Ana Sayfa Haberler Texas flooding: search efforts enter fifth day as death toll passes 100...

Texas flooding: search efforts enter fifth day as death toll passes 100 – latest updates

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Death toll climbs to at least 105

The death toll from the flash floods that struck central Texas on Friday has climbed to at least 105, according to CNN, after surpassing 100 late on Monday. The majority of those killed were in Kerr county, where 84 people, including 28 children, have died. Many were at Camp Mystic when flooding struck early on the Fourth of July. The death toll is expected to rise further as search efforts continue into a fifth day.

Here’s a breakdown of the deaths recorded so far by county:

  • 84 deaths in Kerr County

  • 7 deaths in Travis County

  • 5 deaths in Burnet County

  • 6 deaths in Kendall County

  • 2 deaths in Williamson County

  • 1 death in Tom Green County

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First responders from Mexico help with search after devastating Texas floods

A team of first responders from Mexico joined search efforts yesterday in central Texas, where at least 23 people remain missing after deadly flash flooding over the weekend.

The team traveled from Acuña, in the state of Coahuila, which borders Del Río, Texas, and includes nine members from the civil protection and fire department of Ciudad Acuña and four members from the Fundación 911 organization.

The team told CBS News they were committed to staying until the last victim was found. Jesus Gomez, a dual citizen from Acuña who also answered the call for help, said:

There’s a bunch of firefighters that have visas and we were like, ‘Let’s just go and help.’ Sometimes people from the other side cross and help us. It’s time to give a little bit.

The US ambassador to Mexico, Ronald Johnson, thanked the rescuers for their help and collaboration in the area. He wrote on X:

The United States and Mexico are united, not only as neighbors but as family, especially in times of need.

Mexican canine teams, trained with US support for security missions, are also in Texas, Johnson said.

We reiterate our commitment to working together with Mexico at times like this.

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Staff cuts at a local National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather forecast office may have been contributed to the inability of local emergency managers to respond to rising flood waters on Friday in a timely manner, former NOAA administrator Rick Spinrad has told CNN.

As we reported yesterday, the position of warning coordination meteorologist at the Austin-San Antonio weather forecast office – a role that serves as a direct link between forecasters and emergency managers – was vacant on 4 July, after that person took early retirement recently offered by the Trump administration.

Spinrad told CNN:

The staffing was just fine – and the White House has concurred with this – to get the forecast out, to get the watches and warnings issued. But when you send a message, there’s no guarantee it’s being received, so someone needs to follow up, and that’s the warning coordination meteorologist, a position that was vacant.

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There is a small chance of more storms and rain, but forecasters say the flood-ravaged Texas Hill Country should see a break in storms today. And as of early this morning, all flood watches have been dropped for Texas, but a few flood warnings remain in effect.

Those flood warnings include the Leon River at Gatesville affecting Coryell county, Cowhouse Creek near Pidcoke, and the San Saba River affecting San Saba county, according to the National Weather Service.

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My colleagues have put together this visual guide to one of Texas’s worst natural disasters, which has killed at least 105 people, many of them children, after torrential rain and extreme flash flooding.

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An elite Missouri taskforce has been activated by Fema to deploy to Texas for up to 14 days, focusing on water rescue operations and capabilities for detecting human remains.

The 50-member team, which includes four human-remains-detection canines and their handlers, as well as an additional search team manager, departed from Columbia, Missouri, to Kerr county, Texas, last night. “The team will support search and rescue operations in response to the historic flooding affecting the region,” according to a press release.

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Death toll climbs to at least 105

The death toll from the flash floods that struck central Texas on Friday has climbed to at least 105, according to CNN, after surpassing 100 late on Monday. The majority of those killed were in Kerr county, where 84 people, including 28 children, have died. Many were at Camp Mystic when flooding struck early on the Fourth of July. The death toll is expected to rise further as search efforts continue into a fifth day.

Here’s a breakdown of the deaths recorded so far by county:

  • 84 deaths in Kerr County

  • 7 deaths in Travis County

  • 5 deaths in Burnet County

  • 6 deaths in Kendall County

  • 2 deaths in Williamson County

  • 1 death in Tom Green County

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California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, says he will deploy the state’s urban search-and-rescue team members to Texas to help with the flood-response efforts.

In a statement, he said:

California stands with all those who have lost loved ones, homes, and livelihoods in the devastating aftermath of these summer floods in Texas.

California is sending these specialized resources to support critical emergency response and recovery efforts.

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Ramon Antonio Vargas

Ramon Antonio Vargas is the weekend editor of Guardian US

A pediatrician for a chain of clinics affiliated with a prominent Houston hospital system is “no longer employed” there, according to officials, after a social media account associated with her published a post wishing the “Maga” voters of a Donald Trump-supporting county in Texas to “get what they voted for” amid flash flooding that killed more than 100 people, including many children.

“We were made aware of a social media comment from one of our physicians,” read a statement from Blue Fish Pediatrics circulated late Sunday. “The individual is no longer employed by Blue Fish Pediatrics.”

The statement also said: “We strongly condemn the comments that were made in that post. That post does not reflect the values, standards or mission of Blue Fish Pediatrics. We do not support or condone any statement that politicizes tragedy, diminishes human dignity, or fails to clearly uphold compassion for every child and family, regardless of background or beliefs.”

Blue Fish Pediatrics’ statement neither named the physician in question nor specified whether she had resigned or was dismissed. But multiple publicly accessible social media posts identified her as Dr Christina Propst. A Guardian source familiar with the situation confirmed the accuracy of the posts naming Propst.

You can read the full story here:

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Timelapse footage provided by a witness shows how quickly the Texas flood waters rose. You can watch the video here:

Timelapse footage shows how quickly Texas flood waters rose over causeway – video
 
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Reporters from the Associated Press have spoken to volunteers helping in the rescue efforts as rescue teams in central Texas desperately wade through mud-piled riverbanks to find missing people.

Justin Rubio and dozens of other people went out on Monday to search for people still missing after flash flooding tore through the Texas Hill Country over the weekend.

“It’s sad. It eats at your soul, it eats at your heart,” he said. “I can’t just sit at home thinking about what’s going on out here.”

While applauding their kind-hearted spirit, officials have began closing search sites to volunteers amid concerns they are putting themselves in harms way.

“We need focused and coordinated volunteers, not random people just showing up and doing what they do,” Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. said. “We remain hopeful every foot, every mile, every bend of the river.”

Some families have been frustrated by the pace of the search, but officials are asking for patience with the breadth of the search area and methodical approach. It’s a sweeping operation with 19 different local and state agencies, drones, dogs, boats and helicopters.

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Ted Cruz ensured Trump spending bill slashed weather forecasting funding

My colleague Oliver Milman has this interesting read on how the Texas senator, Ted Cruz, ensured that Donald Trump’s controversial spending bill slashed funding for weather forecasting, even though the threat from extreme weather is growing because of the climate crisis. Cruz was on holiday in Greece when the deadly Texas floods broke out. His office later said the trip was pre-planned. Here is an extract from Oliver Milman’s piece:

Cruz inserted language into the Republicans’ “big beautiful” reconciliation bill, prior to its signing by Donald Trump on Friday, that eliminates a $150m fund to “accelerate advances and improvements in research, observation systems, modeling, forecasting, assessments, and dissemination of information to the public” around weather forecasting.

A further $50m in National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) grants to study climate-related impacts on oceans, weather systems and coastal ecosystems was also removed…

Environmental groups said the slashed funding is just the latest blow to federal agencies tasked with predicting and responding to disasters such as the Texas flood. More than 600 employees have exited the National Weather Service amid a Trump administration push to shrink the government workforce, leaving many offices short-staffed of meteorologists and other support workers.

Around a fifth of all full-time workers at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema), meanwhile, are also set to depart.

Ted Cruz has previously cast doubt over the scientific reality of the climate crisis. Photograph: Alex Wroblewski/EPA
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Texas’s worst flooding in decades – in pictures

Here are some of the latest images coming out from Texas after devastating floods forced authorities to launch one of the largest search-and-rescue efforts in the state’s recent history:

Beds, furniture and personal belongings were seen scattered outside flooded cabins at Camp Mystic. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Teams continue rescue and recovery operations around the Guadalupe River in central Texas. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
People hold candles during a vigil in San Antonio for those who have died in the flooding across Texas. Photograph: Dustin Safranek/EPA
A view of damage following the devastating flash floods that hit Central Texas. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Camp Mystic, a nearly century-old Christian girls camp just outside the town of Kerrville, had roughly 750 girls in residence at the time of the flood. Photograph: Eli Hartman/AP
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Deadly floods could be new normal as Trump guts federal agencies, experts warn

The deadly Texas floods could signal a new norm in the US, as Donald Trump and his allies dismantle crucial federal agencies that help states prepare and respond to extreme weather and other hazards, experts warn.

More than 100 are dead and dozens more remain missing after flash floods in the parched area known as Texas Hill Country swept away entire holiday camps and homes on Friday night – in what appears to have been another unremarkable storm that stalled before dumping huge quantities of rain over a short period of time, a phenomena that has becoming increasingly common as the planet warms.

It remains unclear why the early warning system failed to result in the timely evacuation of Camp Mystic, where 700 girls were camped on a known flood plain on the Guadalupe River, but there is mounting concern that the chaos and cuts instigated by Trump and his billionaire donor Elon Musk at the National Weather Service (NWS) and Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) may have contributed to the death toll.

The Guadalupe River in Kerr County was swollen by heavy downpours before daybreak on Friday. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Samantha Montano, professor of emergency management at Massachusetts Maritime Academy, said:

This is the exact kind of storm that meteorologists, climate scientists, emergency management experts have been talking about and warning about for decades at this point, and there’s absolutely no reason that this won’t happen in other parts of the country.

This is what happens when you let climate change run unabated and break apart the emergency management system – without investing in that system at the local and state level.

You can read the full story by my colleagues, Nina Lakhani and Oliver Milman, here:

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Texas governor says every missing person will be found as he warns of threat of heavy rain

Texas Governor Greg Abbott released a statement yesterday, reassuring residents that the state was continuing to “work around the clock” in its response to the flooding tragedy and promised that work won’t stop until every missing person – which is reportedly 24 – is found.

He added:

There is still a threat of heavy rain with the potential to cause flooding in the Central Texas, Hill Country, Big Country, and Concho Valley regions. Texans are urged to remain weather aware, heed the guidance of local officials, and regularly monitor weather forecasts.

Texas will remain engaged until every missing person is found and every Texan recovers from this disaster.

Abbott has advised Texans to regularly check weather updates. Citing the National Weather Service, the government agency which provides weather forecasts in the US, the governor said “rain with potential to cause flooding is anticipated for large portions of the state including Central Texas, the Hill Country, Big Country, and the Concho Valley over the next couple of days”.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has said the state will not stop until every missing person is found.
Photograph: Rodolfo Gonzalez/AP
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More than 100 killed in Texas floods as search and rescue enters fifth day

We are restarting our live coverage of the devastating Texas floods.

The death toll from the flash floods that struck central Texas on Friday has passed 100 and is expected to rise further as search efforts continue into a fifth day.

At least 84 of the victims – 56 adults and 28 children – died in Kerr county, the worst affected area, where the Guadalupe River rose to critical levels in multiple locations.

And many were in attendance at Camp Mystic, a Christian all-girls’ summer camp that has confirmed that 27 campers and counsellors were among those who were killed. At least ten girls and a camp counsellor are reported to remain unaccounted for.

Teams continue rescue and recovery operations around the Guadalupe River. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Other counties in Texas have reported casualties, including seven deaths in Travis County, six in Kendall, four in Burnet, two in Williamson, and one in Tom Green.

The New York Times and CNN are among the media outlets to be reporting that at least 104 people have been killed across the entire flood zone.

Texas’s governor, Greg Abbott, said that rescuers are continuing to search for dozens of missing people across the state, with over 20 state agencies and 1,750 personnel responding to the floods.

The Guadalupe River rose 26ft (8 meters) in 45 minutes in Friday’s pre-dawn hours, after a downpour north of San Antonio. Much of the water has returned to normal levels.

Stay with us as we bring you the latest updates on the floods throughout the day.

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