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How to Help Those Impacted by the Texas Floods Right Now
This is just one example of how Texans are determined to rally to support for Kerr County, a Hill Country region of 56,000 residents hit by devastating flash floods on Independence Day. Home to towns like Kerrville, Comfort, and Ingram, Kerr County has long been an escape for Texans seeking a slice of nature away from the big cities of Austin, San Antonio, Houston, and Dallas, with activities like tubing on the Guadalupe River.
Tragically, the river many saw as a place of peace and community became the source of devastation in the early hours of July 4.
Deadly flash floods swept through Kerr County before dawn on July 4, as the Guadalupe River surged to up to 35 feet, per USGS—more than double its flood stage—killing more than 100 people, including dozens of children, according to county officials. Among the hardest-hit areas was Camp Mystic, a historic summer camp for young girls. At least 161 people remain unaccounted for as of July 10, according to CBS News , as search and rescue efforts continue at the time of publication. The Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas on July 6, 2025.
Desiree Rios/The Washington Post via Getty Images
Kerr County government officials have provided a list of the most up-to-date needs and vetted organizations on the official county website. According to officials, cash donations are the most necessary at the time of publishing, with the following organizations giving 100 percent of donations to relief efforts.
Other organizations in need of monetary donations:
Those able to donate blood can sign up via the American Red Cross or the South Texas Blood & Tissue Center. Want to volunteer? The best way to assess current volunteer needs is by calling the Salvation Army Kerrville at 830-465-4797.
Some Texas-based organizations have contributed money, boots on the ground, and hot meals. H-E-B, the Lone Star State's largest grocery chain that was founded in Kerrville in 1905, donated $5 million to their hometown, in addition to other means of support.
"For 120 years, the Butt family has proudly called Kerrville home,' said Howard Butt III, H-E-B CEO, in an official statement. 'Our hearts ache for the children, families, and communities facing tremendous loss throughout Texas in the wake of these floods."
James Avery, also founded in Kerrville in 1954, is donating 100 percent of its sales from the "Deep in the Heart of Texas" charm to flood relief efforts until Aug. 4.
For every order placed to a Texas merchant, Doordash is donating $1 to the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country's Kerr County Flood Relief Fund up to $250,000 for direct resources to organizations making a difference on the ground.
Kendra Scott, a jewelry company founded in Austin, Texas, is donating 100 percent of its proceeds from the Everlyne bracelet collection to support the ongoing efforts in Texas Hill Country.
For the most up-to-date list of immediate needs for Kerr County, visit: Kerr County Texas
City of Kerrville
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Texas flooding live updates: Commissioner says he's been getting death threats
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CENTER POINT, Texas — Local and state officials who responded to the catastrophic flooding this month in Central Texas defended their actions in an interview with NBC News, saying they did everything in their power to save lives and are now considering what more could be done to prevent future tragedies. 'Our teams did everything that they possibly could with this gruesome, devastating situation that happened, and we would not change the way we did that. And I think we saved as many people as we could,' Dalton Rice, the city manager of Kerrville, said. He spoke with NBC News alongside Jeff Holt, a Kerr County commissioner, and state Rep. Wes Virdell, over the weekend, before a new round of heavy rain and flooding threatened parts of the region. The officials said they did their best to coordinate evacuations and rescues against uncontrollable forces of nature, but noted that a permanent emergency operations center, more diversion dams and better cellphone service in certain areas might help save lives in future floods. Hundreds of people were rescued in the early morning of July 4 as the Guadalupe River surged to unprecedented heights in less than an hour, its intractable current carrying homes and vehicles for miles downstream. At least 132 people died in the flood, including campers and counselors at a girls' summer camp, and more than 160 people are still missing. Flash floods are common in the Texas Hill Country, where Kerrville is located, but National Weather Service forecasts predicted less rain than ultimately descended on July 4 — and by the time officials learned that lives were in jeopardy, many homes along the river were already submerged or washed away. 'It happened so rapidly that nobody, nobody could have anticipated it,' Rice said. Kerr County and Kerrville officials held separate meetings Monday about the ongoing flood response. Officials mostly steered clear of addressing speculation over how leaders communicated about the events on July 4, but one noted that he had received death threats. Rice told NBC News the water level was normal in his morning run along the river at about 3:30 a.m., during which he planned to survey the Fourth of July festivities. At 5:20 a.m., he started getting phone calls and text messages about the water surging. By that point, evacuations were already underway at campgrounds and RV parks. Holt, who is also a volunteer firefighter, received an alert from the Center Point Volunteer Fire Department at 4:59 a.m. that help was needed along the river. He had been up with his cat, who was agitated by the storm, for the past hour and a half. 'My cat would not leave me alone, actually scratched my eyeball when I was sleeping,' he said. In anticipation of heavy rain, some first responders from the Texas Division of Emergency Management were already stationed in the area, along with volunteer swift water rescue teams. Holt assisted with evacuations at around 5:30 a.m. at the Old River Road RV Park in Kerrville, he said, where some people were still fast asleep as the water encroached. 'We all came in to meet probably the hardest day we're going to see in our lives, and I'm a 30- year combat Marine,' he said. Virdell, a Republican state lawmaker who represents Kerr County, woke to messages about the flood at around 8 a.m. He got in his car as fast as he could, he said, and drove to the scene from Brady, more than an hour and a half north of Kerrville. 'I just threw, I think, one shirt, some gear or whatever in there, and my wife hopped in with me, and we drove 90 miles an hour,' he said. In the wake of the disaster, questions have swirled about whether residents were adequately alerted about the dangers facing them, and if such alerts could have made a difference. Since its approval in 2009, Kerr County has used a phone notification system, known as CodeRed, to deliver emergency messages to residents who opt in. Officials have not said whether CodeRed alerts went out to warn about the weather and evacuations, or who was driving the decision of whether or not to send them. NBC affiliate KXAN in Austin obtained audio of a volunteer firefighter in the city of Ingram asking a county sheriff dispatcher at 4:22 a.m. if they can 'send a CodeRed out to our Hunt residents, asking them to find higher ground or stay home.' The dispatcher responded: 'We have to get that approved with our supervisor.' KXAN reported that one person near a flooded area said they received a voicemail at 1:14 a.m. from a number traced back to CodeRed, while another area resident received a CodeRed alert at 5:34 a.m. about the National Weather Service's 'flash flood warning,' suggesting inconsistencies among recipients countywide. Parts of the county also have spotty cell service or none at all. Others may not have had their phones with them, like the young girls who were staying at Camp Mystic in the unincorporated community of Hunt, where officials say at least 27 campers and staff members died. Holt, the Kerr County commissioner, said the county judge and sheriff typically must agree on issuing alerts such as a CodeRed. From his perspective, evacuating people on the ground, he said, 'felt like we were all in the fight already, and didn't need necessarily a call out for it.' 'It's not easy for anyone, especially if you live on the river and your own home is flooding and you can't get to the [emergency operations center] because you live on Highway 39, which is the case with a county judge,' Holt added. 'He is caught up in the disaster and trying to respond from home as much as possible.' Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly said at a July 5 news conference that he lives along the Guadalupe River and his properties were devastated by the flood. As a city manager, Rice said, 'CodeRed was not on our mind' at around 5 a.m. when evacuations were underway. 'We were actively communicating with emergency responders in the community,' he added. 'It's very tough to say, would that [alert] have been effective?' Hours after the flood, Rice helped establish an emergency operations center at the Hill Country Youth Event Center, where state, county and city officials — including the county judge and sheriff — could coordinate their response. 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