
Search teams scour Texas flood zone for dozens missing; 78 confirmed dead
The bulk of the death toll from Friday's flash floods was concentrated in the riverfront Hill Country Texas town of Kerrville, accounting for 68 of the dead, including 28 children, according to Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha.
The Guadalupe River, transformed by predawn torrential downpours into a raging, killer torrent in less than hour, runs directly through Kerrville.
The loss of life there included an unspecified number of fatalities at the Camp Mystic summer camp, a nearly century-old Christian girls retreat on the banks of the Guadalupe where authorities reported two dozen children unaccounted for in the immediate aftermath of the flooding on Friday.
On Sunday, Leitha said search teams were still looking for 10 girls and one camp counselor, but he did not specify the fate of others initially counted as missing.
As of late Sunday afternoon, state officials said 10 other flood-related fatalities were confirmed across four neighboring south-central Texas counties, and that 41 other people were still listed as unaccounted for in the disaster beyond Kerr County.
Freeman Martin, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, predicted the death toll would rise further as floodwaters receded and the search gained momentum.
Authorities also warned that continued rainfall - even if lighter than Friday's deluge - could unleash additional flash floods because the landscape was so saturated.
State emergency management officials had warned on Thursday, ahead of the July Fourth holiday, that parts of central Texas faced the possibility of heavy showers and flash floods based on National Weather Service Forecasts.
But twice as much rain as was predicted ended up falling over two branches of the Guadalupe just upstream of the fork where they converge, sending all of that water racing into the single river channel where it slices through Kerrville, according to City Manager Dalton Rice.
Rice and other public officials, including Governor Greg Abbott, vowed that the circumstances of the flooding, and the adequacy for weather forecasts and warning systems would be scrutinized once the immediate situation was brought under control.
In the meantime, search and rescue operations were continuing around the clock, with hundreds of emergency personnel on the ground contending with a myriad of challenges.
"It's hot, there's mud, they're moving debris, there's snakes," Martin said during a news briefing on Sunday.
Thomas Suelzar, adjutant general of the Texas Military Department, said airborne search assets included eight helicopters and a remotely piloted MQ-9 Reaper aircraft equipped with advanced sensors for surveillance and reconnaissance missions.
Officials said on Saturday that more than 850 people had been rescued, some clinging to trees, after a sudden storm dumped up to 15 inches (38 cm) of rain across the region, about 85 miles (140 km) northwest of San Antonio.
In addition to the 68 lives lost in Kerr County, three died in Burnet County, one in Tom Green County, five in Travis County and one in Williamson County, according to Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency was activated on Sunday and was deploying resources to Texas after President Donald Trump issued a major disaster declaration, the Department of Homeland Security said. U.S. Coast Guard helicopters and planes were aiding search and rescue efforts.
Trump, who said on Sunday he would visit the disaster scene, probably this coming Friday, has previously outlined plans to scale back the federal government's role in responding to natural disasters, leaving states to shoulder more of the burden themselves.
Some experts questioned whether cuts to the federal workforce by the Trump administration, including to the agency that oversees the National Weather Service, led to a failure by officials to accurately predict the severity of the floods and issue appropriate warnings ahead of the storm.
Trump's administration has overseen thousands of job cuts from the National Weather Service's parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, leaving many weather offices understaffed, former NOAA director Rick Spinrad said.
Ahead of Friday's floods, the Weather Service office near San Antonio, which oversees warnings issued in Kerr County, had one key vacancy - a warning coordination meteorologist, who is responsible for working with emergency managers and the public to ensure people know what to do when a disaster strikes.
The person who served in that role for decades was among hundreds of Weather Service employees who accepted early retirement offers and left the agency at the end of April, media reported.
Trump pushed back when asked on Sunday if federal government cuts hobbled the disaster response or left key job vacancies at the Weather Service under Trump's oversight.
"That water situation, that all is, and that was really the Biden setup," he said referencing his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden. "But I wouldn't blame Biden for it, either. I would just say this is 100-year catastrophe."
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Volunteers flock to help search efforts after Texas floods even as officials warn them away
Justin Rubio awoke in the wee hours to an alert on his phone, thunder, sirens and the thud of helicopter blades — the beginning of one of the largest rescue operations in Texas history. Rubio was determined to be a part of it. Even as authorities in Kerr County have repeatedly discouraged civilian volunteers, Rubio and dozens of others went out Monday to search for people still missing after flash flooding tore through the Texas Hill Country over the July Fourth weekend. The emotions wrapped up in the calamity that killed at least 100 people — and the urge to help find those still missing — at times butted up against officials' need for structure and safety as they search over 60 miles (100 kilometers) along the Guadalupe River. The river grew by the size of a two-story building in less than an hour on Friday. One survivor described a ' pitch-black wall of death." The flooding decimated shorelines, ripped trees from the ground, tossed and crushed a Ram truck, disappeared buildings and swept through a century-old summer camp packed with kids. Rubio, who picked through torn tree limbs Monday, said he couldn't help but pitch in. 'It's sad. It eats at your soul, it eats at your heart,' he said. 'I can't just sit at home thinking about what's going on out here.' The outpouring, volunteers say, is a Texas strain of solidarity, and officials have applauded the donations and volunteers in other areas. When it comes to search and rescue, however, fickle weather and a flash flood warning Sunday afternoon heightened authorities' fears that unorganized volunteers may end up adding to the missing or dead. On Sunday and Monday, officials began closing more search sites to volunteers, instead directing them to a local Salvation Army. 'We need focused and coordinated volunteers, not random people just showing up and doing what they do,' Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. said. "We remain hopeful every foot, every mile, every bend of the river.' Some families have been frustrated by the pace, but officials are asking for patience with the breadth of the search area and methodical, no-stone-unturned approach. It's a sweeping operation with 19 different local and state agencies, drones, dogs, boats and helicopters. Officials have laid out a grid over the search area. Each segment can reach over a mile (2 kilometers) and takes between one and three hours to search, Dalton Rice, the city manager of Kerrville, said at a news conference Monday morning. Rice reiterated for volunteers to 'stay out of the way" so that first responders aren't waylaid ensuring that volunteers 'don't become victims themselves.' When volunteers were asked by official responders to leave sites in Kerrville, some moved to help search in the unincorporated community of Center Point on Monday, said Cord Shiflet, who'd rallied volunteers through a Facebook post. On Sunday, Shiflet had falsely claimed on Facebook that two girls had been rescued in a tree days after the flooding, but he said Monday that he had received bad information and apologized. The mistake caught the attention of U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, who represents the area and urged people to be careful about false news. 'It's not fair to families and it distracts law enforcement,' Roy posted on the social platform X. At Center Point on Monday, dozens of undeterred volunteers gathered, including Rubio and Bryan Dutton, in the afternoon heat. Dutton, a veteran who said he had friends at an RV camp affected by the floods, had been waiting to get off work to join the droves of residents coming out to assist and provide food. 'We do what we can do,' Dutton said. 'That's how Texas is.' ___


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Texas floods latest: At least 104 dead as search for victims continues amid new weather warnings
Life threatening flash floods are forecast to remain a threat as storms continued across central Texas throughout Monday evening. It's the latest in a series of extreme weather events that have killed at least 104 people in the region since late last week. Dozens more people remain missing. Hundreds of local and state responders, dive teams, helicopters, drones, and volunteers on horseback are combing the area. A Christian summer camp said Monday that 27 girls and staff members had been killed in the disaster along the Guadalupe River. 'Our hearts are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy,' Camp Mystic, an all-girls summer camp, said in a statement on its website. The disaster dates back to the early hours of July 4, when heavy rainfall in western Kerr County caused the Guadalupe River to swell almost 24 feet in under an hour. Texas state lawmaker regrets voting against disaster response bill after floods Amid questions about whether emergency systems could've done more to warn residents of central Texas about last week's flood, one state lawmaker says he regrets voting against an emergency preparedness bill earlier this year. The legislation, House Bill 13, would have established a statewide plan to improve Texas's disaster alert systems, as well as provided grants to buy new communications equipment and installing infrastructure like radio towers. 'I can tell you in hindsight, watching what it takes to deal with a disaster like this, my vote would probably be different now,' Representative Wes Virdell told Texas Tribune. Texas officials feared for riverbank camps. A warning system was rejected Camp Mystic, the Christian girl's camp, reported that 27 campers and staffers had been killed in last week's flash flooding Josh Marcus8 July 2025 04:00 Drone collision grounds rescue helicopter City officials in Kerrville are warning residents not to use their drones until the search and rescue operations in the area are complete, after a collision with a drone in restricted airspace temporarily grounded an emergency helicopter flight. 'The helicopter was forced to make an emergency landing, and a critical piece of response equipment is now out of service until further notice. This was entirely preventable,' the city said in a statement on Facebook. 'When you fly a drone in restricted areas, you're not just breaking the law -- you're putting first responders, emergency crews, and the public at serious risk,' the statement continued. Josh Marcus8 July 2025 03:00 WATCH: San Antonio holds candlelight vigil for victims of deadly Texas floods Josh Marcus8 July 2025 02:54 'She did all she could to save the lives of the girls in her cabin' A group of 11 are still missing from Camp Mystic, an all-girls summer camp hit hard by the central Texas floods last week. That includes Katherine Ferruzzo, 19, a counselor at the camp and an incoming student at the University of Texas. 'Katherine has a fierce and loving spirit, and we have no doubt she did all she could to save the lives of the girls in her cabin,' her family told The New York Times. Texas camp confirms flood deaths of 27 girls and staff in 'unimaginable tragedy' Josh Marcus8 July 2025 02:01 Mayor in hard-hit city of Kerrville never got direct warning about floods Scrutiny is mounting over whether officials did enough to alert the public before deadly floods hit central Texas last week. Joe Herring, Jr., the mayor of hard-hit Kerrville, told CNN he never got a flood notification or an individual warning from government forecasters before the disaster struck. The first time he learned the extent of the threat was early Friday morning, when the city's emergency manager called him to say a park had been flooded, Herring told CNN. "It all happened upriver at the worst possible place. And I think everyone in Kerrville, everyone in Kerr County, wishes to God we had some way to warn them. To warn those people. I've lost two friends. We loved them and they're gone," he said. "You know they're gone. Everyone here, if we could've warned them, we would have done so. And we didn't even have a warning. We did not know." Josh Marcus8 July 2025 01:30 Photos: Texas state troopers assist in recovery effort The Texas Department of Public Safety was one of numerous agencies who sent personnel to central Texas to assist with recovery efforts after devastating floods late last week killed over 100 people. Josh Marcus8 July 2025 01:00 Netanyahu offers prayers for Texas ahead of Trump meeting in Washington Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is among the world leaders who have offered prayers and condolences after the devastating floods in central Texas. 'My wife Sara and I and all of Israel are praying for the Great State of Texas,' the US ally wrote on X. 'Israel knows disaster—we've lived through war, fire, and flood. Dear friends, we stand with you!' Netanyahu is slated to dine with President Trump in Washington on Monday. Bel Trew had this preview of what's at stake in the meeting. A glimmer of hope in Gaza? Inside the fragile push for an Israel ceasefire deal After months of deadlock, talks resume this week over Trump's 60-day ceasefire proposal – with Netanyahu in Washington, Bel Trew examines whether this time is any different Josh Marcus8 July 2025 00:40 Rescue teams from Florida, Pennsylvania, Mexico to assist in Texas flood recovery Rescue teams from far and wide are assisting Texas in the aftermath of deadly flooding late last week. Crews from Florida, Pennsylvania, and even Mexico have been sent to join in the response effort. Josh Marcus8 July 2025 00:20 Series of obstacles may have stopped Texas weather warnings from reaching population As first responders work to rescue the living and recover the dead from last week's flooding in central Texas, officials and experts are scrutinizing whether more could've been done to warn the public about the Friday floods, potentially averting some of the more than 100 deaths that followed. A review from NBC Dallas-Fort Worth found that National Weather Service alerts went out about the coming floods in Kerr County on Thursday, about 12 hours before the floods actually hit. 'The National Weather Service office did everything they should do from everything I can tell,' Jeff Masters, a former hurricane scientist with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters, told USA Today. Nonetheless, the county lacks weather sirens, and making matters worse, a lack of cell phone coverage and weather radios in the area may have further prevented such warnings from reaching residents. What's more, numerous summer camps are in the area, some of which don't allow children to carry cell phones. Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said on Monday that flood-warning sirens could've saved lives in communities near the swollen Guadalupe River, and promised the state will 'step up' and help pay for such infrastructure to be in place by next summer. Texas officials feared for riverbank camps. A warning system was rejected Josh Marcus8 July 2025 00:00 PHOTOS: Rescues and repairs continue after Texas floods Josh Marcus


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Expert uncovers horrifying mistake before Texas floods... as blame game erupts and new evidence suggests NO ONE should have died
Dozens of people died in the catastrophic flooding that tore through central Texas last week, and now shocking new evidence suggests the tragedy may have been entirely avoidable. Local officials in Kerr County rejected a proposal in 2017 to install a modern flood warning system along the Guadalupe River, saying its roughly $300,000 price tag was too 'extravagant' for the rural area.