
‘No warning at all': Texas flood survivors question safety planning and officials' response
New flood alerts were issued for Texas 'hill country' on Sunday, prompting rescue services to suspend the search for missing people, including at least 11 from Camp Mystic, the summer camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River hard hit by Friday's flash flood.
At an early evening press briefing, Kerr county authorities said they were suspending the search and evacuating first responders from the river valley. They confirmed that 68 had died there, including 28 children. Not all have been identified, with officials still examining the bodies of 18 adults and 10 children.
Extraordinary tales of resilience have also emerged alongside videos of the destruction and loss that are circulating on social media. On Sunday, a video was posted on X of girls from Camp Mystic being evacuated from the camp and singing the hymns Pass It On and Amazing Grace as they crossed a bridge over the still torrential Guadalupe River.
The new round of rainfall in the area prompted an alert of a 'dangerous and life-threatening situation', it said, adding: 'Do not attempt to travel unless unless you are fleeing an area subject to flooding or under an evacuation order.'
The co-ordination between Kerr county officials and the National Weather Service has become a flashpoint of its own.
Dalton Rice, the city manager of Kerrville, one of the hardest-hit areas, told reporters on Sunday afternoon: 'We don't want to speculate at this time. There will be a formal review that will focus on future preparedness.'
When asked why Kerr county had not moved to evacuate the area before the storm hit, Rice said that authorities were preparing for the storm, 'but unfortunately the rain hit at an inopportune time and right at the most importune areas where the north and south forks of the river converge.'
'We want to focus on continuing rescue operations,' he added.
Kerr county does not have outdoor weather sirens that are common in tornado zones and were once common across the US as relic of cold war nuclear attack alert systems.
Since the flood, local resident Nicole Wilson started an online petition 'urgently' calling for Kerrville and Kerr county to implement an outdoor system. 'A well-placed siren system will provide critical extra minutes for families, schools, camps, businesses and visitors to seek shelter and evacuate when needed,' she told KXAN. 'This is not just a wish – it is a necessary investment in public safety.'
But questions are also being asked about whether Kerr county commissioners' court and flood plains administrator had approved development along the river bank that may have skirted rules issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) that control where homes may be built in areas vulnerable to flooding.
At a Red Cross center in Kerrville on Sunday, flood survivor Kathy Perkins said shehad been alerted to the storm by thunder and lightning. Emergency workers had come to her town, Ingram, and turned on their sirens.
'They were supposed to wake everyone up but I just left. It was just two guys in a white truck and they said to me: 'You gotta get out, you don't have much time.' It must have already hit in Hunt.'
Perkins was luckier than some. Her trailer home was damaged by water, but some of her neighbors' homes got swept away or moved around by the water. 'Many people are angry right now, but you wait 'til the parents get here,' she said, referring to the parents of the children lost at Camp Mystic. 'Those parents are from everywhere.'
The authorities, she added, 'won't just be able to go hush-hush. Those kids should have been safe and they weren't.' Perkins said everyone in the area noticed that Judge Rob Kelly, Kerr county's most senior elected official, seemed to shirk responsibility when he said on Friday: 'We didn't know this flood was coming. Rest assured, no one knew this kind of flood was coming. We have floods all the time. This is the most dangerous river valley in the United States.'
'He said: 'We didn't know nothing.' Everybody caught that,' Perkins said.
Lesa Baird, a resident of Hunt who was also staying at the Red Cross shelter, said she heard 'no warning at all, none whatsoever' when the floods came.
'I heard something going on. I put my feet on the floor and felt the water. I picked up a bunch a kittens in a box and woke my friend up. He had to break a window to get out of the house.'
But as they got out of the home, Baird, 65, followed a cable strung from the house and reached a tree. 'We got up in the tree and he pulled me up as best he could. Thank God he did because I could dangle my foot down and feel the water. We stayed up there for what seemed like hours.'
When the waters began to recede, they climbed down and walked to the local Baptist church. Now recovering from her ordeal, Baird said she'd never seen the Guadalupe River flood as badly as it had. Like many others, Baird faces the kind of limbo that affects natural disaster survivors: she wants to go home.
'There's no home to go to. It's done,' she said, declining to be photographed except for the bruises on her arms incurred during her ordeal. 'I may be able to salvage a bunch of things here and there, but this is my stuff,' she said, pointing to some bags of donated clothes.
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Sky News
41 minutes ago
- Sky News
Eight more deaths confirmed in Texas floods - bringing total to at least 90
At least 90 people have died in the flash floods that have left a trail of destruction across Texas, officials said. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said on Monday that 75 bodies had been recovered from the area, which is seven more than the previous figure for the county. Sheriff Leitha said the number of dead includes 48 adults and 27 children. The total figure is seven higher than the 68 deaths that had earlier been confirmed in Kerr County. In a separate news conference in Williamson County, officials there said a second person had been confirmed dead in the area. One official warned that debris was posing a threat to rescuers out searching for bodies, adding: "The bodies that we're looking for could be hidden beneath 20ft of mud, trees and debris". An official also warned rescuers had to be wary of "snakes and skunks" in the water. He asked people to keep away from the floodwater. One death had earlier been confirmed in Tom Green, while there had been four fatalities in Burnet, six fatalities in Travis County and two in Kendall. Sheriff Leitha has said 15 of the 90 confirmed dead were still unidentified. In Kerr County, at least 27 deaths were confirmed after some of the worst flooding struck a girls' summer camp called Camp Mystic. Among those killed were campers as young as eight, a camp counsellor and the camp's director. At least 41 people are still missing in the state - including 10 girls from the camp. Texas Senator Ted Cruz spoke at the same news conference where the latest death figures were confirmed and said: "Texas is grieving right now, the pain, the shock of what has transpired these last few days has broken the heart of our state. "Those numbers [the number of dead] are continuing to go up... that's every parent's nightmare, every mum and dad." He said he had picked up his own daughter from a camp in the area last week. 3:25 Mr Cruz added: "Over the last several days, I've spoken to multiple parents, scared out of their minds. "There's still ten girls and one counsellor from Camp Mystic that are not accounted for. "And the pain and agony of not knowing your child's whereabouts, it's the worst thing imaginable." He added: "You know what I'd do? What I did when this happened? Just go hug your kids. "Because I've got to tell you, I hugged my girls with tears in my eyes." The flooding comes after the Trump administration made cuts to the National Weather Service (NWS) - with Texas officials having criticised the weather service by claiming it failed to warn the public about the impending danger. 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He added: "We had first responders getting swept away, responding to the first areas of rainfall. That's how quick it happened. "They were driving to these areas and one of them got swept off the road." Texas Game Wardens had arrived at Camp Mystic on Friday afternoon and began evacuating campers. A rope was tied so girls could hang on as they walked across a bridge, the floodwaters rushing around their knees. Elinor Lester, 13, said she was evacuated with her cabinmates by helicopter after wading through floodwaters. She recalled startling awake around 1:30am as thunder crackled and water pelted the cabin windows. Ms Lester was among the older girls housed on elevated ground known as Senior Hill. Cabins housing the younger campers, who can start attending at age eight, are situated along the riverbanks and were the first to flood, she said. "The camp was completely destroyed," she said. "It was really scary." Her mother, Elizabeth Lester, said her son was nearby at Camp La Junta and also escaped. A counsellor there woke up to find water rising in the cabin, opened a window and helped the boys swim out. 1:04 Camp La Junta and nearby Camp Waldemar said in Instagram posts that all campers and staff were safe. It comes after Texas agriculture minister Sid Miller told Fox News that cattle and livestock were found on the "tops of trees" in the state due to a "26ft wall of water". More heavy rain is expected in the region over the next two days, with flood alerts in place until 7pm local time today. US President Donald Trump signed a major disaster declaration yesterday and says he will "probably" visit Texas on Friday. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.


The Independent
43 minutes ago
- The Independent
Here is where the flash flooding has hit Texas
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BreakingNews.ie
an hour ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Risk of further floods in Texas as death toll rises to 89
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