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Tag: snow day

  • 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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    Nick Sullivan

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  • UNC professor who studied online learning offers advice for how to make the most of it

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    Once again, many students in the Triangle area are learning remotely due to winter weather.

    WRAL Investigates spoke with Sophie McKoy, who is a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and spent time researching ways to maximize remote learning. She also owns Mindspire Tutoring and Test Prep, which conducts both in-person and virtual sessions.

    McKoy said engagement is the key to successful online learning, and that teachers and students should be doing everything possible to facilitate conversations and discussions about the material. She said that while some teachers typically shy away from allowing students to use the chat function during virtual class, they should reconsider that approach.

    “The intimidation barrier of participating in a typed chat is way lower than having to raise your hand in front of a group,” she explained. “We’ve really found that students were comfortable chatting, that’s like what they do in their day-to-day interactions socially, and that was a really natural way for them to start engaging with the material.”

    Closings and delays: Click or tap here

    “For teachers, try and give students as many opportunities to talk in small group with other students as you can,” she continued. “And I think, students, don’t be afraid to create those opportunities for yourself even if they’re not a formal part … you’re watching something asynchronously or in live time, don’t be shy to talk to your classmates about it.”

    McKoy said that, if possible, students should have a quiet, private space while they learn virtually.

    “For students, don’t be afraid to use the advantage that you’re given, [which] sis that you can take things at your own pace for that day, especially if you have an asynchronous class,” McKoy said. “So you get the best of both worlds. You get to digest material at your own pace, and you get to go back to the classroom in a few days and have thought about questions that you have.”

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  • Triangle roads: I-40 and major roads still covered in snow, crews working to clear routes

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    The snow moved out of our area on Sunday morning, leaving behind a thick blanket on roads across the state.

    WRAL meteorologist Chris Michaels said sunshine on Sunday could assist in some melting, but with bitterly cold temperatures in the forecast and accumulation totals greater than 4 inches throughout much of our area, much of the snow will stick to the roads into Monday and beyond. 

    Here’s a look at the latest snow totals.

    Triangle road conditions are treacherous

    In the Triangle and across our area at 6:30 a.m., snow was still covering most major roads. WRAL News crews in the WRAL Storm Tracker saw cars sliding both on interstates and side roads in Wake County on Sunday morning.

    As of 6:30 a.m., Interstate 40 in Raleigh was not plowed yet.

    Sgt. Marcus Bethea with the State Highway Patrol spoke to WRAL News at 7 a.m., saying crashes that State Highway Patrol responded to have increased from 750 to 995 statewide overnight.

    “This has become a very busy event,” Bethea said. “We are please urging people, please stay off the roads.”

    The Orange County Sheriff’s Office posted at 6 a.m. that “I-85 and I-40 are still covered in snow with one lane that is starting to open up on each of them.” Some major roads in Orange County, including Churton Street, Highway 70, and Highway 54 have been plowed.

    “All secondary roads are completely covered,” the sheriff’s office wrote. “Even if a plow has gone down the road, it is still covered and very slippery. On and off ramps to the interstate are the same.”

    The city of Durham also posted a reminder late Saturday, writing, “Road conditions are getting worse as snow continues to cover many streets. Our crews are working overnight to plow primary roads, bridges, busy intersections, and steep hills. Please keep a safe distance from plow trucks and never follow too closely. Use extreme caution if you must travel.”

    You can check out traffic cameras on WRAL.com.

    NCDOT asks drivers to stay home

    Not everyone has the option to stay home, but the state Department of Transportation urged drivers on Facebook Saturday night to do so if at all possible.

    “Y’all… We’re not trying to be like that, but…STAY HOME,” the NCDOT posted, reporting 750 crashes as of Saturday night. “That’s a lot of drivers not listening to the message the first time.”

    Staying home also allows road crews to clear the roads faster, although snow could linger on our roads for days to come, especially as temperature stay below average for early February.

    Before you hit the road

    Remember these safety tips.

    Prepare your car for dangerous winter weather

    Tips for driving in snow and ice

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  • ‘Denver’s gone a little soft’: We trudged through the snow to ask Denverites what they thought of the storm | Denverite

    ‘Denver’s gone a little soft’: We trudged through the snow to ask Denverites what they thought of the storm | Denverite

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    Editor’s note: The Denverite staff, like most of the city, was snowed in Thursday.

    As the inches piled up, I reached out to Kyle and Rebecca, from the warmth and comfort of my home office, and asked them to put on their boots, bundle up and head out to see how our neighbors in the city were faring.

    After all, this seemed like a big deal, right? School closures, travel delays and other cancellations were announced left and right all day. Folks had to be freaking out, right?

    Here’s what they heard from other Denverites. – Obed


    Rebecca here. When we’re talking snow, it’s important to know that the only way in and out of my apartment is up two flights of steep, outdoor stairs. I have faced snow on the steps before, but when Obed told me I had to leave my apartment and cover the storm I found for the first time that the snow piled so high it turned my staircase into a slide. 

    So I did what every responsible adult would do: I put on my snowsuit, grabbed a cardboard box and tried to slide down what I am unofficially calling Denver’s steepest sledding hill.

    It did not go well. I managed to avoid re-injuring any limbs, but I reached speeds only fit for ski slopes, used language not fit to print and earned myself some bruises. 

    Safely on the ground, I headed toward City Park to see how other Denverites were dealing with the snow.

    Bryan Wiggins shoveled his whole block near City Park. March 14, 2024.
    Rebecca Tauber/Denverite

    On Adams Street, Bryan Wiggins was out shoveling not just his house but the whole block.

    “Not everyone is easily able to do it, and a lot of other places here are small apartment buildings, it’s no one person’s responsibility, so it ends up not happening,” he said after catching his breath. “So just kind of a public safety thing. That’s what I was primed to do today, is get out here and shovel snow.”

    In City Park, Alexa Temme and Adam Illig were building a human-sized snow bear. Patience, they said, was the key to high-quality snowman building.

    Alexa Temme and Adam Illig admire their work in City Park. March 14, 2024.
    Rebecca Tauber/Denverite

    “The snow is perfect for making this incredible snow bear,” Temme said. “Getting the nose-rock in was quite a feat.”

    Snow-shoeing along the lake were Katharine Brenton, Nicole Malow and their dog Poppy. Brenton and Malow grew up in Denver and went to Manual High School. They insisted that back in their day, weather like this would not have called for a snow day.

    “I think Denver’s gone a little soft is what I’m trying to say,” Brenton said.

    Katharine Brenton, Nicole Malow and Poppy snowshoe in City Park. March 14, 2024.
    Rebecca Tauber/Denverite

    Across town, in Northeast Park Hill, Kyle took a trip to a liquor store.

    Kyle here. Meanwhile, I had been cozied up in my basement typing away for most of the morning, while everybody else in my family enjoyed a snow day. I finally took a break and had just sunk my teeth into a gargantuan turkey club when Obed told me to go find out what people were doing. 

    I finished chewing, put on my long johns, my lumberjack shirt, my winter coat and boots and headed to the door. 

    My partner and my kid were making a snow volcano outside with a ball track that had malfunctioned and came in grumbling just as I was getting ready to go out. For a moment, I considered interviewing them, and then I thought, “I’m pretty sure Obed would think I’m lazy and I like my job,” so I walked past them into the vast empty slush-scape of Northeast Park Hill.

    Just before the door closed, my partner warned me: “You might be overdressed.” I should have listened. I started walking through the slush. I was sweating before I made it to the end of the block.

    Several blocks later, I realized nobody was out and about in my immediate vicinity, so I went where I have stumbled to on many blizzardy nights: Vinny’s Liquors.

    Prince Gill mans the counter at Vinny’s Liquors in Northeast Park Hill. March 14, 2024.
    Kyle Harris/Denverite

    I explained to the salesman, Prince Gill, that I was not just a longtime customer, I was also a journalist. I asked him how the snow was affecting business.

    He said on Wednesday night, as the city shut down and newscasters warned Denverites about the coming snowstorm, the liquor store was packed with people. They bought cognac, brandy, Irish cream, whiskey and red wine. 

    “People like to stay warm,” Gill said. “They try to drink Irish liquor, like some Irish whiskey. They try to make those hot chocolates and stuff like that.”

    On Thursday morning, Gill left the house early to get to work. He had a little trouble navigating side streets, but once he got to the highway, it was a straight shot. 

    With temperatures hovering just over freezing, snow still falling and the streets and sidewalks flooded with standing water, on Thursday afternoon, most regulars were staying home.

    “I think most of the people called it a day off, and they’re just staying home, probably getting drunk,” he said. 

    Fontaine Swann stands outside in Northeast Park Hill on a cold day. March 14, 2024.
    Kyle Harris/Denverite

    One man who was out and about was Fontaine Swann, who’s lived in Denver since the late 1970s.

    He dropped by Vinny’s after a long day at work and was loving the snowy day.

    “I remember when the first snow hit, it used to be around Halloween, it wouldn’t melt until April,” Swann said. “This here, it’s nothing.”

    The biggest problem he sees with this snow is that there are a lot of drivers on the streets who don’t know what they’re doing and put everybody at risk. 

    “But this is beautiful,” he said. “It feels clean. It’s crisp and fresh. What can you complain about that? You’ve got to work? You work! So other than that, there ain’t nothing else to say bad.” 

    All the snow fear-mongering on the news was nothing more than an overblown hustle, as Swann saw it. 

    “Everybody’s like, ‘I’m going to get groceries next weekend,’” he said. Then the newscasters warn about the storm and make people panic, and they rush out to shop. “The grocery stores, they mark [prices] up. They know you’re on your way.”

    Sure, his car was falling apart under the weight of the snow. And drivers weren’t exactly safe. But at the end of the day, he was just enjoying what nature threw at him.

    “If you don’t like the weather in Colorado, leave,” Swann said. “It’ll change in five minutes anyway.”

    Emilee Gendel and Sarah Daniels stand outside Northeast Park Hill’s Dandy Lion Coffee, which closed early due to a snow day. March 14, 2024.
    Kyle Harris/Denverite

    I walked one door down, nearly impaling my head on a snowy branch, and planned to go into Dandy Lion Coffee for a lavender latte and interviews.

    But I was too late.

    Emilee Gendel and Sarah Daniels, workers at Dandy Lion Coffee, taped a sign to the door — “sorry, we closed early today! ❤️ love you, see you tomorrow” — bundled up, locked the building, and headed into the slush.

    Daniels drove to work this morning from Reunion. 

    “It was a fine drive,” she said. “It was a slushy drive, but not bad.” 

    Gendel stomped through the slush from her house to Dandy Lion in the morning and was getting ready to stomp back through slightly deeper puddles.

    Their day had been slow. The normally buzzing coffee shop and plant store had around 20 people crawl in all day long — the same amount that’s usually there at any given time.

    The few people who showed, sipped coffee, read books, and chatted.  

    “I love being here today, in the snow,” Gendel said. “It’s just very cozy.”

    “A cozy cafe,” said Daniels. “Yeah, you can’t ask for more than that.”

    All the doomsday predictions about the weather rang false to the Dandy Lion crew. The main reason they closed early was that their regular customers were holed up at home.

    As they looked at the weather, they were basically bored by what they saw. It was pretty, sure. But snowmageddon?

    “It’s coming down, but it looks normal,” said Gendel. “I feel like the weather people were exaggerating once again.”

    Northeast Park Hill’s Dandy Lion Coffee closed early due to a snow day. March 14, 2024.
    Kyle Harris/Denverite

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  • Best Boozy Drinks For When You Are Snow Bound

    Best Boozy Drinks For When You Are Snow Bound

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    As kids, nothing was better than school being closed for weather.  Snow days gave you the time to sleep in, goof, play outside and have fun.  As adults, there was a hint of thrill when there was as snow, you might front load stuff in the morning and then have a leisurely afternoon with a hearty meal and some good spirits.

    RELATED: 5 Morning Activities To Help You Feel Happier

    But Zoom and conference calls have changed snow days. Still, it seems like a snow day is a little permission to relax and goof off during the work week.  And here are the best boozy drinks for when you are snow bound.

    Ski Lift

    This twist on a classic is the perfect companion inside and out on a snow day!

    Ingredients

    • One pack of hot chocolate
    • Hot Milk
    • One shot of Schnapps or Frangelico
    • Whipped Cream
    • Coconut flakes

    Create

    Heat the milk and mix with the hot chocolate packet then stir in the spirits.  Add whipped cream and sprinkling with coconuts (like snow flakes) and drink up!

    Classic Hot Toddy

    Perfect for after playing outside or shoveling snow.  Best to drink in front of a fire or watching the cold weather from inside someplace warm.

    RELATED: People Who Use Weed Also Do More Of Another Fun Thing

    Ingredients

    • 2 fluid ounces boiling water
    • 1-2 ounces whiskey

    • 1 teaspoon honey

    • 2 whole cloves
    • 1 cinnamon stick (or a sprinkle of cinnamon)
    • A lemon slice

    Create

    Pour boiling water, whiskey, and honey into a cup. Add cloves, cinnamon, and lemon slice. Let mixture stand for 5 minutes so flavors can mingle, then sprinkle with a pinch of nutmeg before serving.

    Hot Butter Rum

    The perfect drink to shake off the chill and thinking of a warm, tropical vacation.  The perfect cocktail mixing the current weather and the hope of an island getaway.

    Ingredients

    • 1 teaspoon butter
    • 1 teaspoon brown sugar
    • 1 pinch ground cinnamon
    • 1 pinch ground nutmeg
    • 1 pinch ground allspice
    • 1 dash vanilla extract
    • 2 ounces rum (light rum is preferred)
    • 1 cup boiling water

    CREATE

    Place butter, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, and vanilla extract in the bottom of an Irish coffee glass. Pour in rum and hot water. Stir.

    The first slight of snow flakes, kick back and make one of these creations and let your body relax.

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    Sarah Johns

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