School Closings And Delays Loom for Maryland Monday as Eastern Shore Faces Highest Vulnerability

School Closings And Delays Loom for Maryland Monday as Eastern Shore Faces Highest Vulnerability

Who feels the impact first: students and school operations across Maryland. With another winter storm forecast for Sunday night into Monday morning, school closings and delays are already being put in motion. Several districts will move classrooms online Monday, and officials are treating Sunday as an Alert Day while snowfall is expected to continue through Monday morning. The Eastern Shore is singled out as particularly vulnerable along the storm track.

School Closings And Delays: which districts and what changes to expect

Here's the part that matters: some Maryland systems will not offer in-person instruction on Monday and will instead use virtual learning. Baltimore City Public Schools, Baltimore County Public Schools and Anne Arundel County Public Schools are listed as closed with virtual learning planned for Monday. More districts are preparing for possible delays or closures as the system moves through the forecast window.

What’s easy to miss is that the shift to virtual learning is already baked into plans for multiple large systems, signaling a broader operational move rather than last-minute cancellations.

Storm timing, snowfall expectations and the alert schedule

  • Alert Day: Sunday is designated as an Alert Day because parts of Maryland may see accumulating snow or a wintry mix.
  • Storm timing: the system is expected to arrive Sunday night and continue into Monday morning.
  • Snow totals: nearly 3 to 5 inches of snow is expected to fall across the region on Sunday, with snowfall continuing through Monday morning.

The combination of an Alert Day, overnight timing and continuing morning snowframes is shaping district decisions now; many schools are preparing for closures and delays rather than waiting to react. The Eastern Shore is among the areas most vulnerable along the storm track, a detail that helps explain why districts there and in nearby regions are taking early action.

Districts that have announced closures with virtual learning are moving to limit disruption to instruction while avoiding in-person travel in overnight and early-morning conditions. The approach shows a preference for continuity through remote instruction where possible.

Micro timeline: Sunday — Alert Day with accumulating snow or a mix; Sunday night — storm moves in; Monday morning — snowfall continues, closures and delays in effect. This sequence is driving the operational decisions being shared now.

The real question now is how long the morning snowfall will disrupt travel and whether additional districts will follow with full closures or delayed openings. Recent updates indicate the situation may evolve as the storm progresses overnight and into Monday morning; details could change.

For families and students in affected districts, the immediate change is the shift from in-person to virtual instruction for Monday in the named systems. Other districts are preparing contingency plans and may announce delays or closures as conditions develop.

Reader note: check your local district's official channels for the latest status; school schedules and plans remain subject to change as the storm moves through the region.