Camp Mystic's emergency planwas approved by Texas inspectors just two days before disaster struck Friday when floods ravaged the grounds, killing 27 campers and counselors, according to a report. The camp complied with a laundry list of regulations regarding "procedures to be implemented in case of a disaster," including evacuation plans, according to records from the Department of State Health Services obtainedby the Associated Press. Five years of inspection records reviewed by the AP, however, did not detail Camp Mystic's disaster plan, which state law requires be posted in all camp buildings. Theall-girl Christian camp founded in 1926didn't evacuate beforethe catastrophic rainfallin the already flood-prone area along the Guadalupe River that led to the deadliest floods Texas has seenin more than a century. Local and state officials have repeatedly avoided answeringquestionsabout who was monitoring the approaching storm and what steps were taken to prepare for flooding. The waters coursed down the Guadalupe River and swept away cabins, tents and trailers. Officials said Tuesday that five campers and one counselor remain missing. Overall, at least 172 people are still missing in Texas' Hill Country days after the once-in-a-generation flash floods,Gov. Greg Abbott said Tuesday. Abbott took a helicopter tour of the affected area, noting the death tolls from the floods — which now stands at 111 — has surpassed the number of Texans killed in Hurricane Harvey in August 2017, in which 103 people died. Kerr County, where Camp Mystic was located, accounted for 87 of the deaths. Rescuers continue to search for survivors.