Millions of people in the northeastern United States had to deal with getting to US school and work on Tuesday after a severe storm that blanketed the area with snow, canceled flights, interrupted transit, and knocked down power lines. In some places, the storm set records.
Even though the snow went north on Tuesday and some sections of the region saw sunlight, the National Weather Service warned that another storm was on the way from the Great Lakes. However, it is not expected to be as bad as the first one.
Many big school districts stayed closed, such those in Boston and Hartford, Connecticut. But Mayor Zohran Mamdani said that more than 900,000 pupils in New York City, which has the biggest public school system in the country, enjoyed a regular day. He told them to throw snowballs at him for making that decision.
Many children and their caregivers seemed willing to take the mayor up on that offer, as they climbed over huge piles of snow and avoided salt spreaders during the morning drop-off.We are walking on thin ice right now. Danielle Obloj, the mother of a fifth grader in Brooklyn, remarked, “One more day would have been fine. They should never have let these kids go back to school.
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