Hopefully they'll put the recording up whereas this was a live feed
DannyDuberstein said:
- Only 3 flash flood warnings during camp season in the last 25 years. Deflates "warning fatigue" excuse
- never did any kind of emergency drill of any sort ever
- security was on site 10am to 2am. To comfort parents, he had told folks it was 24/7
- at 1:45am, he told Glenn J to go home so he wouldn't get stuck there (his shift was set to end at 2am). He thankfully ignored Dick
TexasAg95 said:
wow. The slide about Dick Eastland is really something. All the descriptions of him being "old school" and everybody being scared to speak up, etc....geez. All the people wanting to destroy the Eastlands and their entire reputation forever are definitely getting their wish.
i don't see how they keep the camp or the camp survives at all. Going to be sold and developed.
And honestly the more you hear the more you wonder about criminal negligence.
DannyDuberstein said:
3 per year is not exactly a lot either. And while he's checking alerts, he also tries to send his one security guy home
txags92 said:DannyDuberstein said:
- Only 3 flash flood warnings during camp season in the last 25 years. Deflates "warning fatigue" excuse
- never did any kind of emergency drill of any sort ever
- security was on site 10am to 2am. To comfort parents, he had told folks it was 24/7
- at 1:45am, he told Glenn J to go home so he wouldn't get stuck there (his shift was set to end at 2am). He thankfully ignored Dick
That stat assumes the family only lives there during camp season, which is not true. There were a total of 91 flood warnings over something like 25 years. Not taking away from the accurate conclusion that they were totally unprepared for a situation calling for evacuation, but the warning fatigue is a real thing and 91 warnings over ~25 years would certainly be enough to inspire it if none of them led to anything approaching this kind of flood. But the fact that Dick was awake and monitoring weather apps suggests that he was not complacent about the warning itself.
Windy City Ag said:Quote:
This morning was painful to watch. Seems pretty obvious to me how extremely unprepared they were.
If Camp Mystic was not already dead yet, this was the kill shot.
- The reduction of counselors per cabin and use of the youngest girls (The 'ettes) in the cabins that were hit
- The working PA system that was never used
- The Eastland family themselves describing their dad a a control freak and the totally ad hoc response.
dermdoc said:txags92 said:DannyDuberstein said:
- Only 3 flash flood warnings during camp season in the last 25 years. Deflates "warning fatigue" excuse
- never did any kind of emergency drill of any sort ever
- security was on site 10am to 2am. To comfort parents, he had told folks it was 24/7
- at 1:45am, he told Glenn J to go home so he wouldn't get stuck there (his shift was set to end at 2am). He thankfully ignored Dick
That stat assumes the family only lives there during camp season, which is not true. There were a total of 91 flood warnings over something like 25 years. Not taking away from the accurate conclusion that they were totally unprepared for a situation calling for evacuation, but the warning fatigue is a real thing and 91 warnings over ~25 years would certainly be enough to inspire it if none of them led to anything approaching this kind of flood. But the fact that Dick was awake and monitoring weather apps suggests that he was not complacent about the warning itself.
If it was me, I would have a heightened sense of awareness and responsibility if it was my job to ensure the safety of 700 girls.
dermdoc said:txags92 said:DannyDuberstein said:
- Only 3 flash flood warnings during camp season in the last 25 years. Deflates "warning fatigue" excuse
- never did any kind of emergency drill of any sort ever
- security was on site 10am to 2am. To comfort parents, he had told folks it was 24/7
- at 1:45am, he told Glenn J to go home so he wouldn't get stuck there (his shift was set to end at 2am). He thankfully ignored Dick
That stat assumes the family only lives there during camp season, which is not true. There were a total of 91 flood warnings over something like 25 years. Not taking away from the accurate conclusion that they were totally unprepared for a situation calling for evacuation, but the warning fatigue is a real thing and 91 warnings over ~25 years would certainly be enough to inspire it if none of them led to anything approaching this kind of flood. But the fact that Dick was awake and monitoring weather apps suggests that he was not complacent about the warning itself.
If it was me, I would have a heightened sense of awareness and responsibility if it was my job to ensure the safety of 700 girls.
AustinCountyAg said:
Not to mention when you know you're in a flood warning and you have girls coming to you to say their cabin is taking on water you don't tell them to go back and put towels on the floor. Especially when you're sleeping next to three creeks/river and at the bottom of basically a canyon.
What's even worse is to imagine if some of those cabins did not take it upon themselves to evacuate. We could be looking at 60 or 70 dead girls instead
AustinCountyAg said:
Not to mention when you know you're in a flood warning and you have girls coming to you to say their cabin is taking on water you don't tell them to go back and put towels on the floor. Especially when you're sleeping next to three creeks/river and at the bottom of basically a canyon.
txags92 said:AustinCountyAg said:
Not to mention when you know you're in a flood warning and you have girls coming to you to say their cabin is taking on water you don't tell them to go back and put towels on the floor. Especially when you're sleeping next to three creeks/river and at the bottom of basically a canyon.
That is not an accurate statement of what happened. He drove back to the cabins with them, saw that the issue was water coming overland down the hill and not rising from the creeks or river and THEN he told them to use towels to try to keep more from coming in.
Dick made plenty of bad decisions before and during the flood, but this constant effort to imply that he valued canoes more than the lives of kids or that he was lazy that night couldn't be bothered to address issues being reported by the counselors is really kind of nauseating. The guy was flawed and made decisions that got a bunch of kids killed. But this effort to make it seem that he did so due to a lack of care about them or their lives is just wrong.
This situation is tragic enough and I am certain there is plenty of grief to go around, but can we please stick to discussing actual actions and decisions here and not try to get into slandering people's motives and ethics when they died trying to save lives and aren't here to defend themselves? The court cases will assign the blame where it is deserved, and I am confident that one way or another, the Eastlands will be done owning or operating Mystic when it is all said and done.
DannyDuberstein said:
Again, except for trying to send his security guy home an hour into checking those alerts. Actively checking but not seemingly concerned with safety. Obviously they underestimated what this could do. But this area also has a 100+ history of "the water never got this high before until it did". Agree that complacency and stubbornness doomed it long before.
jja79 said:DannyDuberstein said:
We already have plenty to judge Mystic because we've seen the half-assed half-page plan
I haven't read every post but I take it Mystic had an inadequate plan. How many of the parents that sent their children to the camp requested, reviewed and questioned the plan before sending their children to a camp/area known to be in the flood plain and with a history of some catastrophic events?
AustinCountyAg said:
Also curios why more attention isn't being drawn to the fact that Eastland never communicated with the kitchen workers/maintenance guys on staff to help with evacuating little girls. I feel like that is being overlooked some. Any and all hands on deck would've helped.
Fdsa said:
Interesting comment from Richard regarding the warnings. The warnings highlighted the potential of 4-5" of rain that morning. That means something to a landowner...they ended up having 11.9" in a three-hour period.
AustinCountyAg said:Fdsa said:
Interesting comment from Richard regarding the warnings. The warnings highlighted the potential of 4-5" of rain that morning. That means something to a landowner...they ended up having 11.9" in a three-hour period.
to add on to that it appears most of the family members have no idea what warning signs and how much in terms of how much rain they could handle at camp. Seems they relied sole on Dick to be the only one who could quantify how much rain=river rise, evacuations ,etc.
The kids keep going back to relying on Dick for everything. The slide from yesterday was spot on. He was the sole general in charge and everyone took the orders from him.
dermdoc said:
I am working and will try to listen later. Can someone give Cliff notes?