资讯

Former Kerr County Commissioner Tom Moser said in 2016 their flood warning system was "marginal at best." Still, the county ...
Kerr County first tried to secure $1 million for a flood warning system in 2017, but could not. Could such a system have prevented loss of life on July 4?
Transcripts of Kerr County Commissioners Court meetings show officials previously discussed the possibility of adding a warning siren system, but ultimately, sirens were never adopted.
Leaders in Kerr County are facing major questions about a flood warning system that was discussed but never built.
Flooding is a fact of life in Texas Hill Country, a region home to a flood-prone corridor known as “Flash Flood Alley.” Judge ...
At 4:22 a.m. on Friday, as Texas' Hill Country began to flood, a firefighter in Ingram – just upstream from Kerrville – asked ...
Moser said Kerr County started discussing a better flood warning system soon after devastating flooding hit Wimberley, another town in the Texas Hill Country about 80 miles east of Kerrville, in 2015.
As Central Texas reels from flash floods that killed over 100 people this weekend, questions are sharpening about whether officials could have done more to avert the tragedy – both in the decades ...
Kerr County and the Upper Guadalupe River Authority have tried several times to get funding to upgrade flood alerts on the river, dating back to 2016.
Kerr County failed to secure a warning system, even as local officials remained aware of the risks and as billions of dollars were available for similar projects.
For years, Kerr County officials debated how to fund a flood warning system. Under Trump Administration changes, disaster funding opportunities are getting more limited for communities.