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Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods
Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods

The Star

time4 days ago

  • General
  • The Star

Volunteers help reopen US camp for disabled children after Texas floods

When Kenny Hudnall looked out the window of his mother's minivan, he could see the destruction wrought by the floodwaters of the Guadalupe River in Center Point, Texas, the United States on July 4. Fat cypress trees snapped like twigs, kayaks dangling from debris piles 9m off the ground. Volunteers were still working to clear the mess, many wielding chainsaws. But Hudnall, a 21-year-old college student, could not join them. He was partially paralysed in a car crash at age five and needs a wheelchair to move and a ventilator to breathe. Still, he had a part to play in the rebirth of Texas Hill Country after the deadly floods of July 4 that left at least 132 dead and nearly 100 still missing. Hudnall was traveling to Camp CAMP (Children's Association for Maximum Potential) in Centre Point, which was improbably welcoming new campers, many with physical and cognitive challenges too serious for other camps, little more than a week after the deadly deluge. 'Seeing those volunteers on the road was very similar to the vibe at camp,' Hudnall said. 'It's bringing normalcy to a person who doesn't always feel normal.' Camp CAMP provides an inclusive summer camp experience for children and adults with a wide range of disabilities. Rebuilding after the storm The reopening of a summer camp recently heralded the green shoots already sprouting in the flood's wake, and it felt particularly poignant, and perhaps a little scary. One of the most indelible horrors of the flood was Camp Mystic, 48km upriver in Kerr County, Texas, where more than two dozen campers, counselors and other employees lost their lives. Camp CAMP was not in session the week of July 4. Its cabins and other buildings sit on a hill 24m above the river anyway, safely above the flood's high-water mark, said Brandon Briery, the chief operations officer. The camp's undeveloped stretch of riverfront property was used by campers only sporadically for fishing, canoeing and bonfires. 'For years we had talked about building here, and I always said no,' Ken Kaiser, the facilities director, said this week as he stood on the riverbank. 'Because it always floods.' Still, flood detritus did render the waterfront impassable. The heart of camp was unscathed, but leaders worried about exposing vulnerable campers to scenes of destruction, including search teams from Texas A&M University on the property looking for human remains. 'We didn't want them to see their home as a disaster area,' Briery said. Then unexpected help arrived. Cord Shiflet, an Austin, Texas, real estate agent who started helping with disaster relief when Hurricane Harvey hit Houston in 2017, had driven to the Texas Hill Country looking for places to pitch in. Someone directed him to Camp CAMP. He discovered the destroyed waterfront, and the camp's mission, helping children too disabled to attend other camps. On July 8, Shiflet sent a plea to his tens of thousands of Facebook followers. Camp CAMP serves individuals with developmental, intellectual, physical, and medical disabilities. 'I need MONEY, MANPOWER, and MACHINES,' he wrote. 'We do NOT need people in athletic shorts showing up with a rake. We need the biggest, baddest muscle we can find to work our tails off.' On July 9, 250 people arrived at Camp CAMP. By Friday, the number of volunteers had doubled. They brought front-end loaders, excavators, dump trucks and dozens of chain saws. They hacked the tangles of debris to pieces and hauled it all away. By Saturday evening, the waterfront was a flat expanse of fresh mud. 'I am overwhelmed,' Kaiser said as he surveyed the scene. 'We thought this would take a year. They did it in four days.' Briery sent word to campers' parents that Camp CAMP would reopen at noon Monday, just as he had planned before the flood. 'My first reaction was: 'Really? Is it going to be safe?'' said Gigi Hudnall, Kenny's mother. 'It was scary that they were going to open so fast.' Kenny was intent: He wanted to go. 'It does look like a trash dump compared to the beautiful forest we're used to,' he said. 'But it's rare for me to get this kind of connection with people who are not members of my family, or doctors or nurses.' A safe space Another camper, Eli Hemerly, usually prefers not to go outside. Born 17 weeks premature, he is now 18 years old with the cognitive abilities of a first grader, said his mother, Lucy Hemerly. He favours playing inside with his Mighty Morphin Power Rangers action figures and watching episodes of Paw Patrol. A few minutes before noon, the predicted storm arrived. The Texas Department of Public Safety ordered the camp to remain closed. Hemerly was half a mile away when she told Eli the news. 'I'm disappointed,' Eli said, as his mother later remembered. 'I was shocked,' Hemerly said. 'He never wants to go anywhere.' The delay proved short. Twenty-four hours later, the camp reopened, and campers started to return. Hemerly arrived at noon sharp so she could explain to counselors the complicated necessities of her son's care, which included instructions to navigate the gastric port in his stomach for feeding, the different diapers he wears, and his particular sleep postures. 'The counselors here have always been wonderful at making sure he's comfortable,' said Hemerly. Hudnall was most excited to ride a horse. The activity is logistically complex. Two counselors lift him onto a horse's back. Once the horse is in motion, one counselor walks behind. Two more stand on either side. A fourth carries his ventilator. 'The way that people grow in relationships is doing things together,' said Hudnall, who has attended Camp CAMP for 10 years. 'For people in my predicament, that is the hardest thing to find. So here, having someone who is guaranteed to be around you at all times, that helps a lot.' – ©2025 The New York Times

How 2 men helped a camp for kids with disabilities rebuild amid deadly Texas floods

time19-07-2025

  • General

How 2 men helped a camp for kids with disabilities rebuild amid deadly Texas floods

A summer camp in central Texas designed for children with disabilities that had severe damage following the deadly flooding that hit the region was unexpectedly able to open on time this summer, thanks, in part, to the help from two men and hundreds of volunteers. CAMP's, the Children's Association for Maximum Potential, camp saw its riverfront and grounds destroyed, while its main facilities on higher ground were thankfully not drastically impacted, facilities director Ken Kaiser told ABC News. The two men, Rusty Bourland and Cord Shiflet, didn't know each other, but they met by chance as both were motivated to help others following the floods that started on July 4. There are at least 134 deaths attributed to the flooding, a majority in Kerr County. And 101 people are still missing. In some of the most affected areas, more than 20 inches of rain fell in a matter of hours. The Guadalupe River rose 26 feet in less than an hour. Bourland, who owns a landscaping business in Austin, Texas, and Shiflet, an Austin real estate agent and content creator, showed up to work in Center Point, Texas and began talking about the sites that needed the most help. Both had heard whispers about a place called CAMP, but had no idea where it was or why it was so special. "The place is amazing and it just makes me so emotional talking about it," Shiflet, holding back tears, told ABC News. Shiflet said he remembers the first time he walked into the summer camp. "I just knew that when I asked people to help, they would show up. They'd come out in spades to help with stuff or to volunteer,' he said. And that's exactly what happened, they said. On the first day, the two arrived at the camp on July 9, hoping to have 100 people, but were surprised when over 275 showed up. On day two, more than 300 attended. By day three, more than 500 came to help, and by day four, they believed there were over 1,000 volunteers. Their mission was to clean up the debris and make the place ready to open just nine days after the floods hit. Giant trees were uprooted, lots of equipment, benches and picnic tables were washed down the river. So much was gone. Victims were found in the area, officials said, so their mission moved slowly and methodically out of respect for people who were impacted. "Our priority was to clear pathways leading to the waterfront. Easier said than done," Bourland said. "Thirty people would stand around the excavators to watch and make and sure there wasn't victims in those piles."The skid steer would come in and move a pile, with more people looking to make sure there were no victims. "Then, if all was clear, that step was a burn pile," Bourland said. Shiflet utilized his social media platforms to garner donations and attract people from all over the country to help. Bourland, who had been called on in the past to help with clean-up projects after Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Bill, coordinated the cleanup. He knew how to work the equipment that would be needed for the debris, where to get it and how to manage teams of people. The emotionally and physically draining days paid off, they said. "So much has gone on recently with politics and everyone being nasty to each other. And that's the way it's felt lately," Shiflet said. "This felt so good to see everyone coming out for one purpose. Minnesota, Arizona, Florida, Alabama and even Mexico. There were so many good people that reached out and came in from all over the country. It was heartwarming to feel and see that." On Sunday, July 13, CAMP welcomed campers back, Susan Osborne CAMP's CEO told ABC News. 'You know, I think that our campers just love what we do. They enjoy to go out fishing and canoeing and swimming and horseback riding and all the things that we provide,' Osborne said. 'I was a little hesitant. I think when we first contacted parents, I thought maybe we might have some mass cancellations, but as we were communicating a lot with our parents, we wanted to let them know that we were okay and that everybody was safe.' After more than a week of volunteering, Shiflet and Bourland went home to their families. A project that should have taken months to finish, was completed in four days and left the pair with a desire to do more, they said. "I left this project a changed person,' Shiflet said. ' I just realized what's important in the world and what I've been doing. Forget all the other stuff and focus on this. I need to be there for my community and do more.' "I had no idea we'd be rebuilding anything. I was just going down there as a volunteer to help," Bourland said. "Honestly, it was the most unbelievable amount of emotions that came over me - Other than the day I married my wife."

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