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Meanwhile, Texas authorities have pledged to continue search and rescue operations until every missing person is found.
More than 100 people have died across six counties after flash flooding from heavy rain began affecting the state last week.
NPR speaks with former Kerr County Commissioner Tom Moser about abandoned plans for a warning system in the part of central Texas that has now been devastated by floods. Moser pushed for the system.
As recovery efforts continue after deadly floods in central Texas last week, neighboring New Mexico is facing flooding of its ...
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and House Speaker Dustin Burrows took an aerial tour surveying damage that was left behind in Kerr ...
SAN ANTONIO — Five days after the waters of the Guadalupe River rose and overwhelmed much of Kerr Country on July Fourth, ...
As the death toll from the July 4th floods in Kerr County continues to climb - now surpassing the fatalities from Hurricane ...
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday said investigative committees in the House and Senate will look at the response to deadly ...
Flooding is the deadliest natural disaster facing Oklahomans, a threat far greater than tornadoes. In the United States, ...
The president created the FEMA Review Council to recommend overhauling the agency. The meeting collides with FEMA's response ...
Indiana Task Force 1 shared Tuesday that it has once again mobilized to assist the State of Texas in search and rescue ...
More than 170 people are missing and the confirmed death toll has climbed to above 110 after flash floods devastated parts of central Texas. Follow here for the latest.