People living south of New England are often a concern for those living in New England and posting in this New England regional sub. Excellent insight.
I dunno about y'all, but I definitely hope for a torched February and March just in time for the pattern to flip in April. Love cold mist from April through June.
Districts are also being told they can't go remote, so with all the students and staff out with covid, they're using combinations of delays and snow days to push through.
I don't have insight into the locals, but I suspect it's the same. NYS is dealing with it too and we just saw what happened in VA.
On the plus side--the DOT is usually pretty good. They're no Eversource.
You get the traffic you build for and we've built for nothing but cars. WFH isn't going to change all that much given our land use patterns. This further ignores the spatial aspect of work. WFH isn't going to become the norm because work doesn't happen this way optimally. It's why cities exist.
I'd be more content with fall and winter warmth extremes if the spring and summer could get similar cold extreme treatment. We get 80 in February but I'm not seeing a 30 in August. It kinda sucks enjoying and wanting seasonable weather.