Texas, flooding
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The floodwaters that surged through the Texas Hill Country revealed gaps in preparation, communication and oversight that left so many in harm’s way.
A washed-out Guadalupe River appeared stuck in time nearly two weeks after the catastrophe. Large trees laid on their sides, and debris lingered throughout what was left.
The Rangers also launched a "Together for Texas" campaign, selling T-shirts and raising funds to send to the affected region.
A look at the devastation, the lives lost, the heroism and the timeline, premiering tonight at 6:30 p.m. on KHOU 11+.
WACO, Texas (KWTX) - A group of local children who organize an annual summer daycare lemonade stand, and who usually split the money amongst themselves, decided this year they’d donate every dollar made to those devastated by the deadly July 4th flooding in the Texas Hill Country.
When floodwaters swept through Kerr County on July 4, the Mountain Home Volunteer Fire Department stepped in to save lives.
As H-E-B commonly recounts, the grocer was founded in 1905 and built on a $60 investment, starting as a small family grocery store in Kerrville. H-E-B goes on to note that its "Spirit of Giving" tradition,
The Facebook group Found on the Guadalupe River has racked up 38,000 followers as volunteers seek to reunite treasured items with Texas Hill Country flood victims.
10hon MSN
KVUE and our sister stations in TEGNA collaborated to cover the Texas floods, and those stories are now being shared in this special program.
A look at the devastation, the lives lost, the heroism and the timeline --premiering at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, July 18, on WFAA+.
Presented by Buc-ee’s, a beloved chain of Texas-based travel centers, "Robert Earl Keen and Friends: Applause for the Cause," is set for Aug. 28 at Whitewater Amphitheater outside of New Braunfels, Texas.