PORT ARANSAS, Texas — After a two week delay 140 researchers, students and support staff from the University of Texas at Austin Marine Science Institute were began the fall semester of school. But not at the Port Aransas campus researchers call home.
RELATED | University of Texas Marine Science Institute heavily damaged by Harvey
On Tuesday, Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi opens up their classroom doors to house 80 percent of the faculty and students.
In case you were on an island far away with all communications turned off, Hurricane Harvey made landfall on Friday, August 25th almost three weeks ago. The edge of the eye wall slammed into the UTSMI campus, leaving behind significant, structural damage. The Category 4 tropical storm’s winds were clocked at 136mph.
Two days later, a wayward drill shipping unanchored by Harvey slammed into the facility’s research pier, destroying the same weather monitoring equipment which captured Harvey coming ashore.
A week after the storm push northeast, UTSMI’s Director Dr. Richard Dickey said damage to the research pier.
"It was tragic, I felt bad about the pier and loss of the instrumentation, the services and information we provide and donate not only to the public but to our scientific peers, but it's a hurricane. These things happen."
Most of the institute’s roof failed, labs and classrooms were drenched with storm and ocean water, and Port Aransas student housing was severely damage, immediately shutting downs research, education and outreach mission.
Emergency generators saved sample freezers and aquaculture tank systems. Red fish and croaker broodstock also survived the storm. According to Dr. Dickey, those fish provide the basis of vital human breast and prostate cancer research.
UT Systems Chancellor William McRaven toured the site after learning of the damage. University officials say damage assessment is ongoing.
Dr. Dickey says contractors have examined the damage to the buildings and pier, "and we've made a good start on it, we've got an early start, just two days after the storm had passed, we already had contractors on site to assess the damage to determine exactly what we needed to do."
Complete restoration could take 1 to 2 years.
UT Austin has set up a site for donations which will go directly rebuilding UTSMI here.
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Dr. Dickey's full statement:
The University of Texas at Austin Marine Science Institute (UTMSI) is the oldest marine research facility on the Texas coast. What began humbly in 1941 as a small, lumber shack on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico in Port Aransas is now home to leading-edge research, education, and public outreach programs promoting knowledge and stewardship of our coastal bays, estuaries and oceans.
Hurricane Harvey made landfall at Port Aransas on Friday, Aug. 25, and swept northeastward to impact our neighbors from Rockport to Houston, leaving a path of destruction in its wake. The edge of the eye wall passed directly over UTMSI at Port Aransas with Category 4 winds surpassing 136 mph.
The most important outcome from the storm is that all of our students, faculty members and staffers are accounted for, safe and healthy. However, the Marine Science Institute sustained significant damage. Most of our roofing failed; our laboratories and offices, including newly constructed labs and offices, were inundated with water; and our student housing was severely damaged. In addition, two days after the storm, a drilling ship that broke its moorings destroyed our research pier and instrument house that had survived the storm. We have a lot of cleanup and rebuilding to do.
The storm necessarily halted our research, education and outreach mission, and we will be delayed in restarting until we can re-establish the supporting infrastructure. We are still assessing the full scope of the damage to the institution, and our path forward. Although Harvey has disrupted our programs, our preparations prior to the storm helped immensely to reduce the extent of the damage. Emergency generators provided power to many of our sample freezers and aquaculture tank systems. Our red fish and croaker broodstock survived the storm. These fish are the vital basis of research for a wide variety of projects, from oil spill impacts on marine life to understanding hormone receptors common to fish eggs and human breast and prostate cancer cells, one excellent example of the translational impact of marine science research at UTMSI.
UT System Chancellor William McRaven was on site Aug. 31, very soon after the storm, to lay eyes on the damage. The chancellor and UT Austin President Gregory L. Fenves have been fully engaged and extremely supportive in aligning emergency aid and specialized personnel to help with recovery in the immediate aftermath, damage assessments and planning our path for full recovery going forward.
President Fenves and Texas A&M University System Chancellor John Sharp were instrumental in arranging the relocation of 80 percent of our faculty, students and staff to Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi (TAMU-CC), which came through Harvey in good shape and stepped up magnificently with a helping hand. Special thanks go out to TAMU-CC President Kelly Quintanilla, Harte Research Institute Executive Director Larry McKinney and other colleagues at TAMU-CC for their generous assistance and hospitality.
Beyond Texas, the scientific community has rallied to assist. They have offered to host our students and researchers and to help perform analyses for time-sensitive faculty research and student theses, and they have donated both personal and institutional funds to support students and staff members who have been displaced.
We have an enormous amount of work to bring about a semblance of normalcy as we begin our fall semester, which I postponed for two weeks. Our graduate students started their first classes yesterday at the TAMU-CC campus.
My greatest concern remains the recovery of our students, faculty members and staff members. The University of Texas at Austin has set up a means to donate funds directly to our Institute for Hurricane Harvey relief: https://hornraiser.utexas.edu/project/7548
UTMSI is particularly blessed to have a strong and supportive Advisory Council that immediately rose to the occasion with offers to support our students, staff members and faculty members with emergency funds and individual time and labor if we needed it. I am very grateful to each and every one of our council members for their support, which lifted my spirits and that of our UTMSI family. Many thanks to all who have contributed emergency support to the Marine Science Institute. Your support is heartwarming and encouraging as we move forward. It shows that not only Texas but also Texans, indeed our colleagues across the nation, have big hearts.
In crises like this it is important to be resilient and positive, to help one another and above all to keep the vision of coming back stronger and better than before squarely in mind. Together, we will make that happen.