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Will a winter
storm cancel classes? Will a
winter storm cancel classes? Dial 962-SNOW to find out
When the snow starts piling up and driving becomes
treacherous, one of the first things that students, staff and
faculty start to wonder is whether the university will declare a
snow emergency and cancel classes.
St. Thomas this fall added an easy-to-remember
phone number to the various methods it uses to announce
snow-emergency information. Students, staff and faculty members can
now dial (651) 962-SNOW (on campus, dial 2-SNOW) to find out if the
university will close due to severe winter-weather conditions.
The decision to close the university will be made
by 6 a.m., if at all possible. When the university is officially
closed, all classes are canceled and all administrative offices are
closed for the day.
If weather improves during the day … or
gets worse
On occasion, the inclement weather subsides as the
day progresses. On these occasions, a decision to reopen the
university for evening classes and other activities will be made by
3 p.m. In cases where the university is open during the day, but
worsening conditions warrant the cancellation of evening classes and
activities, that decision also will be announced by 3 p.m.
Radio and television announcements
As it has for generations of snow shovelers, St.
Thomas will continue to use WCCO Radio (AM 830) as the official
closing-notification station. Students, staff and faculty will know
what decision has been made if they listen to WCCO. The station
updates closing information between 6 and 8 a.m.
In addition to WCCO radio, the university also
alerts two local television stations, KARE and KSTP.
Who needs to come in; who can stay home
All employees, except the “emergency essential
employees” listed below, are relieved of duty without change in
compensation for the day of closing. These essential employees are
required to report to work as scheduled and are compensated
according to the university’s Inclement Weather Closing Policy.
Union employees will be paid according to their labor contract.
Emergency essential employees are Public Safety officers, IRT server
administrators, Food Service workers, and certain Physical Plant
employees, such as managers, building service workers, grounds
workers, shift supervisors and managers, maintenance mechanics and
electricians.
In addition to the SNOW phone and radio …
The university will use several additional methods
to announce the cancellation of classes, or the reopening of evening
classes if weather permits:
Telephone
In addition to the message available at (651)
962-SNOW, a recorded announcement will be sent to all voice-mail
boxes on campus.
Students who live on campus can hear the message
simply by accessing their voice messages.
Faculty and staff can access the message on their
campus voice mailboxes using two methods. Instructions are printed
here as a reminder, especially for those who don’t frequently access
their voice mailboxes from off campus. If school is closed for the
day, faculty and staff are encouraged to leave that information on
their personal voice greetings.
Here’s how to access your St. Thomas voice mailbox
from off campus:
Option 1 (This is the preferred
method; note that in most cases the box number is the same as your
five-digit campus extension.)
Dial (651) 962-7777. When the system answers,
enter your five-digit voice mailbox number, listen for the system to
say your name and then press the star key (*). (Note: The star key
denotes that you are the owner of the box, as opposed to being
someone who wants to leave you a message.) Enter your pass code and
the pound key (#). You are in.
Option 2 (This works well for
multiple-box environments, where you share a phone with others.)
Dial your St. Thomas phone number. Press 1 or 2 if
you are in a multiple-box environment. Press the star key (*). Enter
your pass code and the pound key (#). You now will have accessed
your voice mailbox.
Please note that if school does close and a voice
message is sent to all St. Thomas voice-message boxes, you will NOT
have a light indicator of a new message.
Bulletin Update and Bulletin Today
Announcements of school cancellations or
reopenings will be sent to all St. Thomas e-mail accounts. The
announcement will be added to that day’s Bulletin Today, and will be
sent separately as a Bulletin Update.
The announcements made by e-mail will be made as
soon as possible, but will not be available as early in the morning
as the phone messages. The e-mail announcements will be especially
useful for evening-class students who are wondering in the afternoon
if they need to drive to class that night.
St. Thomas home page
The online St. Thomas home page has a spot for
news headlines; it’s on the left-hand side of the page. You can
click on the headline and it will take you to details about the
school closing or reopening.
About the libraries
During fall and spring semesters when St. Thomas
is officially closed due to inclement weather, the
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library Center will attempt to open with a
limited staff. Hourly paid library employees will be paid for hours
actually worked the day of the closing in addition to regular pay
for that day.
St. Paul and Minneapolis snow emergency
information
To find out if a snow emergency has been declared,
check this site for St. Paul,
http://www.ci.stpaul.mn.us/depts/publicworks/snowplow.html, or
check this site for Minneapolis,
http://www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/snow/.
These sites have detailed information about where
and when to park during snow emergencies, and how to recover an
impounded car.
Bulletin Today does not forward information about
the city-declared snow emergencies. Several years ago, Bulletin
Today sent information about city-declared snow emergencies to St.
Thomas e-mail accounts. That worked fine during the weekdays, but it
didn’t work well for emergencies declared on weekends or holidays
when Bulletin Today staff members were not on campus to forward the
news. Because of that, please use the local news media, or the Web
sites listed above, for the latest information about city-declared
snow emergencies.
A word about St. Paul's e-mail and
voice-message warning systems
By going to the city of St. Paul’s snow-plowing
information Web site at
http://www.ci.stpaul.mn.us/depts/publicworks/snowplow.html, you
can sign up to be notified by e-mail when the city has declared a
snow emergency.
Two years ago the city also initiated a free,
automated system that is designed to send a voice message to your
telephone announcing when snow emergencies are declared.
St. Thomas students, staff and faculty interested
in the city’s e-mail notification are welcome to sign up for that
service. The university’s e-mail system can handle those notices.
However, St. Thomas students, staff and faculty
are asked not to sign up an on-campus telephone number for the
voice-message warning. The campus phone system could experience
difficulties if it received a massive number of calls at the same
time.
Students, staff and faculty are welcome to sign up
their home telephones, and their personal cell phones, for the
voice-message warning. Most residential phones in the city already
are on the automated calling list.
A place to stay on campus in case you are
snowbound
If you are a commuter student and are snowbound on
campus or feel it is unsafe to travel home due to weather
conditions, the university, through the Dean of Students Office,
will provide overnight accommodations.
Students who would like to take advantage of this
offer should call the Public Safety Office, (651) 962-5100. Public
Safety staff members are aware that this an emergency-housing
service due to poor weather conditions only.
The per-night cost for a room on campus will be
$15 or $45, depending on available space. The less-expensive option
will be used first.
A student taking advantage of this offer also
should alert Public Safety if her or his car will need to be in a
university lot overnight. As a snow emergency likely will be in
effect, the car should not be parked on city of St. Paul streets.
Though the student’s car may be allowed to remain in the lot
overnight without being ticketed, all other university parking
regulations are in effect.
In cases of financial hardship, the Dean of
Students Office will cover the cost of the emergency accommodations.
Parking on campus during snow
emergencies
Please be aware that St. Thomas does not
automatically allow nonpermit holders to park in university lots
during snow emergencies. Depending on campus plowing needs, the
university may or may not allow parking in the lots. Public Safety
will announce this after a snow emergency has been declared. Unless
otherwise announced, all regular parking rules and regulations are
enforced during snow emergencies.
In the case that parking would be allowed in lots
during a snow emergency, it is usually in designated
commuter/employee lots for a limited time (generally 7 p.m. to 7
a.m.).
Resident students with permits also should make
sure to check for lot-closing postings during heavy snowfalls in the
event it is necessary to close resident lots for plowing. This also
will be announced in Bulletin Today.
New this year: In order to help with snow removal
during the winter months, overnight parking will not be allowed in
nonresident lots seven days per week. Third-shift employees must
park in Lot T (north of McCarthy Gym on the south campus) or contact
Public Safety for access to either the Morrison Hall or McNeely Hall
parking ramps, where they can park from 10 p.m. until 9 a.m.
Where to find this message when the snow
starts falling
We will keep a link to this story throughout the
winter on Bulletin Today’s home page. The link will be at the bottom
of the column on the right-hand side of the page. |