Nearly seven weeks ago on July 4, the Guadalupe River raged out of its banks and killed more than 130 people, including two teenage counselors and 25 young girls at Camp Mystic who had been asleep in their cabins before waking up to disaster.
On Thursday, many of the girls’ parents were in the gallery of the Texas House chamber, listening to their names being read aloud before lawmakers voted 136-1 on a bill designed to meet the parents’ demands to make camps safer, so no other parents would have to live the same horror of losing a child.
“Make no mistake, House Bill 1 is fundamentally a bill about failure,” said Rep. Drew Darby, R-San Angelo, when he introduced it. “The camp failed these girls. The county failed them. The river authority failed them, and in a larger sense, their government. In some ways, I know I have failed them.”
Since the floods, lawmakers have heard testimony about the many ways Texas failed not only the girls but also the 111 other people who died, including grandparents swept away with grandchildren and parents with their own children.
On Wednesday and in meetings before, the Camp Mystic parents had described to senators personal torture and pain. They missed the daughter who poured Cheerios for her little brother so her parents could rest, the daughter who was supposed to be holding her little sister’s hand last week as she started first grade, the daughter who should be learning to shoot archery while wearing fake nails printed with miniature avocados.
And now legislators are inching closer toward changing laws to address at least pieces of the multitude of problems with flood prevention and disaster response that they’d heard about in recent weeks — many of which were not new problems at all.
“We’ve said it all morning long,” said Rep. Ken King, R-Canadian, who chaired the House committee to look at disaster issues. “The locals can do better. We can do better. Being prepared and being ready to respond to a disaster is what we owe the citizens of Texas.”
Both chambers have been moving forward bills. They aim to make justices of the peace get trained on how to handle many bodies at once. To start fixing a broken system of radio communication among first responders who struggle to get on the same channel from place to place. To get a handle on a deluge of groups that solicit donations and the thousands of volunteers who comb private property after a disaster.
They faced the egregious mistakes: Failures to get the National Weather Service warnings to people in harm’s way so people would know to act and failures of county officials to be awake and alert and taking action instead of asleep and caught by a surprise.
Here’s where the bills they’re considering stand:
Camp Safety
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House Bill 1 would require overnight kids’ camp operators to develop emergency plans, including for natural disasters, and submit them to the state. The plans must include information on when to shelter or evacuate, and they must be taught to the campers. Operators would also be required to tell parents if any part of the camp was in a floodplain. The state would not be allowed to license youth camps with cabins in the 100-year floodplain.
Status: The bill passed the House chamber. It hasn’t been heard by the Senate.
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Senate Bill 1 would prohibit the state from licensing kids’ camps if they had cabins in a floodplain, unless the floodplain was around a lake or still body of water. It would require camp operators to prepare to evacuate campers any time the National Weather Service issues a flood warning or a flash flood warning if they are in the floodplain. Evacuation routes would be displayed in all camp cabins.
Status: The bill passed the Senate committee. It will be heard in the chamber Thursday night.
Camp Mystic and the family of Dick Eastland, the director of Camp Mystic who died in the flood, said in a written statement: “We join the families in supporting legislation that will make camps and communities along the Guadalupe River safer, especially the creation of detection and warning systems that would have saved lives on July 4. Dick Eastland gave his life fighting to save the girls whose care was entrusted to Camp Mystic.”
Flood warnings
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Senate Bill 3 would require a state agency to determine which areas in the region that flooded on July 4 should be required to have outdoor warning sirens, and then establish guidance on how to install, maintain and operate them.
Status: The bill passed the Senate. It will be heard by a House committee Friday.
Emergency response
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Senate Bill 2 would create a training program for justices of the peace on how to handle bodies during disasters when many people die, establish licensing requirements for emergency management coordinators and set up a registration system for disaster response volunteers that could include criminal history checks. It also allows the state to “neutralize” drones operating in disaster areas without government permission.
Status: The bill passed the Senate and the House. The Senate needs to consider House changes.
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House Bill 3 would create a Texas Interoperability Council to develop and implement a strategic plan to address the need for new and old emergency communication equipment and infrastructure to work together across the state, and training for using that equipment. The council would also administer a grant program for local governments to buy and build emergency communication equipment, such as radios and radio towers.
Status: The bill passed the House. It needs to be heard by the Senate.
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House Bill 20 would create a voluntary accreditation under the state attorney general’s office for groups that ask for and take donations for disaster relief to show people during disasters that they are trustworthy. It would also set up a hotline for people to report suspected fraudulent charities.
Status: The bill passed the House. It needs to be heard by the Senate.
Funding
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Senate Bill 5 would pull $240 million from the rainy day fund for the state’s match for federal disaster response funds and other disaster needs, $50 million for sirens and rain gauges in the Central Texas flood region, $28 million to improve weather forecasting and $50 million for the new interoperability council, if House Bill 3 passes, to improve emergency communication.
Status: The bill passed the House and Senate and goes next to the governor.
Status: The bill passed the House. It needs to be heard by the Senate.
Kayla Guo contributed reporting.
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