Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
JSU

Two Weeks Without Drinkable Water at the Largest HBCU in Mississippi

MSwater contaminationadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

After the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant failed in late August 2022, Jackson State University moved to virtual instruction and remote work to relieve pressure on the city's collapsed water system. Approximately 150,000 Jackson residents lost reliable water service; the university distributed bottled water and adjusted operations for roughly two weeks while the boil-water notice that had begun July 28 stretched into mid-September.

Alerts
3
Response
min
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Jackson State University
Hbcu · MS
~7,000 studentsJSU Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 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 reconstructionCNN — paraphrasing JSU's August 29 community notice506 chars
JSU ALERT: Due to the ongoing City of Jackson water crisis and a failure at the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant, Jackson State University is moving to virtual instruction effective Tuesday, August 30. All in-person classes are canceled until further notice. The City of Jackson remains under a boil-water notice. Bottled water is available to on-campus residents at designated distribution points. Faculty and staff should work remotely where possible. Updates will be provided as the situation develops.

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

The pivot to virtual instruction within roughly 36 hours of the treatment plant failure was unusually fast for a public HBCU and reflected institutional muscle memory from the COVID-era pivot two years earlier.
Reconstructed from CNN, NPR, and KRDO coverage; JSU's alert archive does not retain the original text.
UPDATEEmail+3d
JSU UPDATE: The City of Jackson water crisis continues. JSU will remain on virtual instruction through Friday, September 9. On-campus residents may stay or depart for the long Labor Day weekend at their discretion. The University has a constant supply of drinking water on hand. Bottled water distribution continues at the Walter Payton Recreation & Wellness Center. Restrooms and showers in residence halls are operational using non-potable water — DO NOT drink, cook with, or brush your teeth using tap water. The boil-water notice remains in effect citywide.

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

The all-caps 'DO NOT drink, cook with, or brush your teeth using tap water' line was the operative health instruction — every other detail was logistics around it.
Walter Payton Center became the de facto bottled-water distribution hub for the campus and surrounding neighborhoods.
ALL CLEAREmail+16d
JSU UPDATE: The Mississippi State Department of Health has lifted the boil-water notice for the City of Jackson effective today, September 15, 2022. Tap water at JSU is once again safe to drink. In-person instruction resumes Monday, September 19. Faculty should plan to return to in-person teaching. Bottled water will continue to be available at the Walter Payton Center while supplies last. Thank you for your patience and resilience over the past two weeks.

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

Boil-water notice was lifted September 15, 2022 — but the underlying treatment plant problems would recur in subsequent winters.
JSU's experience became a touchstone in higher-ed coverage of climate-vulnerable urban infrastructure.
Context

Background

Jackson State University, the largest HBCU in Mississippi, was caught in the middle of Jackson's late-August 2022 water crisis — a slow-motion collapse precipitated when the Pearl River flooded and the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant lost the ability to reliably treat drinking water. The city had already been on a boil-water notice since July 28, and on August 29 Governor Tate Reeves declared a state of emergency. JSU pivoted to virtual instruction, distributed bottled water at the Walter Payton Center, and asked employees to work remotely. President Thomas Hudson told NPR that the university had a constant supply of drinking water on hand for residents but could not sustain a full in-person operation while the city water was unsafe. The boil-water notice was finally lifted on September 15, 2022; the New England Journal of Medicine subsequently published an analysis framing Jackson's water crisis as a case study in the health effects of structural racism on urban infrastructure.
Analysis

Key Findings

O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant failed late August 2022 after Pearl River flooding.
JSU pivoted to virtual instruction starting Tuesday, August 30, 2022.
Boil-water notice in effect citywide from July 28 to September 15, 2022.
Bottled water distribution centered at the Walter Payton Recreation & Wellness Center.
In-person classes resumed Monday, September 19, 2022.
Outcome
Boil-water notice lifted September 15, 2022. JSU returned to in-person operations in stages. No documented illnesses among students attributed to water exposure.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. Source
Tags
water-contaminationboil-water-advisoryhbcuinfrastructure-failuremississippi2022
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion