Updated
Updated · First Alert 4 · Jul 11
Camping Family Escapes Black River Flooding After 2 NWS Alerts and 9 Inches of Rain
Updated
Updated · First Alert 4 · Jul 11

Camping Family Escapes Black River Flooding After 2 NWS Alerts and 9 Inches of Rain

3 articles · Updated · First Alert 4 · Jul 11

Summary

  • 3 a.m. evacuation orders sent Dan Schult’s family fleeing Parks Bluff Campground after floodwater reached their camper steps and rose another 4 to 5 inches within minutes.
  • Two National Weather Service alerts drove the escape: a considerable flash flood warning at 2:35 a.m. and a flash flood emergency at 4:16 a.m.
  • Rainfall totals jumped from about 6 inches to 9 inches between those alerts, prompting forecasters to call the event unusually catastrophic and rare.
  • Schult said the phone warnings and campground staff likely saved his family, adding he will no longer ignore emergency alerts.
  • The NWS urged campers to keep wireless alerts on, carry a NOAA weather radio and turn around at flooded roads.

Insights

After a catastrophic flood, who is ultimately responsible for camper safety in high-risk recreation areas?
As extreme weather becomes common, are new state laws the only thing preventing another campground tragedy?