New Texas laws ban youth cabins in floodways, require camp safety plans
[September 06, 2025]
By SEAN MURPHY
In the days and weeks following the death of his 9-year-old daughter,
Lila, at Camp Mystic in the Texas Hill Country, Blake Bonner found
himself wondering whether the tragedy was simply an unstoppable act of
God, or if something could have been done to prevent it.
Lila was one of 27 Camp Mystic campers and counselors swept to their
deaths when fast-rising floodwaters of the Guadalupe River roared
through the girls’ summer camp. All told, the destructive flooding in
Texas on the Fourth of July killed at least 136 people and washed away
homes and vehicles.
“It just became clear to me that this incident was 100% preventable,”
Bonner said, “and for a lot of reasons, I was going to do everything in
my power, and I was hoping the other parents would as well, to make sure
that our girls' legacy wasn't in vain.”
Bonner and many other parents and family members of the girls who died
at Camp Mystic were in the Texas House and Senate gallery this week
during a special session to see lawmakers give final approval to a
series of bills aimed at preventing similar tragedies. Many of them
shared hugs, handshakes and tears after they passed.
Gov. Greg Abbott, who was flanked by family members as he signed several
of the bills into law Friday, recalled the grieving parents visiting
with him and his wife and urging swift action before the start of the
special legislative session.
“They pleaded that their daughters did not die in vain. They wanted laws
to be passed so that other parents would not experience the hell that
they had been through,” Abbott said. “The Legislature understood that
mission ... they tapped into empathy and they delivered laws that will
be in effect when camps open this next summer, laws that make youth
camps safer.”
The measures aim to improve the safety of children's camps by
prohibiting cabins in dangerous parts of flood zones and requiring camp
operators to develop detailed emergency plans, to train workers and to
install and maintain emergency warning systems. One allocates $240
million from the state's rainy day fund for disaster relief, along with
money for warning sirens and improved weather forecasting.

“All the key tenets that we were looking for were addressed in these
bills,” Bonner said.
Matthew Childress, whose 18-year-old daughter Chloe was one of two
counselors killed, said the effort by the families to pursue legislation
began with a bond that developed through shared grief. As they mourned
together, sometimes attending other children's funerals, they grew
closer.
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Emmalynn Lytal, center, points to a photo button of her sister,
Kellyane Lytal, as she and other family of children who died at Camp
Mystic visit with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, left, before he signed
camp safety bills into law, Friday, Sept. 5, 2025, in Austin, Texas.
(AP Photo/Eric Gay)

When Abbott announced plans to address flooding disaster relief as
part of a special session, Childress said, some parents raised
concerns that camp safety might get overlooked. Parents started
becoming more organized and discussed what their priorities would be
for lawmakers to consider.
“That was something that was really important to me, that we move as
one, that we have as much unity as possible,” Childress said. “I’m
trying to make something positive that can give me purpose, that can
give my family purpose, that we can honor Chloe, that we can honor
our girls for something that’s positive.”
Many of the families delivered gut-wrenching testimony to lawmakers
during hearings in Austin, urging them to pass legislation to help
keep campers safe.
Despite their unified voice and the compelling accounts from the
parents, there was no guarantee that all the bills would make it to
the governor's desk. Childress acknowledged that conservative
legislators are typically not eager to impose government regulations
on private businesses.
The owners of at least three Kerr County youth camps urged lawmakers
to reconsider some of the new proposals, saying the legislation
would cause financial hardship, according to a letter to Lt. Gov.
Dan Patrick obtained by the Texas Tribune.
Childress said he made it clear to legislators that he supports
youth camps and wants them to thrive. He believes the new laws will
ensure that, and he hopes the legislation becomes a model for other
states.
“Our hope is that this win for millions of campers in Texas is
potentially something that could be leveraged for the tens of
millions of campers in other states across the country,” Childress
said.
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