Anonymous wrote:One of my kids is a walker (up to a mike and you walk fir HS), should I be complaining that DC had to walk today? Get real! Stop bitchin. Toughen up or your may melt since you really are a snowflake.
I would rather have my kid walking for 10 minutes in this cold than standing still at a bus stop for 30 minutes for a bus that may or may not ever come. With no snow on the horizon and a ridiculous number of snow days built in, I think they could manage two-hour delays on days where a good chunk of the bus fleet is likely to fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did they go in to start the buses yesterday? In another thread someone mentioned Loudoun County checking on their bus fleet.
They did.
One of my kids is a walker (up to a mike and you walk fir HS), should I be complaining that DC had to walk today? Get real! Stop bitchin. Toughen up or your may melt since you really are a snowflake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all it's complete, utter bullshit to expect parents to drive their kids to school when the school system provides bus service. Either they do or they don't, but the whole it's your fault for not driving them is crap. FCPS can decide how to manage its services, but it's not right to just excuse this cluster and blame parents for relying on a service (reliable bus service for qualified students) they were told existed.
Honestly, what should have happened is a two hour delay to allow temps to rise a bit and to work out the mechanical issues. And they should have announced it last night to give parents time to make arrangements, etc.
+1000
I intend to email the FCPS superintendent to express my utter dismay at their incomprehensible decision today. A 2-hour delay would have solved most of the issues our kids faced this morning...
How? It rose 2’ degrees here from 13’ to 15’. Same problems, just delayed. Better to get it over with earlier so that they have more time in school.
A two hour delay wouldn’t fix the weather or the temperature, but it would allow the buses to get ready (warm up the engines, check for breakdowns, missing drivers etc.) while giving parents and students a specific time to be at the bus stop.
Why not have the bus drivers go in two hours early?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all it's complete, utter bullshit to expect parents to drive their kids to school when the school system provides bus service. Either they do or they don't, but the whole it's your fault for not driving them is crap. FCPS can decide how to manage its services, but it's not right to just excuse this cluster and blame parents for relying on a service (reliable bus service for qualified students) they were told existed.
Honestly, what should have happened is a two hour delay to allow temps to rise a bit and to work out the mechanical issues. And they should have announced it last night to give parents time to make arrangements, etc.
+1000
I intend to email the FCPS superintendent to express my utter dismay at their incomprehensible decision today. A 2-hour delay would have solved most of the issues our kids faced this morning...
How? It rose 2’ degrees here from 13’ to 15’. Same problems, just delayed. Better to get it over with earlier so that they have more time in school.
A two hour delay wouldn’t fix the weather or the temperature, but it would allow the buses to get ready (warm up the engines, check for breakdowns, missing drivers etc.) while giving parents and students a specific time to be at the bus stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's going to be a high of 26 today. If we delayed / closed school for that, they'd miss a ton of days!
That's exactly what they did a few years back in order to justify applying for the early-start wavier. (FCPS needed to miss a certain amount of days for consecutive years to apply for the waiver.) People thought cancelling school for "cold" was normal and now expect it.
PP here - my oldest is in 3rd grade. I have vague memories of school being canceled for cold in 2014-2015 and/or 2015-2016, but IIRC it was colder, with highs in the single digits. (??)
Anonymous wrote:My ds takes an FCPS bus to a special ed school that shares a bus stop and pickup time with another middle school. There was a poor kid standing out there in just a sweatshirt 30 minutes after the normal pick up time!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First of all it's complete, utter bullshit to expect parents to drive their kids to school when the school system provides bus service. Either they do or they don't, but the whole it's your fault for not driving them is crap. FCPS can decide how to manage its services, but it's not right to just excuse this cluster and blame parents for relying on a service (reliable bus service for qualified students) they were told existed.
Honestly, what should have happened is a two hour delay to allow temps to rise a bit and to work out the mechanical issues. And they should have announced it last night to give parents time to make arrangements, etc.
+1000
I intend to email the FCPS superintendent to express my utter dismay at their incomprehensible decision today. A 2-hour delay would have solved most of the issues our kids faced this morning...
How? It rose 2’ degrees here from 13’ to 15’. Same problems, just delayed. Better to get it over with earlier so that they have more time in school.
Anonymous wrote:Did they go in to start the buses yesterday? In another thread someone mentioned Loudoun County checking on their bus fleet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's going to be a high of 26 today. If we delayed / closed school for that, they'd miss a ton of days!
That's exactly what they did a few years back in order to justify applying for the early-start wavier. (FCPS needed to miss a certain amount of days for consecutive years to apply for the waiver.) People thought cancelling school for "cold" was normal and now expect it.
Anonymous wrote:It's going to be a high of 26 today. If we delayed / closed school for that, they'd miss a ton of days!