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Home Local Dallas-Fort Worth

Four North Texas School Systems Remain Closed as Cleanup From Winter Storm Fern Drags On

Megan O'neill by Megan O'neill
March 31, 2026
in Dallas-Fort Worth, Local
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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Image Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC - Public domain/Wiki Commons

Image Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC - Public domain/Wiki Commons

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Four North Texas school systems stayed closed Friday as the region continued digging out from Winter Storm Fern, a storm that stopped dropping sleet and snow days earlier but left behind a more stubborn problem: ice that refused to fully melt on neighborhood streets, secondary roads, campus lots and walkways. By Friday morning, most of the Dallas-Fort Worth area had moved closer to normal. Dallas ISD and many other large districts reopened. But farther north, districts including Denton ISD, Northwest ISD, Argyle ISD and Ponder ISD remained shut down, a sign that the storm’s real disruption was no longer the precipitation itself but the slow, uneven cleanup that followed.

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Why the closures lasted long after the storm moved out

Brent Singleton/Pexels
Brent Singleton/Pexels

The broad outline of the storm was clear from the start. A National Weather Service summary said widespread mixed precipitation hit North and Central Texas from late Jan. 23 through Jan. 26, producing sleet, snow and freezing rain, along with hazardous travel, canceled flights and school and business closures. Just as important, forecasters noted that frigid temperatures lingered well after the precipitation ended.

A few warmer afternoon hours were enough to soften surface ice in some places, but not enough to clear shaded roads, subdivision streets, sidewalks, bridge approaches and parking lots. Once temperatures fell again overnight, that meltwater refroze into slick patches that were often harder to spot and tougher to treat. For school districts, that creates a different kind of risk than a simple snow day. The main highways may look improved, but buses do not run only on highways. They move through residential areas, side streets and rural roads, then pull into campus loops and parking lots where a thin layer of ice can still turn an ordinary morning arrival into a safety hazard.

Why the shutdowns were concentrated in the northern part of the metroplex

By Friday, the story across North Texas was no longer uniform. Local closure reporting showed that many of the districts still closed were in the northern and northeastern reaches of the region, where lingering slick spots remained a bigger problem than in more central parts of Dallas-Fort Worth. District geography mattered. Northwest ISD covers a wide footprint with suburban neighborhoods, rural roads and fast-growing areas that do not all thaw at the same pace. Denton ISD serves a broad area where conditions can vary sharply from one municipality to another. Argyle ISD and Ponder ISD also faced the same issue that often defines winter-weather decisions in North Texas: a road does not have to be completely impassable to be unsafe for buses, teenage drivers, staff commuters or parents dropping off younger children before sunrise.

What the districts said

Image Credit: Jno.skinner - CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons
Image Credit: Jno.skinner – CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons

Northwest ISD said it would remain closed through Friday out of caution because many campus areas were projected to refreeze overnight. District leaders said crews had spent the day clearing the worst spots, but many locations still posed a risk. The district had already cited poor residential and rural road conditions, plus frozen parking lots and sidewalks, in earlier updates explaining why the closure stretched deeper into the week. Argyle ISD used similar language. The district said staff had extensively evaluated campuses and driven roads across the district before deciding to stay closed Friday.

Even with some daytime melting, Argyle said hazardous conditions persisted on neighborhood roads, secondary streets, parking lots and walkways, especially with another overnight freeze expected. Denton ISD said conditions remained unsafe in many areas across its district. The district specifically pointed to hazardous residential streets and secondary routes used by students, as well as parking lots and access roads around campuses that had not fully thawed.

Denton also emphasized that conditions varied from campus to campus, which is exactly the kind of uneven reality that makes reopening decisions difficult in a large district. Ponder ISD was also among the districts that remained closed Friday, underscoring the same pattern seen across Denton County and nearby communities: even as major roads improved and many big districts reopened, smaller and more northerly systems were still dealing with enough leftover ice to keep students home.

The waiver issue is real, but it is not automatic

Marri  Shyam/Pexels
Marri Shyam/Pexels

The scheduling question now shifts from road conditions to calendar consequences. In Northwest ISD, officials said the district planned to seek an inclement weather waiver for its fifth bad-weather day. Denton ISD said it would use two built-in inclement weather makeup days and then apply for a waiver for additional missed time. Argyle ISD has also said it intends to pursue a missed school days waiver. That matters because the waiver process is more limited than many families assume. Texas Education Agency guidance says the first two missed instructional days generally must be made up through designated days or added instructional minutes. Only additional missed days beyond those built-in adjustments are eligible for a missed school day waiver. In practice, that means districts still have paperwork and planning ahead even if families never see extra days tacked onto the end of the year. Some systems build enough extra minutes into the calendar to absorb a few bad-weather days. Others have to use designated makeup days. And if the missed time goes beyond that cushion, districts have to document why closures were necessary and ask the state for relief.

What this week showed

Winter Storm Fern did not cripple every part of the metroplex in the same way, and by Friday the contrast was obvious. In much of Dallas-Fort Worth, schools reopened and the week’s disruption started to fade. In the northern tier of the region, though, the cleanup moved slower than the headlines about the storm itself. That is what made this stretch so disruptive for families. The storm’s most visible phase ended first. The harder part came afterward, when districts had to decide whether a few thawed lanes and a bright sky were enough to safely move buses and reopen campuses. For Denton ISD, Northwest ISD, Argyle ISD and Ponder ISD, the answer on Friday was still no.

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Megan O'neill

Megan O'neill

Megan O’Neill is a Florida-based writer covering politics, public policy, and economic development, with a focus on state and local issues.

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