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Tag: Triangle school closings

  • Triangle school closings & delays: What Wake, JoCo, Chapel Hill will do Tuesday

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    Triangle universities and school districts are beginning to announce their plans for Tuesday following the weekend snowstorm.

    The weekend storm brought enough snow to the Triangle to cause schools and universities to close on Monday or switch to online classes or remote learning. The National Weather Service is warning that remaining snow, water and slush will freeze solid through Tuesday morning and make travel conditions hazardous.

    Some school districts have used up — or are close to — using up the five days of remote learning allowed under state law for emergencies.

    Bookmark this story and check back — it will be updated as additional closings are announced.

    Here’s what schools have announced so far for Tuesday

    K-12 school districts

    • Chapel Hill-Carrboro (updated 2:30 p.m. Monday): Tuesday will be the district’s 4th out of five allowed remote learning days. Middle school and high school students will log in online to receive live instruction from teachers. Elementary school students will work on their own using assignments provided by their teachers.
    • Chatham County: No announcement about Tuesday school plans yet.
    • Durham Public Schools: No announcement about Tuesday school plans yet.
    • Johnston County (updated 2 p.m. Monday): Schools will be closed Tuesday for a remote learning day. All extracurricular activities have been canceled.
    • Orange County: No announcement about Tuesday school plans yet.
    • Wake County (updated 3:30 p.m. Monday): Schools will use remote instruction on Tuesday due to continued icy conditions on some side roads and campuses.

    Universities

    • UNC-Chapel Hill: No announcement about Tuesday classes yet.
    • NC State: No announcement about Tuesday classes yet.
    • Duke University: The university has previously said that classes will be held as scheduled Tuesday.
    • NC Central University: No announcement about Tuesday classes yet.

    .

    This story was originally published February 2, 2026 at 3:19 PM.

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    T. Keung Hui

    The News & Observer

    T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.

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  • School closings and delays: When Triangle districts expect to make decisions

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    Snow falls on Wake County Public School busses parked on Capital Boulevard in Raleigh on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025.

    Snow falls on Wake County Public School busses parked on Capital Boulevard in Raleigh on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2025.

    tlong@newsobserver.com

    Here’s how Triangle school districts say they’ll make decisions about delays, closing, switching to remote learning or early releases if a band of winter weather arrives over the weekend as expected.

    Bookmark this story and check back — it will be updated as closings are announced.

    Schools are expected to make decisions about weekend athletic and extracurricular activities as well as classes on Monday. A common theme is that the entire school district is considered unsafe if road conditions are unsafe in any part of the district. Different parts of Wake County can have dramatically different weather.

    Schools generally try to announce decisions so that families and school employees know the night before. But sometimes the decision can be made as late as 5:15 a.m., depending on overnight changes.

    Chapel Hill-Carrboro

    The superintendent makes a decision after receiving a recommendation from the district’s Division of Operations, which takes into account factors including the weather forecast, current and future road conditions, the safety of school grounds, power outages and internet access. The decision is communicated through the district website and its mass notification system (robocall, email, text).

    Chatham County

    District leaders say they make a decision after obtaining information and recommendations from experts, consulting with weather forecasters and safety personnel, and driving designated bus routes thoroughly throughout the county. The decision is communicated through phone calls, emails and text messaging; district and school websites; the Chatham County Schools NC app; television news outlets; and the district’s Facebook and X accounts.

    Durham Public Schools

    The district uses National Weather Service updates, local emergency management alerts, on-the-ground assessments of conditions and consultations with law enforcement and public safety officials to make decisions. Notification is made on the district’s website, the My DPS app, social media, automated phone calls and texts and local media partners.

    Johnston County

    The district’s Emergency Team works with local and state emergency and safety officials, local law enforcement agencies, and government officials to develop a course of action during inclement weather events. Announcements are shared with families via ConnectEd, the district website, school websites, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and local radio and television stations.

    Orange County

    The district’s Inclement Weather Team makes a recommendation after assessing the readiness of schools and facilities, monitoring conditions and forecasts before weather events, consulting with neighboring districts and driving all bus routes. Families are notified by phone call, email and text; push notification in Parent Portal; district and school websites; district social media; and news media.

    Wake County

    Decisions to adjust school schedules will be made after consulting the National Weather Service, local weather forecasters, and area law enforcement. The district uses district and school websites, emails, texts and phone calls to let families know about schedule changes.

    Brooke Cain and Tammy Grubb contributed to this report.

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    T. Keung Hui

    The News & Observer

    T. Keung Hui has covered K-12 education for the News & Observer since 1999, helping parents, students, school employees and the community understand the vital role education plays in North Carolina. His primary focus is Wake County, but he also covers statewide education issues.

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    T. Keung Hui

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