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Ohio State

The Two-Day Polar Vortex Shutdown That Delayed Ohio State's Spring Semester by 36 Years' First Precedent

OHwinter stormadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On January 6 and 7, 2014, Ohio State closed its Columbus campus for two consecutive days as a southward-shifted polar vortex drove wind chills to roughly minus 35 degrees Fahrenheit. The closure delayed the start of the spring semester and was the university's first back-to-back weather closure in 36 years. Buckeye Alerts and a presidential message from then-President E. Gordon Gee's successor Joseph A. Alutto announced the shutdown and warned students against outdoor travel.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
The Ohio State University
Public R1 · OH
~60,000 studentsBuckeye Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 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
Approximate reconstruction458 chars
Ohio State University: Due to dangerously cold temperatures and wind chills forecast for Monday, January 6, the Columbus campus will be closed. Classes are canceled and only employees designated as essential personnel should report to work. The Wexner Medical Center remains fully operational. Please avoid all unnecessary outdoor travel. Wind chills are expected to be in the -25 to -35 degree range. Frostbite can occur in less than 10 minutes of exposure.

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

Reconstructed from Ohio State Libraries' contemporaneous 'School's Out' blog post and OSU HR's weather-closing policy referencing this event as a milestone
First back-to-back closure of OSU's Columbus campus for weather in 36 years (since the January 1978 blizzard)
Distinguishes the academic campus closure from the Wexner Medical Center, which never closes — a standard pattern in R1 weather messages with attached academic medical centers
Frostbite-time framing (10 minutes) was the National Weather Service's standard public-messaging language for the January 2014 polar vortex
UPDATEEmail
Approximate reconstruction357 chars
Ohio State University: The Columbus campus will remain closed Tuesday, January 7, due to continued dangerously cold conditions. Classes are canceled for a second consecutive day. Spring semester instruction will now begin Wednesday, January 8. Only essential personnel should report. Wind chills overnight are expected to remain between -20 and -30 degrees.

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

Reconstructed from OSU Libraries' archival narrative noting that the spring semester start was delayed by two days
Two-day closures are operationally significant at OSU because residence halls remain open and dining services must continue at reduced staffing
The 'spring semester instruction will now begin' phrasing is the official way OSU announces a calendar shift mid-break
Context

Background

The January 2014 polar vortex collapsed Arctic air southward across the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley on January 5-7, 2014, producing wind chills below minus 30 degrees Fahrenheit across Ohio. Ohio State University closed its Columbus campus on both Monday January 6 and Tuesday January 7 — the first back-to-back weather closure of OSU's main campus in 36 years, per OSU Libraries' contemporaneous archival post. The decision delayed the start of spring semester from Monday to Wednesday. OSU's weather-closing policy preserves operations at the Wexner Medical Center and certain research facilities even when academic operations close, which the closure messages explicitly noted. The 2014 polar vortex closures became a reference point in OSU's emergency-communications playbook: a decade later, the same wind-chill thresholds and frostbite-time framing reappeared in subsequent winter advisories. The case illustrates how a 'lower-severity' weather closure still functions as a Clery-adjacent advisory: students and employees rely on the alert system to know whether to report, whether residence halls and dining are open, and whether the academic medical center is staffed.
Analysis

Key Findings

Two consecutive academic-day closures of OSU's Columbus campus had not occurred for 36 years before January 2014
OSU's policy bifurcates 'campus closed' from 'medical center closed' — the Wexner Medical Center remained fully operational during the polar vortex
Frostbite-in-10-minutes framing became standard public-messaging language during the January 2014 cold wave, tied to NWS guidance
The closure delayed spring semester start by two days, an unusual mid-break calendar shift
OSU's polar-vortex response became the template for later winter weather messaging at the institution
Outcome
Campus closed both days; only essential personnel reported. Spring semester instruction began January 8 instead of January 6. No serious cold-related injuries reported among students.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. encyclopedia
  4. News
Tags
weatherextreme-coldpolar-vortexcampus-closureohio-statepublic-r1ohioadvisoryspring-semester-delaywind-chill
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion