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As of this writing, 111 people have perished in the central Texas flash flooding of the Guadalupe River, including 27 campers, counselors and owner of Camp Mystic along its banks.
Taking swift action, counselors at an all-boys summer camp in the Texas Hill Country managed to evacuate hundreds of children from a raging flood.
Climate change is making disasters more common, more deadly and far more costly, even as the federal government is running away from the policies that might begin to protect the nation.
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The Texas Tribune on MSN“Disasters are a human choice”: Texas counties have little power to stop building in flood-prone areasExperts suggested that more data and education are needed as Texas and the rest of the country build in known flood plains.
Two major climate disasters of 2025 — the Texas flooding that killed more than 100 people and the L.A. wildfires in January ...
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Dagens.com on MSN“We Wrote Their Names in Case We Died”: Teen Camp Counselors Share Texas Flood NightmareTwo teenage counselors from Camp Mystic in Texas have spoken publicly for the first time about the terrifying moments they ...
More than 160 people are believed to be missing in Texas in the aftermath of the flash floods that killed more<a ...
Between 2 and 7 a.m. July 4, the Guadalupe River in Kerrville rose 35 feet, according to a flood gauge in the area.
Here's what to know about flash floods, emergency systems and how to stay safe as Florida is in the Atlantic hurricane season.
When a reporter demanded to know why the summer camps along the Guadalupe River weren’t evacuated before its waters reached their deadly peak on July 4, Rob Kelly, the highest-ranking local official, ...
Aidan Heartfield was on the phone with his dad when their family’s cabin was swept away in the Texas floods. A team is ...
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