Camp Mystic, flood
Digest more
Follow for live updates in the Texas flooding as more than 173 are missing as rescuers continue a desperate search
Records released Tuesday show Camp Mystic met state regulations for disaster procedures, but details of the plan remain unclear.
The details of Camp Mystic's emergency plans were not included in the records released by the state. DSHS released the July 2 inspection report along with five years of reports of the youth camp.
As hope for finding survivors dims, questions swirl around whether Camp Mystic's emergency plan was adequate. Texas doesn't approve or keep copies of such plans; camps are required to show only that they have plans in place.
Texas Hill Country's Camp Mystic was a refuge until the floods came – one made of water, the other made of lies. Grieving parents face social media rumors, Internet hoaxes and political attacks.
Explore more
Stuffed animals, a lunchbox, a pink blanket. Those were among the belongings left behind after a raging torrent from Texas’ Guadalupe River overwhelmed a cabin that was occupied by 8 and
The Paschal High School student traded Fort Worth’s cityscape for a summer in Texas Hill Country, her spiritual home nestled in sky-scraping cypress and pecan trees along the bank of the Guadalupe River.
Molly Claire DeWitt "had a heart as expansive as her imagination," her obituary shares. She is one of 109 people who died in Central Texas due to floods in Kerr, Travis, Kendall, Burnet, Williamson and Tom Green counties.