catastrophic floods
Coverage of catastrophic floods in the Nexus archive.
- 'People are still scared': What's going on with Travis County's flood siren efforts?
One year after catastrophic floods in Central Texas that killed over 130 people, attention remains on improving early warning systems, particularly flood sirens. Travis County residents express lingering fear despite efforts to enhance alerts.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for bankruptcy following catastrophic floods that killed 28 people. The camp informed the Texas Department of State Health Services it is withdrawing its application for a summer 2026 camp license.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for bankruptcy following catastrophic floods that killed 28 people. The camp notified the Texas Department of State Health Services that it is withdrawing its application for a summer 2026 camp license.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for bankruptcy following catastrophic floods that resulted in 28 deaths. The camp notified the Texas Department of State Health Services it is withdrawing its application for a 2026 summer camp license.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for bankruptcy following catastrophic floods that killed 28 people. The camp notified the Texas Department of State Health Services it would withdraw its application for a summer 2026 camp license.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization after catastrophic floods killed 25 girls and two teenage counselors at the all-girls Christian camp. The camp listed debts exceeding $10 million and assets between $100,001 and $500,000, while families of victims sued alleging negligence. The floods, which killed 136 people along the Guadalupe River, prompted outrage as the camp halted plans to reopen amid ongoing lawsuits and investigations.
- Camp Mystic in Texas files for bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 28 people
Camp Mystic in Texas filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after catastrophic floods killed 25 girls and two teenage counselors at the camp. The camp listed debts exceeding $10 million and assets between $100,001 and $500,000, while families of victims sued over safety failures. The owner, Richard Eastland, also died in the flood, and the bankruptcy filing followed the camp’s decision to halt reopening plans amid public outrage.
- Camp Mystic files for bankruptcy nearly a year after catastrophic floods in Texas killed 28 people at the summer camp
Camp Mystic filed for bankruptcy nearly a year after catastrophic floods in Texas that killed 28 people at the summer camp. The floods occurred in Texas, resulting in significant loss of life and leading to the camp's financial collapse.