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Abbott Signs Texas Camp Safety Laws Banning Cabins in Floodplains and Funding Sirens

The laws respond to July's Hill Country floods with implementation slated before next summer.

Overview

  • Gov. Greg Abbott signed the Heaven’s 27 Act, which bars the state from licensing youth camps with cabins in FEMA-designated floodplains and restricts sites within 1,000 feet of floodways, with limited exceptions.
  • The Youth Camper Act requires state-approved emergency plans, annual staff training, camper orientations, posted and illuminated evacuation routes, National Weather Service monitoring with weather radios, and parental acknowledgment of flood risks.
  • Lawmakers approved roughly $278–$280 million for flood preparedness, including $200 million to match federal disaster aid, $50 million for local warning sirens administered by the Texas Water Development Board, and $28 million to improve weather forecasting.
  • Families of the 27 Camp Mystic victims attended the signing after leading the push for reforms, and Abbott said the measures will save lives when camps reopen next summer.
  • Camp operators have warned that relocating or rebuilding cabins could impose severe costs and are seeking financial help, while a separate emergency responder coordination bill did not pass and could be revisited.