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A large percentage of people still unaccounted for were probably visiting the area, Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly said.
More than 130 people are dead after devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country that began early on the Fourth of July.
In Kerr County, where the most deaths occurred, officials said they were receiving threats, even as they continued to deflect ...
Commissioners in Kerr County, Texas, are set to meet Monday in their first official court hearing since more than 100 people, ...
The questions about a flood warning system before the deadly Central Texas floods continue. Some are shining the spotlight on ...
Plus, Republicans strategists are advising lawmakers to appeal to working class voters when selling Donald Trump's "big, ...
As the water rises, so does the Kerr County community, especially one man who reunited a brother and sister, swept away in ...
State and local officials said they did their best to coordinate evacuations and rescues, but better cellphone service might ...
For a second straight day, rain forecasts hampered the search Monday for people still missing after deadly floods pummeled Texas, as officials made plans to drain reservoirs in the search for ...
Search and rescue efforts resume for an eleventh day as specific crews continue to look for the 161 missing after the ...
Kerr County officials, who have come under increasing scrutiny for their actions as the Guadalupe River began to flood, ...