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UH ALERT Goes Statewide: Houston's R1 Flagship and Its Sugar Land and Katy Campuses All Shutter for Winter Storm Fern

TXwinter stormadvisorymedium confidence

On January 25-26, 2026, the University of Houston closed its main campus along with its Sugar Land and Katy campuses due to expected hazardous winter weather conditions from Winter Storm Fern. The university announced the closure Friday afternoon, January 23, and filed a catastrophe notice with the Texas Attorney General covering all UH System campuses. UH ALERT pushed the closure notification to approximately 47,000 students and 6,000 employees.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of Houston
Public R1 · TX
~47,000 studentsUH 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 ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction257 chars
UH ALERT: The University of Houston, including Sugar Land and Katy campuses, will be closed Sunday, Jan. 25 and Monday, Jan. 26 due to expected hazardous winter weather conditions. All classes and on-campus activities are canceled. Visit uh.edu for updates.

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

Reconstructed from Houston-area news coverage; the UH ALERT SMS is not in a public archive
UH's decision to close two days ahead of the storm was driven by Texas Department of Transportation pre-staging warnings about freezing rain accumulations
The catastrophe notice filed with the Texas Attorney General is the formal mechanism by which Texas state agencies document weather-related operational suspensions
UPDATEEmail
Approximate reconstruction334 chars
UH ALERT: The University of Houston, including the Katy and Sugar Land campuses, will resume normal operations on Tuesday, January 27, 2026, with all regularly scheduled classes and activities. Please drive carefully — some side streets may still be icy. Faculty are encouraged to be flexible with students delayed by road conditions.

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

Reconstructed from Houston television reporting that confirmed the Tuesday reopening
UH's reopening covered the main campus plus the two satellite campuses (Sugar Land and Katy), consistent with the system-wide closure scope
The 'drive carefully' phrasing matches typical UH ALERT post-weather messaging style
Context

Background

On Friday afternoon, January 23, 2026, the University of Houston announced the closure of its main campus and the Sugar Land and Katy campuses for Sunday and Monday, January 25-26, 2026, in advance of Winter Storm Fern. The University of Houston System filed a catastrophe notice with the Texas Attorney General's Office for the closure date — the formal mechanism by which Texas state agencies document weather-related operational suspensions. UH ALERT, the university's emergency notification system, pushed the closure notification by SMS and email to approximately 47,000 students and 6,000 employees. Houston-area forecasters predicted freezing rain, ice accumulation, and dangerously cold temperatures. The closure aligned UH with most Houston-area independent school districts, Lone Star College System, Houston Community College, Rice University, and Texas Southern University. UH resumed normal operations on Tuesday, January 27, with all regularly scheduled classes. Winter Storm Fern killed at least seven people across Texas and produced more than 5,800 flight cancellations between January 23 and 28.
Analysis

Key Findings

UH's two-day-ahead announcement (Friday for Sunday-Monday closure) is unusually early compared with the Sunday-evening announcements from Texas State and UT Austin, reflecting Houston's larger commuter footprint and the longer planning lead-time needed for a 47,000-student commuter university
The catastrophe notice filed with the Texas Attorney General is a legally required Texas state-agency mechanism — one of the few states where weather closures generate a formal AG filing, providing a stable government-record audit trail
UH ALERT's coverage of all three campuses under a single notification (main, Sugar Land, Katy) demonstrates the system-wide consolidation approach common among Texas R1 publics during weather emergencies
Outcome
The University of Houston resumed normal operations on Tuesday, January 27, 2026, including campuses in Katy and Sugar Land, with all regularly scheduled classes and activities. No injuries reported on UH property.
Provenance

Sources

  1. government report
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. Official
Tags
winter-stormwinter-storm-ferntexascampus-closurepublic-r1uh-alertmulti-campuscatastrophe-notice
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion