MONTGOMERY, Ala. — When Patrick Marsh returned to the Bubble Inn cabin at Camp Mystic, he sat in the corner where his 8-year-old daughter Sarah's bunk had been. The view out the window landed like a gut punch.
Safety from the rising floodwater that took her life would have been just a short walk away, he said. It cemented his belief that the tragedy was ''100% preventable.''
''From where Sarah slept to high ground where she would have been safe — 50 yards. All they had to do was walk up a hill,'' Patrick Marsh said in an interview.
Sarah Marsh of Birmingham, Ala. was one of 27 Camp Mystic campers and counselors swept to their deaths when floodwaters engulfed cabins at the Texas camp on July 4, 2025. Grieving parents pushed Texas lawmakers to approve new safety requirements for camps, including mandating detailed emergency plans and emergency warning systems. Sarah's parents are urging lawmakers in Alabama and elsewhere to tighten regulations. Similar bills have also been filed in Missouri.
''As we learned more and more about what happened at Mystic, the more we realized there were a lot of things that went wrong," Patrick Marsh said.
The Alabama bill, named the Sarah Marsh Heaven's 27 Camp Safety Act, will require camps to meet safety standards, including obtaining an emergency preparedness license from the Alabama Emergency Management Agency and establishing emergency and evacuation plans. It would prohibit cabins from being located in floodplains. Camps would be required to have weather radios and a notification system that does not rely on cellular or internet service, which could fail in a natural disaster.
''The flood itself was an act of God, and there's nothing you can do to stop the flood. But how you prepare for the possibility of flooding, how you handle it in the moment, those things were handled so poorly,'' Patrick Marsh said.
Had they been done properly, he believes, ''Sarah would be sitting in school right now.''