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JMU

Finals Week Underwater: When Flash Floods Turned a Virginia Campus Into a TikTok-Famous Swimming Pool

VAfloodingemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Heavy rains on May 6, 2024, caused significant flash flooding across the James Madison University campus during finals week. A National Weather Service flash flood warning was in effect until 7:45 PM. The flooding caused property damage to multiple buildings including Warren Hall, forced evacuation of the Theatre Department building, suspended campus shuttle services, and prompted the Harrisonburg Fire Department to respond to over 40 calls in 30 minutes. The event went viral on TikTok as students were filmed swimming in floodwaters.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
James Madison University
Public Masters · VA
~22,000 studentsJMU SafeAlert
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 ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction279 chars
JMU ALERT: Flash Flood Warning issued by National Weather Service for Harrisonburg area until 7:45 PM. Avoid low-lying areas and do not attempt to cross flooded roadways. Several campus roads are flooded. Inner Campus Shuttles are temporarily suspended. Stay indoors if possible.

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

The suspension of Inner Campus Shuttles left students without a key transportation service during the flooding, requiring them to shelter in place or walk through dangerous conditions
The alert timing during finals week meant many students were traveling between academic buildings for exams, increasing exposure to flooding hazards
UPDATESMS
Approximate reconstruction298 chars
JMU ALERT UPDATE: TDU building has been evacuated due to fire alarm triggered by water intrusion. Avoid flooded areas on campus. Do NOT walk, swim, or drive through floodwater. JMU Police are monitoring flood-prone areas including Duke Dog Alley. Newman Lake levels are being managed by Facilities.

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

The fire alarm triggered by water intrusion is a common secondary effect of flooding that can complicate emergency response by creating false fire evacuations during flood conditions
The specific mention of students being told not to swim in floodwater reflects awareness that students were already doing so, a concern later validated by viral TikTok videos
ALL CLEARSMS
Approximate reconstruction290 chars
JMU ALERT UPDATE: The Flash Flood Warning for the Harrisonburg area has expired. Water levels are receding on campus. Some roads may still have standing water. Use caution when traveling. Facilities Management is assessing damage. Normal shuttle service will resume when routes are cleared.

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

The conditional language about shuttle resumption reflects the practical reality that transit services cannot resume until routes are physically inspected for safety
Context

Background

The May 6, 2024 flash flooding at JMU occurred during finals week, one of the highest-stress periods of the academic calendar. The Harrisonburg Fire Department responded to more than 40 calls in a 30-minute period, including water rescues of people trapped in vehicles. The Breeze, JMU's student newspaper, documented flooding in Warren Hall and the suspension of Starship delivery robot services. The event went viral on TikTok, with one video receiving over 1.6 million views and 291,000 likes, as students were seen tubing and swimming in campus floodwaters despite safety warnings. The disconnect between university safety messages urging avoidance of floodwater and students' social media-fueled recreation in that same water illustrates a persistent challenge in campus emergency communication: getting young adults to take weather hazards seriously when the immediate experience feels more exciting than dangerous.
Analysis

Key Findings

Flash flooding during finals week creates compound stress as students must balance exam preparation with safety compliance and potential displacement
The viral TikTok coverage of students swimming in floodwater directly contradicted university safety messaging, highlighting the gap between institutional risk communication and student behavior
Secondary hazards like water-triggered fire alarms can create confusion during flood events by mixing evacuation signals for different emergencies
Campus infrastructure designed for academic operations, including shuttle routes and delivery robots, is vulnerable to disruption from flooding events
Outcome
No injuries reported. Property damage to multiple buildings including Warren Hall ceiling tiles. Campus shuttles and Starship delivery robots suspended. TDU building evacuated after fire alarm triggered by water. Harrisonburg Fire Department responded to 40+ calls.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. News
  3. News
Tags
floodingflash-floodfinals-weekviral-tiktokweatherevacuationvirginiapublic-masters
Added April 2026Updated April 2026Via ingestion