Schools

School Snow Days Likely Greater This Year

A weak El Nino could bring larger snowfall amounts to Connecticut this year.

 

Back to school is looming with three weeks from today on Aug. 29, but during the dog days of summer, probably few people are thinking about the potential for school snow days this year.

But weather folks do and so do the officials who set their annual school calendars each year. In Connecticut, public schools are required to have at least 180 instructional days each academic year and most districts include in their schedules several extra days in the event school has to be canceled because of snow.

Find out what's happening in North Branfordwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

are scheduled to head back on Wednesday, Aug. 29 with a tentative last day scheduled for Monday, June 17. The district still has week-long vacation weeks in February (Feb. 18-22, 2013) and April (April 15-19, 2013). Full school calendar attached.

With the mild winter of 2011-2012, which saw low snowfall amounts across the state, few districts canceled school because of snow.

Find out what's happening in North Branfordwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

They probably will this year, meteorologists say.

Forecasters with AccuWeather.com are projecting a weak to moderate El Niño will begin to dominate weather patterns in the Northeast by late in the summer. A weak El Niño, warm tropical air masses that blow west to east, brings with it greater snowfalls in the winter.

If you’re a kid hoping for a school snow day, a weak El Niño is the answer to your prayers.

"Historically, both strong La Niñas and weak El Niños have produced higher-than-average snowfall in the Northeastern U.S.," said Jack Boston, a senior meteorologist with AccuWeather.com.

While there was little snowfall in the state last winter, Connecticut still saw enough disruptive weather to complicate school schedules during the academic year.

First, there was , which hit in late August last year, cutting power to about 800,000 across the state and , some by nearly a week.

Then, a that hit around Halloween again cut power to hundreds of thousands in Connecticut and forced school districts to close.  


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here