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Campus Alert Archive
TXST

Winter storm, January 26, 2026

AI-generated · every claim is source-linked
TXwinter stormadvisoryhigh confidence

On January 26, 2026, Texas State University closed both its San Marcos and Round Rock campuses due to Winter Storm Fern, a powerful arctic blast that brought freezing rain, sleet, and a hard freeze to Central Texas. All in-person and online classes were canceled and all university events were called off. The university announced the closure by 6 p.m. Sunday, January 25, via TXSTATE Alert text messages and email.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Texas State University
Public R1 · TX
All TXST cases →
~40,000 studentsTXSTATE Alert
Documented Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 2 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTTwitter/X
Verified verbatim@txst on X (verbatim raw t.co)316 chars
Due to winter weather conditions, TXST San Marcos and Round Rock Campuses will be closed on Monday, Jan. 26, 2026. TXST will continue monitoring conditions and will provide an update on Tuesday’s schedule no later than 2 p.m. Monday. More info. online. https://safety.txst.edu/updates/winter-weather-jan-2026.html
Exact @txst winter weather Monday closure post. Double space before newline after "Monday." preserved.
UPDATEEmail
Texas State University will return to normal operations on Tuesday, January 27, with different start times by campus. San Marcos Campus: All facilities and offices will open at regular hours and classes will be held as scheduled on Tuesday. Round Rock Campus: All facilities and offices will open at noon, and classes will be held as scheduled for the remainder of the day. While conditions are improving, some walkways and roads may refreeze. Please continue to use caution when walking and driving and allow extra time for travel if needed. Students or employees who are unable to make it to either campus due to local conditions, should contact their supervisor or instructor.
Exact Monday reopening message from the official TXST winter weather archive FAQ block.
Message elements

How the first alert is built

To check this alert, Claude (an AI) read it in full 25 separate times, independently. Each read decided whether the message answers each of the six questions and gave a short reason. A final reviewer then weighed all 25 and wrote the plain-English verdict you see when you open a row. The score (for example 22/25) is how many reads agreed; the 25 individual reads are tucked underneath if you want to check them.

Due to winter weather conditions, TXST San Marcos and Round Rock Campuses will be closed on Monday, Jan. 26, 2026. TXST will continue monitoring conditions and will provide an update on Tuesday’s schedule no later than 2 p.m. Monday. More info. online. https://safety.txst.edu/updates/winter-weather-jan-2026.html

  • Sourceabsent0/0

    Who is sending the alert and who is responding. People act faster on a message from a clearly identifiable, credible sender, such as a named department, the police, or a branded alert system, than on an anonymous notice. A branded signature counts.

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  • Hazardabsent0/0

    What the threat actually is. A complete warning names the specific danger, such as a shooter, a fire, a tornado, or a gas leak, rather than a vague emergency, because people decide what to do based on what they are facing.

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  • Locationabsent0/0

    Where the threat is. Saying whether danger is in a specific building, a part of campus, or area-wide lets people judge their own proximity and choose a safe direction. Without a where, a warning is hard to act on precisely.

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  • Guidanceabsent0/0

    The protective action to take. A clear, specific instruction, such as shelter in place, evacuate, avoid the area, or run-hide-fight, drives faster and more correct protective behavior than describing the threat alone.

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  • Timeabsent0/0

    When the message applies. A timestamp, the word now or immediately, or a phrase like until further notice tells the reader whether the danger is current and how quickly to act.

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  • Impactabsent0/0

    What the hazard could do to the people in its path. Beyond naming the threat, a complete warning conveys its potential consequences or severity, such as that a tornado can level buildings or that a leak could be explosive, so recipients grasp how much danger they are in. Research on warning message content finds that a concrete impact statement helps people personalize their risk and act sooner.

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Systematic AI judgments with visible reasoning, not human-validated codings.

About this analysis
Context

Background

Late January 2026 brought a classic shallow-cold-air event to Texas as Winter Storm Fern, an arctic outbreak that undercut subtropical air, produced freezing rain, sleet, and snow across Central Texas and the I-35 corridor. Texas State University, with about 40,000 students across its San Marcos and Round Rock campuses, announced its closure for Monday, January 26 by Sunday evening, January 25, falling within the university's stated 6 p.m. Sunday decision deadline. The closure aligned TXST with UT Austin, the University of Houston, Lone Star College System, and East Texas Baptist University, all of which shut their campuses for the storm. The storm killed at least seven people across Texas, including five children, and produced more than 5,800 flight cancellations in the region between January 23 and 28. Texas State reopened Tuesday, January 27 without further weather disruption.
Analysis

Key Findings

Texas State's Sunday-evening closure announcement matched the university's published 6 p.m. decision deadline, demonstrating disciplined adherence to its weather decision-process documentation
The closure spanned both the San Marcos and Round Rock campuses, plus online classes, a comprehensive shutdown that recognized faculty and students could not safely travel to office hours or proctored exams even for online courses
Winter Storm Fern produced the deadliest Texas winter storm since February 2021, killing at least seven people and disrupting flights, schools, and universities across the state
Outcome
Texas State University reopened at regular hours Tuesday, January 27, 2026, with all classes held as scheduled. No injuries reported on either campus. The closure was part of a regional pattern that also shuttered UT Austin, University of Houston, Lone Star College System, and most Central Texas school districts.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Student Paper
  3. Social
  4. News
  5. government report
  6. Social
Cite this case

Campus Alert Archive. "Texas State University: Winter storm, January 26, 2026." Incident of January 26, 2026. Added May 2026; last updated July 2026. https://campusalertarchive.com/case/texas-state-university-winter-storm-fern-closure-2026-01-26/

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Alert text quoted on this page remains the work of the issuing institution; the archive is a secondary source.

Tags
winter-stormwinter-storm-ferntexascampus-closurepublic-r1san-marcosround-rockarctic-blast
Added May 2026Updated July 2026Via ingestion