
What we know about victims of devastating Texas floods
The flooding in central Texas originated from the fast-moving waters on the Guadalupe River on Friday, killing more than 70 people, including 15 children. Authorities say search and rescue efforts are still underway for dozens missing from a summer camp for girls.
Jane Ragsdale, 68, devoted her life to the Heart O'the Hills Camp, a summer camp for girls in Texas Hill Country. She was a camper and counselor there herself in the 1970s before becoming a co-owner. By the 1980s, she was director of the camp in Hunt.
'She was the heart of The Heart,' the camp said in a statement. 'She was our guiding light, our example, and our safe place. She had the rare gift of making every person feel seen, loved, and important.'
Since the camp was between sessions, no children were staying there when the floodwaters rose. The camp's facilities, directly in the path of the flood, were extensively damaged and access to the site remained difficult, according to camp officials. The camp has been in existence since the 1950s.
Camp officials said Ragsdale would be remembered for her strength and wisdom.
'We are heartbroken. But above all, we are grateful,' the camp said. 'Grateful to have known her, to have learned from her, and to carry her light forward.'
In a 2015 oral history for the Kerr County Historical Commission, Ragsdale, whose first name was Cynthie, but went by her middle name Jane, talked about how her father was also a camp director and how much she enjoyed her experiences.
'I loved every minute of camp from the first time I stepped foot in one,' she recalled.
Videos of Ragsdale strumming a guitar and singing to campers during a recent session were posted in a memorial on the camp's Facebook page: 'Life is good today. So keep singing 'til we meet, again.'
Eight-year-old Sarah Marsh from Alabama had been attending Camp Mystic in Texas, a longtime Christian girls camp in Hunt where several others were killed in the floods. As of Sunday, afternoon, 11 children were still missing.
Marsh was a student at Cherokee Bend Elementary in suburban Birmingham.
'This is an unimaginable loss for her family, her school, and our entire community,' Mountain Brook Mayor Stewart Welch said in a Facebook post. 'Sarah's passing is a sorrow shared by all of us, and our hearts are with those who knew and loved her.'
He said the community — where about 20,000 people reside — would rally behind the Marsh family as they grieved.
Her parents declined an interview request Sunday 'as they mourn this unbearable loss,' the girl's grandmother, Debbie Ford Marsh, told The Associated Press in an email.
'We will always feel blessed to have had this beautiful spunky ray of light in our lives. She will live on in our hearts forever!' Marsh wrote on Facebook. 'We love you so much, sweet Sarah!'
She declined further comment.
U.S. Sen. Katie Britt of Alabama also noted the girl's tragic death.
'We continue to pray for the victims' loved ones, the survivors, those who are still missing, and our brave first responders as search and rescue efforts continue in Texas,' she said in a post on social media platform X.
The last time Tanya Burwick's family heard from her was a frantic phone call about the flood waters as she headed to work at a Walmart early Friday in the San Angelo area. When Burwick didn't show up for work, her employer filed a missing persons report and sent a colleague to look for her.
Police investigating the 62-year-old's disappearance found Burwick's unoccupied SUV fully submerged later that day. Her body was found the next morning blocks from the vehicle.
'She lit up the room and had a laugh that made other people laugh,' said Lindsey Burwick, who added that her mom was a beloved parent, grandparent and colleague to many.
She and her brother Zac said the day was especially difficult because it happened on July Fourth as they were working at a fireworks stand that's been in the family for generations. As word of Tanya Burwick's disappearance spread, people from from Blackwell, a small community of about 250 people, showed up to the stand that's run out of a trailer painted orange.
'People came to our aid,' Lindsey Burwick said.
Police in San Angelo said more than 12,000 houses, barns and other buildings have been affected by the floods in the community of roughly 100,000 people.
'We ask that the public continue to keep the Burwick family in their thoughts and prayers as they navigate this heartbreaking tragedy,' the San Angelo Police Department said in a Facebook post.
Sisters Blair and Brooke Harber, both students at St. Rita Catholic School in Dallas, had been staying along the Guadalupe River when their cabin was swept away, according to the school.
Pastor Joshua J. Whitfield of St. Rita Catholic Community, which shares a campus with the school, said the girls' parents, Annie and RJ Harber, were staying in a different cabin and were safe. However, their grandparents were unaccounted for. Annie Harber has been a longtime teacher at the school.
Blair was headed into eighth grade while Brooke was a rising sixth grader.
'We will honor Blair and Brooke's lives, the light they shared, and the joy they brought to everyone who knew them,' Whitfield wrote in a Saturday letter to parishioners. 'And we will surround Annie, RJ, and their extended family with the strength and support of our St. Rita community.'
The church held a special prayer service Saturday afternoon and offered counseling.
'Please keep the Harber family in your prayers during this time of profound grief,' Whitfield wrote. 'May our faith, our love, and our St. Rita community be a source of strength and comfort in the days ahead.'
The family of camper Lila Bonner confirmed to Nexstar's KXAN on Saturday that she was among those killed in the flooding. In a statement, her family said, 'We ache with all who loved her and are praying endlessly for others to be spared from this tragic loss.'
Austinite Michael McCown posted on Instagram that his daughter, Linnie, did not survive the flood at Mystic Camp.
'It's with the heaviest of hearts we must share that our sweet little Linnie is with the Lord in heaven,' McCown said on Instagram. 'She filled our hearts with so much joy we cannot begin to explain.'
KXAN's Kelly Wiley and Sally Hernandez contributed to this report.

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Time Magazine
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How You Can Help Texas Flooding Victims
Catastrophic flooding in central Texas over the Fourth of July weekend has left at least 88 people dead, and dozens are still missing as rescue efforts continue. The disaster is one of the deadliest floods in the country in the past century. About 27 of the nearly 90 confirmed victims of the deluge were campers and counselors at an all-girls Christian summer camp, Camp Mystic. Ten girls and a counselor from the camp are among those who remain missing. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott posted on X on Saturday that he visited the camp that day, saying, 'It, and the river running beside it, were horrendously ravaged in ways unlike I've seen in any natural disaster.' 'The height the rushing water reached to the top of cabins was shocking,' he said in his post. 'We won't stop until we find every girl who was in those cabins.' As news of the devastation has spread, many people are looking for ways to help. Here are some organizations that are aiding relief efforts. The Kerr County Flood Relief Fund The Kerr County Flood Relief Fund was created by the public charity Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country to help support relief and rebuilding efforts. Donations can be made online or mailed to the foundation's office in Kerrville, Texas. TEXSAR TEXSAR is a nonprofit first responder organization based in Austin, Texas, and has deployed at least 51 volunteers to areas affected by the flooding. The organization has asked for online donations to help aid its relief efforts. World Central Kitchen World Central Kitchen said its Relief Team is in central Texas to help support people who have been affected by the flooding in the area. The organization provides freshly made meals to people impacted by disasters. You can donate online to help support the organization's work in Texas. Salvation Army The Salvation Army said it has deployed a mobile kitchen and team to the area, at the request of local emergency management and authorities. The organization said it is offering meals, drinks, and emotional and spiritual care to people affected by the flooding. It is accepting online donations from those who want to help support the organization's disaster response efforts. GoFundMe pages GoFundMe has collected a list of fundraising pages started by community members who have been affected by the flooding and are seeking help to recover from the disaster and rebuild their homes. Austin Pets Alive! The nonprofit organization has taken in more than 150 pets that were in areas affected by the flooding. The group said its top need was monetary donations, which can be made through its website. People can also donate supplies—including flea and tick meds, vaccines, plastic airline kennels for medium to large dogs, potty pads, dawn dish soap, and more—by dropping them off in the main visitor parking lot at 1156 West Cesar Chavez in Austin, Texas, between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. local time. The organization is also seeking volunteers, foster families, and adopters.


USA Today
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A flood killed his entire family in 2015. Now, he's joined search efforts in Texas.
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They were swept from his grasp as the house they were in was pushed along the Blanco River and broke apart against a bridge. On the morning of July 7, McComb, 45, gathered with about 20 members of TEXSAR, a search-and-rescue volunteer group based in Central Texas. On the banks of the Guadalupe – no longer destructive but still brown and swollen – the members discussed river currents and reminded one another to be careful with fallen branches and trees. As of that morning, the missing included at least 10 children attending a nearby Christian camp for girls. Live updates: Texas flooding death toll rises to 90; 10 campers missing Many of the volunteers were lending their expertise in search and rescue to a stricken community. For McComb, it was the fulfillment of a pact he struck with God while clinging to life in the raging Blanco River a decade ago. 'This one hits a little bit more at home,' McComb said in an interview with USA TODAY. 'I can see the hurt and the pain in the families. I know what they're going through and what they're feeling and what they're going to feel.' 'The magnitude of this is in its own category' Volunteers have streamed to Kerr County in the wake of the floods, some pulling skiffs on trailers behind trucks or with canoes strapped to the roofs of their SUVs. Authorities have asked volunteers to connect with a law enforcement agency before helping. TEXSAR alone has deployed 50 volunteers and six swift water rescue boats to the effort, spokesperson Shannon Smith said. Over the years, TEXSAR teams have helped in hundreds of missions, from search and rescue in the wake of Hurricane Harvey in southeast Texas to rescuing lost hikers in the Guadalupe Mountains in West Texas. But few have compared to this disaster, Smith said. 'The magnitude of this is in its own category,' she said. At least 90 people have died in flooding across Texas since July 4, officials said. The worst of the flooding occurred here in Kerr County, but fatalities have also been recorded in Travis, Burnet, Kendall, Tom Green and Williamson counties. The death toll included at least 27 children and counselors from a beloved all-girls summer camp, the camp said in a statement, as a frantic search for those still missing entered its fourth day. "Our hearts are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy," the private Christian camp, Camp Mystic, said in a July 7 statement on its website. "We are praying for them constantly." There were about 700 children at the camp when relentless rain caused the nearby Guadalupe River to surge over 26 feet in less than an hour, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said. Photos taken at the scene show a building where some of the children slept with broken windows and a blown-out wall. Among the mud-covered debris were pink blankets and stuffed animals. 'I'll tell your story and help others' The images have reawakened painful memories for McComb. On Memorial Day weekend 2015, McComb, his wife, Laura, their son Andrew, 6, and daughter Leighton, 4, were vacationing at a riverfront home in Wimberley with another family when the floods hit, pushing the home off its foundation and sending it rushing down the Blanco River. The home smashed into a bridge and began ripping apart, sending family members into the raging river. McComb witnessed his family swept away by the angry current, as they slipped from his grasp, he said. He resigned to go as well and slipped under the waves. But something bumped his head, startling him awake. He called on God. 'I said, 'All right, I'm going to get out of here and I'll tell your story and help others,'' McComb remembered. Around 11 miles downriver, McComb finally climbed out, scaled a steep cliff and walked to safety. He was the only one of the nine people in the home that night to survive. Leighton's body was never recovered, he said. While recovering in the hospital, he learned that TEXSAR volunteers were looking for his family. He vowed to join the group as soon as he could. Later that year, he did. McComb has assisted in six missions with the group, including other weather events and helping to find missing persons. He has since remarried and now has a 5-year-old daughter, Scarlett. He hugged her a little tighter before heading off to Kerr County. He arrived in Kerrville on the night of July 4, as the Guadalupe still roiled, joining search-and-rescue teams on Zodiac rafts. It's been a struggle, he said, to stay focused on the search while not letting familiar feelings distract him. 'It's a tug of war,' McComb said. 'I'm here to help. But knowing we weren't able to recover my daughter 10 years ago and I know what that feels like. I want to do what I can to help.' He climbed into a pickup truck with his team and rode off to a stretch of uprooted trees and tangled debris downriver. There were more victims to find. How to volunteer At a news conference, Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice asked that volunteers contact the Salvation Army Kerrville at 830-465-4797, or in-person at 855 Hays St. in Kerrville. He also asked that private drone operators desist from flying in the disaster area. Where to donate A variety of aid groups, nonprofits and other organizations are accepting donations to help victims and assist in the recovery effort. The Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country started a Kerr County Flood Relief Fund, which will provide aid to vetted organizations in Hunt, Ingram, Kerrville, Center Point and other areas. Crowdfunding website GoFundMe has an updated page for verified fundraisers connected to flood victims and their families. Other organizations accepting donations include World Central Kitchen and the Salvation Army, which is distributing supplies and has set up a mobile kitchen in the disaster area. Reach Jervis at: rjervis@ or follow him on X: @MrRJervis.

USA Today
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Camp Mystic, those devastating videos and the role of faith during disasters
Pink bedding drenched in mud. Stuffed animals meant for homesickness abandoned. Photos and videos of Camp Mystic after the central Texas camp was caught in a deadly deluge over the weekend are going viral. At least 27 children and counselors died after the nearby Guadalupe River became a mass torrent of water that surged over 26 feet in less than an hour on Friday. As some campers from the 99-year-old nondenominational Christian summer camp for girls evacuated, they sang the words "I want my world to know/the Lord of love/has come to me/I want to pass it on" to stay calm. As the girls sang, waves crashed where water shouldn't flow, tumbling through broken roads and structures turned inside-out. The haunting video has gained over 700,000 views and thousands of comments, with many reactions embracing something fundamental to Camp Mystic: prayer. "I'm not a 'religious' person but I'm extremely moved by these young ladies' faith and strength," said one comment. Others remarked on the song as a symbol of resilience and even-keeled stillness amid a terrible event. These reactions are an important reminder of how religion can helps some people through difficult times, even for those who aren't normally spiritual, according to Mary Beth Werdel, associate professor of counseling at Fordham University. Research links religion is to positive outcomes after disasters, as engaging in faith helps people make sense of what's just happened. "Prayer as a coping mechanism is really useful," said Werdel, who researches how religion leads us through stress and trauma. "Especially when other forms of coping are not available." For people who have seemingly lost everything in a near-biblical flood, reaching for hymn or prayer is an active medium for healing when other mechanisms, like therapy, aren't easily accessible, Werdel said. "Singing is a ritual," she said. "Religion in many ways gives people a roadmap to follow, structure to follow, in a time when stress and trauma make things very chaotic." 'Religion doesn't erase sadness' The wide-ranging reactions online are an important reminder that everyone processes trauma differently. Not everyone finds peace through prayer right now. Some reacted to the scene at Camp Mystic by calling out flood warnings that came too late to save lives and decrying local climate change preparedness policies. But it's not about choosing one versus the other, Werdel said. "We can be hopeful and moved by people's collective experience. And it can also be true that things can happen systemically ... religion's not going to stop the floodwaters." She added singing can be powerful, but some may find themselves asking, "What type of God would allow this to happen?" "Allow that question to stay with us," Werdel said. "Try not to find an answer right away ... It's OK to now have an answer." Werdel recommends working through questions like those with a counselor or therapist. "Religion doesn't erase sadness [or loss]," she added. "But it can give you hope that loss isn't the final reality." Prayer at the center of a community Lorynn Divita's 17-year-old daughter was working as a food service worker at another camp about 50 miles away from Camp Mystic. Her daughter happened to have a day off when the flooding occurred and was off-site in an unaffected area. But Divita prayed following the realization it could have been her child. Faith is the connective tissue for the area's summer camps, said Divita, an associate professor at Baylor University. These camps give kids opportunities to immerse themselves in nature and explore the tougher, unpredictable parts of life, she said. Parents often send their kids to these camps in the hope they will find the same joy and growth they did. "This whole experience has taught us that we are not truly in control," she said. Prayer has helped, she added. "While it doesn't answer the question of 'why,' the community fostered by [these camps] and the togetherness they have at least gives the solace of knowing they are not alone in feeling the feelings they have and confronting the trauma they've experienced," Divita said. "They are part of a community that cares for them and that is larger than themselves." How to match prayers with action The high number of prayer responses reflects how many people right now are moved by the losses at Camp Mystic and elsewhere in the flood zone, said Jamie Aten, executive director of Humanitarian Disaster Institute at Wheaton College. He says these expressions of prayer online are well-meaning, but people can also take those intentions into their real lives. "I would also encourage that in addition to prayer, we look at best practices for how to take action," Aten said. This can mean finding trusted nonprofits and other groups to give our money and time to through donations and volunteering (here's how to help victims in Texas right now). "There's something so truly powerful about just showing up," said Aten, a Hurricane Katrina survivor. "Know that your presence means more than any words you could ever say." Think about what you can do right outside your door, Aten recommended. If you're moved to pray, try also to take this moment to reach out to a friend who has had a recent loss, for example. How to cope with trauma after a natural disaster While research shows Americans have been moving away from religion in recent years, for areas like central Texas, events like these can show the best examples experiencing love and loss with community, said Werdel. But it's important to acknowledge faith, spirituality and coping is different for everyone. And faith isn't a fit for all people experiencing trauma, said Werdel. The Anxiety and Depression Association of America offers some other strategies for coping with natural disasters: