New flood watch in effect: Updates
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Together for Texas 💙 Along with the Rockets & Spurs, we are wearing “Texas Strong” shooting shirts at Summer League to support those impacted by the recent Central Texas flooding. 100% of the proceeds will benefit Texas Sports for Healing Fund, providing support to those… pic.twitter.com/AFevPrLzpL
The National Weather Service issued the watch for 'Bandera, Bexar, Blanco, Burnet, Comal, Edwards, Gillespie, Hays, Kendall, Kerr, Kinney, Llano, Medina, Real, Travis, Uvalde, Val Verde and Williamson [counties].
Linda Bason and Deana Hillock checked into the HTR campground on July 3 for a mother-daughter weekend. The next morning, the Kerrville camp was destroyed.
The San Antonio Zoo is stepping up to help with displaced animals in the Texas Hill Country after the deadly Fourth of July floods.
Mitchell, alongside a team of minds keeping the river authority operating, explained that many of these dams were a direct result of legislation passed in 1954, the Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act. That act led to the construction of over 2,000 dams across Texas.
The shirts cost $30 and the team says 100% of the proceeds will go towards supporting relief efforts after the deadly floods in Central Texas.
San Antonio Food Bank helped more than 200 households get food, water and other essentials this weekend. It's just the start of ramped-up efforts after the deadly Kerr County flood.
The group's primary role supporting flood recovery efforts has been delivering food and other needed goods. But the organization is also tasked with getting some donations out of the Hill Country region.
Emlyn and Penny Jeffrey went to their cabin in Hunt with their grandchild, 11-year-old Bulverde Creek Elementary student Madelyn Jeffreys. They never came home.
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Axios on MSNWhere San Antonio's drought stands after floodsEven as the Hill Country was inundated during the deadly flooding, rain was more scarce closer to San Antonio, offering little relief to the city's multiyear drought. The big picture: San Antonio remains several years into its most intense drought in decades,
A study puts the spotlight on Texas as the leading U.S. state by far for flood-related deaths, with more than 1,000 of them from 1959 to 2019