Search teams combed through debris-filled riverbanks and deployed aircraft across flood-ravaged central Texas on Monday as hopes dwindled for finding survivors among dozens still missing.
The death toll from Friday’s catastrophic flooding now stands at 96, with 27 victims linked to Camp Mystic, a Christian girls’ summer camp along the Guadalupe River in Texas Hill Country’s notorious “flash flood alley.”
With 10 campers and one counselor still unaccounted for, emergency crews raced against time and approaching thunderstorms. Kerr County Sheriff’s Office confirmed 84 flood-related deaths in their jurisdiction alone – 56 adults and 28 children – most recovered in Kerrville. Across five neighboring counties, 12 additional fatalities were reported with 41 persons still missing, though media outlets like The New York Times estimate the total death toll may exceed 104.
Questions Arise Over Failed Flood Warnings
Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick pledged state funding for a Kerrville flood siren system after revelations that county officials abandoned a similar $1 million proposal eight years prior. “Had we had sirens…we might have saved lives,” Patrick told Fox News. Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice defended the response, noting forecasters underestimated rainfall by 100% as two Guadalupe River tributaries unexpectedly converced near the camp.
The nearly century-old camp became the disaster’s epicenter when predawn floods struck Friday. Co-owner Richard “Dick” Eastland, 70, perished attempting to rescue campers his family had nurtured since 1974. “This was the only way he’d go – saving the girls he loved,” his grandson wrote on Instagram. The camp’s statement expressed devastation over the “unimaginable tragedy” affecting their community.
The Ongoing Dangers Rescuers Face
Recovery efforts suffered a setback when a private drone collided with a search helicopter in restricted airspace, forcing an emergency landing. Meanwhile, National Weather Service warned of 4-10 additional inches of rain for the saturated region. French climatologist Davide Faranda of CNRS noted such disasters are “no longer exceptional in a warming world,” with climate change increasing flood risks.
As Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. warned of “a rough week” ahead, the catastrophe has reignited debates about warning systems in flood-prone areas. With soil saturation and debris complicating recovery, officials brace for both rising waters and rising questions about preparedness in America’s most vulnerable flood corridors.