Death toll from Texas floods reaches 43; many still missing
Some 43 people, including 15 children, have been confirmed dead following
flash floods in central Texas , authorities said on July 6 as rescuers continued a frantic search for campers, vacationers and residents who were still missing.
Officials said more than 850 people had been rescued, including some who were clinging to trees, after a sudden storm dumped up to 38cm of rain in an area around the Guadalupe River, about 137km north-west of San Antonio.
Among the missing were 27 girls from the Camp Mystic summer camp, Kerrville city manager Dalton Rice said at a press conference on the evening of July 5, and there may be others beyond that.
'We are kind of looking at this in two ways called the known missing, which is the 27 ... We will not put a number on the other side because we just don't know,' Mr Rice said.
The disaster unfolded rapidly on the morning of July 4 as heavier-than-forecast rain drove river waters rapidly to as high as 8.8 metres.
'We know that the rivers rise, but nobody saw this coming,' said Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, the top local official in the region.
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said eight of the confirmed dead, including three children, had yet to be identified.
The US National Weather Service said the flash flood emergency has largely ended for Kerr County, following thunderstorms that dumped more than 30cm of rain. That is half of the total the region sees in a typical year. A flood watch remained in effect until 7pm local time for the broader region.
Kerr County sits in the Texas Hill Country, a rural area known for rugged terrain, historic towns and tourist attractions.
Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said an unknown number of visitors had come to the area for an Independence Day celebration by the river.
'We don't know how many people were in tents on the side, in small trailers by the side, in rented homes by the side,' he said on Fox News Live.
Camp Mystic had 700 girls in residence at the time of the flood, according to Mr Patrick. Another girls' camp, Heart O' the Hills, said on its website that co-owner Jane Ragsdale had died in the flood but no campers had been present as it was between sessions.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott said at a news briefing that he had asked President Donald Trump to sign a disaster declaration, which would unlock federal aid for those affected. US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Mr Trump would honour that request.
Earlier on July 5, Mr Trump said he and his wife Melania were praying for the victims. 'Our Brave First Responders are on site doing what they do best,' he said on social media.
He 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.
Videos posted online showed bare concrete platforms where homes used to stand and piles of rubble along the banks of the river. Rescuers plucked residents from rooftops and trees, sometimes forming human chains to fetch people from the floodwater, local media reported.
Local officials said the extreme flooding struck before dawn on July 4 with little or no warning, precluding authorities from issuing advance evacuation orders as the Guadalupe River swiftly rose above major flood stage in less than two hours.
Ms Noem said a 'moderate' flood watch issued the previous day by the National Weather Service did not accurately predict the extreme rainfall and said the Trump administration was working to upgrade the system.
The administration has cut thousands of jobs from the National Weather Service's parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, leaving many weather offices understaffed, said former NOAA director Rick Spinrad. He said he did not know if those staff cuts factored into the lack of advance warning for the extreme Texas flooding, but said they would inevitably degrade the agency's ability to deliver accurate and timely forecasts.
'People's ability to prepare for these storms will be compromised. It undoubtedly means that additional lives will be lost and probably more property damage,' he said. REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Texas floods: How geography, climate and policy failures collided
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Texas's Hill Country sits in an area known as 'Flash Flood Alley'. WASHINGTON - 'There's no such thing as a natural disaster,' geographers like to say – a reminder that human choices turn hazards into tragedies. The Texas flash floods this weekend that left more than a hundred dead, including many children, offer a stark illustration. Here is a look at the intertwined forces that amplified this storm's impact. Flash flood alley Texas's Hill Country sits in an area known as 'Flash Flood Alley', explains Professor Hatim Sharif, a hydrologist at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Warm Gulf air rushes up the Balcones Escarpment – a line of steep hills and cliffs that arcs southwest down from near Dallas – cools, and dumps torrents onto thin soils that quickly give way to bedrock. Runoff then funnels through a dense web of creeks. 'Water will rise very, very quickly, within minutes or a few hours,' Prof Sharif told AFP. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. World 25% on Japan and Malaysia, 40% on Laos: Trump's tariff letters to Asia add pressure for deals by Aug 1 Singapore Grab to trial driverless shuttle for staff between Media Circle office and one-north MRT station Singapore Ong Beng Seng's new pre-trial conference date set for July 23 Multimedia 'I suspect he's cheating': She finds proof when spouses stray Singapore MRT services resume on 5-station stretch of North-South Line after track fault Asia Thai authorities vow crackdown on cannabis-infused products after toddler hospitalised World Netanyahu says he nominated Trump for Nobel Peace Prize Singapore Fastest charger to be added to Singapore's EV charging network by Q4 in 2025 The early hours of July 4 proved that. Around 3am (4pm Singapore Time), a gauge near Camp Mystic in Hunt showed the Guadalupe River rising nearly 30cm every five minutes; by 4.30am the river had surged more than 6.1m, National Weather Service data show. That is enough water to sweep away people, vehicles and buildings. An urgent NWS warning went out shortly after 1am, but most campers were asleep; phones are banned, coverage is patchy, and darkness makes escape routes hard to judge. Prof Sharif urges the use of hydrologic forecasts that convert rainfall into likely river levels. 'Rainfall needs to be translated into runoff,' he said. 'If you have 25cm, what will happen?' Summer camps have long been drawn to the region for its natural beauty. But with increasing risks, Sharif warns that treating these sites as safe or permanent is unwise. 'We need to adapt' A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, loading the dice for heavier downpours. A new analysis by ClimaMeter finds that the meteorological conditions preceding the floods, which delivered more than twice the monthly average rainfall in a single day, could not be explained by natural variability alone. 'Climate change is already affecting us, so we need to adapt,' said Dr Mireia Ginesta, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford who co-authored the research, which is funded by the European Union and the French National Centre for Scientific Research. 'We also need to cut our emissions, and make sure that proper funding is provided to the forecast services and research in general on climate change.' The call comes as the National Weather Service (NWS), like other agencies, has experienced deep staffing cuts under President Donald Trump's administration. Experts stress, however, that NWS forecasters performed admirably under the circumstances. The real failure, wrote climate scientist Daniel Swain on Bluesky, 'was not a bad weather prediction, it was one of 'last mile' forecast/warning dissemination'. A search and rescue team looks for people along the Guadalupe River near a damaged building at Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 7. PHOTO: AFP No warning system For years, commissioners in Kerr County, where the camps lie, considered flood sirens and digital alerts to replace the informal practice of summer camp staff getting on the radio and warning fellow camps. Minutes from a 2016 meeting show officials labeling even a feasibility study 'a little extravagant', suggesting sirens would mainly help tourists, and vouching for the word-of-mouth system. 'The thought of our beautiful Kerr County having these damn sirens going off in the middle of night, I'm going to have to start drinking again to put up with y'all,' Commissioner H.A. Buster Baldwin said in a transcript. The debate rolled on. Residents during meetings in 2021 expressed strident opposition toward relying on federal funds tied to the Biden administration. After the disaster, San Antonio mother Nicole Wilson – who almost sent her daughters to Camp Mystic – launched a petition on urging Governor Greg Abbott to approve a modern warning network. 'Five minutes of that siren going off could have saved every single one of those children,' she told AFP. AFP

Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Tropical Storm Danas looms over China after battering Taiwan, killing two
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A man riding a scooter past traffic lights that were knocked down by Typhoon Danas in Chiayi in Taiwan, on July 7. BEIJING - Tropical Storm Danas headed for China's eastern seaboard on the morning of July 8, as Zhejiang province braced for landfall after the storm tore through Taiwan with record winds and torrential rain, leaving two dead and over 600 injured. Packing winds of around 80kmh at its centre, Danas is forecast to make a sharp left turn as it moves north-west across the South China Sea before striking the port city of Taizhou, prompting the local maritime authority to suspend passenger shipping and cancel over 100 voyages. China, the world's second-largest economy, faces growing threats from extreme weather, which meteorologists link to climate change. Risks that each year stand to wipe out tens of billions of dollars worth of commercial activity, as cities flood, shipping activity stalls and croplands are washed out. Authorities in Zhejiang issued a flash flood warning early on July 8, with forecasters expecting 100mm to 250mm of rain to hit the 650km stretch from Fuzhou, the capital of neighbouring Fujian province, to Hangzhou, Zhejiang's capital. After sweeping through Zhejiang, Danas is expected to move into Jiangxi province, whose rolling hills and mountains make it particularly vulnerable to catastrophic flooding. REUTERS

Straits Times
14 hours ago
- Straits Times
Texas girls' camp confirms 27 children, counsellors died in floods as search teams face more rain
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A search and rescue team searching for survivors along the Guadalupe River near Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on July 7. KERRVILLE, Texas - A Christian all-girls camp in central Texas said on July 7 that 27 campers and counselors were among those who perished in the catastrophic flooding over the July 4 weekend, while emergency responders still searching for dozens of missing people faced the prospect of more heavy rains and thunderstorms. The death toll from July 4's floods has reached 78, including 28 children, and officials have said it is likely to rise as search teams waded through mud-laden riverbanks and flew over the flood-stricken landscape. The bulk of the dead were in the riverfront Hill Country Texas town of Kerrville, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said. The Guadalupe River that runs through Kerrville was transformed by pre-dawn torrential downpours into a raging torrent in less than an hour on July 4. The waters tore through Camp Mystic, a nearly century-old Christian girls' retreat on the banks of the Guadalupe River. 'Our hearts are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy,' the camp said in a statement on July 7. Mr Richard 'Dick' Eastland, 70, the co-owner and director of Camp Mystic, died trying to save the children at his camp during the flood, multiple media including the Austin American-Statesman reported. Eastland and his wife Tweety Eastland have owned the camp since 1974, according to the camp's website. 'If he wasn't going to die of natural causes, this was the only other way, saving the girls that he so loved and cared for,' Mr Eastland's grandson, George Eastland, wrote on Instagram. In Hill Country where the worst flooding occurred, 5cm to 10cm of more rain were expected to fall, with isolated areas getting up to 25cm of rain, said Ms Allison Santorelli, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Centre in College Park, Maryland. Ms Santorelli said that the potential new floods could be particularly dangerous because of the water-saturated soil and all the debris already in and around the river. The weather service issued a flood watch through 7pm on July 7 in the region. State emergency management officials had warned on July 3, ahead of the Fourth of July holiday, that parts of central Texas faced the possibility of heavy showers and flash floods based on National Weather Service forecasts. Confluence of disaster 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, City Manager Dalton Rice said. Mr Rice and other public officials, including Governor Greg Abbott, said the circumstances of the flooding, and the adequacy of weather forecasts and warning systems, would be scrutinised 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,' Mr Freeman Martin, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, told reporters on July 6. Mr 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 July 5 that more than 850 people had been rescued, some clinging to trees, after the sudden storm dumped up to 15 inches of rain across the region, about 140km north-west of San Antonio. The Federal Emergency Management Agency was activated on July 6 and was deploying resources to Texas after President Donald Trump issued a major disaster declaration, the Department of Homeland Security said. US Coast Guard helicopters and planes were aiding search and rescue efforts. First responders searches under a bridge that spans over the Guadalupe River, in Hunt, Texas, on July 6. PHOTO: EPA Scaling back federal disaster response Mr Trump said on July 6 that he would visit the disaster scene, probably on July 11. He 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. Mr Trump's administration has overseen thousands of job cuts from the National Weather Service's parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), leaving many weather offices understaffed, former Noaa director Rick Spinrad said. Mr Trump pushed back when asked on July 6 if federal government cuts hobbled the disaster response or left key job vacancies at the Weather Service under Mr 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 a 100-year catastrophe.' Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on Fox News on July 7 that there did not appear to be a specific breakdown in the National Weather Service systems. 'The alerts went out several hours in advance, but the rise in the level of water, and how quickly that happened, just really was unprecedented for this area,' she said. REUTERS