'To Cancel or Not to Cancel,' Calling A Snow Day in Belmont
The thought process behind making the call to cancel school due to wind or snow.
"Snow day." Those two words on a typical school week elicit hosannas from grateful pupils but also starts a mad scramble by parents who need to dance around finding childcare and babysitters.
Belmont Superintendent Dr. Thomas Kingston was asked several times this past week how he determines making the call to cancel school due to weather decision including his determination to hold off on opening schools this Monday, two days after the blizzard ended in Belmont.
Kingston's wrote how he makes those decisions on his blog:
"Whether or not to cancel school is a complex decision contingent on many factors. There are some superintendents who dread having to make the school/no school decision more than any other decisions they have to make (although, admittedly, I’m not one of them). The ultimate decision is never one made alone or without considerable help. Certainly, superintendents consult with counterparts in neighboring districts. However, the more important consultation is with other officers of the Town.
Last fall, for example, in anticipation of Hurricane Sandy, I joined all the Town department heads, the Town Administrator, and public safety officials for ongoing meetings under the Town Emergency Management Director’s, Leo Saidneway’s, chairmanship. We were apprised of the preparations for Hurricane Sandy, the needs of the various town departments, advice from the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency, predictions from NOAA’s Taunton center, and the directives from the Governor’s office. I canceled school for two days because trees and limbs were down throughout the town. While the Belmont Emergency Management team never directs me what to do, I’d be foolish to disregard their best advice. Even then, some questioned why we did not resume school by the second day.
For this current February 2013 blizzard, I’ve listened to what my Town colleagues have had to say and, again, had access to the best intelligence by means of (Belmont's Emergency Management's) Leo Saidneway’s good office. Nonetheless, after using my tracked snowblower to extricate my car from my house in Arlington Heights, I and my wife Sue drove Sunday afternoon through much of Belmont to discover how impacted the side streets and sidewalks were. DPW informed me that it would be impossible to clear all the sidewalks they clean before late afternoon Monday. The call to cancel was actually a fairly easy one to make, but one made only after consulting with the school department’s building and grounds crew and with the Town Administrator.
I always state publicly early in a school year that if the weather is bad and school is nonetheless in session, parents always have a right to keep their students at home. More often the complaints I receive are from stressed parents who need child care and become upset when they only have a few hours notice that schools are canceled. Important to note is that the majority of Belmont school personnel do not live in the town; and some come to work from considerable distances. For those reasons, I try to make a firm decision as soon as possible the afternoon or evening before so that our robo-calls and notices get to people with as much forewarning as possible. Ultimately, the decision to go or stay depends upon my best informed judgment about protecting the safety of our students and teachers. It is always a decision never guaranteed to please everyone."
Joe
10:27 am on Thursday, February 14, 2013
Interesting, thanks for the explanation.
Mike
2:14 pm on Thursday, February 14, 2013
Does the Fire Department still sound whistles (2-2-2-2) at 7:15 AM to signify a school cancellation?
Joe
3:13 pm on Thursday, February 14, 2013
@Mike, I don't believe they still do that but I can remember when they did, that was one of the only ways we knew that school was called off for that day. I guess with today's technology and many people needing to know info instantly they have stopped the fire dept whistles
Mike
8:07 pm on Thursday, February 14, 2013
Too bad. I'm sure you remember the feeling: laying in bed waiting to hear those blasts, counting them out and them rolling over and going back to sleep. Come to think of it, that building isn't a fire station anymore...
Joe
8:36 am on Friday, February 15, 2013
Maybe that's why the bells stopped, can't ring them from a condo, although it looks like the bells are still there since they didn't knock the building down. Too bad they didn't save the church across the street and just build inside as they've done to churches in other towns. And yes, I do remember the feeling of lying in bed and hearing the "no school" bells. If only we had these bells now that we have work...
John Bowe
8:59 am on Saturday, February 16, 2013
Anyone recall the wicked nasty mid-day Dec snowstorm a few years ago? My kids had a very hard time getting home from school, a normally 10 min walk. Buses were stranded trying to mount Belmont Hill, etc. My company's CEO told us all to go home at lunchtime. It seems like Belmont schools have been a bit more respectful of dire forecasts since. I think people often forget that in addition to 4000 kids, the superintendent is responsible for the safety of 400 staff members.
I don't recall Belmont's fire dept doing that in my 17 years here. But I do remember hearing Arlington's, both when I lived there and the ~2 miles to my house here in Bemont. I wasn't even a kid and that thrilled me.
Mike
12:04 pm on Saturday, February 16, 2013
In the 60's, the three fire stations had bright red horns attached to the outsides of the buildings. Usually, there was a long blast every Saturday at Noon. On snow days, the School Superintendent, John McGrath, would call the Fire Alarm Office with the cancellation notice. Wisely, the dispatcher would call Dr. McGrath right back to confirm the authenticity of the message. Then the special signal would sound at 7:15.