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342 Syracuse Students in Florence Given 5 Days to Leave Italy After COVID Case Confirmed in City

NYcovid 19advisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On February 26, 2020, Syracuse University announced it was suspending its Florence study-abroad program after a COVID-19 case was confirmed in Florence itself. Senior Vice President Steven Bennett told students they had five days to leave Italy or risk being quarantined in Florence by Italian health authorities. The Florence Center hosted 342 students -- one of the largest US study-abroad concentrations in Europe -- making this the largest single COVID-driven study-abroad evacuation announced in the first wave of Italy closures.

Alerts
2
Response
min
Killed
Injured
Institution
Syracuse University
Private R1 · NY
SU Abroad Emergency Line
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

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
Concerns for the safety, well-being and free movement of the 342 students in our study abroad program in Florence, Italy, have guided this difficult decision, which was also informed by global health experts. We believe this action is necessary to reduce the risk of any student being unable to leave Italy due to Italian containment efforts. We will work with all students to help them return to the United States or to their home country as soon as possible and to ensure they can continue their academic studies.
This text is the verbatim statement from Senior VP Steven Bennett as published in the official Syracuse University news release dated February 26, 2020 -- the characterCount reflects the exact text
The Daily Orange reported that students learned of the suspension during a meeting with Florence Center officials before the formal announcement -- the in-person notification preceded the email in this case
At 342 students, the SU Florence Center was one of the largest single-institution US study-abroad programs in Europe; the evacuation logistics were commensurately more complex than smaller programs
UPDATEEmail
Dear SU Florence Students, All students must leave Italy within five days. Students in on-campus housing must vacate the Florence Center by Friday. Students in off-campus housing or with host families are also expected to arrange travel home within the same five-day window. SU Abroad staff will be available to assist with travel arrangements and academic credit questions. Please contact your academic advisor at home regarding continuation of your coursework. Airlines are reporting high demand; please book as soon as possible. — SU Abroad

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

The five-day departure window was reported by the Daily Orange and CNY Central -- students were notified of cancellation after a 'brief six weeks' of the program
The high-demand airline booking context is accurate: Italy-US flight demand spiked in late February 2020 as multiple universities announced simultaneous evacuations
Context

Background

Syracuse University's Florence Center is one of the university's flagship overseas programs, enrolling 342 students in the spring 2020 semester. When a COVID-19 case was confirmed in Florence -- home to the Center -- Syracuse became the second major US institution to announce a Florence evacuation, following NYU Florence's closure announcement two days earlier. Senior VP Steven Bennett's February 26 announcement framed the decision around 'free movement' -- the specific fear that Italy's expanding quarantine cordons would trap students before they could depart. The Daily Orange reported that students were told of the cancellation during a Tuesday meeting with program officials, then had five days to leave a city where they had been settled for six weeks. A Colgate student also enrolled in the program described the sudden cancellation as disorienting but understood the safety logic. Italy's national lockdown came on March 10, less than two weeks after SU's departure deadline -- confirming that the five-day window was correctly calibrated.
Analysis

Key Findings

At 342 students, SU Florence was the largest single US study-abroad cohort evacuated from Italy in the first wave of COVID closures -- the logistics of simultaneous booking, housing vacate, and credit continuation at that scale made this a more operationally complex case than smaller programs
The 'free movement' framing in Bennett's announcement -- concern that Italian quarantine would trap students -- was the correct threat model: Italy's quarantine zones expanded rapidly through March
The five-day departure window, announced February 26, gave students until approximately March 2 to leave Italy, 8 days before the national lockdown
Outcome
342 SU students in Florence required to leave Italy within five days. Program suspended effective February 26. All students successfully departed before Italian quarantine measures widened. No SU students reported to have contracted COVID-19 during the program.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Student Paper
  3. Student Paper
  4. News
  5. Source
Tags
study-abroadcovid-19italyflorencepandemicevacuationinternationalprivate-r1syracuse-universityadvisorypublic-healthoverseas-campus
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion