Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine – UPDATE #1 – 9/23/2024

University of Florida officials are actively monitoring Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine due to UF units being in the five-day forecast cone. While much remains unknown about the storm’s exact path, here is what we know today:

Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine is expected to intensify while it moves northward over the eastern Gulf of Mexico, becoming Hurricane Helene, and could be a major hurricane when it reaches the Florida coast on Thursday, according to the National Hurricane Center, which has issued potential tropical cyclone advisories.

The official NHC forecast currently indicates Category 2 at landfall. The center is expected to make landfall in the Nature Coast or Big Bend area with the strongest winds near and to the right of the center. By late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning tropical storm winds will begin and increase to hurricane strength at landfall.

For the UF campus in Gainesville, tropical storm conditions are possible on Thursday, depending on the exact track of the storm, with a forecast of 2 to 3 inches of rainfall expected.

As of Monday afternoon, no tropical storm warnings or watches had been issued for Florida, and no operational changes have been announced for the UF campus in Gainesville. However, all UF units statewide – especially in the Panhandle, Big Bend, and North Florida – should closely monitor forecasts and follow guidance from local officials.

We will continue to monitor and update all on expected impacts or schedule changes as information becomes available.

Students, faculty and staff should use the next few days to prepare, including reviewing their emergency kit. Additional preparedness information is available at https://emergency.ufl.edu/get-ready.

Additional information:

Please visit the National Hurricane Center

Here’s how to prepare for hurricane season
Pre-storm preparation for students in UF housing
UF/IFAS Disaster Preparation & Recovery

Published: September 23rd, 2024

Category: 2024 Weather Alerts, Uncategorized