My daughter was planning to go to the hill country that weekend. They looked at the weather forecast and changed their plans.
Sharpshooter said:
Lawyers are a blight on society.
jt16 said:
Why can't they sue? I just don't understand this mentality. Acts of God can be planned for and mitigated. They didn't die because of a heart attack. They died during a flood in an area known as flood alley, the most deadly river system in the country. These floods do happen in central Texas. They aren't completely unexpected. And nobody warned them until it was too late. People died because flooding in a known flood area wasn't taken seriously enough. Lots of times lawsuits change habits going forward to prevent things from happening again. families were swept away in 2015 and we did jack **** to prevent it from happening again. I'm not a lawyer, but lawsuits serve a purpose other than looking for someone to blame.


Gunny456 said:
The 500 year thing is pure speculation imho. That would have been in 1525. Those river canyons and all those fertile fields a good ways from the river were formed by that river over the centuries. No way of knowing accurately how many times since creation the river has done that. But I tend to believe it is a given it had done it before……and could do it again next week.
I personally feel the "100 year, 200 year, 500 year flood plane" monikers, can give people a false sense of security of where it is safe along rivers.
ts5641 said:
Lawyers taking advantage of people's pain. But I don't blame the victim's families at all. Can't even imagine that pain or how I'd react. I'd want my pound of flesh for sure.
BMX Bandit said:Brother Shamus said:Sharpshooter said:
Lawyers are a blight on society.
Until you need em.
Even then
Gunny456 said:
I know what it means. Who determines the .2%? It's still a speculative numbers thing.
Gunny456 said:
Our judicial system is the cause of this. There aren't "accidents" anymore. Someone "must" be at fault.
We have to put placards on the stern of our boats stating that if you stick your head by the engine exhaust and breathe it long enough you may die. Our society is no longer expected to have common sense intelligence anymore.
Brother Shamus said:Sharpshooter said:
Lawyers are a blight on society.
Until you need em.
YellAg2004 said:
I do agree that the naming conventions inherently confuse most people and give a false sense of security to people who don't understand what they actually mean and not that it will only rain that much 1x in a given 100-, 200-, or 500-year period.
F4GIB71 said:
It's the 99% of lawyers who give the 1% a bad name
Brother Shamus said:Sharpshooter said:
Lawyers are a blight on society.
Until you need em.
doubledog said:F4GIB71 said:
It's the 99% of lawyers who give the 1% a bad name
I agree. The 1% also advertise the most.
jt16 said:
Why can't they sue? I just don't understand this mentality. Acts of God can be planned for and mitigated. They didn't die because of a heart attack. They died during a flood in an area known as flood alley, the most deadly river system in the country. These floods do happen in central Texas. They aren't completely unexpected. And nobody warned them until it was too late. People died because flooding in a known flood area wasn't taken seriously enough. Lots of times lawsuits change habits going forward to prevent things from happening again. families were swept away in 2015 and we did jack **** to prevent it from happening again. I'm not a lawyer, but lawsuits serve a purpose other than looking for someone to blame.
Burdizzo said:bthotugigem05 said:
Be prepared for a lot more, likely including some of the Camp Mystic families. Just a reality of insurance policies these days.
I will be shocked if Camp Mystic ever opens again.
agracer said:Burdizzo said:bthotugigem05 said:
Be prepared for a lot more, likely including some of the Camp Mystic families. Just a reality of insurance policies these days.
I will be shocked if Camp Mystic ever opens again.
I stated that on the Camp Mystic thread and a bunch of posters said they would not hesitate to send their children there when it reopens.
YellAg2004 said:Gunny456 said:
The 500 year thing is pure speculation imho. That would have been in 1525. Those river canyons and all those fertile fields a good ways from the river were formed by that river over the centuries. No way of knowing accurately how many times since creation the river has done that. But I tend to believe it is a given it had done it before……and could do it again next week.
I personally feel the "100 year, 200 year, 500 year flood plane" monikers, can give people a false sense of security of where it is safe along rivers.
The term "500 year flood" just means that it has a 0.2% chance of happening. You could theoretically have two 500-year events in back to back months. It is EXTREMELY unlikely, but possible.
I do agree that the naming conventions inherently confuse most people and give a false sense of security to people who don't understand what they actually mean and not that it will only rain that much 1x in a given 100-, 200-, or 500-year period.
The Banned said:FTACo88-FDT24dad said:ABATTBQ11 said:fullback44 said:
I think there will be many lawsuits unfortunately, people want to blame someone…. That was a 500 year flood.. if that's not an "act of god"…. Then what is ?
500 year flood or not, anyone living on a river, or in this case operating a campground, in Texas and especially in the hill country knows there is a risk of flash flooding. Their lawsuit probably states the campground did not properly mitigate that risk by having an evacuation plan or properly executing it if they did. I haven't read it yet, but that's what I some of would say. You can't predict the particulars of the actual event, but that doesn't mean you can't adequately prepare for the eventuality.
This. It's all about what was reasonably foreseeable under the circumstances and what measures the owners of the campground/rv park//summer camp took to protect their customers. If those steps were what a reasonable owner would have done under the same or similar circumstances then there should not be any civil liability. On the other hand, if there were things a reasonable owner would have done, then there could be a breach of duty and the damages are clear.
500 year flood = reasonably foreseeable? I remember the Guadalupe river floods of 1998. Horrific flooding. Won't ever happen again in our lifetime.
In 2002, 4 whole years later, the flooding was so bad Canyon Lake went over the spillway. If all the "authorities" are telling you this is virtually impossible, how much liability rests with the person who trusts them?
Gunny456 said:
Our judicial system is the cause of this. There aren't "accidents" anymore. Someone "must" be at fault.
We have to put placards on the stern of our boats stating that if you stick your head by the engine exhaust and breathe it long enough you may die. Our society is no longer expected to have common sense intelligence anymore.