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Infrastructure

D.C. Public Schools Still Closed as City Struggles To Clear Roads and Sidewalks

As the district's struggle to clear snow drags on, the case for public infrastructure maintenance becomes weaker.

Jack Nicastro | 1.28.2026 12:30 PM

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Photo of a snow-covered DC street | Photo: Gent Shkullaku/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom (edited)
(Photo: Gent Shkullaku/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom (edited))

Libertarians are often asked, "Without government, who will pave the roads?" After the weekend's winter storm, libertarians may ask: "When will the government clear the roads?"

Late Saturday night and into early Sunday morning, Washington, D.C., received a combination of "4 to 7 inches of snow" and "up to 4 inches of icy pellets," the combination of which had a water content "comparable to the contents of a 20-inch blizzard," explains The Washington Post. By Wednesday morning, the D.C. Snow Team map showed 46 snow plows still on the job. 

The D.C. city government's inability to clear roads and sidewalks and to reopen schools within 24 hours is confusing, considering the $192 million budget of the city's Department of Public Works (DPW). One of the DPW's stated responsibilities is to ensure that "the District is safe to navigate after the end of a snow storm and can resume normal government services and business commerce." The DPW's snow removal budget totals over $7.3 million, up $2.1 million from FY 2023, most of which was allocated to increase its snow plow and snow removal budget. It seems $7.3 million is apparently insufficient to clear the city's 364 miles of alleys, 1,495 miles of sidewalks, and over 1,100 miles of roadway.

Joe Bishop-Henchman, advisory neighborhood commissioner representing the Eckington neighborhood in northeast D.C., lamented on X that, by midday Tuesday, alleys "seem to have given up on completely," many sidewalks and crosswalks were "impassable," and "a lot of residential streets [had] not even passed once." Around this time, another X user shared a video showing that "the roads and access to the sidewalks haven't really been touched" outside Italian restaurant Cucina Morini on 4th and I Street.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser tacitly acknowledged the gaps in the city's snow removal services by thanking over 600 D.C. residents for clearing "walkways at 100+ homes of seniors and residents with disabilities" as part of Snow Team Hero. This program "pairs volunteers with residents who need help shoveling walkways after a snowstorm." 

Later Tuesday afternoon, photos were shared on X showing the well-traveled intersection of Q Street and Connecticut Avenue still coated in dirty wintery slush. Bowser announced Tuesday evening that "most main roads in DC are now passable" and that "side and residential roads are our focus." Right around this time, a D.C. resident shared a video apparently showing a DPW snowplow stuck in the Eckington neighborhood. 

NBC Washington reported Wednesday morning that "residents are encountering problems as they navigate uncleared side streets." Outside of Union Station, only "one lane wide" is plowed "each way," according to Bishop-Henchman. Three days after the snowfall, D.C. public schools were still closed. 

Given the millions of taxpayer dollars granted to the DPW to address such situations, it's a wonder why D.C. is struggling to clear its roads and reopen schools, especially when New York City has managed to do so. For now, D.C. residents must hope that public schools will be open tomorrow. If this week is representative of the DPW's snow removal capacity, D.C. residents should brace themselves to be homebound next week in the event of another snowstorm. 

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NEXT: The Real Reason Beef Costs More: Fewer Cows, Not Corporate Greed

Jack Nicastro is an assistant editor at Reason.

InfrastructurePublic transportationPublic schoolsSnowWeatherRoads
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  1. Eeyore   2 hours ago

    Lol. Just write the people a ticket for failure to remove the snow. It's what most cities would do.

    What happened to walking to school? We never needed shoveled walks to get to school. People have turned into snowflakes. Public schools are the biggest whiners of all.

    Log in to Reply
    1. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   58 minutes ago

      Why would anyone outside of DC give a fuck about DC getting some snow?

      Log in to Reply
  2. Gaear Grimsrud   2 hours ago

    Bunch of fucking crybabies. Around here if we get a foot of snow, everybody gets up and goes to work. 15 below zero? Everybody gets up and goes to work. DC is packed with pussies. And they're the assholes telling us global warming is the biggest threat to humanity.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   1 hour ago

      20 degrees with 7 in. of accumulation? Time to put on your big boy snowpants and go have some fun!

      Log in to Reply
    2. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 hour ago

      I’m so sick of the media treating any amount of winter weather in the NE as some kind of news event. They really think the whole world is DC and NYC.

      Log in to Reply
      1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   4 minutes ago

        Likewise. The whole Northeast is completely periphery to the country. If it sank into the Atlantic tomorrow, most of us wouldn’t miss it.

        Log in to Reply
    3. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   5 minutes ago

      +1

      These assholes should have to put up with Houghton-Hancock, Michigan levels of snow for a bit. Somehow, up there, they get 210-220 inches of snow every year (on average) yet daily life continues.

      Log in to Reply
  3. MasterThief   2 hours ago

    I don't think any counties in NoVa are open yet, including as far south as Spotsylvania.
    I'm encountering the same situation throughout the region: main roads are dry, but side roads and housing developments are covered in ice and snow.

    Log in to Reply
  4. Rick James   2 hours ago

    There's a solution to this, Reason staff... it involves a U-Haul.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   2 hours ago

      You mean moving more Central/South Americans and Africans into urban centers to clear the snow that Americans won't clear themselves?

      Log in to Reply
  5. Rossami   2 hours ago

    Reminds me of a joke I saw as the storm was rolling in:

    Severe Winter Storm Warning!
    Southerners are advised to stay home and off the roads at all costs.
    Northerners are advised that they might need a coat.

    Log in to Reply
  6. MWAocdoc   1 hour ago

    This is pretty lame. Telling us one big blue city was unable to clear snow off the streets while in the same article telling us that another big blue city was able to clear snow off the streets, then telling us this is all evidence that public agencies should not be relied upon to maintain the streets.

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  7. mad.casual   1 hour ago

    up to 4 inches of icy pellets

    At this point, I'm convinced morons are a much greater threat to the human race than the climate.

    Lemme guess, when you started getting these "icy pellets" the temperature was somewhere between 20 and 40 degrees Fahrenheit?

    Also, every few hundred years (much, much more often if you move around a lot) the Sun will go completely dark in the middle of the daytime. This is just the Moon moving between the Earth and the Sun.

    No need to burn me at the stake or worship me as a demigod, this is just how the world works.

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  8. SCOTUS gave JeffSarc a big sad   1 hour ago

    Too local.

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  9. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

    I bet the national gaurd could help.....

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  10. JesseAz (RIP CK)   47 minutes ago

    Dont they still have those fed employees being paid not to work as they wait for the buyouts? Send those people.

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  11. JonFrum   38 minutes ago

    D.C. is run by the usual suspects. Nuff said.

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  12. Joe   18 minutes ago

    "The DPW's snow removal budget totals over $7.3 million, up $2.1 million from FY 2023, most of which was allocated to increase its snow plow and snow removal budget."

    No matter how many times I read this sentence, it still sounds like a tautology: the budget is up and most of that increase went to the budget. Huh?

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    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   15 minutes ago

      It was to fund things like equipment or workers. Just to pay graft to the current set of workers and administrators.

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  13. Bubba Jones   6 minutes ago

    This article isn't very informative. The underlying data shouldn't be hard to calculate.

    How many miles can a single plow clear in a day? Does the volume of snow matter if it's not being carted off?

    Are there enough plows?

    Are the drivers experienced?

    How often do they really need to plow snow, and is it reasonable to invest assets to prepare for an event such as this?

    Do cities normally clear sidewalks?

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    1. InsaneTrollLogic (smarter than The Average Dude)   1 minute ago

      Do cities normally clear sidewalks?

      Depends. Most municipalities in the country do not; however, some in high snow areas do (alpine areas, Upper Peninsula). Holland, Michigan even has a system to melt snow off the roads and sidewalks downtown.

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    2. Bubba Jones   54 seconds ago

      Quick math. DC has 1 plow for every 30 miles of street. NYC has 1 plow for every 3 miles of street.

      NYC spends $100M per year on snow removal, compared to DC's $7M.

      So yeah, it makes sense that NYC snow removal is 10x as good.

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