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Justice Democrat
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Principal Matt Rogers with teacher Lindsay Treharne
When snow descended on Atlanta and it became too dangerous for kids to get home, E. Rivers Elementary School principal Matt Rogers threw his students the sleepover of a lifetime.

[...]

After movies and pizza, he used tablecloths and even his own dress coat as blankets to cover slumbering students. Teachers hugged and comforted the little ones who were scared — and if they were lucky, got a few minutes' sleep on their own classroom floors.

Many students were stuck at school Tuesday afternoon as the storm moved in, and by about 8 p.m., Rogers decided that it was safest for everyone to stay put. The school was one of several where students were stranded overnight due to a snow and ice storm that surprised and paralyzed the region.

Ninety-four students and 31 adults — mostly teachers along with a few bus drivers and parents — hunkered down for the night.

“Our beautiful little snow flurries at 12, 12:30 turned into a fast-moving snow incident and we ended up having a lot of our kids that are bus riders and car riders stuck here at school with us,” he said. “We had a snowcation. A little, mini snow vacation overnight.”

The kids watched “Free Willy” while munching popcorn, ate pizza for dinner in the cafeteria and had a paper airplane-making contest. After breakfast Wednesday morning, they did something Georgia kids don’t usually get to enjoy — a snowball fight.

“One of my students said, ‘Mr. Rogers, it’s like a party.’ Yeah, it’s like a big slumber party,” Rogers, 41, said Wednesday morning as 61 students were still at school.

“We’ve been having a good time,” said an exhausted Rogers, principal of the 670-student school for the last four-and-a-half years.

The kids spent the night on tumbling mats in the gym, using coats and even tablecloths as blankets. “I was using my dress coat,” Rogers said. “We were using anything and everything we can find.”

[...]

“My teachers are the rock stars of this whole event,” said E. Rivers Elementary Principal Matt Rogers, pictured here with teacher Lindsay Treharne, as they both spent the night at school with their students stranded by the snowstorm.

After dinner, the kids finished the movie and most fell asleep by 10 p.m. Rogers said. “By that time, kids were tired and they crashed,” he said.

School officials fielded phone calls from parents all evening, and let kids call home whenever they wanted to.

A few of the youngest students were upset, likely never having spent the night away from home before, Rogers said.

“We probably had about three to four kids that were crying, so we got them up here (in the office), and they talked to their parents,” Rogers said. Some of the kids’ teachers were at school, “so they felt safe.”

“We were hugging a lot of kids and letting them know that this was an adventure they would never forget,” said fifth grade teacher Lindsay Treharne, who manned the phones most of the night.

While the kids managed to get some sleep, most of the teachers and other adults did not.

“My teachers are the rock stars of this whole event,” Rogers said. “They’ve been answering phones. They have been entertaining the kids. They’ve been playing with the kids, putting blankets on the kids.

“Just anything and everything,” he said, “and most of them have not slept at all.”

In the morning, the youngsters had French toast sticks and fruit, and Rogers invited them to a snowball fight.

“They were excited,” he said. “They were anxious to get out in the snow.”

Treharne didn’t hesitate to spend the night at school, where seven of her students were stranded.

“With my kids I give them a sense of family all the time,” she said. “I wanted to make sure they were safe here.”

“It was just something you sign up for when you become a teacher,” said Treharne, 34, who slept for about 90 minutes Tuesday night on her classroom floor. “You’ll take care of your children whenever necessary.”

She praised Rogers as a great leader.

“He makes sure everyone is safe and accounted for,” she said. “He also make sure the kids are having fun. There was always a sense of fun, never a sense of urgency. It was always light and fun the whole time.”

Rogers said he would do it all again just for the experience.

“I thought last night was a very memorable, fun evening,” he said. “It was stressful but what it did was it pulled our community together. We made it a memorable event for our kids and staff and it turned out to be awesome.”
READ MORE: http://www.today.com/moms/shelter-s...-tears-kids-stuck-overnight-school-2D12018114

I love how they were able to turn what would have normally been a very scary situation into an excellent adventure. And just imagine how differently things might have turned out if they hadn't chosen to relax the typical school rules, such as no physical contact between students and teachers and no snowballs or paper airplanes. If my child were ever caught in a similar situation, I'd certainly hope his teacher would have the courage to give him a big hug without fear of reprisal.
 
how fun and kudos to those teachers......what a feel good story.Atlanta is lame for they got what? 5 inches of snow...pussies....but all in all a good time was had by all.cool
 
If you want to blame anyone blame the Governor. He decided it was all a tempest in a teapot and wouldn't allow the government workers to leave until it was really too late. As a result, the sand and salt trucks were late getting out on the roads and when they did they couldn't be too effective because the interstate and side roads were already becoming covered in stopped cars. When he let the government workers go then everybody else said "Oh Crap" we need to leave too, so everybody was leaving to go home at the same time and the crowded road just got more crowded. My son's job let them go around 11 when it first started and he was home by 2:30. ( 2 hours longer than usual) It was his opinion, too, that there were just too many people trying to get home at the same time, and then one car gets in a accident or slides sideways of the road and then the ones behind it just pile up.

Governor was on the news yesterday saying it was the Weather Services fault because they supplied him with faulty information. He apologized but then turned around and said that he didn't think he had anything to apologize for. He's our Governor and he needs to take responsibility whether he thinks he's responsible or not, he's in charge.
 
too dangerous for kids to get home
Really? I know I'm a Yankee and a couple inches of snow is nothing to me but Jesus Christ, walk, and I promise you can survive driving in a couple of inches of snow, I do it quite regularly in the winter which up here is generally from October until May.
 
Really? I know I'm a Yankee and a couple inches of snow is nothing to me but Jesus Christ, walk, and I promise you can survive driving in a couple of inches of snow, I do it quite regularly in the winter which up here is generally from October until May.
For people with zero experience driving in snowy or icy conditions, a few inches is worse than a foot. A foot will keep them inside, but they'll try to drive in "just a little" with absolutely no idea of how the physics have changed. They don't have any idea how to compensate, and it rarely occurs to them that compensation for loss of friction is even necessary.

As a Texan who spent the last few years in Colorado and then moved to the East Coast, I can appreciate how a first-time snow-driver feels, and how overconfidence kills people on the roads. I applaud this Atlanta school for keeping the kids overnight instead of possibly endangering them by putting them on the road in what, to an Atlantan, amounts to very hazardous conditions.
 
It wasn't the snow as much as it was the inches thick black ice under the snow. We all got a day and a half of sleet. Look, I lived in Buffalo for several years; I know how to drive in snow...it was the ice under it that scared the shit outta me. And how can you be prepared for something that happens maybe every 20 years? I defend the South in all things except racism!

And don't give me any Yankee sass either!
 
you tell it Grrrrrl!!! @carolinablue, we are 65 miles south of Atlanta, and the worst of it was supposed to come our way and basically skip right over Atlanta so they didn't prepare like the should have. We got around 4 inches and 2 of our main roads (basically the roads most used by ambulances to and from the main hospitals around here) were cleared fairly quickly, they told the rest of us to stay at home, schools had already been canceled for 3 days. That snowstorm was almost a once on a lifetime happening around here. I'm 55 and this is probably only the third time we were iced and snowed in like this. But the worst one was in the mid 80's and it was mainly ice that was nearly a foot deep in places like snowdrifts. So we get excited! :shrug:
 
But if it snowed like that here in north Florida, we'd be screwed. We don't have salt trucks.
But... the billies here are pretty resourceful.
 
The Dallas area got up to 24" (not a typo!) during snowpocalypse 2010, and I don't think it shut down anything but me. 2013's icemaggedon of a mere inch or so thickness saw trucks stuck on I20 for a week. The ice is worse because you can't count on having any traction at all. Here's a photo for anyone who doesn't think it ever snows in Dallas. Yeah, it only happens every 20 years or so.
 
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