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When the Ocean Rose 20 Feet: ASCC's Campus Role in American Samoa's Deadliest Modern Disaster

ASearthquakeemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On September 29, 2009, a magnitude 8.1 earthquake struck approximately 120 miles southwest of American Samoa at 6:48 AM local time, generating tsunami waves of up to 22 meters (72 feet) that devastated the territory's coastline. The disaster killed 34 people in American Samoa and caused over $200 million in damage. American Samoa Community College, located at its main campus in Pago Pago, was closed as the tsunami struck and in subsequent days while the territory assessed the damage. ASCC's Multi-Purpose Center later served as an alternate Emergency Operations Center for American Samoa's recovery operations.

Alerts
3
Response
min
Killed
34
Injured
100
Institution
American Samoa Community College
Community College · AS
~2,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSiren
Approximate reconstruction529 chars
[American Samoa Community College suspended all campus operations and initiated emergency evacuation procedures as a major earthquake struck the Samoa Islands region at 6:48 AM SST on September 29, 2009. All students, faculty, and staff were directed to evacuate immediately to higher ground as a tsunami warning was issued for American Samoa and surrounding areas. The college's emergency plans called for evacuation to designated elevated locations as coastal areas in Pago Pago were at immediate risk from tsunami inundation.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

American Samoa observes Samoa Standard Time (SST), UTC-11, year-round; the earthquake struck at 6:48 AM local time on September 29, 2009
The earthquake occurred at 17:48:10 UTC on September 29, 2009 -- when converted to UTC-11, this corresponds to 6:48 AM SST
ASCC's campus in Pago Pago is near the harbor; the campus Multi-Purpose Center was later designated as an alternate Emergency Operations Center, underscoring the institution's central role in American Samoa's disaster response infrastructure
UPDATEUnknown
Approximate reconstruction562 chars
[American Samoa Community College remains closed as emergency response operations are underway across the territory. Tsunami waves have struck the coastlines of American Samoa, causing significant casualties and damage. All campus activities are suspended until further notice. The ASCC campus is being assessed for safety and may serve as a coordination point for emergency and relief operations. Students, faculty, and staff are advised to remain in safe locations away from coastal areas and await further communications through territory emergency channels.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The tsunami generated waves of up to 22 meters (72 feet) in some coastal areas of American Samoa and independent Samoa; the harbor areas of Pago Pago experienced significant inundation
34 people were killed in American Samoa and more than 100 injured; the total death toll including independent Samoa and Tonga was approximately 192
Communications across American Samoa were severely disrupted by the earthquake and tsunami; emergency information was communicated primarily through radio and government emergency broadcasts
FOLLOW-UPWebsite
Approximate reconstruction611 chars
[American Samoa Community College is resuming limited campus operations. The college is working with the American Samoa Government and federal agencies to support territory-wide recovery from the September 29 earthquake and tsunami. ASCC facilities may be utilized to support relief operations and community assistance efforts. Classes will resume on a schedule to be announced. The college extends its deepest condolences to all who lost family members and homes in this devastating disaster. Students with questions about their academic status should contact their instructors or the academic affairs office.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

ASCC's Multi-Purpose Center is documented in the college's disaster plans as an alternate Emergency Operations Center for American Samoa Government during major disasters
The college hosted a USGS presentation by oceanographer Dr. Guy Gelfenbaum on October 22, 2009, sharing scientific findings about the tsunami for community education
American Samoa received TsunamiReady recognition from the NOAA National Weather Service in 2012, with the September 2009 disaster informing preparedness improvements
Context

Background

The September 29, 2009 Samoa earthquake was one of the deadliest natural disasters in modern Pacific history. An M8.1 earthquake struck at 17:48:10 UTC (6:48 AM local SST) approximately 120 miles southwest of American Samoa, triggering a devastating tsunami that killed 34 people in American Samoa, 149 in independent Samoa, and 9 in Tonga -- a total of approximately 192 fatalities. Waves reached up to 22 meters (72 feet) in some locations; in American Samoa, coastal communities including Nu'uuli, Pago Pago harbor, and Leone were severely inundated. Damage in American Samoa exceeded $200 million, with approximately 200 homes and businesses destroyed. American Samoa Community College, located near Pago Pago harbor, closed immediately following the earthquake and did not reopen until emergency response operations allowed safe access. ASCC's central role in the territory's recovery extended beyond classroom suspension: the ASCC Multi-Purpose Center was designated as an alternate Emergency Operations Center for the American Samoa Government. On October 22, 2009, the college hosted USGS oceanographer Dr. Guy Gelfenbaum, who presented research findings on the tsunami to the community. The disaster had lasting effects on American Samoa's emergency preparedness infrastructure: in 2012, the territory received TsunamiReady recognition from the NOAA National Weather Service, with the 2009 event providing critical real-world data. The September 29, 2009 tsunami is the most significant natural disaster to directly threaten the American Samoa Community College campus in the institution's history.
Analysis

Key Findings

The M8.1 Samoa earthquake struck at 6:48 AM SST on September 29, 2009, generating tsunami waves up to 22 meters that killed 34 people in American Samoa and caused over $200 million in damage
ASCC closed immediately following the earthquake and subsequent tsunami; the campus near Pago Pago harbor was in a high-risk zone for coastal inundation
ASCC's Multi-Purpose Center was designated as an alternate Emergency Operations Center for the American Samoa Government during the disaster
The college hosted USGS tsunami researchers on October 22, 2009, demonstrating its community education role in disaster aftermath
American Samoa received TsunamiReady recognition from NOAA in 2012, informed by lessons learned from the 2009 event
Outcome
American Samoa suffered 34 fatalities and over $200 million in damage from the tsunami. ASCC campus sustained no reported direct structural damage as it is located in Pago Pago, which was impacted but where higher ground offered some protection. The ASCC Multi-Purpose Center served as an alternate Emergency Operations Center during recovery. The territory received TsunamiReady recognition from NOAA in 2012, partially informed by lessons from this event.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
tsunamiearthquakeamerican-samoaterritorypago-pagom8-earthquakenatural-disasteremergency-operationshistorical2009pacificcommunity-college
Added June 2026Updated June 2026Via ingestion