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Texas family helps rescue woman clinging to tree after being swept 20 miles downriver

Texas family helps rescue woman clinging to tree after being swept 20 miles downriver

Fox Newsa day ago
One Texas family helped save a woman's life who was clinging to a tree for hours as deadly flash flooding struck Kerr County over the weekend.
The woman, who was swept 20 miles downriver, caught the Jeter family's attention when she saw Carl and began to "scream for help" while he was outside on his deck.
"She spotted me, and she started to scream for help," Carl told "Fox & Friends Weekend" on Sunday. "At first, I couldn't… locate her. I thought she was in the river itself going downstream, and I was like, 'Oh my gosh,' and then I finally was able to look across the river at the end of the tree and I spotted her, so I began to call out to her and tell her that I see her… 'I got you. We're going to get you some help. It's going to be okay. Just hang on.'"
The family was able to call for help and ultimately, Texas troopers rescued the woman from the tree after an hours-long nightmare.
"There were multiple teams that showed up," Josh said. "There was a Swiftwater Rescue from Bernie, Texas, team that showed, and then there were some Texas Parks and Wildlife game wardens that showed with boats as well. We were able to help launch those boats by hand into the water for them to get in and rescue her."
"It was just kind of… you didn't think about it. You just did what you needed to do to help them get into the water to save this young lady that's clinging to life in a tree."
The Jeters invited the woman into their home after the harrowing rescue. Carl said she was in "shock."
"She was cut and bruised and banged up from the trek and cold," he said. "So we wrapped her in blankets and towels and got her into the house, the dry spot because it was raining outside at the time, pretty good."
"She was just extremely upset, concerned, worried, and what have you."
More than 50 people have been confirmed dead in Central Texas since the flash flooding began on Friday, and authorities are still frantically searching for more still missing.
There are more than 27 young girls who remain missing in Kerr County who were staying at Camp Mystic, an all-girls private Christian retreat in Hunt, Texas.
Five young girls who were staying at that camp have been confirmed dead. Authorities said about 850 people have been rescued so far.
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The 1:14 a.m. message was followed by a series of increasingly dire bulletins, including a 4:03 a.m. warning saying, 'Move to higher ground now! This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation.' But cellphone service in the area can be spotty, and not all residents appear to have received the alerts in the critical early-morning hours when the floodwaters rose. Behind the scenes, NWS officials were communicating with local emergency managers in the affected region over an internal messaging platform. Typically, the media is expected to treat messages from this platform as off-the-record, but a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration official granted CNN permission to report general information about the Texas disaster from the platform. The messages show that after initial briefings on the afternoon of Thursday, July 3, about the potential of heavy rains to come, emergency managers from some counties in the region were posting on the system, querying forecasters about what to expect. Those messages picked up in pace as the flooding began in the early hours of July 4. But no emergency manager from Kerr County participated in those discussions on the messaging platform. It's unclear whether officials were reviewing the information being shared. As the floodwaters rose, officials in neighboring Kendall County ordered evacuations of residents living along Guadalupe River on Friday morning. But while Kerr County posted social media messages about the flooding on the morning of July 4, officials do not appear to have ordered any immediate evacuations. Local officials have defended the decision in recent days, saying that an evacuation in the middle of the night as waters were rapidly rising could have put more people in danger. In 1987, 10 campers in the region were killed when their bus was caught in Guadalupe River floodwaters as they were evacuating a flash flood, according to the NWS. 'It's very tough to make those calls,' Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice told CNN on Monday. 'Evacuation is a delicate balance, because if you evacuate too late, you then risk putting buses or cars or vehicles or campers on roads into low water areas trying to get them out, which then can make it even more challenging.' 'What we also don't want to do is cry wolf,' Rice added. The risk was especially high at Camp Mystic, the nearly 100-year-old girls' camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River, where counselors and campers were forced to flee for higher ground amid rapidly rising floodwaters and more than two dozen people died. Some of the cabins campers were staying in are located in the river's 'regulatory floodway' – the area that floods first and is most dangerous – according to federal flood maps. Other cabins were located in an area that the federal government has determined has a 1% chance of flooding each year. New construction or significant renovations in those zones would have required a specific review by a local floodplain manager, according to Kerr County documents. But historic aerial imagery shows that the cabins in the area of the campground most affected by flooding have been there for more than 50 years. The county floodplain administrator did not respond to requests for comment on Monday. L. David Givler, a hydrologist and civil engineer based in Texas, said that residents and business owners in flood zones often don't realize the danger they're in. 'I don't think you're going to find anybody who would say it's a good idea for those structures to be there,' Givler said of Camp Mystic's cabins. CNN's Thomas Bordeaux, Isabelle Chapman, Majlie de Puy Kamp, Brandon Miller, Bob Ortega, and Jeff Winter contributed to this report.

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