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Eckerd

Two Days, Then Gone for a Month: Eckerd College's Mandatory Helene Evacuation Triggered the Longest Closure in Its History

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Confirmed Threat

On the evening of September 23, 2024, Eckerd College alerted students they had to evacuate the waterfront St. Petersburg campus by September 25 under Pinellas County's mandatory Zone A evacuation order for Hurricane Helene. The compact 1,900-student liberal arts college, which sits on a peninsula in Boca Ciega Bay, ultimately remained closed for a full month after Helene's storm surge was followed by a second mandatory evacuation for Hurricane Milton.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Eckerd College
Private Liberal Arts · FL
~1,900 studentsEckerd Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

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 ALERTEmail
Members of the Eckerd College Community, The Eckerd College Emergency Management Executive Team continues to monitor Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine. In view of the current track and in the interest of the safety of our community, we are enacting our plan for campus closure. Students will meet with their Resident Advisors to discuss travel plans, and all classes are canceled tomorrow to allow students time to evacuate. Please take your course materials with you. Students must be out of residence halls by 11 a.m. on Wednesday, September 25.
Verbatim opening text from Eckerd College's Hurricane Helene blog post timestamped 'Mon., Sept. 23, 2024 at 7 p.m.'
Pinellas County subsequently issued a mandatory evacuation order for Zone A and all mobile homes countywide on September 25, 2024
Eckerd's geographic position on a Boca Ciega Bay peninsula makes it one of the most surge-vulnerable campuses in the United States — every named storm forecast to enter the eastern Gulf triggers an evacuation review
At the time the alert was issued the storm was still officially Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine; it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Helene later that night
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Approximate reconstruction200 chars
Eckerd College will reopen for in-person classes on Monday, October 28. The campus has been cleared for occupancy following the impacts of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton. Welcome back, Tritons.

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

The reopening message acknowledges both storms together — Helene (September 26) and Milton (October 9) hit Eckerd within a 14-day window, requiring two separate evacuations
'The campus has been cleared for occupancy' is the legal trigger phrase that confirms residence halls and academic buildings have passed structural and environmental safety checks after surge inundation
October 28 reopening represented a roughly month-long closure — the longest in the college's history
Context

Background

Eckerd College is a private liberal arts college of about 1,900 students perched on a waterfront peninsula in southwest St. Petersburg, Florida, making it one of the most hurricane-vulnerable college campuses in the United States. When Hurricane Helene's projected storm surge prompted Pinellas County to issue a mandatory evacuation order for Zone A on September 24, Eckerd ordered students out by 11 a.m. on September 25, with faculty and staff off campus by 2 p.m. Students dispersed across the country and even abroad, with some flying home to Mexico City and Europe. Helene's surge flooded the lowest-lying parts of campus the night of September 26. Two weeks later, Hurricane Milton forced a second evacuation, and the cumulative damage extended the closure. Eckerd ultimately did not reopen until October 28, a month-long closure that was unprecedented in the college's history. The Helene-Milton sequence at Eckerd illustrates a structural challenge facing surge-vulnerable Gulf Coast campuses: even a single storm can compress academic calendars by weeks, and back-to-back storms can effectively cancel a semester.
Analysis

Key Findings

Eckerd's two-tier evacuation deadline (students by 11 a.m., faculty/staff by 2 p.m. on September 25) reflects the operational sequence of securing residence halls before facilities
The college's peninsula geography in Boca Ciega Bay makes every named Gulf storm a potential evacuation trigger
Helene and Milton hit within 14 days, forcing two separate full-campus evacuations and a month-long closure — the longest in Eckerd's history
International and out-of-state students faced extreme logistical strain on a 36-hour evacuation window, with some flying back to Mexico City and Europe rather than wait out the storm in Florida
Outcome
Campus was fully evacuated by 2 p.m. September 25. Helene's storm surge flooded the lowest-lying parts of campus. The campus remained closed through both Helene and Milton, reopening on October 28 — the longest closure in Eckerd's history. Students dispersed to states ranging from Illinois and Massachusetts to Texas, with international students flying home to Mexico City and Europe.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
  4. Student Paper
  5. Official
Tags
hurricanehelenemiltonweatherevacuationfloridaeckerdprivate-liberal-artspinellas-countysurge-vulnerablemonth-long-closure
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion