. I know DMV folks are used to this. But the rest of the country thinks it is ridiculous to close the school for so many days for this amount of snow.
No, they don't, because most of the country never gets much snow. Raleigh area schools will close for a week if ice seems likely, even if it never materializes. CA Bay Area schools close for unusually heavy rain. Weather closures are specific to the region and what that region is used to.
If you look at areas that do get a lot of snow (NE and Midwest, which is not most of the country) they don't close because they have public services appropriate to their climate. Snow gets cleared, sidewalks get shoveled (often by city workers), cars and bus shelters are chosen for snow, etc. But even NYC and Boston have been snowed over and closed in historic storms, within recent memory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would imagine a critical mass of students and teachers can make it to school today. It cannot be the policy that we wait for every last person to be able to make it or we are going to be waiting until the middle of next week.
To be the people that say their car is still “snowed in”, take some personal responsibility and shovel it out like the rest of us do.
What planet does your brain live on?
This was a novel storm fool. Ice is different than fluffy snow. I know these concepts are hard for your pea sized brain cells.
Today is not safe for teachers or kids to get to school.
FOCUS
I’ll ignore your overly aggressive comments to ask the following:
Why are almost all other in person businesses open no problem (and have been since Sunday!)?
Who are all the people I see driving on the roads? Surely some of them must be students or teachers?
What conditions would be acceptable to you to return to school? Because another day of this level of cold and incompetent plowing will not improve things. If you are waiting for a full melt it looks like end of next week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would imagine a critical mass of students and teachers can make it to school today. It cannot be the policy that we wait for every last person to be able to make it or we are going to be waiting until the middle of next week.
To be the people that say their car is still “snowed in”, take some personal responsibility and shovel it out like the rest of us do.
What planet does your brain live on?
This was a novel storm fool. Ice is different than fluffy snow. I know these concepts are hard for your pea sized brain cells.
Today is not safe for teachers or kids to get to school.
FOCUS
Anonymous wrote:Shoveling it out - of course we shoveled our car out. However, my street still hasn't been plowed. So you too assume everyone has an SUV. Regardless of what the carpool looks like, not everyone has an SUV. Driving on unplowed roads is not safe for anyone. Ignorant to think people can make it in. Go walk around and see. Not everyone has a heated driveway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just came from downtown DC to Bethesda (in an uber bc my alley is a sheet of ice and my low to ground car cannot clear it, not one car or truck has even attempted to drive down it) and the difference between DC and Montgomery County is like night and day. Connecticut and Mass Ave are one lane in each direction, Mass has a large snow pile in the middle. The only fully clear road I saw was Wisconsin. The roads around the Cathedral are not clear and the sidewalks are worse. My uber driver said most of DC is in terrible shape. So if you’re in MoCo, please realize your experience is not necessarily everyone’s.
We drove around this morning, it is fine. The parking lot is even open. I know DMV folks are used to this. But the rest of the country thinks it is ridiculous to close the school for so many days for this amount of snow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just came from downtown DC to Bethesda (in an uber bc my alley is a sheet of ice and my low to ground car cannot clear it, not one car or truck has even attempted to drive down it) and the difference between DC and Montgomery County is like night and day. Connecticut and Mass Ave are one lane in each direction, Mass has a large snow pile in the middle. The only fully clear road I saw was Wisconsin. The roads around the Cathedral are not clear and the sidewalks are worse. My uber driver said most of DC is in terrible shape. So if you’re in MoCo, please realize your experience is not necessarily everyone’s.
We drove around this morning, it is fine. The parking lot is even open. I know DMV folks are used to this. But the rest of the country thinks it is ridiculous to close the school for so many days for this amount of snow. Walking is fine, transportation is fine. Kids and teachers should be at school. If some teachers cant commute, they can give virtual lessons or skip the day. Not making it flexible is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:It is obvious at this point for those people who don’t want schools to open today, they won’t want schools to open tomorrow either, or Friday, or next Monday. The small minority of people still “stuck” should just be given excused absences and let everyone else go back to learning normally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would imagine a critical mass of students and teachers can make it to school today. It cannot be the policy that we wait for every last person to be able to make it or we are going to be waiting until the middle of next week.
To be the people that say their car is still “snowed in”, take some personal responsibility and shovel it out like the rest of us do.
What planet does your brain live on?
This was a novel storm fool. Ice is different than fluffy snow. I know these concepts are hard for your pea sized brain cells.
Today is not safe for teachers or kids to get to school.
FOCUS
Anonymous wrote:I just came from downtown DC to Bethesda (in an uber bc my alley is a sheet of ice and my low to ground car cannot clear it, not one car or truck has even attempted to drive down it) and the difference between DC and Montgomery County is like night and day. Connecticut and Mass Ave are one lane in each direction, Mass has a large snow pile in the middle. The only fully clear road I saw was Wisconsin. The roads around the Cathedral are not clear and the sidewalks are worse. My uber driver said most of DC is in terrible shape. So if you’re in MoCo, please realize your experience is not necessarily everyone’s.