Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Oregon Schools Take To Social Media When Making Snow Day Decisions

<p>Children take to a snowy street next to Northeast Portland's Sabin School on a snow day, Feb. 21, 2018.</p>

Rob Manning

Children take to a snowy street next to Northeast Portland's Sabin School on a snow day, Feb. 21, 2018.

Decisions on snow days Thursday varied from district to district, but the common theme across western Oregon schools was their use of social media.

Officials in the Salem-Keizer School District tweeted out video clips of their middle-of-the-night test drive of road conditions. The dark dashcam footage showed wet streets and snowy banks.

By Thursday afternoon, that video had nearly 3,500 views — not bad for a Twitter account with fewer than 5,600 followers.

The driving video drew a handful of responses, including several directed at district officials: "Two hour delay?? That looks unsafe!"

And an apparent student saying, "When making your decision, just remember about all the high school students that drive to school and have bad tires like myself. I don’t want to skid across the road just trying to get my education."

Salem-Keizer stayed open Thursday.

But snow day decisions were all over the map, with nearly every district in Multnomah County deciding to close. That included the David Douglas School District, where a similar evaluation was conducted in the pre-dawn hours Thursday.

A David Douglas spokesman said officials had to predict at 5 a.m. what conditions would be more than two hours later, when more than 3,000 students would be headed to the state's largest high school.

Like Salem-Keizer, David Douglas officials said they have also stepped up their use of social media, seeing some of the highest activity on their Twitter and Facebook accounts when snow might close school. They're trying to stay in touch with parents and students at those times, too — sometimes proactively, like this tweet sent out early Tuesday, as storms were threatening the region:

Portland Public Schools was the only school district in Multnomah County to open school Thursday, though students were told to arrive two hours later than usual. PPS spokesman Dave Northfield said top leaders had the same decision to make as David Douglas, though local conditions were slightly different, as were school schedules.

Copyright 2018 Oregon Public Broadcasting