
FEMA let Camp Mystic operate in 100-year flood zone despite deadly warnings for years: ‘Particularly disturbing'
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) designated the prestigious girls' summer camp as being in a 'Special Flood Hazard Area' on its National Flood Insurance map for Kerr County in 2011, which meant it was required to have flood insurance and faced stricter regulations on any future construction projects.
That designation indicates an area is likely to flood during a 100-year event, defined as a severe flood with only a one percent chance of occurring each year.
Syracuse University associate professor Sarah Pralle, who has extensively studied FEMA's flood map determinations, said it was 'particularly disturbing' that a camp responsible for the safety of so many young people would receive exemptions from basic flood regulations.
Situated in a low-lying area along the Guadalupe River in a region known as flash flood alley, Camp Mystic lost at least 27 campers and counselors, along with longtime owner Dick Eastland, when historic floodwaters tore through its property just before dawn over a week ago.
The flood was much more severe than the 100-year event predicted by FEMA, according to experts, and moved so quickly in the middle of the night that it caught many people off guard in a county without a warning system.
'It's a mystery to me why they weren't taking proactive steps to move structures away from the risk, let alone challenging what seems like a very reasonable map that shows these structures were in the 100-year flood zone,' said Pralle.
Camp Mystic didn't respond to emails seeking comment, and attempts by the AP to contact staff by phone went unanswered. The camp has described the flood as an 'unimaginable tragedy' and added in a statement on Thursday that it had restored power to communicate with its supporters.
In response to an appeal, FEMA amended the county's flood map in 2013 to remove 15 of the camp's buildings from the hazard zone. Records indicate that those buildings were part of the 99-year-old Camp Mystic Guadalupe, which was destroyed by last week's flood.
After additional appeals, FEMA removed 15 more structures at Camp Mystic from the designation in 2019 and 2020. These buildings were located at nearby Camp Mystic Cypress Lake, a sister site that opened to campers in 2020 as part of a major expansion and experienced less flood damage.
Campers have said the cabins at Cypress Lake endured significant damage, but those called "the flats' at the Guadalupe River camp were submerged.
Experts say Camp Mystic's efforts to change the FEMA map may have aimed to avoid flood insurance requirements, reduce insurance costs, or make it easier to renovate or build new structures under less strict regulations.
Pralle noted that the appeals were not surprising, as communities and property owners have often used them successfully to protect specific properties from regulation.
Regardless of FEMA's findings, the risk was clear, as at least 12 structures at Camp Mystic Guadalupe were fully within FEMA's 100-year flood plain, with a few more partially in that zone, according to an AP analysis of data provided by First Street, a data science company specializing in climate risk modeling.
Jeremy Porter, head of climate implications at First Street, said FEMA's flood insurance map underestimates flood risks because it doesn't account for the effects of heavy rainfall on smaller waterways, such as streams and creeks. First Street's model indicates that nearly all of Camp Mystic Guadalupe faces risk during a 100-year flood.
The buildings at the newer Cypress Lake site are farther from the south fork of the flood-prone river but are adjacent to Cypress Creek. FEMA's floodplain does not consider the small waterway a risk.
However, First Street's model, which factors in heavy rain and runoff reaching the creek, shows that most of the Cypress Lake site falls within an area with a 1% chance of flooding in any given year.
In a statement to the AP, FEMA downplayed the significance of the flood map amendments: 'Flood maps are snapshots in time designed to show minimum standards for floodplain management and the highest risk areas for flood insurance.'
'They are not predictions of where it will flood, and they don't show where it has flooded before,' the agency said.
Property owners challenging FEMA's maps hire engineers for detailed studies to argue where the 100-year floodplain should be, a complex process that can improve map accuracy and facilitate future construction.
Pralle, who reviewed the amendments for AP, noted that some of the exempted properties were within two feet of FEMA's flood plain according to the camp's revised calculations, which she said left almost no margin for error.
She stated that her research indicates FEMA approves approximately 90% of map amendment requests, and the process might favor the wealthy and well-connected.
FEMA warned in its amendments that other parts of Camp Mystic remained on the flood map, and that 'any future construction or substantial improvement' would be subject to flood plain management regulations.
County officials not only allowed the camp to continue operating but also enabled a significant expansion, with Camp Mystic owners Dick and Tweety Eastland citing the 'tremendous success' of their original camp to justify the need for a second nearby site.
The expansion included new cabins, a dining hall, a chapel, an archery range, and more. Records show that the camp had 557 campers and over 100 staff members across its two locations when a state licensing agency inspected on July 2, two days before the tragedy.
Chris Steubing, executive director of the Texas Floodplain Management Association, an industry group that represents floodplain managers, said the rain and flooding that hit Kerr County in a matter of hours were so much more intense than anything in its history that it's hard to call the floodplain management a failure.
Local officials likely believed they were following existing regulations when they allowed the camp to keep growing, but 'then Mother Nature set a new standard,' Steubing said.
'You could have built things two feet higher, three feet higher, and they still might have gotten taken down,' he added.
As of Saturday, July 12, a total of 129 people have been confirmed dead from the July 4 flood. A week later and approximately 160 are still believed to be missing.
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The Guardian
23 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Texas camp leader waited over an hour after flood warning to evacuate
The adult leader of Camp Mystic, the Texas summer camp where 27 children and counselors died in the Hill Country floods, waited more than an hour after receiving a severe flood warning before initiating an evacuation, it was disclosed on Monday. Richard 'Dick' Eastland, who had run the popular all-girls, Christian-values sleepaway camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River with his family since the 1980s, was among the fatalities after a wall of water rushed through the camp early on 4 July. A spokesperson for the Eastland family told the Washington Post that a National Weather Service (NWS) alert was sent to his phone at 1.14am warning of 'life threatening flash flooding', and only at 2.30am, with heavy rain still falling and the river level rising fast, he made the decision to begin evacuations. The account sheds new light on a chaotic few hours at the campsite, where almost 700 girls were sleeping in dormitories. Campers were not allowed to bring mobile phones, and counselors were made to surrender theirs, leaving them unable to see the emergency alerts themselves, two teenage Mexican counselors previously revealed. The family spokesperson, Jeff Carr, said Eastland spent time after receiving the alert conferring with family members, some of whom lived and worked at the 725-acre camp as staff. The Post said the NWS alert did not contain an order or recommendation for evacuation, a power it said rests with local government officials. Separately, the actions of authorities in Kerr county, which bore the brunt of the flooding that killed 132 and left 160 missing, continue to come under scrutiny. Carr said staff communicated with each other by walkie-talkie about how to respond – and that Eastland eventually ordered an evacuation after realizing that the situation had become critical, particularly at dormitories closest to the river containing some of the youngest campers. Eastland, 70, died after his truck was swept away as he tried to move a group of small girls to safety, Carr said. Many of the fatalities occurred in the Bubble Inn and Twins cabins, which the Post analysis said were caught between swirling eddies rising to 4ft. Ultimately the Guadalupe River crested at 37.5ft, the US Geological Survey said. Many of the teenage counselors in charge of the dormitories were left to make instant life-or-death decisions on their own, having lost contact with adult supervisors, the Post said. Carr added that the Eastland family wanted to put out the information about the timeline to try to avoid speculation. 'It will be important to go through this process and avoid sharing information on a piecemeal basis,' he said following a family meeting on Sunday, which he said was the first real opportunity they had to meet and grieve together. While the statement explains some of the decisions by camp staff, others will continue to be questioned. The chief of the Hunt volunteer fire department, closest to Camp Mystic, told the newspaper it did not receive any calls for help from the camp. Meanwhile, families of some of the campers have said they did not receive any notification from the camp about the situation until an email shortly before 11.30am. The search for those still missing was halted in some places on Sunday and Monday after further heavy rain created dangerous conditions and fears of further flooding. At a meeting of the Kerr county commission on Monday morning, the first since the disaster, officials revealed grim new details of the aftermath of the emergency. 'We've heard accounts of trailer after trailer after trailer being swept into the river with families in them. [We] can't find the trailers, we don't know how many of them there are,' the county judge, Rob Kelly, said. One trailer was found 'completely covered in gravel' 27ft below the surface of the river, he said, adding that sonar crews were searching the river and local lakes. Two reservoir lakes attached to the river would be drained to aid the search, officials said. The Kerr county sheriff, Larry Leitha, told the meeting that his office's search and recovery operation could last up to six months, CNN reported. The sheriff's office said 2,200 people from multiple local, state and federal agencies had been deployed to assist in the recovery effort. The Associated Press contributed to this report


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
New account sheds light on chaotic hours at Texas girls camp hit by flood
The adult leader of Camp Mystic, the Texas summer camp where 27 children and counselors died in the Hill Country floods, waited more than an hour after receiving a severe flood warning before initiating an evacuation, it was disclosed on Monday. Richard 'Dick' Eastland, who had run the popular all-girls, Christian-values sleepaway camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River with his family since the 1980s, was among the fatalities after a wall of water rushed through the camp early on 4 July. A spokesperson for the Eastland family told the Washington Post that a National Weather Service (NWS) alert was sent to his phone at 1.14am warning of 'life threatening flash flooding', and only at 2.30am, with heavy rain still falling and the river level rising fast, he made the decision to begin evacuations. The account sheds new light on a chaotic few hours at the campsite, where almost 700 girls were sleeping in dormitories. Campers were not allowed to bring mobile phones, and counselors were made to surrender theirs, leaving them unable to see the emergency alerts themselves, two teenage Mexican counselors previously revealed. The family spokesperson, Jeff Carr, said Eastland spent time after receiving the alert conferring with family members, some of whom lived and worked at the 725-acre camp as staff. The Post said the NWS alert did not contain an order or recommendation for evacuation, a power it said rests with local government officials. Separately, the actions of authorities in Kerr county, which bore the brunt of the flooding that killed 132 and left 160 missing, continue to come under scrutiny. Carr said staff communicated with each other by walkie-talkie about how to respond – and that Eastland eventually ordered an evacuation after realizing that the situation had become critical, particularly at dormitories closest to the river containing some of the youngest campers. Eastland, 70, died after his truck was swept away as he tried to move a group of small girls to safety, Carr said. Many of the fatalities occurred in the Bubble Inn and Twins cabins, which the Post analysis said were caught between swirling eddies rising to 4ft. Ultimately the Guadalupe River crested at 37.5ft, the US Geological Survey said. Many of the teenage counselors in charge of the dormitories were left to make instant life-or-death decisions on their own, having lost contact with adult supervisors, the Post said. Carr added that the Eastland family wanted to put out the information about the timeline to try to avoid speculation. 'It will be important to go through this process and avoid sharing information on a piecemeal basis,' he said following a family meeting on Sunday, which he said was the first real opportunity they had to meet and grieve together. While the statement explains some of the decisions by camp staff, others will continue to be questioned. The chief of the Hunt volunteer fire department, closest to Camp Mystic, told the newspaper it did not receive any calls for help from the camp. Meanwhile, families of some of the campers have said they did not receive any notification from the camp about the situation until an email shortly before 11.30am. The search for those still missing was halted in some places on Sunday and Monday after further heavy rain created dangerous conditions and fears of further flooding. At a meeting of the Kerr county commission on Monday morning, the first since the disaster, officials revealed grim new details of the aftermath of the emergency. 'We've heard accounts of trailer after trailer after trailer being swept into the river with families in them. [We] can't find the trailers, we don't know how many of them there are,' the county judge, Rob Kelly, said. One trailer was found 'completely covered in gravel' 27ft below the surface of the river, he said, adding that sonar crews were searching the river and local lakes. Two reservoir lakes attached to the river would be drained to aid the search, officials said. The Kerr county sheriff, Larry Leitha, told the meeting that his office's search and recovery operation could last up to six months, CNN reported. The sheriff's office said 2,200 people from multiple local, state and federal agencies had been deployed to assist in the recovery effort. The Associated Press contributed to this report


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
Camp Mystic reportedly waited an hour to evacuate after warnings of ‘life-threatening' Texas floods
The director of Camp Mystic waited more than an hour after receiving a life-threatening flood alert before beginning to evacuate campers asleep in their cabins, his family confirmed through a spokesman. Executive Director Richard 'Dick' Eastland, 70, along with his wife, had been in charge of the beloved all-girls Christian summer camp in Hunt, Texas since the 1980s. It's located directly in the flood zone. But when the National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning for Kerr County at 1:14 a.m. on July 4, warning of 'life-threatening flash flooding' near the Guadalupe River, little direction was given by the leadership of the camp. Eastland did not order evacuations until 2:30 a.m., by which time torrential rains were already falling and the river was rapidly rising, according to family spokesman Jeff Carr, as reported by The Washington Post. Instead, the director first used walkie-talkies to coordinate with his family members, many of whom worked at the camp, to 'assess the situation.' Interviews, detailed in the Post, with survivors and emergency personnel, describe a chaotic and delayed response that left teenage counselors scrambling in the dark as floodwaters surged through the camp, which lacked reliable cell service and had no backup power for its loudspeaker system once electricity went out. The result was catastrophe. Twenty-seven campers and counselors died. Eastland himself drowned while trying to rescue some of the youngest girls at the camp. 'There should have been immediate action (by the leaders),' said Serena Aldrich, a lawyer, a parent and former camper whose two daughters survived. 'They should have been paying attention to those warnings and evacuated the camp,' she added. 'The flooding is not a new thing. I don't know if it's ever been to epic proportions like that, but ignoring the warnings doesn't make a lot of sense to me.' Camp Mystic had been under a flood watch earlier that evening, but the 1:14 a.m. 'life threatening' alert, which came without an official evacuation order, marked a significant escalation. The National Weather Service does not have the authority to mandate evacuations. That responsibility falls to local officials. Kerr County authorities, however, did not use emergency alert systems to warn residents until more than two days later, The Post reported. Whether Camp Mystic called 911 is still unclear. The local fire chief told the outlet he never received a call for help from the camp. By the time the camp began evacuations, the Guadalupe River had already started its historic surge, eventually cresting at 37.5 feet, nearly a foot above its previous record. Counselors were forced to make life-or-death decisions in waist- and chest-high water. They carried barefoot children through the darkness to higher ground while listening to cries for help from cabins closer the river. Some girls were eventually rescued by helicopter. Others clung to trees or took shelter on rooftops for hours. Camp staff did not officially contact most parents, until later that morning, according to emails obtained by the Post. The first communication from the camp to most parents came at 11:28 a.m. By that time, many of the parents had grown hysterical over the harrowing images being shared on the news and across social media.