Severe winter weather conditions lead to recommendations for seniors to not leave for off campus lunch today, Jan 14. These conditions lead the admin team to make an announcement informing students of how bad the weather conditions are, including a comment from the Aurora Police Department that addresses multiple accidents in the school area due to inclement weather conditions.
The snow and wind conditions are projected to continue through 10:30 a.m., according to weather.com. The weather channel also released a special weather statement in effect until 11:00 a.m.
“Accumulating snow with gusty winds will continue to result in hazardous road conditions and poor visibility this morning,” weather.com said. “Where snow is falling, visibility will briefly fall to one quarter mile or less. Also, icy conditions will persist with temperatures falling into the lower 20s. Motorists are advised to leave extra time to reach their destinations this morning and be prepared to encounter hazardous travel. Take it slow and keep a safe following distance when driving.”
Accuweather.com has a similar warning in place starting at 9:20 a.m. and continuing through 11:00 a.m., saying that the snow will be heavy at times, with the prospect of getting an inch of snow as conditions continue throughout the morning. Drivers are advised to be cautious and maintain a greater following distance to account for weather unpredictability.


LS • Jan 14, 2026 at 10:52 am
The quoted weather statement that was put in this article was written by Todd Kluber, a meteorologist at the Chicago office of the National Weather Service in Romeoville. Weather statements like the one you put in this article are written by NWS meteorologists, then posted online by the NWS and weather websites such as The Weather Channel or AccuWeather. In the future, should you choose to include such statements in a Metea Media article, remember that those statements are usually written by NWS Chicago meteorologists such as Todd Kluber. Therefore, in the future:
1. Go to the website of NWS Chicago, then look at the weather statement applicable to post. At the end of each statement, the last name of the meteorologist is added. Look up that last name with “NWS Chicago” on a search engine, and then you will find the full name of the meteorologist.
2. If the name of the meteorologist cannot be found, cite NWS Chicago as the source.
I hope this helps.
Ezequiel Martinez • Jan 14, 2026 at 10:29 am
Amazing writing! You cited sources without plagiarizing wonderfully!