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Texas mayor calls for flash flood warning system to lessen future fatal disasters

Texas mayor calls for flash flood warning system to lessen future fatal disasters

Reutersa day ago
July 31 (Reuters) - fThe mayor of a Texas city at the center of flash flooding that killed over 130 people earlier this month asked state lawmakers on Thursday to help get a warning system in place within a year.
Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring told a joint Senate-House committee that met in his town northwest of San Antonio that he wanted a flood warning system to be designed and installed by next summer.
"We need solutions in place that protect the public and save lives," Herring said. "We will need your help to achieve this goal."
The flooding was on the agenda of a special legislative session Texas Governor Greg Abbott called. The flooding sent a wall of water down the Guadalupe River in the state's Hill Country early on July 4, washing away camps of children and Fourth of July weekend goers.
After an initial committee meeting on the issue last week in the state capital lawmakers traveled to the flood-hit area to hear from Herring, several other local leaders and local residents on Thursday.
Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha questioned whether a warning system would have done any good.
"The water came too fast," Leitha told lawmakers.
Speaker of the House Dustin Burrows said lawmakers would come up with "some solutions" during the special session, which lasts for 30 days, but that the effort would take time.
"Our commitment is to continue beyond this session and these hearings, into the next session and the session after that," Burrows said.
The high casualty toll ranked as one of the deadliest U.S. flood events in decades, raising questions about the lack of flash-flood warning sirens in hardest-hit Kerr County. Many have expressed concern about vacancies at National Weather Service offices due to staffing cuts under President Donald Trump.
Several residents impacted by the flooding testified before the committee, with many saying they felt abandoned by city, county and state governments.
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Kerr County officials were asleep, away as Texas floods hit
Kerr County officials were asleep, away as Texas floods hit

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Kerr County officials were asleep, away as Texas floods hit

Two top officials in the Texas county where dozens died in catastrophic flooding over the 4 July holiday weekend were asleep - a third out of town - when disaster struck the management coordinator William B Thomas and Sheriff Larry Leitha told Texas lawmakers at a hearing in Kerrville on Thursday that they were asleep when the flash floods hit overnight. Judge Rob Kelly, Kerr County's top executive, said he was out of town. The downpour and flash flood killed at least 135 people in the state, while hundreds of others were forced to evacuate their County was the hardest hit, where at least 95 people - including those at the all-girls Camp Mystic - were killed. In the wake of the deadly tragedy, officials were criticised and questioned over whether adequate warnings were provided and what top officials were doing. Mr Thomas, in his first public remarks since the disaster, explained that he had been feeling ill in the days leading up to the flood, and "remained in bed" throughout 3 July. "My supervisors and the sheriff's office leadership were aware I was off-duty," he testified. He said there was no indication that day about the flood risk or the disaster that would later Thomas told state lawmakers that he was woken up around 05:30 (11:30 BST) the next morning, when he was asked to immediately report to the sheriff's office. Sheriff Larry Leitha testified that he went to bed on 3 July "with zero worries".He said the weather report at the time shared "good news that we were finally about to get some rain", and added that he had "no idea, no warning" about the catastrophe that was about to unfold. Judge Rob Kelly, whose position functions as the county's chief executive officer, testified that he was away "at our lake house preparing for a family gathering".He also said that there was no flood alerts issued in the days before the disaster, and the intense flooding wasn't forecast by the National Weather have been raised about whether authorities provided adequate flood warnings before the disaster, and why people were not evacuated say there were a number of factors that contributed to the tragedy in Texas, including extreme weather, the location of some homes and Greg Abbott said authorities had issued a storm warning and knew about a possible flash flood, but "didn't know the magnitude of the storm".

Texas mayor calls for flash flood warning system to lessen future fatal disasters
Texas mayor calls for flash flood warning system to lessen future fatal disasters

Reuters

timea day ago

  • Reuters

Texas mayor calls for flash flood warning system to lessen future fatal disasters

July 31 (Reuters) - fThe mayor of a Texas city at the center of flash flooding that killed over 130 people earlier this month asked state lawmakers on Thursday to help get a warning system in place within a year. Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring told a joint Senate-House committee that met in his town northwest of San Antonio that he wanted a flood warning system to be designed and installed by next summer. "We need solutions in place that protect the public and save lives," Herring said. "We will need your help to achieve this goal." The flooding was on the agenda of a special legislative session Texas Governor Greg Abbott called. The flooding sent a wall of water down the Guadalupe River in the state's Hill Country early on July 4, washing away camps of children and Fourth of July weekend goers. After an initial committee meeting on the issue last week in the state capital lawmakers traveled to the flood-hit area to hear from Herring, several other local leaders and local residents on Thursday. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha questioned whether a warning system would have done any good. "The water came too fast," Leitha told lawmakers. Speaker of the House Dustin Burrows said lawmakers would come up with "some solutions" during the special session, which lasts for 30 days, but that the effort would take time. "Our commitment is to continue beyond this session and these hearings, into the next session and the session after that," Burrows said. The high casualty toll ranked as one of the deadliest U.S. flood events in decades, raising questions about the lack of flash-flood warning sirens in hardest-hit Kerr County. Many have expressed concern about vacancies at National Weather Service offices due to staffing cuts under President Donald Trump. Several residents impacted by the flooding testified before the committee, with many saying they felt abandoned by city, county and state governments.

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