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A week after deadly flash floods, as rescue turns to recovery, more than 160 people remain missing in Kerr County, Texas.
By RYAN J. FOLEY, CHRISTOPHER L. KELLER, and JIM MUSTIAN Federal regulators repeatedly granted appeals to remove Camp ...
While Kerr County officials say they didn't know how bad the July 4 flooding would be, it warned residents nearly eight years ...
State officials said rescue efforts in Central Texas following devastating flooding continue, emphasizing the state's ...
In the last nine years, federal funding for a system has been denied to the county as it contends with a tax base hostile to ...
Kerr County, Texas, lacked a “last mile” warning mechanism that could have saved residents before the deadly floods ...
A "Basic Plan" for emergency response for three Texas counties labeled flash flooding as having a "major" impact on public safety, according to a page on a city website.
Kerr County, part of a region whose rivers and creeks have high flooding potential, earned the nickname “Flash Flood Alley” and was among the communities that sought preventative funding.
When the precipitation intensified in the early morning hours Friday, many people failed to receive or respond to flood ...