News

In better times, such a natural disaster would be met with a serious newsgathering effort and sober analysis. Not so today.
More than 130 people are dead after devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country that began early on the Fourth of July.
Search crews continued the grueling task of recovering the missing as more potential flash flooding threatened Texas Hill ...
Officials announced on Sunday that the overall death toll in the ongoing Texas flooding has risen past 130 killed. There are ...
A National Weather Service advisory warned of another 2-4 inches of rain falling in the region − and isolated areas could see ...
Ground search operations were suspended Sunday in Kerr County, Texas, where crews have continued to look for those still lost ...
Residents south of the San Saba River in west-central Texas have been ordered to evacuate because of surging waters.
A new report has found that officials in Kerr County, Texas, did not use technology that would have sent lifesaving emergency ...
A new round of flash floods tore through Central Texas, triggering dozens of rescues as the death toll climbed to 132. Emergency crews resumed some recovery efforts Sunday afternoon after heavy rain ...
Twenty-seven young girls and staff members were killed at Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp situated on the ...
The death toll has now climbed to at least 132, making it America's deadliest rainfall-driven flash flood since 1976.
At least 161 are still unaccounted for after the July Fourth floods that saw the waters of the Guadalupe rise to historic ...