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My niece is just wondering. She lives in Reno if that makes a difference....

2007-02-26 13:52:54 · 14 answers · asked by Cali_forever! 2 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

14 answers

I have no clue I've lived in FL most of my life.

2007-02-26 13:55:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I live in Tahoe which is about 30-40 minutes from Reno and I don't know if they actually have snow days. I don't think your neice has to worry about going to school tomorrow because cities typically shut down after a foot and a half or two feet of snow. Here in Tahoe we've received up to four feet in the last three days and it's still dumping. In my old hometown in Colorado there was no such thing as a snow day. It could dump five feet overnight and you still had to get to school unless the busses didn't start. That was the only way there wouldn't be any school. Your neice should be pumped, though. I don't think she'll have school for the next day or two.

2007-02-26 21:58:02 · answer #2 · answered by BRAINS! 5 · 1 0

Every state and city is different. I live in Colorado (up in the mountains).There has to be 3 feet of snow on the ground before they close school. Some states that get less snow than us will close school with just 6 inches of snow. It just depends on your cities school rules.

2007-02-26 21:57:51 · answer #3 · answered by kim_in_craig 7 · 1 0

We live in Michigan and the superintendents of the various school districts will go out during the night and drive the roads. If they feel that it would be dangerous for the busses to get through (a lot of our school district is out in country roads), they will cancel school.

So, it all depends on the school district. In some locations, if there is ANY snow, they cancel school. Here, it has to be difficult for school busses to drive safely.

2007-02-26 22:56:01 · answer #4 · answered by Searcher 7 · 0 0

100

2007-02-26 21:55:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It doesn't really depend on the snow itself, but instead how icy and unsafe the roads are. Of course if you get 100 inches or something outrageous like that, then you could quite possibly be off for school.

2007-02-26 21:56:52 · answer #6 · answered by Suzie-Q 1 · 1 0

Where I live in Texas, having snow in the forecast is enough for a snow day. It doesn't actually have to fall.

2007-02-26 21:56:42 · answer #7 · answered by laura palmer 5 · 1 0

Apparently it doesnt matter. Its just like how NY had 100+ inches of snow... but yet we still have a global warming problem.. How the f*ck does that happen??

2007-02-26 22:01:20 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

6 feet

2007-02-26 21:54:41 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Depends. I used to live in Ohio, and we walked to school during blizzards (seriously). I live in the south now, and we will have a "weather day" for ice patches on the roads.

2007-02-26 22:05:56 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We never get a snow day in Sydney

2007-02-26 21:57:15 · answer #11 · answered by Angel Girl 7 · 0 0

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