Nearly one million students in New York City public schools may be required to attend classes online on Monday as city officials prepare for a powerful winter storm, NYC Mayor Mamdani said Friday, even though he has the authority to restore traditional snow days eliminated by prior administrations.
With forecasts warning of a potentially historic snowfall, city leaders signaled that in-person classes are unlikely early next week, leaving students to expect either remote instruction or a full school day inside classrooms — but not a weather-related day off.
“I know to the disappointment of any student that’s watching this right now, Monday is either going to be a remote learning day or it’s going to be an in-person school day,” Mamdani said on NY1 on Friday.
“It’s not going to be a traditional snow day. That is a determination we’ve made.”
City officials said a final decision on whether students should physically attend school or log in from home will be announced by noon on Sunday.
“The reason that we’re waiting until then is to see what is the extent of the snowfall we’re talking about, because you know as well as I do, the range is a pretty big range,” Hizzoner said.
While mayors can declare a snow day, schools are still required to meet the state mandate of 180 instructional days each year. Over the past decade, several holidays have been added to the academic calendar, limiting flexibility.
During the Eric Adams administration, education officials ended weather-related closures altogether, opting instead for remote learning when conditions made travel unsafe.
It remained unclear whether the Department of Education could simply extend the school year to make up lost days, as many districts do, or whether contractual obligations with the teachers’ union restrict that option.
Meteorologists warned that the fast-moving storm could bring as much as 18 inches of snow by Monday, along with frigid temperatures and widespread travel disruptions across the region.
As Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a statewide emergency on Friday, Mamdani said the city was fully mobilized for the first major storm of his tenure, referring to the response effort as “Blade Runner 2.0.”
“The forecasts don’t always get it right, but what is being predicted right now, whether it’s a foot of snow or even a little bit more, would be one of the biggest snowfalls that our city has seen in years,” he said during a weather briefing.
“Either late tomorrow evening or early Sunday morning, we are going to see snow start to begin to fall across our city. It will fall and fall and then fall some more.”
Sanitation crews began treating highways and major roadways early Friday, and the city has stockpiled approximately 700 million pounds of salt ahead of the storm, Mamdani said.
More than 2,000 sanitation workers were scheduled to begin 12-hour shifts starting Saturday to keep streets passable around the clock.
In addition, 2,200 snowplows are positioned throughout the city and will be deployed once snowfall reaches two inches.
“Tomorrow, as the storm nears, we’re going to see thousands of DSNY collection trucks and agency partners transformed into the nation’s largest snow fighting operation,” Mamdani said.
Hizzoner urged residents to avoid unnecessary travel and remain indoors as conditions worsen.
“I want to encourage New Yorkers to do their parts to stay safe this weekend. That is why we are issuing a hazardous travel advisory for Sunday and for Monday,” he said.
“I want to encourage New Yorkers to do something that we don’t often have the luxury of doing, which is take a breath and stay home, stay indoors, stay off the roads, watch the snow come down, watch the worst possible reality TV show you can find.”
Snow is expected to begin early Sunday and continue through Monday.
If totals reach at least 12 inches, it would mark the city’s heaviest snowfall since February 2021, when 16.8 inches accumulated in Central Park over two days.
“We’re expecting more snow than they were talking about even 24 hours ago. So pay attention to these totals,” Hochul said.
“Up to a foot of snow downstate could be paralyzing in a dense area like New York City. They have not seen snow totals like this in years.”
The governor said she has been in regular contact with Mamdani as he prepares for his first major blizzard as mayor.
“I let him know that we have a governor who’s from Buffalo and if he wants any tips, to give me a call, and I gave him some of them and he’s ready to go,” she said.
“I think we’re ready for this. But when you get complacent, that’s when you get into trouble.”
{Matzav.com}