The Digital Snow Day: Is Remote Learning Failing Newark’s Families?

The Digital Snow Day: Is Remote Learning Failing Newark’s Families?

NEWARK, NJ — The sound of snow shovels hitting the pavement across Northern New Jersey and Brooklyn this morning was accompanied by a different kind of stress: the chime of login screens. Following a historic winter storm on Sunday, January 25, 2026, that dumped up to 14 inches of snow across the region, Mayor Zohran Mamdani in New York and officials in Newark mandated a shift to remote learning for Monday, January 26. But for many in our community, the “Digital Snow Day” is exposing old wounds in the Newark remote learning digital divide.

Infrastructure Under Ice: Why the City Shifted

The Digital Snow Day: Is Remote Learning Failing Newark’s Families?

The decision to go remote was driven by a State of Emergency declared by Governor Mikie Sherrill and a State Disaster Emergency from Governor Kathy Hochul as the storm created “hazardous conditions posing an imminent danger.” While the physical safety of students was the priority, the storm’s impact was felt immediately:

The Dead Zones: When High-Speed is a Myth

While the city moves to the cloud, many residents remain grounded by “digital redlining”—a practice where providers invest in fiber optics for wealthier areas while leaving low-income and Black blocks with aging, slow infrastructure. In Newark, this manifests as “dead zones” where even a minor storm can cause the Wi-Fi to buckle.

Policy & The Fight for a Basic Utility

The conversation is shifting from “charity” to “civil rights.” Leaders are increasingly framing broadband as a basic utility, as essential as water or electricity.

Key Takeaways

HfYC Poll of the Day

Follow us and respond on social media, drop some comments on the article, or write your own perspective!

How has today’s shift to remote learning impacted your household?

  1. It was seamless—we were prepared.
  2. It was a struggle due to work/childcare.
  3. We had technical/internet issues.
  4. I miss the traditional “No-School” snow days.

Alternative Perspectives

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References

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