Texas Probes Camp Mystic After 27 Flood Deaths as License Renewal Looms
Texas health officials have opened an investigation into "hundreds of complaints" about Camp Mystic’s 2025 operations, including its response to July 4 floods that killed 25 campers and two teenage counselors, as they decide whether to renew the Christian all‑girls camp’s license to reopen this summer on an unflooded portion of the site. The Department of State Health Services says the complaints allege violations of state youth‑camp laws, and has asked the Texas Department of Public Safety and its Texas Rangers unit to investigate alleged neglect during the disaster, in which the Guadalupe River rose from 14 to 29.5 feet in about an hour before dawn and the camp did not evacuate. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick publicly labeled the Rangers’ work a criminal investigation and urged regulators not to allow the camp to operate until that probe and a separate legislative inquiry are finished, even as more than 850 families have already signed up to return if permitted. Camp Mystic says it has cooperated with every inquiry and will continue to work with the Rangers to establish what happened, while families of several victims have sued the camp, and a district judge last month ordered preservation of damaged cabins and other flooded structures as evidence. One child’s body, 8‑year‑old Cile Steward, has still not been recovered, and officials say the broader flood along the river killed at least 136 people, intensifying scrutiny of camp safety, emergency planning and state oversight of youth camps in high‑risk areas.
📌 Key Facts
- Texas Department of State Health Services has received hundreds of complaints about Camp Mystic’s summer 2025 operations and is investigating alleged youth‑camp law violations while considering license renewal.
- The Texas Rangers, via the Department of Public Safety, have joined an investigation into alleged neglect during July 4, 2025 floods in which the Guadalupe River rose from 14 to 29.5 feet within 60 minutes and the camp did not evacuate.
- Twenty‑seven girls (25 campers and two teenage counselors) died at Camp Mystic in the floods, at least 136 people died along the river overall, and more than 850 families have already enrolled children for the 2026 season if the camp is allowed to reopen part of the grounds.
📊 Relevant Data
The Guadalupe River Basin has experienced an uptick in the frequency and magnitude of floods over the last 20 years, with major events like the October 1998 flood being the most destructive financially in the basin's history.
Guadalupe River Basin — USGS
Texas youth camps are required to develop comprehensive written emergency plans covering natural disasters, including procedures for evacuation, weather monitoring, and safety briefings, with updates following the Camp Mystic incident to include specific safety equipment like weather alert radios.
What Parents Need to Know About New Texas Camp Safety Laws — DFWChild
Camp Mystic's emergency plan was a one-page document that was never practiced, and state inspectors approved it just two days before the 2025 flood, despite the camp successfully appealing to remove buildings from FEMA's 100-year flood maps multiple times.
Texas inspectors approved Camp Mystic's disaster plan 2 days before deadly flood, records show — Houston Public Media
Summer camps like Camp Mystic in Texas have historically had an overwhelmingly White attendee makeup, reflecting socioeconomic barriers where affluent families predominate, while Black and Hispanic children are underrepresented in such programs compared to their population shares (e.g., Black children make up about 13% of the US youth population but often less in elite camps).
Camp Mystic: A Century of Privilege, Exclusion, and Tragedy — Higher Education Inquirer
From 2016 to 2024, youth summer camp fatalities in the US were rare, with an average of fewer than 5 deaths per year from all causes, making the 2025 Camp Mystic incident with 27 deaths one of the deadliest in modern history.
What We Can Learn from the Camp Mystic Tragedy — Association of State Floodplain Managers
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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