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The top two emergency management officials in Kerr County told lawmakers Thursday that they were asleep in the early morning hours of July 4 when floodwaters rose.
Several people shared harrowing stories of the devastating floods in the Hill Country on July 4, describing how rising waters forced them to flee their homes, seek refuge in trees and mourn the loss ...
Kerr County leaders are facing mounting scrutiny over their handling of the Fourth of July flooding. On Thursday, the ...
William B. Thomas IV, the Kerr County Emergency Management Coordinator, is speaking out after questions were raised about his whereabouts during the July 4 floods that killed more than 130 people.
For the first time since catastrophic flooding killed more than 100 people in Kerr County, Texas, the county emergency ...
In the aftermath of the deadly July 4 floods, the need for warning systems has been sounded by elected officials and members of the public.
Flood relief is one of many items the Texas Legislature is taking up in the 30-day special session called by Gov. Greg Abbott ...
The July 4 flood killed 27 campers and counselors at the all-girls Camp Mystic in Hunt. One camper remains missing. The ...
Texas state legislators will be in Kerrville on Thursday for a hearing on the July 4 floods. They may get an earful.
At a hearing in hard-hit Kerr County, an emergency management coordinator for the first time explained his whereabouts when ...
While loss of life may have been inevitable after the Guadalupe River flooded on July 4, missteps by authorities at the local level up to those in power in Washington may have worsened the tragedy.
Kerr County’s emergency management coordinator, William B. Thomas IV, testified on Thursday that he was sick and asleep ...