Marvin Mutts of Vineland, who drives for DoorDash, said he is weighing whether to work through the weekend.
"I'm gonna see. I feel like money's gonna be good if nobody wants to drive," Mutts said.
LIVE UPDATES | Snowstorm set to hit the Philly region this weekend
Camden County officials say they hope drivers like Mutts will reconsider.
"We're looking for people to not put themselves in harm's way; safety is paramount here. We want people to stick it out at home," Dan Keashen, Camden County's public affairs director, said.
Road crews have been stretched thin recently, still recovering from last weekend's storm while preparing for the next one.
In Delaware, officials say they currently have supplies in place to respond.
"We've got about 47,000 tons of salt currently available. We are getting some additional salt deliveries this week," said CR McLeod of DelDOT.
McLeod said roughly 70% of their salt stockpile remains and will be replenished.
In Camden County, several truckloads of salt were delivered to public works facilities on Tuesday, ensuring coverage for the county's 1,200 lane miles. Officials say up to 2,500 tons of salt could be used, with about 100 trucks deployed during the storm.
"Right now, we just got eight shipments of salt, eight truckloads just dropped off, salt into our salt dome, Keashen said.
"It's gonna be an all-hands-on-deck. Vacations have been canceled. Every member of the public works department, our parks department, and a couple of other county agencies are going to be ready to lend a hand, helping to plow, treat roads, shovel sidewalks. Make sure that once the snow does stop falling, that we are not behind the eight ball and that we can open up county services relatively quickly right after," Keashen added.
In Philadelphia, the Streets Department did not return an inquiry from Action News on Wednesday. On the city's Facebook page though, a recent post encouraged the public to follow various city departments online for updates on the storm.
Residents can also track salting and plowing operations online through the city's PlowPHL system.
Some drivers say they are already planning to stay put.
"Even though I got a Subaru here and it is All Wheel Drive, it still can be dangerous, and you don't know what could happen every now and then," Michael Lobascio of Cherry Hill said.
Officials continue to remind anyone who must travel to give plow trucks plenty of space, especially when encountering convoys. At this point, no announcements have been made by local school districts.