News

Heartache is widespread in the aftermath of violent flash flooding throughout the Texas hill country over the July 4 weekend. It reaches Tennessee, where the loved ones of Claire "Reese" Manchaca ...
Texas officials and Hill Country leaders knew the risks of flooding along the Guadalupe. Warnings went unheeded, flood ...
Unfounded rumors linking an extreme weather event to human attempts at weather modification are again spreading on social ...
Days after floodwaters swept through Camp Mystic and other parts of Central Texas, rescuers recovered the body of camper, ...
After a tragedy, records from local archives can help us understand how a community understands itself. Here’s some of what ...
More than half of Americans think the government could have prevented the Hill Country flooding deaths, according to a new ...
Eight-year-old girls at sleep-away camp, families crammed into recreational vehicles, local residents traveling to or from ...
The flash flooding deluged summer camps in Kerr County, dotted along the Guadalupe River, and also left families in Burnet, ...
For a third and final day, teams in Texas Hill Country must face the threat of flooding as they continue to search for the ...
With 101 people still missing after the July 4 flash flood, the focus turns to local lakes, and what may be buried in them.
In the survey — which sampled 1,680 U.S. adults — 52% of respondents said that most of the deaths could have been prevented if the government had been more adequately prepared. Twenty-nine percent ...
More than 130 people are dead after devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country that began early on the Fourth of July.