New Braunfels Edition | November 2025

State

BY HANNAH NORTON

New Texas laws aim to protect campers, residents from future oods

Also of note

Abbott signed into law $278 million in state ood relief funding Sept. 18. This includes the $50 million in grants for ood warning sirens.

On Sept. 5, two months after the historic July 4 weekend ooding killed at least 137 people in Central Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott signed three new laws that he said will “make youth camps safer” and ensure communities are better prepared for future disasters. Under the two-pronged camp safety package, which includes Senate Bill 1 and House Bill 1, summer camps are required to remove existing cabins from oodplains by Jan. 1. Camps that do not do so will not be eligible to be licensed by the Texas Department of State Health Services and therefore cannot continue operating, according to SB 1. Camps must also develop and annually update comprehensive emergency plans, set up warning systems to notify campers if something is wrong, and install ladders so campers can climb on cabin roofs during oods. Abbott also signed Senate Bill 3, which requires

ash ood-prone communities that were impacted by the July 4-5 oods to install ood warning sirens with the help of $50 million in state grants. Rules for their installation will be developed by the Texas Water Development board. After Abbott signed the laws Sept. 5, he told Community Impact that the state will ensure ood-prone communities in Central Texas are better prepared to host campers and visitors next summer. “If an event like this does occur again, those warning systems will go o‘ in a way that will

During special legislative sessions this summer, state lawmakers considered two other ood-related measures, which did not become law:

A plan to establish a state interoperability council to improve communication among žrst responders

A sweeping bill that would have created licensing requirements for local emergency managers and expanded mass fatality training for justices of the peace

do everything possible to protect lives,” Abbott said. All three laws took e‘ect immediately Sept. 5.

SOURCE: TEXAS LEGISLATURE ONLINECOMMUNITY IMPACT

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Put in perspective

Frequent oods

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The families of 25 campers and two counselors who died at Camp Mystic in Kerr County attended the Sept. 5 event. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick requested that portraits of Chloe Childress and Katherine Ferruzo, the two 18-year-old counselors who died saving their campers’ lives, be displayed in the Texas House and Senate. “[They are] true Texas heroes that can go down and should go down with the great names of Texas history,” Patrick said Sept. 5.

A large stretch of Central Texas is known as “ash ood alley” due to its unique geography and weather patterns that make it susceptible to intense ooding.

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4

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Flash ood alley

Colorado River

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The Guadalupe River basin has been deemed “one of the three most dangerous regions” in the nation for ash ooding.

1 Austin 2 Brady 3 Dallas 4 Kerrville

5 San Antonio 6 San Marcos 7 Uvalde 8 Waco

Guadalupe River

MAP NOT TO SCALE N

SOURCES: ACCUWEATHER, GUADALUPEBLANCO RIVER AUTHORITYCOMMUNITY IMPACT

Before

After

What’s a prosthodontist? Prosthodontist are specialists in the restoration and replacement of missing teeth and oral/facial structures with natural, esthetic, and functional replacements.

What we do: ¤ Full mouth rehabilitation ¤ Crowns and bridges with or without implants ¤ All-on-4, All-on-X

¤ Veneers ¤ Snap dentures, dentures, partial dentures ¤ Cosmetic dentistry

Dr. “Jane” Chia-Chen Tsai, DDS, MSD | 512-518-4358 | www.CentralTexasProsthodontics.com | 2410 Hunter Rd, Ste 101, San Marcos, TX 78666

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