Texas implements camper safety laws after floods killed 27 children
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Texas has enacted a slate of new camper safety laws following the deaths of 27 children in catastrophic flash floods at Camp Mystic in Kerr County on July 4.

The legislation, signed Friday by Governor Greg Abbott, imposes stricter safety and emergency preparedness requirements on youth camps across the state in an effort to prevent similar tragedies.

The three new bills, signed during a ceremony at the Governor’s Mansion, alongside Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, bill authors, and the families of the victims, introduces new mandates for emergency planning, camp licensing, and flood warning systems.

‘Every child who goes to camp should come home to their families,’ Abbott said on Friday. 

‘No parent should ever have to outlive their child or endure this kind of loss.’

The laws come two months after record-breaking rainfall caused deadly flooding in Texas Hill Country, killing more than 130 people, including 27 campers and counselors at the all-girls Camp Mystic along the Guadalupe River.

House Bill 1, also known as the Youth CAMPER Act, requires camps to develop and annually update emergency response plans, provide evacuation training for both staff and campers, notify parents if camp facilities are located in floodplains, and coordinate those emergency plans with local emergency services.

The legislation, signed Friday, imposes stricter safety and emergency preparedness requirements on youth camps across the state in an effort to prevent similar tragedies. Pictured: Gov. Greg Abbott signs a bill alongside Sen. Charles Perry, Lieutenant Gov. Dan Patrick and Rep. Drew Darby during a bill signing ceremony at the Governor's Mansion on September 5, 2025 in Austin, Texas

The legislation, signed Friday, imposes stricter safety and emergency preparedness requirements on youth camps across the state in an effort to prevent similar tragedies. Pictured: Gov. Greg Abbott signs a bill alongside Sen. Charles Perry, Lieutenant Gov. Dan Patrick and Rep. Drew Darby during a bill signing ceremony at the Governor’s Mansion on September 5, 2025 in Austin, Texas

The laws come two months after record-breaking rainfall caused deadly flooding in Texas Hill Country, killing more than 130 people, including 27 campers  after flash flooding in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

The laws come two months after record-breaking rainfall caused deadly flooding in Texas Hill Country. Pictured: A view inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic after flash flooding in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

While, Senate Bill 1, or the Heaven’s 27 Camp Safety Act, bars the state from licensing youth camps that operate cabins within FEMA-designated floodplains, except under limited circumstances.

It also mandates annual emergency planning and training and creates a publicly accessible online registry of licensed camps to improve oversight and transparency.

The third piece of new legislation, Senate Bill 3, creates a grant program through the Office of the Governor that will provide financial support to cities and counties for the installation of early-warning sirens in areas vulnerable to flash flooding.

Camps must also install emergency alert systems, have rooftop ladders in cabins located in 100-year flood zones, and relocate cabins out of floodplains – all of which will be enforced by the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS).

The bills passed both chambers of the Legislature with bipartisan support, however, four House Republicans – Brian Harrison, David Lowe, Mike Olcott, and Wesley Virdell – voted against the legislation. 

The laws were pushed forward following weeks of emotional testimony from families of the victims, emergency responders, and camp operators, where many parents expressed frustrations over a ‘lack of preparedness and oversight.’

‘Our children’s lives were cut short because the safeguards in place were not enough,’ a spokesperson for the Campaign for Camp Safety said. 

‘We are asking lawmakers to make sure no other family ever has to endure the pain we have lived with every day since July 4.’

More than 130 people were killed as a result of the flash-flooding, including 27 campers (pictured) and counselors at the all-girls Camp Mystic along the Guadalupe River

More than 130 people were killed as a result of the flash-flooding, including 27 campers (pictured) and counselors at the all-girls Camp Mystic along the Guadalupe River

A damaged home is seen near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

A damaged home is seen near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

The laws were pushed forward following weeks of emotional testimony from families of the victims, emergency responders, and camp operators, where many parents expressed frustrations over a 'lack of preparedness and oversight.' Pictured: Parents and family of the girls lost react after the passage of a Senate Bill on August 21, 2025, in Austin, Texas

The laws were pushed forward following weeks of emotional testimony from families of the victims, emergency responders, and camp operators, where many parents expressed frustrations over a ‘lack of preparedness and oversight.’ Pictured: Parents and family of the girls lost react after the passage of a Senate Bill on August 21, 2025, in Austin, Texas

CiCi Williams Steward, whose 8-year-old daughter Cile was in attendance at Camp Mystic during the catastrophic flooding and remains missing, criticized the lack of safety protocols.

‘Obvious commonsense safety measures were absent. Protocols that should have been in place were ignored,’ Steward said. ‘She was stolen from her family, from her future, from the world she lit up with her independence and spunk.’

Camp Mystic has voiced support for the newly-minted legislation. 

In a statement, the all-girls summer camp said it would revise planning and procedures based on what it called a ‘catastrophic 1,000-year weather event,’ and affirmed it would never again use cabins that had previously taken on floodwaters.

All cabin floors, the statement noted, were already built outside the 100-year floodplain.

While many youth camps have backed the new regulations, some have expressed concerns over the financial burden. Three long-standing Kerr County camps warned that compliance costs could jeopardize their operations.

‘The combination of devastating floods and the heavy financial burden proposed under new state regulations presents an impossible challenge,’ the camps wrote. 

‘The costs of compliance must be met with partnership and support, not mandates that dismantle the very institutions that have nurtured children for over a century.’

Still, lawmakers insisted the changes were necessary.

While many youth camps have backed the new regulations, some have expressed concerns over the financial burden. Pictured: A view of a damaged building at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

While many youth camps have backed the new regulations, some have expressed concerns over the financial burden. Pictured: A view of a damaged building at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

Many of the families in attendance at Friday's signing wore buttons reading 'Heaven's 27' in honor of their children. Pictured: A view inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic on July 5, 2025

Many of the families in attendance at Friday’s signing wore buttons reading ‘Heaven’s 27’ in honor of their children. Pictured: A view inside of a cabin at Camp Mystic on July 5, 2025

More than 20 girls were missing from the riverside summer camp, after torrential rains caused devastating flooding that killed at least 27 people

More than 20 girls were missing from the riverside summer camp, after torrential rains caused devastating flooding that killed at least 27 people

Furnitures lie scattered inside a cabin at Camp Mystic after deadly flooding on July 5, 2025

Furnitures lie scattered inside a cabin at Camp Mystic after deadly flooding on July 5, 2025

A drone view shows the Guadalupe River and damage from flooding near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

A drone view shows the Guadalupe River and damage from flooding near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 5, 2025

‘As we move forward, let us commit not only to fixing what has been broken but also to ensuring that the memory of our fallen Texans drives us to better prepare for the future,’ Senator Pete Flores, vice chair of the Senate Select Committee on Disaster Preparedness, said.

Many of the families in attendance at Friday’s signing wore buttons reading ‘Heaven’s 27’ in honor of their children.

Ryan DeWitt, who lost his 9-year-old daughter Molly, said the legislation should represent the floor, not the ceiling, of camp safety.

‘What’s being laid out in this bill should be the bare minimum for what these camps should be looking to implement.’

Johnny Stevens, who lost his 8-year-old daughter Mary Barrett Stevens, said the families’ advocacy was a way to honor their children.

‘We would have been doing a massive disservice to our daughters for not running with this and seeing this through. The Heaven’s 27 family is a way for us to never, ever let the world forget these girls,’ DeWitt said.

The new laws will be in effect before the next summer camp season begins.

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