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SUU

Two Hundred Students Displaced by Cedar City's Worst Flash Flood in a Generation

UTfloodingadvisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the evening of July 26, 2021, a sudden monsoon downpour dropped approximately 2.15 inches of rain on Cedar City, Utah in about an hour, sending floodwaters through streets and into apartment complexes near the Southern Utah University campus and displacing approximately 200 SUU students. Cedar City Mayor Maile Wilson-Edwards declared a state of emergency at approximately 5:00 p.m. MDT, and SUU partnered with city and county officials to set up a command post and provide emergency dormitory housing for displaced students for up to 30 days, while urging the campus community to avoid roads and stay away from flooded areas.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Southern Utah University
Public Masters · UT
~11,000 studentsSUU Emergency Notifications
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 ALERTWebsite
Approximate reconstruction698 chars
Earlier this evening, Mayor Wilson-Edwards declared a state of emergency in Cedar City due to severe flooding. City officials are assessing the damage and are working with a number of jurisdictions and community partners to provide resources and support to those affected. A command post has been set up and city, county, and Southern Utah University officials are working together to evaluate the situation, provide ongoing resources, and focus on power and infrastructure restoration. The greatest concern we have is for the safety of our community. Please continue to help your friends and neighbors, but avoid the roads and stay away from heavily flooded areas as conditions can change quickly.

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

The joint statement was issued under the signatures of the Cedar City Mayor, Iron County Commissioner, and Southern Utah University, an unusually collaborative multi-government communication reflecting how the flooding affected university students, city residents, and county infrastructure simultaneously.
The phrase 'conditions can change quickly' is a standard flash-flood safety warning for Utah's monsoon season, when dry desert washes can fill in minutes and second-wave floods are common after the initial storm.
The command post was physically co-located with city and county emergency management, placing SUU officials directly in the incident command structure rather than operating a separate campus emergency response.
FOLLOW-UPWebsite
Approximate reconstruction273 chars
Southern Utah University has arranged emergency dormitory housing for displaced students for up to 30 days while they are able to either return to their apartments or find a new place to live. Students who need housing assistance should contact the Dean of Students office.

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

The 30-day dormitory housing offer was a significant institutional commitment, suggesting that administrators anticipated prolonged displacement and did not expect apartments to be habitable quickly.
Routing displaced students to the Dean of Students office reflects a welfare-and-housing intervention rather than a public safety response, marking the transition from emergency phase to recovery phase.
Approximately 200 students were displaced, representing roughly 1.8% of the total enrollment, a scale large enough to require formal institutional housing coordination.
Context

Background

Cedar City, Utah sits at approximately 5,840 feet elevation at the foot of the Iron County Plateau and experiences intense monsoon thunderstorms in late July and early August. On July 26, 2021, a cell dropped 2.15 inches in about an hour, more rain than the city typically receives in all of July, causing cars to be half-submerged in parking lots and floodwater to pour into ground-floor apartments near the SUU campus. The disaster prompted Cedar City Mayor Maile Wilson-Edwards to declare a state of emergency, and Iron County to follow with its own emergency declaration. SUU's response was notable for its integration with local government: a joint command post was established, and the university's statement was co-signed with city and county officials. The university arranged dormitory housing for approximately 200 displaced students for up to 30 days. The 2021 flood was among the worst in Cedar City's recent history; the city undertook rapid flood-mitigation infrastructure improvements after 2021 to prevent a recurrence, and by the 2022 monsoon season reported no comparable flooding. Iron County is in the Mountain Time zone (UTC-6 in summer).
Outcome
Approximately 200 SUU students displaced. Cedar City declared state of emergency. Iron County also declared an emergency. University provided dormitory housing for 30 days. Roads and some structures damaged.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
Tags
floodingflash-floodmonsoonadvisoryutahsuucedar-citystate-of-emergencystudent-displacementmulti-agency
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion