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Embry-Riddle

62 Aircraft Flown to Alabama: How Embry-Riddle Evacuated Its Training Fleet Six Hours Before Hurricane Irma's Florida Landfall

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Confirmed Threat

On Saturday morning, September 9, 2017 — about six hours before Hurricane Irma churned into the lower Florida Keys as a Category 4 — 62 flight instructors at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University piloted the university's entire training fleet from Daytona Beach to two locations in Alabama. The Daytona Beach campus closed Friday September 8 through Wednesday September 13; classes resumed Thursday September 14, 2017. The aircraft evacuation — believed to be the largest university-aviation hurricane evacuation in U.S. history — became one of the most-cited examples of advance hurricane planning by an aviation training institution.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Private R2 · FL
~30,000 studentsERAU Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 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 ALERTEmail
ERAU Alert: Due to Hurricane Irma, the Embry-Riddle Daytona Beach Campus will be closed Friday, September 8 through Sunday, September 10. All classes are canceled. Daytona Beach is under a mandatory evacuation order east of the Intracoastal Waterway; students living in those zones must evacuate. All university aircraft will be relocated to Alabama beginning Saturday morning. Every residential student must complete a hurricane-safety plan with Housing Operations. Updates will be issued through ERAU Alert and news.erau.edu.

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

Daytona Beach is split by the Intracoastal Waterway — areas east, including the barrier-island beachfront, were under mandatory evacuation while the ERAU main campus west of the waterway was not
ERAU's aircraft evacuation is unique among U.S. campus emergency-notification systems — no peer institution has comparable language for university-fleet relocation
'Every residential student had a hurricane-safety plan' became a standard ERAU emergency-management talking point repeated in subsequent Dorian (2019) and Ian (2022) responses
UPDATETwitter/X+1d
ERAU Alert: ERAU flight instructors are departing Daytona Beach for Alabama relocation sites this morning. 62 university aircraft are being flown ahead of Hurricane Irma. Daytona Beach Campus remains closed. Residential students must shelter in residence halls. The hurricane is expected to begin affecting Florida this afternoon.

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

62 aircraft — the entire ERAU Daytona Beach training fleet — were relocated to two locations in Alabama in a single morning, requiring 62 instructor-pilots coordinated through ERAU Flight Operations
The flights departed about six hours before Irma's first Florida landfall at Cudjoe Key (9:10 AM EDT Sunday) — a precise pre-storm timing window driven by FAA flight restrictions and Daytona Beach airport closure schedules
ERAU's video reconstruction of the evacuation — released in 2018 — became a teaching tool used by other university aviation programs for hurricane-preparedness training
UPDATESMS
ERAU Alert: Hurricane Irma now over Florida. Residential students shelter in place in residence halls. All Daytona Beach Campus buildings remain locked except residence halls and dining facilities. Do not go outside. Power outages possible. Continue to monitor ERAU Alert.

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

Sunday September 10 shelter-in-place coincided with Irma's first Florida landfall at Cudjoe Key as Category 4 (9:10 AM EDT) and second landfall at Marco Island as Category 3 (3:35 PM EDT) the same afternoon
Daytona Beach experienced Irma's eastern wind field — sustained tropical-storm-force winds with gusts to hurricane force; significantly less impact than the Florida west coast
ERAU dining facilities remained open — a deliberate choice to keep residents fed without requiring travel
ALL CLEAREmail+6d
ERAU Alert: The Embry-Riddle Daytona Beach Campus will resume normal operations on Thursday, September 14. Classes will resume Thursday. Approximately 3 percent of students have reported travel delays. The university aircraft fleet is being repositioned back from Alabama through Wednesday and Thursday. Flight operations resume Friday, September 15. Thank you for your patience.

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

3-percent travel-delay figure — exceptionally low compared with peer Florida universities — reflects that the Daytona Beach campus is on Interstate 95 with relatively few evacuation-route disruptions
Flight operations resumed Friday September 15 — two days after classes resumed Thursday September 14 — because the 62-aircraft return flight from Alabama took two days to complete safely
Embry-Riddle's reopening narrative — 'every residential student had a hurricane-safety plan, 62 aircraft safely relocated, flight ops resumed within seven days' — became a hurricane-preparedness case study cited by FAA and peer aviation universities
Context

Background

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University — the world's largest aviation-focused university — operates residential campuses in Daytona Beach, Florida and Prescott, Arizona plus a Worldwide network of 130+ teaching sites. Its Daytona Beach campus, adjacent to Daytona Beach International Airport, operates a training fleet of approximately 90 aircraft and produces a significant share of U.S. commercial aviation pilots. Hurricane Irma — a Category 5 Atlantic hurricane that made first U.S. landfall in the Florida Keys as Category 4 at 9:10 AM EDT on September 10, 2017 — prompted Embry-Riddle to execute its long-planned aircraft-evacuation protocol on Saturday morning September 9. Sixty-two flight instructors flew the entire active training fleet to two locations in Alabama — believed to be the largest university-aviation hurricane evacuation in U.S. history. The campus itself, on the west side of the Intracoastal Waterway, was not subject to Daytona Beach's mandatory evacuation order (east of the waterway) but closed Friday September 8 through Wednesday September 13. Residential students were required to complete an individual hurricane-safety plan with Housing Operations. Sodexo food-service personnel were among the last to leave campus before the storm and the first to return — a recurring detail in ERAU's institutional narrative of the response. Daytona Beach experienced Irma's eastern wind field — sustained tropical-storm-force winds with gusts to hurricane force, but significantly less impact than the Florida west coast. Approximately 3 percent of students reported travel delays when classes resumed Thursday September 14; flight operations resumed Friday September 15 after the 62-aircraft return flight from Alabama completed. The Embry-Riddle Irma response established the ERAU Alert aviation-evacuation template later used for Hurricane Dorian in 2019, Hurricane Ian in 2022, and Hurricane Milton in 2024.
Analysis

Key Findings

62 university aircraft — the entire active Daytona Beach training fleet — were flown to two locations in Alabama on Saturday morning September 9, 2017, about six hours before Irma's first Florida landfall
Daytona Beach Campus closed Friday September 8 through Wednesday September 13; classes resumed Thursday September 14
Flight operations resumed Friday September 15 — two days after classes — because the 62-aircraft return flight from Alabama took two days
Every residential student was required to complete a hurricane-safety plan with Housing Operations — a unique ERAU emergency-management policy
Approximately 3 percent of students reported travel delays — exceptionally low compared with peer Florida universities, reflecting Daytona Beach's I-95 access
The aircraft evacuation is believed to be the largest university-aviation hurricane evacuation in U.S. history
ERAU's response became a hurricane-preparedness case study cited by the FAA and peer aviation universities; the template was repeated for Dorian (2019), Ian (2022), and Milton (2024)
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. industry media
  4. Official
  5. News
  6. encyclopedia
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hurricanehurricane-irmacampus-closurefloridadaytona-beachembry-riddleaircraft-evacuationaviation-university2017-hurricane-seasonprivate-r2flight-operationsalabama-relocation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion