This is Iowa 1/2 of inch of snow shouldn't be a big deal.
Glazed roads with zero treatment down is why. No brine could go out because of the rain then salt delayed until plows were out for snow. Schools made the right choice.
This is Iowa 1/2 of inch of snow shouldn't be a big deal.
This is Iowa 1/2 of inch of snow shouldn't be a big deal.
a half inch of snow on top of a layer of frozen rain. It is not science, the schools make the best possible decision that they can. The national weather service (not to be confused with your local TV station or the weather channel) was pretty direct in saying that they thought the morning commute could be very bad this morning and they aren't prone to over hyping things.
Our superintendent made a call like that back in the late 90's up in rural NW IA. Blizzard warnings galore and we didn't even have a late start. The roads were already crappy on the way to school and the blizzard hit around 10:00 but early out didn't happen until closer to noon. By that time you had buses and high school kids driving in a complete white out. It wasn't good and the guy took some serious heat for it. n I have no issues with the cautious approach.
a half inch of snow on top of a layer of frozen rain. It is not science, the schools make the best possible decision that they can. The national weather service (not to be confused with your local TV station or the weather channel) was pretty direct in saying that they thought the morning commute could be very bad this morning and they aren't prone to over hyping things.
The problem is they do miss, plenty. This missed on this one and we had schools calling it before anything fell out of the sky.
The problem is they do miss, plenty. This missed on this one and we had schools calling it before anything fell out of the sky.
And you just pretty clearly explained why it should have started as a 2 hour delay. That gives them time to actually see the actual results of the weather and make an appropriate decision, the whole point of going w delay first. My phone rang at 3am with the schools cancellation notice.
What is the problem with a better safe than sorry approach to these kinds of things? You can always track a couple days one the end of the year when the weather will be fine. You can't undo any accidents or injuries that may happen if you push your luck and have school one a day that you shouldn't. It is one school day, no big deal.
The problem comes with daycare of kids. Many people don't have anything set up for daycare during snow days. It is one thing for real bad snow days but when we get 1/2 inch of snow and they close it down that starts to become a problem.
The problem is they do miss, plenty. This missed on this one and we had schools calling it before anything fell out of the sky.
So we're going to seriously need to bump up our number of snow days for the calendar year. We have slippery roads quite often during the winter.
Our superintendent made a call like that back in the late 90's up in rural NW IA. Blizzard warnings galore and we didn't even have a late start. The roads were already crappy on the way to school and the blizzard hit around 10:00 but early out didn't happen until closer to noon. By that time you had buses and high school kids driving in a complete white out. It wasn't good and the guy took some serious heat for it. n I have no issues with the cautious approach.
What surprise me is the fact if you are using the fact that "it is Iowa" why the hell don't you realize by now that ice is 50 times worse than snow?
What surprise me is the fact if you are using the fact that "it is Iowa" why the hell don't you realize by now that ice is 50 times worse than snow?
How does Sunday look?