Texas, making flooding
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Here's what to know about the deadly flooding, the colossal weather system that drove it and ongoing efforts to identify victims.
Search crews continued the grueling task of recovering the missing as more potential flash flooding threatened Texas Hill Country.
A week after catastrophic flash floods swept through Central Texas, first responders are still sifting through debris to find the missing and recover the dead.At least 121 people, including 36 children,
This part of Texas Hill Country is known for flash floods. Why were so many people caught off guard when the river turned violent?
President Donald Trump met with victims' families and surveyed the damage of catastrophic floods that struck the state one week ago.
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Kristi Noem detailed how the federal government deployed resources and funds to Texas flood victims, signaling fundamental changes to FEMA under the Trump administration.
The Guadalupe River rose 26 feet in 45 minutes on the morning of July 4th, leading to devastation and more than 100 deaths across Central Texas. CNN recounts what happened in the first 48 hours of the flood.
The numbers fluctuate by the hour, but the July 4 Hill Country flash flood is already the deadliest in Texas in more than a century – a grim distinction for a state that far outpaces all others in flood-related deaths.
Roberto Marquez, an artist from Oak Cliff, uses river debris to create a healing space for families grieving flood losses in Kerr County.
13hon MSN
Thousands of FEMA calls went unanswered following the Texas floods after a mass of contracts went unrenewed by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.