
Summer beach day turns dangerous as lightning strikes three at St. Augustine Pier in Florida
Two of the victims of the strike in St. Augustine Pier in Florida were transported to the hospital, one in critical condition and one with minor injuries, according to WJXT. A third person refused to be taken to the hospital.
The pier was closed down while fire crews attended to the injured, and it was inspected for damage. It is expected to reopen on Monday.
"Please avoid the pier while emergency operations are underway — and remember, when thunder roars, go indoors," St. John's County Fire Rescue said in a Facebook post. "Stay safe and weather aware."
St. Augustine Beach Mayor Dylan Rumrell echoed that sentiment, warning residents to seek shelter if they hear thunder.
"There's a big storm and lightning can hit at any time," he reportedly said.
According to the report, the lightning strike left beachgoers, swimmers and surfers in a panic, and many ran for their cars in the immediate aftermath.
"I got scared, everybody was scared," said one witness.
According to the National Weather Service, there have been six lightning strike fatalities in the United Sates in 2025, all in different states. North Carolina, Texas, Mississippi, Florida and Oklahoma have all seen fatal strikes.
The 10-year average annual fatality rate from lightning strikes is 20 people per year.
To reduce the risk of being struck by lightning, the National Weather Service instructs people to immediately move away from high ground, including hills, mountain ridges or peaks.
The organization says never to lie down to avoid lightning, never to hide under an isolated tree, never use a cliff or rocky overhang for shelter and to immediately move away from bodies of water and anything that conducts electricity.
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Yahoo
38 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Transcript: Sen. Maria Cantwell on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," July 13, 2025
The following is the transcript of an interview with Sen. Maria Cantwell, Democrat of Washington, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on July 13, 2025. MARGARET BRENNAN: And we're joined now by Senator Maria Cantwell, who is the top Democrat on the Commerce Committee, which has oversight of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, and the National Weather Service. Good morning, Senator. SEN. MARIA CANTWELL: Good morning. MARGARET BRENNAN: These agencies are being looked at carefully right now, as you know. Just this morning in Texas, we are seeing the National Weather Service issue another flash flood warning for that very same part of Central Texas, Kerrville. In fact, the ground search for victims had to be halted because of this warning. There's been so much scrutiny of what went wrong or what more could have been done. In your view, at the federal level, is the National Weather Service doing everything it should be doing? SEN. CANTWELL: You mean at this moment? MARGARET BRENNAN: Yes, did it function as intended? SEN. CANTWELL: Well, I think what- what's happening here, and we need to take a pause. Glad the president and first lady went, and definitely there's a lot of things being said, but what the real question is, is what can we do to improve the weather forecasting of this nation? To use science, to use better assets, to really do a once in a lifetime investment to upgrade the system so that we could have given people in Kerrville a- more time, more warning and the same for tornadoes and hurricanes and fires. And so I think what we're learning is that in this last week, we've had four events that have all broken huge records for weather and precipitation. That means more flooding. So we know now we're having more extreme weather. What is our response to that to make sure we never have another Kerrville again. MARGARET BRENNAN: So more extreme weather, more stress is on the system. At the same time, you have the Trump administration at least proposing that they're going to do a 27% budget cut to NOAA. The Commerce Secretary, though, said he's not going to touch public for- forecasting. We've seen, though, on the Democratic side, Leader Schumer say there should be an investigation about whether staff cuts, for example, led to or contributed to the Texas disaster. Are Democrats being too quick here to blame the politics? SEN. CANTWELL: You know, I liked your-- MARGARET BRENNAN: You're not. SEN. CANTWELL: I liked your opening story about the GAO report and saw what my colleagues presented. You know, I was on that call the day the President was shot and base- shot and-- MARGARET BRENNAN: You're talking about Butler. SEN. CANTWELL: In Butler. And I basically asked the question on the call that day, did you guys use drones? There was like dead silence. So I'm glad now that GAO, a respected arm of our organization and government, is producing a report. Do you want the same kind of report a year from now? Yes. What we want is to make sure that we understand what happened, but doing blame gaming isn't going to bring people back. But the press has every right to ask hard questions to try to figure out what- what do we need to do to improve weather forecasting, to-- MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, I ask that because the DNC and Democratic leaders have said things like this, you're talking in substantial, specific-- SEN. CANTWELL: Yes, yes. MARGARET BRENNAN: --policy language. That's not what's coming from leadership. That's why I'm asking. SEN. CANTWELL: Well, what's important to know is that in this particular storm, what we had is very warm surface conditions in the Gulf. We had- that meant the storm was going to move slower. It meant it was going to drop more precipitation. We as a nation shouldn't be second to Europe or anybody in being a weather-ready nation. We should be the smartest government in the world, using technology, analyzing the data and putting a forecast system into place that gives people that kind of system. So just recently, in- in the Midwest, that work by NOAA and the weather forecasting system and the labs helped give information about how to get out of the way of a tornado two hours in advance, not 15 minutes or 13 minutes, but two hours. And I'm going to send a letter to the President making five recommendations, and some of them are very bipartisan recommendations, things that Senator Cruz or Wicker or Moran support, that basically make this once in a lifetime investment. So we have the best information, the best analysis, the best people to interpret that on the ground for the local responders and let's help Americans get out of the way of a storm. MARGARET BRENNAN: So on that point, in your recommendations, we are still seeing a proposed budget cut, we are still seeing staff cuts, and the administration is talking about privatizing parts of NOAA. SEN. CANTWELL: Yup. MARGARET BRENNAN: Can you do all of that and then accomplish the outcome you're asking for? SEN. CANTWELL: Well, I think that's what we're going to try to draw attention to. Senator Cruz and I both support upgrading our Doppler radar system. That is having a system that gives you more information about what the storm is likely to do. It's one of the reasons why Europe is a little ahead of us, and you hear about their forecasting system, is because they do more analytics around data that give them higher predictability. I think we're in the same place. Let's get the best system in the country. Senator Wicker and I support these ocean buoys. Those buoys tell you the temperature of the ocean. Why was that so important in this case? Because you needed to know, that temperature tells you how- how much that storm might move or hold in a pattern, and how much precipitation it might move forward and dump in a community. So-- MARGARET BRENNAN: And so believe this has to happen at the federal level? It's not a state-led response in that way, or forecasting rather. SEN. CANTWELL: Well, this is- this is a national responsibility. And I think of, you know, if you want your snow shoveled, yeah, you want the mayor to show up, but if you want accurate weather information, it's not community to community. It's a national system, and we share that with the local people and help them best respond. And today, my state has a red flag warning out right on the- in the Seattle Times, telling the whole state very bad conditions today, very hot temperatures, very high winds. That means a fire could be explosive. MARGARET BRENNAN: So a lot of warning ahead of time. Let's talk more about this on the other side of this break. Stay with us, if you will. We'll be right back. [COMMERCIAL BREAK] MARGARET BRENNAN: Welcome back to Face the Nation. We return to our conversation with Senator Maria Cantwell. Just to pick up where we left off in talking about how to, at least, warn people further in advance of potential weather-related disasters. You know, there is still no Senate confirmed head of NOAA. You did go through with a hearing on the committee very recently. And the nominee, Dr. Jacobs, told you that the main mission will still be preserved under this administration. Do you feel comfortable in the potential leadership of Dr. Jacobs? Will you vote to confirm him? SEN. CANTWELL: I haven't decided yet, I have to see. For the record, he did say some very positive things that he wanted a NOAA Organic Act. He wants the Weather Act that Senator Cruz and I have proposed. He said he wanted some other resources there. I gotta drill down on exactly what he thinks is going to happen on the science mission and how we're going to preserve that, because the nation is now spending billions of dollars on storms. In fact, Susan Collins and I had a report from GAO a few- in the last year that showed how much we were spending on the impacts of- of climate and extreme weather. So the point is, it's a minuscule investment to keep some of the science research functions at NOAA to help them better prepare people for hurricanes, for tornadoes and floods. It's a minuscule amount of money. And so we want to be smarter about it, and the more you can move people and resources out of the way of a storm, the more you can predict what might happen, the better prepared we're going to be, and that's going to help us save lives and certainly save dollars. So I want to- I want to get from him exactly how he thinks that this is going to work. But he did say some positive things about the structure. People don't understand, but NOAA is really a science arm of our government to make all of this for the nation and the weather service. So they literally have to fund the hurricane hunters, those are the planes that fly into a hurricane, and we've helped support that in the past in a bipartisan way. It basically funds these- the research that really- I think probably where Europe is right now is they just do better analysis of the data. They're not doing anything extraordinarily better than us. They're probably just spending more time. And if that is a few million dollars and supercomputing time, we should do it. MARGARET BRENNAN: Speaking of Europe and the trade conversation the President has renewed just on Saturday, saying he's going to put tariffs on the European Union, and up them on- on Mexico as well, by August 1st. You know, there's been a lot of concern about what it would do to the economy. The stock market seems to be brushing off the impact. Out in your state, Boeing, huge contributor to the U.S. economy, is headquartered there. In fact, they had a 27% increase in airplane deliveries in June. Eight to China, because there's been this sort of cooling off with them. If that's on the back burner, are you less concerned about the trade war? SEN. CANTWELL: Oh no, no, no, no. I'm very concerned we're in an endless summer of trade war, tariffs and chaos. I'm very concerned about this. It is impacting our businesses. We are one of the most trade dependent states in the nation, but it's impacting our ports. I mean literally, trade with our ports is, you know, at least 20% down over last year, the month of May from the previous year. The Association of Washington Businesses is releasing a study that they've previewed with us, and of their membership, 75% of them have said they already are impacted by the tariffs. About-- MARGARET BRENNAN: Those are medium sized businesses, or-- SEN. CANTWELL: Yes, there are- probably a few would define as large. But they're saying that- 30% of them are saying that they basically have already raised costs in some way, and 15% of them said we've either laid off people or are planning to lay off people in the future. So for us, we are seeing the economic impacts of this and our competitiveness, even though people have planned with storing a lot of material, you know, getting supplies in, trying to prepare for this, this up and down, you know, is really having an effect on costs. MARGARET BRENNAN: So it sounds like you're saying at this point, we haven't yet seen fully or felt fully the economic impact. So for the market to be betting that the President is either going to back down or that this isn't as hurtful as some predicted, you're saying just wait and see. SEN. CANTWELL: Oh, I think the market has been very clear. When he says he's going forward with tariffs, they don't like it, and you see a drop and- and- when he takes a pause- But that's not the issue. The issue is small businesses. We have- you know, 75% of jobs are created by small businesses, and those small businesses don't have the same flexibility that a big company does to move out of the way of a supply chain that is now being disrupted. Or, you know, there was a Japanese company, big supplier to U.S. auto manufacturers, that went out of business. So we now have aluminum prices that affects everything from our transportation infrastructure investment to- you know, I heard on Amazon that tea kettles went up, you know, like 40 or 50% in cost. So it's affecting all sorts of products. And, you know, while we may not see all of that at this moment, I guarantee you, as the next quarter results come in, I'm sure we will see some effects of these tariffs. So let's get back to using our alliances to create- you know, why aren't we working with Europe right now to counter, you know, Russia, instead of being in an argument with them on some of these issues that could be resolved in a different form. MARGARET BRENNAN: We will see if an agreement is reached before August the 1st. Senator, thank you very much-- SEN. CANTWELL: Thank you. MARGARET BRENNAN: --for joining us today. We'll be right back with more Face the Nation. How a father's persistence unlocked his son's brilliance Global backlash grows to Trump's tariff threats Takeaways from Trump's tour of Texas flooding damage


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Epicenter of Texas floods hit with dangerous new flash flooding — just 9 days after 129 were killed
New flash flooding hit parts of Kerr County, Texas on Sunday, just nine days after the same region saw devastating floods that left 129 dead. 'Life-threatening flash flooding' struck Kerr and Gillespie Counties, as rainfall rates were expected to reach 1 to 2 inches per hour. 3 A tow truck driver tries to attach a cable to a car submerged in flood waters on the road as severe thunderstorms prompt emergency flash flood warnings on the bank of the Guadalupe River during a search and recovery mission on July 13, 2025 in Ingram, Texas. Getty Images Advertisement 3 A member of a fire crew assess how to remove debris from a tree during continued search and recovery operations on the bank of the Guadalupe River on July 12, 2025 in Ingram, Texas. Getty Images A 'considerable' flash flood warning is in place and alerts should have been sent to all phones in the area, according to the National Weather Service. Areas afflicted include places devastated by last week's flooding, such as Hunt and Kerrville, home to Camp Mystic, a Christian girls' summer camp where 27 cameras and counselors lost their lives. Advertisement The search for the more than 170 people still missing was forced to be suspended on Sunday in the face of the heavy rain. 3 A search team searches for victims on the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas, the United States, on July 12, 2025. Xinhua/Shutterstock 'We will provide more information soon but for now, all search crews need to evacuate the river corridor until further notice,' the Kerrville Police Department said in a statement on Sunday.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
A 94-year-old grandmother lost her house in the Texas floods. Her family says rebuilding their home is worth the risk
Betty Matteson's four children, nine grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren have squeezed into her Texas Hill Country home countless times since 1968. They've spent summers relaxing on the deck and floating down the nearby Guadalupe River in tubes, waving to kids and counselors at Camp Mystic paddling by in canoes. They've hiked the cliffs and fished in the deeper part of the river, soaking in the tranquil Texas countryside. They've celebrated milestones just steps away from the house, watching Matteson's granddaughter getting married on a sunny day under a tree arch last May. 'It is a special place to my children and grandchildren and all the friends that have come,' Matteson said. Her family had just gathered, again, at the Hunt, Texas, house to celebrate the Fourth of July, one of their favorite holidays. But early that morning, 94-year-old Matteson, seven friends and family members, two cats and two dogs rushed into the attic as the house was starting to flood. Rushing water was making its way through central Texas, and the three-story house was filling with water and debris. The Guadalupe River, where they had planned to play in the water and build rock forts on the river banks, had surged to nearly 30 feet, barreling through neighborhoods and camps, and sweeping away hundreds of people. More than 120 people, including 27 from nearby Camp Mystic, have died in the floods. At least 150 people are still missing. After hours of waiting and praying in the attic, the water stopped rising and the family was rescued. A first responder helped Matteson, wearing a navy and pink floral dress and quilted white jacket, into the back of a car. Her family survived. Their home was not so lucky. The cobblestone house referred to as 'Casa Del Rio,' where they had gathered for nearly 60 years, was drenched in water and mud. Massive piles of debris, trash and furniture lined the road along the property, Shannon Swindle, Matteson's 53-year-old granddaughter said. 'The land didn't just flood, it became a collection point for destruction from all directions,' she wrote in a GoFundMe for her grandmother. Matteson said the house, where she used to sit in her bedroom and look out the large windows at the river and lush trees, would need to be gutted to the studs. But the family didn't have flood insurance, she said, and the family estimates it could cost half a million dollars to fix. Flood insurance was 'nearly impossible' to afford, Swindle said, and most families could not keep up with the premiums. Matteson said she was renting out a cottage on the property already to help with housing costs, and couldn't afford to pay roughly $6,000 to $8,000 a year for flood insurance. She said she had been trying to save the property, where her husband and other family members are buried nearby, for her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. The family has had ties to the area for nearly 100 years, since her husband's parents bought the house next door in 1929. 'I've just been holding on for dear life because it was just an exceptionally beautiful, calming, peaceful place,' she said, just days after the river destroyed her home. Only 4% of homes nationwide have flood insurance, according to FEMA estimates, and even high risk areas lack wide coverage. In Kerr County, which was the hardest hit by the floods, 2% of residents have flood insurance. Flash flooding has erupted along nearly every part of the Guadalupe River basin, with an uptick over the last 20 years in both frequency and magnitude, the US Geological Survey says. Gov. Greg Abbott says the flooding in central Texas was a 1-in-100-year event, but such disasters are becoming more frequent as the world warms. Texas, North Carolina, Illinois and New Mexico all experienced flash flooding this month. Matteson said another natural disaster could happen living so close to the Guadalupe River, which rose after slow-moving thunderstorms unleashed a summer's worth of rain in a few hours. The family said they're aware of the risks of living near the water and the possibility of another flood event. But still, the overwhelming sentiment is to rebuild the home, even with Matteson's daughter calling the weather increasingly 'unpredictable.' Looking past the risks of climate change and the financial strain to rebuild, Swindle added, was like 'suspending one's disbelief.' 'If (it's) something that you love so much and so dearly, there's so many memories that saying goodbye is like almost not an option,' she said through tears. Barry Adelman, Matteson's grandson who was at the house the night of the flood, said it was hard to imagine not rebuilding it. It's a part of his identity, he said, and he wants the younger generation to have the same experience as he did, even if rebuilding doesn't make sense to others. 'Love is blind,' he admitted. The family is hopeful they will receive some money from FEMA, but they don't believe it'll even be a fraction of the cost to rebuild, said Adelman. Matteson, who is staying with her daughter, said they're still figuring out the finances of the house and weighing what to do. But Sherry Matteson, Betty Matteson's daughter, doesn't think her mom will give up on the house. She feels confident they will find a way to figure out the finances to rebuild the home despite the risks. 'You can't live your life afraid of what might happen. You have to live your life the best you can,' she said. 'None of us around here are going to live our life based on fear.'