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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCamp Mystic's owner warned of floods for decades. Then the river killed him
By Curt Devine and Casey Tolan
Fri July 11, 2025
Dick Eastland warned for decades about the hidden dangers of the beautiful but volatile Guadalupe River, a peril he saw firsthand while running his familys youth camp alongside its banks. Eastland saw floods damage Camp Mystic again and again and his pregnant wife was even airlifted to a hospital while the camp in central Texas was cut off by floodwaters. He successfully pushed for a new flood warning system after 10 children at a nearby camp were swept to their deaths in 1987, and in recent years served on the board of the local river authority as it supported renewed efforts to improve warnings on the Guadalupe.
The river is beautiful, Eastland told the Austin American-Statesman in 1990. But you have to respect it. But after 27 people were killed at Camp Mystic in last weeks cataclysmic flooding along with Eastland himself, who died while trying to rescue his young campers the scale of the tragedy highlights potential missed opportunities by Camp Mystics owners and government officials to better mitigate those risks.
About a decade after it was installed, the warning system Eastland had championed in the late 80s became antiquated and broken. The river authority ultimately shut it down in 1999, saying it was unreliable with some of the systems stations not reporting information, according to an article in the Kerrville Daily Times. Yet periodic attempts to adopt a more modern flood-monitoring system, including one with warning sirens that might have alerted campers last week, repeatedly failed to gain traction stalled by low budgets, some local opposition and a lack of state support.
At Camp Mystic, meanwhile, several of the cabins that were hit hardest in the flooding were in an area identified by the federal government as the highest-risk location for inundations from the Guadalupe. Even as the camp built new cabins in a less-risky flood zone elsewhere on its property, nothing was done to relocate the buildings in the most danger. Camp officials might have not been aware of flood risk when they first built the cabins, before the county even had flood maps, said Anna Serra-Llobet, a University of California-Berkeley researcher who studies flood risk. But after the recent construction, she said, officials should have realized they were in an area of severe hazard.
https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/11/us/camp-mystic-owner-warnings-texas-flooding-invs

malaise
(286,922 posts)the most risk. Bye!
No other words
angel823
(429 posts)Being from Texas, I was trying to find a redeeming quality for the camp director after losing his life trying to rescue the campers. I was not terribly surprised to find the following:
https://www.opensecrets.org/donor-lookup/results?name=Richard+Eastland&order=desc&sort=D
No surprise
Blues Heron
(7,186 posts)They didnt want the ugly sirens and kept the money for the police dept instead.
Traildogbob
(11,534 posts)Was Charlie Kirk wrong about the DEI black fire chief being responsible? WOW. Shocked!!
Who would have guessed?
milestogo
(21,350 posts)
Igel
(36,998 posts)Because the "Biden funded" it guys didn't want to use the money for that because federal money always "had strings attached." So they didn't want to use it for the alarm system.
But the exact same reason said they didn't want to use the money for the communications system (which provided communication not just for police, but across a wide area for first responders of all types, so it's not like it went for body armor and APCs or police outings at Hooters).
In the end, they used the "Biden-tainted" money. But they couldn't fund both the comms system *and* the early warning system, so they split the difference: they applied for a FEMA grant for the early warning system and spent the money on the communications system. They were turned down for the grant.
I do have to wonder if the comms system helped during the flooding.
Omnipresent
(7,029 posts)He should have sold it for the sake of the campers and gotten the fuck out of there!
Bernardo de La Paz
(57,215 posts)With adequate warning he would be alive. But due to CON manoeuvring, the Warnings Coordinator was fired or forced out.
Srkdqltr
(8,678 posts)You have to.
milestogo
(21,350 posts)It was an older lady. There were no campers onsite when the flooding hit, but she did not get out.
Wild blueberry
(7,761 posts)patphil
(8,087 posts)Still, He continued to put his campers at risk every year. He had decades to fix this, but didn't.
swong19104
(465 posts)they kept the money. Safety versus money. Money wins.
littlemissmartypants
(28,502 posts)https://www.owler.com/company/campmystic
Camp Mystic is headquartered in Hunt, Texas. Camp Mystic has a revenue of $20.9M, and 59 employees.
Camp Mystic has received a total of $150K in funding.
PPP (CARES Act)
May 2020
$150K
U.S. Small Business Administration.
Greed kills.
RussBLib
(9,960 posts)...and chances are good someone would have heard the warnings. So his stupid rule to preserve the "camp.experience" and get closer to God ended up getting him and many young girls killed.
Amen.