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Tag: school closures

  • Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, other districts announce closures, delays for Wednesday

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    Charlotte-area schools are again announcing changes to Wednesday classes after a historic snow storm over the weekend. In this file photo, Jonathan Boone, right and son, Avett, left make their way along Lyon Court in Charlotte, NC on Saturday, January 31, 2026.

    Charlotte-area schools are again announcing changes to Wednesday classes after a historic snow storm over the weekend. In this file photo, Jonathan Boone, right and son, Avett, left make their way along Lyon Court in Charlotte, NC on Saturday, January 31, 2026.

    jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools announced it will transition to remote learning on Wednesday as a flurry of other districts pivot to remote learning and cancellations.

    “Instruction will be asynchronous, meaning students will work independently and complete assignments provided in advance by their teachers,” a CMS representative said late Tuesday afternoon. “There will be no live online sessions during this remote learning day, and all completed work will be due the next scheduled school day.”

    All district, school and work locations will be closed for students and the community.

    The Charlotte area has seen two consecutive weekends of ice and snow. And CMS students have been out of school two days in a row to start the week.

    A record-setting storm brought snow totals ranging from 6 to 12 inches across the city last weekend, while Mooresville, Concord, Kannapolis and Salisbury saw 12 to 17 inches, according to the National Weather Service. Forecasters expect mostly rain on Wednesday, but there’s a chance for snow in the evening.

    Last week, CMS canceled classes Monday, had remote learning days Tuesday and Wednesday and delayed the start of in-person classes by two hours on Thursday and Friday. So far, the cancellations haven’t resulted in any announcements about make-up days.

    However, the CMS Board of Education announced an emergency virtual meeting for Wednesday evening to consider changes to the current school year’s calendar. The district also is moving mid-year graduation ceremonies to Feb. 12.

    Here’s what other districts in the region are planning for Wednesday:

    • Cabarrus County Schools will move to a remote learning day. After-school and athletic events are canceled.
    • Catawba County Schools will continue with remote learning Tuesday. The district is using its final state-allotted remote day.
    • Clover School District will have a remote learning day for students.
    • Fort Mill School District will be on a two-hour delay
    • Gaston County Schools will have an asynchronous remote learning day, meaning students will work at their own pace on assignments that do not require technology. Staff will have an optional work day and can report to work in-person if they are able to do so safely, or else they should contact their supervisor.
    • Iredell-Statesville Schools will be closed for students. It will be a remote workday for staff. N.B. Mills Elementary School will be open Tuesday from 11:00 am to 1:00 pm for families to pick up lunch and breakfast for the next day for any Iredell-Statesville Schools students. The student need not be present, but their name and the name of their school will be required to pick up food.
    • Kannapolis City Schools will have a remote learning day for students and a remote work day for staff.
    • Lancaster County Schools will be on a two-hour delay.
    • Mooresville Graded School District will continue with remote learning. District facilities will be closed.
    • Rock Hill School District will be on a two-hour delay.
    • Rowan-Salisbury Schools will have a remote learning day. There will be a make-up day Friday, Feb. 13, which was originally scheduled as a teacher workday. Students are now expected to attend school on a normal schedule Friday, Feb. 13.
    • York School District will have an asynchronous learning day for students.

    This story was originally published February 3, 2026 at 4:53 PM.

    Related Stories from Charlotte Observer

    Nick Sullivan

    The Charlotte Observer

    Nick Sullivan covers city government for The Charlotte Observer. He studied journalism at the University of South Carolina, and he previously covered education for The Arizona Republic and The Colorado Springs Gazette.

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  • Icy road conditions, closures in Southlake, Keller, Colleyville, Grapevine

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    Officials have been warning North Texas to stay off the roads as much as possible.

    Officials have been warning North Texas to stay off the roads as much as possible.

    TxDOT

    Residents across northeast Tarrant County are still experiencing icy road conditions and officials are warning residents to stay at home if possible to avoid accidents.

    Roads are expected to keep refreezing until perhaps Wednesday.

    Public works departments are working on sanding problem areas and plowing where they can once the ice starts to melt.

    All school districts in the area are closed Tuesday, and some colleges have moved to online learning through Tuesday. Garbage pick up services were cancelled for Monday and city officials will let residents know when services will resume.

    Colleyville

    According to a city spokesperson, the Colleyville Police department responded to a number of calls over the weekend.

    “We’ve had around a dozen calls for service that could reasonably be attributed to weather,” said Adrienne Lothery, assistant city manager. “A handful of those are minor crashes, reckless driver complaints, or general citizen assistance.”

    On Saturday two people died in a fire at home on the 3600 block of Sweetbriar Lane around 10 a.m and two others were treated for minor injuries.

    Around 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, an older man was found unresponsive in a pond near his home. He remains in critical condition in the hospital.

    Colleyville City offices and the public library are open today, but scheduled programs have been canceled. Both the recreation center and senior center are closed.

    Grapevine

    A spokesperson said Grapevine police officers responded to 10 minor accidents and three major highway accident calls between Saturday and Monday, but could not confirm how many or if any of those accidents were due to the weather.

    City offices remain closed on Tuesday, and garbage and recycling collection has been moved to Tuesday.

    Officials said on social media that everyone’s collection day would move one day forward for the remainder of the week.

    Keller

    The city posted on social media that with some exceptions like the low water crossing in Bear Creek Park, roads in Keller are open.

    Officials said that roads are still icy with some slick spots here and there, and urged drivers to go slow, give space between cars and stop ahead of time at intersections.

    These city offices and services are operating on adjusted hours of operations.

    • Keller Town Hall: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    • The Keller Pointe: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    • The Keller Senior Activities Center and Keller Public Library are closed.

    Over the weekend some polling locations for Senate District 9 were closed, today there will be delayed openings. The Keller Town Hall will be open at 10 a.m. through 7 p.m. for voting.

    Southlake

    All city offices are closed except for city hall which is open only for early elections from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m.

    While the offices are closed for business residents are able to use the available online services through the city’s website and by phone at 817-748-8400 from 8 a.m. through 5 p.m.

    Normally, The Rustin and Family Parks at Southlake Town Square would be full of people taking a break from shopping to sit by the fountain or kids would be running around but this weekend the park was empty due to the ice and snow accumulation.
    Normally, The Rustin and Family Parks at Southlake Town Square would be full of people taking a break from shopping to sit by the fountain or kids would be running around but this weekend the park was empty due to the ice and snow accumulation. Courtesy of the City of Southlake

    The following facilities and programs including athletic leagues, recreation programs and Volunteer Southlake assignments are cancelled.

    • Senior Activity Center
    • Town Hall City Offices
    • Southlake Municipal Court
    • Southlake Public Library
    • Bob Jones Nature Center
    • Southlake Pickleball Complex
    • Southlake Tennis Center
    • The Marq Southlake, including Legends Hall & Champions Club

    Fousia Abdullahi

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Fousia Abdullahi is a Fort Worth Star-Telegram news reporter who covers suburban cities including Southlake, Colleyville, Grapevine and Keller. She enjoys reading and attending local events. Send tips by email or phone.

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    Fousia Abdullahi

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  • As Tarrant kids enjoy snow days at home, pediatricians give tips for staying safe

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    Tarrant County children are experiencing two snow days in a row this week as a widespread winter storm passes through the area. Pediatricians have tips on how to stay safe amid the frosty temperatures.

    All public school districts in the area have canceled classes on Monday and Tuesday. Children as young as infants and as old as teenagers may be eager to play outdoors while school is out. Dr. Desiree Evans and Dr. Brent Kaziny, pediatric physicians with Texas Children’s, say it’s vital for children to dress in layers and wear non-slip footwear to avoid falls and injuries. Going inside to take breaks from the cold temperatures and to allow outerwear to dry off is also key.

    “I think we tend to see a lot of incidents and accidents with sledding as well, something that we don’t get a chance to do very often in Texas,” said Kaziny, emergency management medical director at Texas Children’s.

    “One thing that we frequently see in sledding accidents is that parents tend to kind of put the little kid in the front and go down the hill, and then oftentimes there is a tumble that takes place. They kind of lay their full force on that smaller child. So make sure that you’re not doing anything too extreme. No huge hills,” he added, cautioning children to stay away from trees or roads while sledding.

    Evans, a primary care pediatrician at Texas Children’s Pediatrics Palm Center in Houston, recommended parents use virtual care options if their child gets injured and they’re unsure about next steps.

    “That’s a great resource, especially when it’s cold or it’s difficult to move around, or even get out of the house if it’s snowing and stuff like that. Because that virtual care provider can kind of help you navigate and figure out what’s important or what’s truly necessary for you to take your child to the emergency room or the urgent care right away,” Evans said.

    ❄️🌡️ Winter storm in North Texas:

    Signs that it might be time to take a break from cold weather are redness or paleness in the face, shivering that’s not going away and changes in energy level or mood, Kaziny said. Both physicians noted to keep a closer eye on infants and toddlers, as it’s more difficult for their body temperatures to stay regulated. In general, children and parents also need to be drinking water and staying hydrated.

    If using generators for power, keep them outside while also monitoring carbon monoxide levels inside with meters. Use caution with open flames like fireplaces and candles.

    “If you have space heaters in your home, you want to be really, really careful. Some people will sometimes turn on the oven, so you want to be careful; watch out for gas leaks. If you start to smell something that doesn’t smell right, you know, keep your senses on,” Evans said.

    If a family loses power in their home, Kaziny recommends everyone gather in one room, preferably one without windows and with closed doors, while layering their clothing the same way they would if they were outside.

    “That can be a great first step to kind of staying warm in your home. Using blankets — even making like a little fort that you’re sleeping in, kind of akin to like a tent inside of the house, can do a great job of conserving some of your body heat and keeping you nice and toasty,” he said.

    Seguin resident Deanna Roeder, right, and her son, Holden, 12, gather hay for their heifer showing at theFort Worth Stock Show &Rodeo on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, in Fort Worth.
    Seguin resident Deanna Roeder, right, and her son, Holden, 12, gather hay for their heifer showing at the Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, in Fort Worth. None amccoy@star-telegram.com

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lina Ruiz covers early childhood education in Tarrant County and North Texas for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A University of Florida graduate, she previously wrote about local government in South Florida for TCPalm and Treasure Coast Newspapers.

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    Lina Ruiz

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  • Colossal winter storm kills at least 18; hundreds of thousands without power across US

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    The workweek opened with yet more snow dumping on the Northeast under the tail end of a colossal winter storm that brought lingering misery to parts of the South, where freezing rain left hundreds of thousands shivering without electricity Monday. Authorities reported at least 18 weather-related deaths.Deep snow — over a foot extending in a 1,300-mile swath from Arkansas to New England — halted traffic, canceled flights and triggered wide school closures Monday. Up to two feet were forecast in some of the harder-hit places.There were more than 800,000 power outages in the nation on Monday morning, according to poweroutage.com. Most of them were in the South, where weekend blasts of freezing rain caused tree limbs and power lines to snap, inflicting crippling outages on northern Mississippi and parts of Tennessee.Utility officials in New Albany, Mississippi, said some homes and businesses could be without electricity for at least a week. In nearby Oxford, where most residents and University of Mississippi students were without power Monday, Mayor Robyn Tannehill said on social media that so many trees, limbs and power lines had fallen that “it looks like a tornado went down every street.”“Apparently, the new status symbol in this town is having electricity,” said Marshall Ramsey, a University of Mississippi journalism professor whose family was running a generator at their Oxford home Monday to power a space heater and keep phones charged.A pair of burly, falling tree branches damaged real estate agent Tim Phillips’ new garage, broke a window and cut off power to his home in Oxford. He said half of his neighbors had homes or vehicles damaged.“It’s just one of those things that you try to prepare for,” Phillips said, “but this one was just unreal.”The U.S. had more than 6,400 flight delays and cancellations nationwide Monday, according to flight tracker flightaware.com.More light to moderate snow was forecast in New England through Monday evening.New York City saw its snowiest day in years, with 11 inches falling on Central Park. Main roads throughout the city were largely clear Monday morning, but pedestrians had to plod through snow on some sidewalks and multiple subway lines with above-ground tracks saw delays.Bitter cold grips much of the nationMeanwhile, bitter cold followed in the storm’s wake. It got down to minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of Minnesota on Sunday. Many communities across the Midwest, South, and Northeast awakened Monday to subzero weather. The entire Lower 48 states were forecast to have their coldest average low temperature of minus 9.8 F — since January 2014.Record warmth in Florida was the only thing keeping that average from going even colder, said former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief scientist Ryan Maue, who calculates national averages based on National Weather Service data.From Montana to the Florida Panhandle, the weather service posted cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings as temperatures in many places dipped to zero and even colder. Wind made conditions even chillier and the overnight cold refoze roads early Monday in a cruel reprise of the weekend’s lousy travel weather.Even with precipitation ending in Mississippi, “that doesn’t mean the danger is behind us,” Gov. Tate Reeves said in a news conference Sunday.Freezing rain that slickened roads and brought trees and branches down on roads and power lines were the main peril in the South over the weekend. In Corinth, Mississippi, heavy machinery manufacturer Caterpillar told employees at its remanufacturing site to stay home Monday and Tuesday.It already was Mississippi’s worst ice storm since 1994 with its biggest-ever deployment of ice-melting chemicals — 200,000 gallons — plus salt and sand to treat icy roads, Reeves said. He urged people not to drive anywhere unless absolutely necessary. “Do please reach out to friends and family,” Reeves added.At one point Sunday morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, authorities said.Some 12,000 flights also were canceled Sunday and nearly 20,000 were delayed.Storm leads to deaths in a number of statesIn New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at least five people who died were found outside as temperatures plunged Saturday, though the cause of their deaths remained under investigation. Two men died of hypothermia related to the storm in Caddo Parish in Louisiana, according to the state health department.In Massachusetts, police said a snowplow backed into a couple walking in a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority parking lot in Norwood on Sunday. A 51-year-old woman was killed and her 47-year-old husband was hospitalized.Two teenagers died in sledding accidents, a 17-year-old boy in Arkansas, and a 16-year-old girl in Texas, authorities said.Three weather-related deaths were announced in Tennessee, authorities said. Further details were not immediately available.___Amy reported from Atlanta. Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. AP journalists Charlotte Kramon in Atlanta; Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee; Kath McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire; David Caruso in New York; Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio; Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, contributed to this story.

    The workweek opened with yet more snow dumping on the Northeast under the tail end of a colossal winter storm that brought lingering misery to parts of the South, where freezing rain left hundreds of thousands shivering without electricity Monday. Authorities reported at least 18 weather-related deaths.

    Deep snow — over a foot extending in a 1,300-mile swath from Arkansas to New England — halted traffic, canceled flights and triggered wide school closures Monday. Up to two feet were forecast in some of the harder-hit places.

    There were more than 800,000 power outages in the nation on Monday morning, according to poweroutage.com. Most of them were in the South, where weekend blasts of freezing rain caused tree limbs and power lines to snap, inflicting crippling outages on northern Mississippi and parts of Tennessee.

    Utility officials in New Albany, Mississippi, said some homes and businesses could be without electricity for at least a week. In nearby Oxford, where most residents and University of Mississippi students were without power Monday, Mayor Robyn Tannehill said on social media that so many trees, limbs and power lines had fallen that “it looks like a tornado went down every street.”

    “Apparently, the new status symbol in this town is having electricity,” said Marshall Ramsey, a University of Mississippi journalism professor whose family was running a generator at their Oxford home Monday to power a space heater and keep phones charged.

    A pair of burly, falling tree branches damaged real estate agent Tim Phillips’ new garage, broke a window and cut off power to his home in Oxford. He said half of his neighbors had homes or vehicles damaged.

    “It’s just one of those things that you try to prepare for,” Phillips said, “but this one was just unreal.”

    The U.S. had more than 6,400 flight delays and cancellations nationwide Monday, according to flight tracker flightaware.com.

    More light to moderate snow was forecast in New England through Monday evening.

    New York City saw its snowiest day in years, with 11 inches falling on Central Park. Main roads throughout the city were largely clear Monday morning, but pedestrians had to plod through snow on some sidewalks and multiple subway lines with above-ground tracks saw delays.

    Bitter cold grips much of the nation

    Meanwhile, bitter cold followed in the storm’s wake. It got down to minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit in parts of Minnesota on Sunday. Many communities across the Midwest, South, and Northeast awakened Monday to subzero weather. The entire Lower 48 states were forecast to have their coldest average low temperature of minus 9.8 F — since January 2014.

    Record warmth in Florida was the only thing keeping that average from going even colder, said former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief scientist Ryan Maue, who calculates national averages based on National Weather Service data.

    From Montana to the Florida Panhandle, the weather service posted cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings as temperatures in many places dipped to zero and even colder. Wind made conditions even chillier and the overnight cold refoze roads early Monday in a cruel reprise of the weekend’s lousy travel weather.

    Even with precipitation ending in Mississippi, “that doesn’t mean the danger is behind us,” Gov. Tate Reeves said in a news conference Sunday.

    Freezing rain that slickened roads and brought trees and branches down on roads and power lines were the main peril in the South over the weekend. In Corinth, Mississippi, heavy machinery manufacturer Caterpillar told employees at its remanufacturing site to stay home Monday and Tuesday.

    It already was Mississippi’s worst ice storm since 1994 with its biggest-ever deployment of ice-melting chemicals — 200,000 gallons — plus salt and sand to treat icy roads, Reeves said. He urged people not to drive anywhere unless absolutely necessary. “Do please reach out to friends and family,” Reeves added.

    At one point Sunday morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, authorities said.

    Some 12,000 flights also were canceled Sunday and nearly 20,000 were delayed.

    Storm leads to deaths in a number of states

    In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at least five people who died were found outside as temperatures plunged Saturday, though the cause of their deaths remained under investigation. Two men died of hypothermia related to the storm in Caddo Parish in Louisiana, according to the state health department.

    In Massachusetts, police said a snowplow backed into a couple walking in a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority parking lot in Norwood on Sunday. A 51-year-old woman was killed and her 47-year-old husband was hospitalized.

    Two teenagers died in sledding accidents, a 17-year-old boy in Arkansas, and a 16-year-old girl in Texas, authorities said.

    Three weather-related deaths were announced in Tennessee, authorities said. Further details were not immediately available.

    ___

    Amy reported from Atlanta. Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. AP journalists Charlotte Kramon in Atlanta; Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee; Kath McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire; David Caruso in in New York; Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio; Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, Louisiana sand Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, contributed to this story.

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  • WINTER STORM: How much snow has already fallen across NYC? – amNewYork

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    A man uses a snowblower during a winter storm in Queens on Jan. 25, 2026.

    Photo by Robert Pozarycki

    Most NYC neighborhoods already have at least a half-foot of snow on the ground during the ongoing winter storm, according to the National Weather Service.

    The latest report from Central Park had 8.3 inches of snow on the ground as of 4 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 25. The highest total in the city thus far, according to the unofficial data, can be found in the southeast Bronx; the Throgs Neck Bridge came in with a reported 11.3 inches of snow as of 4:16 p.m. Sunday.

    A modest 8.3 and 9 inches of snow were on the ground at JFK and LaGuardia Airports, respectively, at 4 p.m.

    The snow is expected to continue through this evening and may transition into a period of a wintry mix of snow and sleet. When the snow began falling early on Sunday morning, most forecasters predicted city snow totals of between 6 and 12 inches.

    Here’s a rundown of NWS-reported snowfall totals across the city on Sunday:

    • Throgs Neck Bridge, Bronx: 11.3 inches at 4:16 p.m.
    • Washington Heights, Manhattan: 10.6 inches as of 3:59 p.m.
    • Williamsburg, Brooklyn: 10.5 inches as of 4:30 p.m.
    • Westerleigh, Staten Island: 10.5 inches as of 2:40 p.m.
    • Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn: 9.5 inches as of 3:06 p.m.
    • Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn: 9.5 inches as of 3 p.m.
    • LaGuardia Airport, Queens: 9 inches as of 4 p.m.
    • Annandale, Staten Island: 9 inches as of 2:14 p.m.
    • Central Park, Manhattan: 8.8 inches as of 4:15 p.m.
    • Bay Ridge, Brooklyn: 8.4 inches as of 3:07 p.m.
    • JFK Airport, Queens: 8.3 inches as of 4 p.m.

    More winter storm coverage from amNY:

    All NYC public schools will be closed on Monday; classes pivot to remote instruction

    PHOTOS: Snow blankets NYC during heavy winter storm

    Some NYC transit disrupted by snow, MTA urges riders to avoid unnecessary travel

    Mayor faces first nor’easter in office, responds to deadly Bronx fire, condemns second ICE killing in Minneapolis

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    Robert Pozarycki

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  • Ice from winter storm leaves a million customers without power across the South

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    A massive winter storm dumped sleet, freezing rain and snow across much of the U.S. on Sunday, bringing subzero temperatures and paralyzing air and road traffic. Tree branches and power lines snapped under the weight of ice, and about a million homes and businesses in the Southeast were left without electricity.The ice and snowfall were expected to continue into Monday in much of the country, followed by very low temperatures, which could cause “dangerous travel and infrastructure impacts” to linger for several days, the National Weather Service said. Heavy snow was forecast from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast, while “catastrophic ice accumulation” threatened from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast.”It is a unique storm in the sense that it is so widespread,” weather service meteorologist Allison Santorelli said in a phone interview. “It was affecting areas all the way from New Mexico, Texas, all the way into New England, so we’re talking like a 2,000 mile spread.”President Donald Trump had approved emergency declarations for at least a dozen states by Saturday. The Federal Emergency Management Agency pre-positioned commodities, staff and search and rescue teams in numerous states, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state was bracing for the longest cold stretch and highest snow totals it has seen in years. Communities near the Canadian border have already seen record-breaking subzero temperatures, with Watertown registering minus 34 degrees Fahrenheit and Copenhagen minus 49 F, she said. “An Arctic siege has taken over our state,” Hochul said. “It is brutal, it is bone chilling and it is dangerous.” Effects of the stormIn Corinth, Mississippi, where power outages were widespread, Caterpillar told employees at its remanufacturing site to stay home Monday and Tuesday.”May God have mercy on Corinth, MS! … The sound of the trees snapping, exploding & falling through the night have been unnerving to say the least,” resident Kathy Ragan wrote on Facebook.Video below: Dashcam captures moment tree falls from weight of ice in North LouisianaOn the east side of Nashville, Jami Joe, 41, had power Sunday afternoon but she feared the juice might not last long as ice-heavy limbs from mature oak and pecan trees continued to crash around her house. “It’s only a matter of time if a limb strikes a power line,” she predicted.In Little Rock, Arkansas, officials say the weight of accumulated snow and sleet likely caused the collapse of an awning onto several houseboats. Six people were rescued and 22 were evacuated, Pulaski County officials said.Storm knocks out power and snarls flights As of Sunday morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, Santorelli said. The number of customers without power stood at about 1 million, according to poweroutage.us.Tennessee was hardest hit with about 337,000 customers out by midday Sunday, and Louisiana and Mississippi all had more than 100,000 customers in the dark. Tens of thousands of homes and businesses were without power in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama and West Virginia. Some 11,000 flights were canceled Sunday and more than 14,000 delayed, according to the flight tracker flightaware.com. Airports in Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, North Carolina, New York and New Jersey were hit especially hard.At Philadelphia International Airport, inside displays registered scores of canceled flights and few vehicles could be seen arriving Sunday morning. At Reagan National in Washington, virtually all flights were canceled.Bitter cold makes things worse Even once the ice and snow stop falling, the danger will continue, Santorelli warned.”Behind the storm it’s just going to get bitterly cold across basically the entirety of the eastern two-thirds of the nation, east of the Rockies,” she said. That means the ice and snow won’t melt as fast, which could hinder some efforts to restore power and other infrastructure.Video below: Listen as ice-covered trees crack in MississippiAlong the Gulf Coast, temperatures were balmy Sunday, hitting the high 60s and low 70s, but thermometers were expected to drop into the high 20s and low 30s there by Monday morning. The National Weather Service warned of damaging winds and a slight risk of severe storms and possibly even a brief tornado.In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at least five people who died were found outside as temperatures plunged Saturday before the snows arrived in earnest, though the cause of their deaths remained under investigation.The Democrat pleaded with New Yorkers to stay inside and off roads: “We want every single New Yorker to make it through this storm.”Two men died of hypothermia related to the storm in Caddo Parish in Louisiana, according to the state health department there.Across the affected areas, officials announced that school would be canceled or held remotely Monday.Recovery could take a while In Oxford, Mississippi, police on Sunday morning used social media to tell residents to stay home as the danger of being outside was too great. Local utility crews were also pulled from their jobs during the overnight hours.”Due to life-threatening conditions, Oxford Utilities has made the difficult decision to pull our crews off the road for the night,” the utility company posted on Facebook early Sunday. “Trees are actively snapping and falling around our linemen while they are in the bucket trucks.”Tippah Electric Power in Mississippi said there was “catastrophic damage” and that it could be “weeks instead of days” to restore everyone.The Tennessee Valley Authority provides power to some utilities across the region, and spokesperson Scott Brooks said the bulk power system remains stable but overnight icing had caused power interruptions in north Mississippi, north Alabama, southern middle Tennessee and the Knoxville, Tennessee, area.Icy roads made travel dangerous in north Georgia, where the Cherokee County Sheriff’s office posted on Facebook, “You know it’s bad when Waffle House is closed!!!” along with a photo of a shuttered restaurant. Whether the chain’s restaurants are open — known as the Waffle House Index — has become an informal way to gauge the severity of weather disasters across the South.

    A massive winter storm dumped sleet, freezing rain and snow across much of the U.S. on Sunday, bringing subzero temperatures and paralyzing air and road traffic. Tree branches and power lines snapped under the weight of ice, and about a million homes and businesses in the Southeast were left without electricity.

    The ice and snowfall were expected to continue into Monday in much of the country, followed by very low temperatures, which could cause “dangerous travel and infrastructure impacts” to linger for several days, the National Weather Service said.

    Heavy snow was forecast from the Ohio Valley to the Northeast, while “catastrophic ice accumulation” threatened from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast.

    “It is a unique storm in the sense that it is so widespread,” weather service meteorologist Allison Santorelli said in a phone interview. “It was affecting areas all the way from New Mexico, Texas, all the way into New England, so we’re talking like a 2,000 mile spread.”

    President Donald Trump had approved emergency declarations for at least a dozen states by Saturday. The Federal Emergency Management Agency pre-positioned commodities, staff and search and rescue teams in numerous states, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said the state was bracing for the longest cold stretch and highest snow totals it has seen in years. Communities near the Canadian border have already seen record-breaking subzero temperatures, with Watertown registering minus 34 degrees Fahrenheit and Copenhagen minus 49 F, she said.

    “An Arctic siege has taken over our state,” Hochul said. “It is brutal, it is bone chilling and it is dangerous.”

    Effects of the storm

    In Corinth, Mississippi, where power outages were widespread, Caterpillar told employees at its remanufacturing site to stay home Monday and Tuesday.

    “May God have mercy on Corinth, MS! … The sound of the trees snapping, exploding & falling through the night have been unnerving to say the least,” resident Kathy Ragan wrote on Facebook.

    Video below: Dashcam captures moment tree falls from weight of ice in North Louisiana

    On the east side of Nashville, Jami Joe, 41, had power Sunday afternoon but she feared the juice might not last long as ice-heavy limbs from mature oak and pecan trees continued to crash around her house. “It’s only a matter of time if a limb strikes a power line,” she predicted.

    In Little Rock, Arkansas, officials say the weight of accumulated snow and sleet likely caused the collapse of an awning onto several houseboats. Six people were rescued and 22 were evacuated, Pulaski County officials said.

    Storm knocks out power and snarls flights

    As of Sunday morning, about 213 million people were under some sort of winter weather warning, Santorelli said. The number of customers without power stood at about 1 million, according to poweroutage.us.

    Tennessee was hardest hit with about 337,000 customers out by midday Sunday, and Louisiana and Mississippi all had more than 100,000 customers in the dark. Tens of thousands of homes and businesses were without power in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama and West Virginia.

    Some 11,000 flights were canceled Sunday and more than 14,000 delayed, according to the flight tracker flightaware.com. Airports in Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, North Carolina, New York and New Jersey were hit especially hard.

    At Philadelphia International Airport, inside displays registered scores of canceled flights and few vehicles could be seen arriving Sunday morning. At Reagan National in Washington, virtually all flights were canceled.

    Bitter cold makes things worse

    Even once the ice and snow stop falling, the danger will continue, Santorelli warned.

    “Behind the storm it’s just going to get bitterly cold across basically the entirety of the eastern two-thirds of the nation, east of the Rockies,” she said. That means the ice and snow won’t melt as fast, which could hinder some efforts to restore power and other infrastructure.

    Video below: Listen as ice-covered trees crack in Mississippi

    Along the Gulf Coast, temperatures were balmy Sunday, hitting the high 60s and low 70s, but thermometers were expected to drop into the high 20s and low 30s there by Monday morning. The National Weather Service warned of damaging winds and a slight risk of severe storms and possibly even a brief tornado.

    In New York City, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said at least five people who died were found outside as temperatures plunged Saturday before the snows arrived in earnest, though the cause of their deaths remained under investigation.

    The Democrat pleaded with New Yorkers to stay inside and off roads: “We want every single New Yorker to make it through this storm.”

    Two men died of hypothermia related to the storm in Caddo Parish in Louisiana, according to the state health department there.

    Across the affected areas, officials announced that school would be canceled or held remotely Monday.

    Recovery could take a while

    In Oxford, Mississippi, police on Sunday morning used social media to tell residents to stay home as the danger of being outside was too great. Local utility crews were also pulled from their jobs during the overnight hours.

    “Due to life-threatening conditions, Oxford Utilities has made the difficult decision to pull our crews off the road for the night,” the utility company posted on Facebook early Sunday. “Trees are actively snapping and falling around our linemen while they are in the bucket trucks.”

    Tippah Electric Power in Mississippi said there was “catastrophic damage” and that it could be “weeks instead of days” to restore everyone.

    The Tennessee Valley Authority provides power to some utilities across the region, and spokesperson Scott Brooks said the bulk power system remains stable but overnight icing had caused power interruptions in north Mississippi, north Alabama, southern middle Tennessee and the Knoxville, Tennessee, area.

    Icy roads made travel dangerous in north Georgia, where the Cherokee County Sheriff’s office posted on Facebook, “You know it’s bad when Waffle House is closed!!!” along with a photo of a shuttered restaurant. Whether the chain’s restaurants are open — known as the Waffle House Index — has become an informal way to gauge the severity of weather disasters across the South.

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  • Minnesota schools announce closures, delays amid snow, incoming cold

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    Minnesota schools are beginning to announce early closures on Wednesday as snow impacts parts of the state and dangerous cold approaches

    Many of the announced closures are in western and southern Minnesota, where increasing winds are expected to lead to blowing snow Wednesday afternoon. The full list of closures is below.

    A round of organized snow will move through the state through the evening commute, dropping around an inch of accumulation in most places, including the Twin Cities.

    After that, arctic air will blast the state. Minnesotans will wake up to single-digit temperatures and wind chills below zero on Thursday, but the perilous cold arrives Friday morning. Lows will be in the double digits below zero and highs won’t cross into the positives, while wind chills will hover between 30 and 50 below zero. The warm-up won’t come until next week.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • Schools in Minnesota, Wisconsin announce delays, closures amid wet winter weather

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    Some schools in Minnesota and Wisconsin are delayed or closed on Tuesday as early morning rain makes the roads slick.

    Schools in Stillwater, St. Cloud and White Bear Lake are delayed by two hours. In Wisconsin, Hudson and River Falls schools will see similar delays, while the St. Croix Falls School District is closed. The full list of closings and delays is below.

    Rain will continue through about 7 a.m., with some pockets of freezing rain possible. Dense fog will also reduce visibility. WCCO has issued a NEXT Drive Alert, and a winter weather advisory is in place through noon.

    Increasing temperatures throughout the day will improve driving conditions later on. The rest of the week looks mild until another possible winter system arrives over the weekend.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • Multiple Minnesota schools are closing early as winter storm approaches. See the latest listings.

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    A growing list of Minnesota schools has decided to close early as a winter storm is expected to bring snow — with significant totals possible in parts — to the state beginning Tuesday night. 

    A winter storm warning will be in effect starting at 6 p.m. for a large swath of the state, stretching from the Arrowhead to parts of southern Minnesota, and including the Twin Cities. A NEXT Weather Alert is also in effect.

    By Wednesday morning, there could be up to 5 inches of snow on the ground in the Twin Cities area. There could be more accumulation to the north and west, with areas like Plymouth, Andover and Forest Lake seeing up to 8 inches of snow. 

    But the highest snow totals will likely be in central and northern Minnesota.

    A quick freeze Tuesday evening could turn untreated surfaces icy as winds ramp up and visibility drops. Travel conditions will be impacted, with slick roads, slower commutes and a spike in crashes expected. 

    See the latest school closings & delays

    In preparation for the winter storm impacts, some schools have announced early closures. Check the updated list below. 

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    Cole Premo

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  • Grapevine-Colleyville parents vow to fight over proposed school closures

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    A row of school buses parked in a lot.

    A row of school buses parked in a lot.

    Tri-City Herald

    When parents in the Grapevine-Colleyville school district learned this week of recommendations to close two elementary schools, they joined forces, vowing to fight for their schools.

    This week, the school district’s education Master Planning Committee comprised of district employees and residents to help shape the district’s future needs, recommended the closing of Bransford Elementary in Colleyville and Dove Elementary in Grapevine.

    Ashleigh Johnson, whose three children attend Bransford, said she was beyond angry when she read an email to parents from Superintendent Brad Schnautz that was sent Thursday.

    “We are livid,” she said.

    Johnson described how her children are thriving at Bransford, which has a renowned fine arts program and also serves special education students.

    “This has awakened a giant bear,” she said.

    Trustees are meeting Monday night to hear the committee’s recommendations, but they are not scheduled to vote on the school closings until Dec. 10, board President Shannon Braun said in an interview.

    Asked about parents’ concerns that school employees were finding out about the recommendations to close campuses before a final decision was made Braun said: “What would they want the district to do, not tell people what’s going on, or tell the employees what the recommendation is going to be so that they can be prepared. I think that would be the kindest thing,” she said.

    Braun said trustees are not going to vote Monday night, but will hear the committee’s recommendations, which are “far more broader” than closing the two elementaries, she said.

    For instance, Braun said another recommendation is to close and sell the Professional Development Building on Colleyville Boulevard, which houses Bridges, the district’s alternative high school.

    “I don’t hear people upset about that,” she said.

    The next steps are to send letters to residents, hold a community forum on Dec. 2 and vote on Dec. 10, Braun said.

    In his letter to parents that Johnson provided to the Star-Telegram, Schnautz said he was sharing the committee’s final recommendation after 10 months of looking at finances, growth projections and other factors.

    The letter said the recommendation was to consolidate Bransford with Colleyville Elementary and O.C. Taylor.

    “We know that this news brings many feelings. The Bransford campus, the physical building, the community, and the memories created, is so much more than just a place of learning,” Schnautz wrote. “It is a home, and the idea of closing that home is truly heartbreaking. We share those feelings with you.”

    Parents from Dove Elementary in Grapevine were also upset when they heard that the campus was on the recommendation list for closure.

    Allan Thompson, who lives in north Grapevine, said he has a kindergartner enrolled at school, and that the teachers are outstanding and helped his daughter get used to the idea of going to school and learning.

    Thompson said the PTA at Dove was to meet at 5 p.m. Friday after an employee meeting. He said the PTA will likely craft a resolution calling for the school to remain open.

    Johnson said she will also keep fighting for her school.

    “Closing schools doesn’t show a thriving district, it shows a crumbling district,” she said.

    Parents also held two community forums. During a forum Thursday night in Grapevine, they discussed ideas for bringing in revenue and building community partnerships.

    They will provide their recommendations to the district.

    Grapevine Mayor William Tate also attended the meeting, and said he was there to listen to the people.

    “The people always win. I am here to give people encouragement,” he said in an interview.

    Elizabeth Campbell

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    With my guide dog Freddie, I keep tabs on growth, economic development and other issues in Northeast Tarrant cities and other communities near Fort Worth. I’ve been a reporter at the Star-Telegram for 34 years.

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    Elizabeth Campbell

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  • Decision to close Grapevine-Colleyville schools to come in next two months

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    Grapevine-Colleyville ISD trustees will decide on closing three elementary campuses soon.

    Grapevine-Colleyville ISD trustees will decide on closing three elementary campuses soon.

    Grapevine-Colleyville ISD trustees will decide on closing three elementary campuses soon, but the board hasn’t determined which schools will be on the chopping block.

    Board president Shannon Braun said in an interview Friday morning that the decision on which elementaries are closing will be made in November or December.

    “It will be before Christmas,” Braun said.

    The Grapevine-Colleyville school board will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday to hear a report from the Education Master Planning committee, which is tasked with making recommendations about the district’s future needs.

    The agenda also lists a period for public comment.

    Braun said that by closing three elementaries, it will bring the other campuses up to full capacity and save approximately $1.6 million.

    “We’re freeing up as much money as we can,” she said.

    Grapevine-Colleyville is facing critical financial needs as are other North Texas school districts.

    Grapevine-Colleyville did not receive full funding from the state, and it is also a “recapture” or Robinhood district, and sent more than $30 million to the state to distribute to poorer school districts.

    Grapevine-Colleyville is also facing declining enrollment and a concern that the number of high school seniors is outpacing kindergarteners

    Parents raise concerns about school closures

    But some parents in the district want school officials to pause and to take a step back from closing schools and explore other possibilities, because closing schools is not just about saving money. There are other factors to consider such as the impact on students, teachers, businesses and neighborhoods, several speakers said during a presentation.

    The parents gathered Thursday night at The Vine, an event venue in Grapevine where they divided into small groups to discuss questions and ideas that will be submitted to the district.

    Some questioned if full capacity in the elementary schools that will remain open is a good idea when it comes to student learning.

    Renee Hart, a parent in the Grapevine-Colleyville district, said schools at full capacity for an extended period of time face overcrowding, larger class sizes and less space for enrichment programs.

    Braun said that she spoke to principals at schools that are not at full capacity, and they said it is easier to schedule classes and activities when there are more children in the buildings.

    The parents also said the district should explore ways to make the district more attractive for families.

    There were also questions about the consequences of changing traffic patterns and the emotional toll on children who are moved to a different campus.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Elizabeth Campbell

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    With my guide dog Freddie, I keep tabs on growth, economic development and other issues in Northeast Tarrant cities and other communities near Fort Worth. I’ve been a reporter at the Star-Telegram for 34 years.

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    Elizabeth Campbell

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  • SFUSD superintendent Matt Wayne resigns, school closures on hold

    SFUSD superintendent Matt Wayne resigns, school closures on hold

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    San Francisco Unified School District Superintendent Matt Wayne resigned Friday, amid controversy over plans to close or merge more than a dozen schools amid a massive budget shortfall. The district also announced that the closures are on hold.

    At an emergency meeting, the city’s Board of Education accepted Wayne’s resignation.

    “The District is grateful for Dr. Wayne’s leadership during a challenging period for the SFUSD. Under Dr. Wayne’s leadership, the District has focused on student outcomes and teaching and learning,” the district said in a statement Friday night. “He has been an instructional leader with a deep commitment to our students’ success. The District agrees with Dr. Wayne that the time is right for new leadership in SFUSD.”

    In a separate statement, Wayne said, “I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity to have served SFUSD and proud of all that has been accomplished during my almost two-and-a-half years leading the District.”

    The board announced that Maria Su, who has served as Executive Director of the Department of Children, Youth and their Families, would be nominated as the new Superintendent. Su was part of a “School Stabilization Team” of city officials appointed by Mayor London Breed last month to help the district.

    “I am excited to deepen the work we started three weeks ago to stabilize the school district,” Su said. “San Francisco public schools are the city’s greatest asset. We must come together as a community to take care of our school district. SFUSD students, families, and staff are counting on us.”

    Along with the change in leadership, the district announced that there would be no school closures in the 2025-26 school year.

    Wayne has faced heat following an Oct. 8 announcement which named 11 elementary schools and two high schools that would be impacted. At the time, the district said that the closures were needed to balance the budget by next school year, or risk a takeover by the California Department of Education.

    Under the proposal, three campuses would have closed, another eight schools would be merged with another school, while the remaining schools would be a welcoming school for a closed school.

    Earlier this week, Breed weighed in on the closures, saying she had “lost confidence” in the superintendent but stopped short of calling him to step down. Breed also called for a halt to the closures.

    “This cannot continue. Whatever this current proposed school closure process was meant to accomplish, or could have accomplished, is lost,” the mayor said in a statement released Tuesday. “This has become a distraction from the very real work that must be done to balance the budget in the next two months to prevent a state takeover. It is time to immediately stop this school closure process.”

    At the same time, Breed said there would be “painful but necessary” decisions ahead to balance the budget and to avoid a state takeover.

    Karling Aguilera-Fort, who is currently the Senior Associate Superintendent of Education Services, has been named as Acting Superintendent in the meantime.  

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    Tim Fang

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  • Some Denver wind damage and outages will stick with us a while

    Some Denver wind damage and outages will stick with us a while

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    A fallen tree in Denver’s Alamo Placita Park seen on Sunday, April 8, 2024 after heavy winds.

    Dave Burdick/Denverite

    This weekend’s wind in Denver wrought damage across the region. More than 100,000 people lost power. Traffic lights went dark. Trees and powerlines blew down.

    “For the first time in Colorado, Xcel Energy conducted a public safety power shutoff,” the energy company wrote in a statement on Sunday. “More than 600 miles of lines were proactively de-energized, and before power is turned back on, our crews will need to visually inspect the lines to ensure it is safe to do so. Xcel Energy has more than 400 crew members working to restore power quickly and safely.”

    As of Monday, for many, power had still not been restored.  

    On Sunday morning, the city had 68 traffic signals not working — “the vast majority due to grid shutoffs by Xcel,” explained Department of Transportation and Infrastructure spokesperson Nancy Kuhn, on Monday afternoon. “By early this morning, there were outages at only four locations, so those were all coming back on.” 

    A traffic signal at Colfax Avenue and Ogden Street was so damaged it needs to be replaced.

    Kuhn’s advice for those who encounter a downed power line: “Stay clear of downed lines and report them immediately to Xcel Energy at 1-800-895-1999. If a power line is in contact with a tree or any other object, stay away and call 911 immediately.”

    And people did call.

    Over the weekend, Denver Fire Department was trying to keep up with the demand.

    “We saw a number of calls for reports of downed power lines and calls for broken windows or flying debris,” said Denver Fire Captain J.D. Chism. 

    The Tava Waters Apartments, at Mississippi and Valentia, caught fire, and partially collapsed. 

    Putting out the flames was more challenging because of the wind, Chism explained.

    Many Denverites are cleaning up branches, fallen trees and trash — or wondering how to do so.

    Property owners are tasked with cleaning up debris that falls on private property and is blocking the public right of way. The city is asking people not to put the debris on public land. Denver Forestry has a list of tree-care contractors who can help out. 

    “If emergency removal of a fallen tree or tree branch is needed to clear a street, call 311 to report the specific address of the location,” Kuhn wrote in a statement. “The city will evaluate and prioritize the removal of the obstruction, and when necessary, the city will remove the encumbrance, and the cost of the work will be billed to the responsible property owner.”

    And if you have extra tree branches, DOTI will collect them as part of its regular trash and compost services.

    There are a few rules to keep in mind. 

    “Branches must be no larger than 4 inches in diameter, and they must be cut into lengths of 4 feet or less, bundled and tied, and weigh no more than 50 pounds,” according to the city’s rules. “Customers may set out up to 10 bundles of branches on their large item pickup day.”

    In short: Break out the saw and have patience.

    In Lakewood, there’s a temporary tree limb drop-off site from now through Monday, April 15 at the city greenhouse, 9556 W. Yale Ave.

    “Residents must be able to unload the limbs without assistance. The limb drop-off site is for storm damage only; yard debris will not be accepted,” the city said in announcing the site.

    A few schools are still waiting for answers, too.

    Monday, students at John F. Kennedy High School, Rocky Mountain Prep Ruby Hill Elementary, and Traylor Academy Elementary stayed home, since power had not been restored in their areas. 

    Would those students be back in class on Tuesday? 

    “We don’t know yet,” DPS spokesperson Scott Pribble told Denverite. “ There is no power to the schools. They are part of the power outage that Xcel Energy is dealing with.”

    As of Monday afternoon, Xcel had no timeline for when those schools’ power would be restored. 

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  • The Worst Pediatric-Care Crisis in Decades

    The Worst Pediatric-Care Crisis in Decades

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    At the height of the coronavirus pandemic, as lines of ambulances roared down the streets and freezer vans packed into parking lots, the pediatric emergency department at Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, was quiet.

    It was an eerie juxtaposition, says Chris Woodward, a pediatric-emergency-medicine specialist at the hospital, given what was happening just a few doors down. While adult emergency departments were being inundated, his team was so low on work that he worried positions might be cut. A small proportion of kids were getting very sick with COVID-19—some still are—but most weren’t. And due to school closures and scrupulous hygiene, they weren’t really catching other infections—flu, RSV, and the like—that might have sent them to the hospital in pre-pandemic years. Woodward and his colleagues couldn’t help but wonder if the brunt of the crisis had skipped them by. “It was, like, the least patients I saw in my career,” he told me.

    That is no longer the case.

    Across the country, children have for weeks been slammed with a massive, early wave of viral infections—driven largely by RSV, but also flu, rhinovirus, enterovirus, and SARS-CoV-2. Many emergency departments and intensive-care units are now at or past capacity, and resorting to extreme measures. At Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, in Maryland, staff has pitched a tent outside the emergency department to accommodate overflow; Connecticut Children’s Hospital mulled calling in the National Guard. It’s already the largest surge of infectious illnesses that some pediatricians have seen in their decades-long careers, and many worry that the worst is yet to come. “It is a crisis,” Sapna Kudchadkar, a pediatric-intensive-care specialist and anesthesiologist at Johns Hopkins, told me. “It’s bananas; it’s been full to the gills since September,” says Melissa J. Sacco, a pediatric-intensive-care specialist at UVA Health. “Every night I turn away a patient, or tell the emergency department they have to have a PICU-level kid there for the foreseeable future.”

    I asked Chris Carroll, a pediatric-intensive-care specialist at Connecticut Children’s, how bad things were on a scale of 1 to 10. “Can I use a Spinal Tap reference?” he asked me back. “This is our 2020. This is as bad as it gets.”

    The autumn crush, experts told me, is fueled by dual factors: the disappearance of COVID mitigations and low population immunity. For much of the pandemic, some combination of masking, distancing, remote learning, and other tactics tamped down on the transmission of nearly all the respiratory viruses that normally come knocking during the colder months. This fall, though, as kids have flocked back into day cares and classrooms with almost no precautions in place, those microbes have made a catastrophic comeback. Rhinovirus and enterovirus were two of the first to overrun hospitals late this summer; now they’re being joined by RSV, all while SARS-CoV-2 remains in play. Also on the horizon is flu, which has begun to pick up in the South and the mid-Atlantic, triggering school closures or switches to remote learning. During the summer of 2021, when Delta swept across the nation, “we thought that was busy,” Woodward said. “We were wrong.”

    Children, on the whole, are more susceptible to these microbes than they have been in years. Infants already have a rough time with viruses like RSV: The virus infiltrates the airways, causing them to swell and flood with mucus that their tiny lungs may struggle to expel. “It’s almost like breathing through a straw,” says Marietta Vazquez, a pediatric-infectious-disease specialist at Yale. The more narrow and clogged the tubes get, “the less room you have to move air in and out.” Immunity accumulated from prior exposures can blunt that severity. But with the pandemic’s great viral vanishing, kids missed out on early encounters that would have trained up their bodies’ defensive cavalry. Hospitals are now caring for their usual RSV cohort—infants—as well as toddlers, many of whom are sicker than expected. Infections that might, in other years, have produced a trifling cold are progressing to pneumonia severe enough to require respiratory support. “The kids are just not handling it well,” says Stacy Williams, a PICU nurse at UVA Health.

    Coinfections, too, have always posed a threat—but they’ve grown more common with SARS-CoV-2 in the mix. “There’s just one more virus they’re susceptible to,” Vazquez told me. Each additional bug can burden a child “with a bigger hill to climb, in terms of recovery,” says Shelby Lighton, a nurse at UVA Health. Some patients are leaving the hospital healthy, only to come right back. There are kids who “have had four respiratory viral illnesses since the start of September,” Woodward told me.

    Pediatric care capacity in many parts of the country actually shrank after COVID hit, Sallie Permar, a pediatrician at NewYork-Presbyterian and Weill Cornell Medicine, whose hospital was among those that cut beds from its PICU, told me. A mass exodus of health-care workers—nurses in particular—has also left the system ill-equipped to meet the fresh wave of demand. At UVA Health, the pediatric ICU is operating with maybe two-thirds of the core staff it needs, Williams said. Many hospitals have been trying to call in reinforcements from inside and outside their institutions. But “you can’t just train a bunch of people quickly to take care of a two-month-old,” Kudchadkar said. To make do, some hospitals are doubling up patients in rooms; others have diverted parts of other care units to pediatrics, or are sending specialists across buildings to stabilize children who can’t get a bed in the ICU. In Baton Rouge, Woodward is regularly visiting the patients who have just been admitted to the hospital and are still being held in the emergency department, trying to figure out who’s healthy enough to go home so more space can be cleared. His emergency department used to take in, on average, about 130 patients a day; lately, that number has been closer to 250. “They can’t stay,” he told me. “We need this room for somebody else.”

    Experts are also grappling with how to strike the right balance between raising awareness among caregivers and managing fears that may morph into overconcern. On the one hand, with all the talk of SARS-CoV-2 being “mild” in kids, some parents might ignore the signs of RSV, which can initially resemble those of COVID, then get much more serious, says Ashley Joffrion, a respiratory therapist at Baton Rouge General Medical Center. On the other hand, if families swamp already overstretched hospitals with illnesses that are truly mild enough to resolve at home, the system could fracture even further. “We definitely don’t want parents bringing kids in for every cold,” Williams told me. The key signs of severe respiratory sickness in children include wheezing, grunting, rapid or labored breaths, trouble drinking or swallowing, and bluing of the lips or fingernails. When in doubt, experts told me, parents should call their pediatrician for an assist.

    With winter still ahead, the situation could take an even darker turn, especially as flu rates climb, and new SARS-CoV-2 subvariants loom. In most years, the chilly viral churn doesn’t abate until late winter, which means hospitals may be only at the start of a grueling few months. And still-spotty uptake of COVID vaccines among little kids, coupled with a recent dip in flu-shot uptake and the widespread abandonment of infection-prevention measures, could make things even worse, says Abdallah Dalabih, a pediatric-intensive-care specialist at Arkansas Children’s.

    The spike in respiratory illness marks a jarring departure from a comforting narrative that’s dominated the intersection of infectious disease and little children’s health for nearly three years. When it comes to respiratory viruses, little children have always been a vulnerable group. This fall may force Americans to reset their expectations around young people’s resilience and recall, Lighton told me, “just how bad a ‘common cold’ can get.”

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    Katherine J. Wu

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