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Campus Alert Archive
TAMUG

A Pelican Island Campus Rode Out Hurricane Beryl — Then Lost Power for Five Days

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Confirmed Threat

Beginning Saturday, July 6, 2024, Texas A&M University at Galveston moved to remote operations ahead of Hurricane Beryl's landfall on the central Texas coast. Beryl made landfall near Matagorda as a Category 1 hurricane on the morning of July 8, 2024, causing widespread power outages across the Houston-Galveston region and stranding TAMUG's Pelican Island campus without electricity for days. The Sea Aggie Alert system pushed daily class-cancellation notices through Friday, July 12. Galveston issued voluntary west-end evacuations; the seaside campus took minimal driven-rain damage but lost power along with much of the regional grid.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Texas A&M University at Galveston
Public R1 · TX
~2,400 studentsSea Aggie Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 messages in sequence · 4 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Texas A&M University at Galveston is moving to remote operations and instruction on Monday, July 8 due to continued uncertainty regarding Hurricane Beryl.
Sent more than 40 hours before Beryl's actual Texas landfall, reflecting the post-Ike (2008) institutional culture at TAMUG of erring early on hurricane decisions — Ike destroyed the campus and forced a year of operations from the College Station mainland
Notable for explicitly naming 'continued uncertainty' as the reason for the decision — a transparency choice unusual in hurricane pre-warnings, which typically state operational decisions without acknowledging forecast uncertainty
Verbatim text preserved at the official TAMUG Hurricane Beryl communications archive
UPDATEEmail+1d
Due to regional conditions caused by Hurricane Beryl, classes and remote work are canceled today, July 8.
Notable shift from 'remote operations' (sequence 1) to fully canceling remote work — an acknowledgment that staff would not have reliable power or internet to perform remote duties given the regional outage
The phrase 'regional conditions' is a hedged framing that lets TAMUG announce cancellation without committing to specific damage assessments while crews are still doing their initial sweeps
Verbatim text preserved at the official TAMUG Hurricane Beryl communications archive
UPDATEEmail+2d
Classes and remote work are canceled for Tuesday, July 9, due to widespread regional power outages and to allow campus restoration and recovery from Hurricane Beryl's impacts.
Issued the same day as the prior message — the morning cancellation was for Monday only, this afternoon update extended cancellation to Tuesday
The phrase 'widespread regional power outages' is doing two jobs: (a) explaining why work can't happen even remotely, (b) signaling that the constraint is not on TAMUG specifically but on the broader Houston-Galveston grid
Verbatim text preserved at the official TAMUG Hurricane Beryl communications archive
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Classes and remote work are canceled for Friday, July 12, due to continued widespread regional power outages.
Five business days of canceled operations is unusual for a Category 1 hurricane that caused only minimal direct damage to campus — reflects that the regional grid outage, not the storm itself, was the binding constraint
Galveston specifically lost CenterPoint Energy service to most of its substations; TAMUG could not restart classroom operations until the grid did
Verbatim text preserved at the official TAMUG Hurricane Beryl communications archive; normal operations resumed Monday, July 15
Context

Background

Hurricane Beryl made landfall near Matagorda, Texas, as a Category 1 hurricane on the morning of Monday, July 8, 2024, and then tracked north over the greater Houston metropolitan area, knocking out power to more than 2 million CenterPoint Energy customers. For Texas A&M University at Galveston — the marine and maritime branch of Texas A&M, located on Pelican Island just north of Galveston — Beryl arrived with grim familiarity. The campus had been destroyed by Hurricane Ike in 2008 and forced into a year of exile in College Station, so post-Ike institutional culture errs toward early decisions: TAMUG announced remote operations more than 40 hours before Beryl's Texas landfall. Once the storm passed, direct campus damage was minimal — only minor driven-rain infiltration — but the regional power outage was binding. CenterPoint Energy lost service to most Galveston substations, and TAMUG kept classes and remote work canceled through Friday, July 12, with normal operations not resuming until Monday, July 15. The case is an instructive example of grid-dependent operational risk at a coastal R1: the storm itself did almost nothing to the buildings, but the campus lost five business days because the surrounding grid did not recover.
Analysis

Key Findings

TAMUG's pre-landfall messaging — announcing remote operations more than 40 hours before Beryl's Texas arrival — reflects a post-Ike institutional culture distinct from inland Texas campuses, where 'wait and see' is more common; the 2008 destruction of the campus made early decisions politically and operationally cheaper than late ones
Five business days of canceled operations after a Category 1 hurricane with minimal direct campus damage is a vivid demonstration of grid-dependent operational risk: a coastal R1 cannot restart on its own timeline if the surrounding utility grid is down
TAMUG's day-by-day Beryl communications archive — preserving each cancellation message at a stable URL — is one of the more thorough hurricane-communications records published by a US public university, and a model for transparency that few non-flagship campuses match
Outcome
TAMUG suffered minimal structural damage but lost power, along with much of the Houston region. Classes and remote work were canceled July 8, 9, 11, and 12 because of continued widespread regional power outages. Pelican Island remained difficult to reach due to road conditions and debris. The campus resumed normal operations Monday, July 15, 2024.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. Source
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  5. Official
Tags
hurricaneweathertexasgalvestonpelican-islandtamugberylpower-outageremote-operations2024grid-dependent-risk
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion