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The death toll from the Texas flooding disaster reached 105 victims on Tuesday as crews began to shift from rescue operations to recovery as the hope of finding survivors faded.The majority of the ...
While Texas may feel far from the Northeast, the lessons from the Texas Hill Country disaster matter here, too, particularly ...
At least 104 people are dead after heavy rain led to devastating flooding in Texas. Kerr County was hit the hardest, with at ...
Death toll surpasses 100 as hope fades in search for dozens still missing - Ten campers and a staff member from Camp Mystic are among the two dozen still missing, as the search for survivors enters it ...
At a news conference Friday, W. Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, said the National Weather Service had initially predicted “3 to 6 inches of rain in the Concho Valley and ...
Without a modern flood warning system, emergency officials monitor four sensors along the Guadalupe River – including one ...
Wireless Emergency Alerts are sent by the National Weather Service and distributed by your mobile provider. Are yours enabled ...
In Texas, the death toll from catastrophic July 4 floods has reached 104 people. That includes 27 victims from an all-girls ...
The National Weather Service said the threat of severe weather is low, but some flood warnings are still in effect.
When storms roll in, water rushes downhill fast, gaining speed and force as it moves — often with deadly results.
Current and former National Weather Service officials defended the agency, pointing to urgent flash flood warnings issued in pre-dawn hours before the river rose.
The search for missing bodies is ongoing along Texas’ Guadalupe River after catastrophic flooding killed more than 100 people following a torrential downpour Friday.