Kerr County, flood
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Texas, Flood
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Dispatch audio has surfaced from the critical hours before a deadly flood hit its height in Kerr County, helping piece together the timeframe local officials have yet to provide amid public
A firefighter appears to have called for emergency alerts at least an hour before the first warnings were received.
1don MSN
Officials in Texas are facing mounting questions about whether they did enough to get people out of harm’s way before a flash flood swept down the Guadalupe River and killed more than 100 people, including at least 27 children and counselors at an all-girls Christian camp.
KXAN Austin on MSN10h
Audio obtained by KXAN helps piece together flood warning timelineKXAN obtained dispatch audio from critical hours before flooding in Kerr County hit its height July 4. KXAN's Josh Hinkle breaks down what was said, how residents were notified and provides a timeline that local officials have yet to provide.
It has been four days since catastrophic floodwaters swept through the Texas Hill Country, leaving more than 100 people dead and destroying homes and businesses across multiple counties.
Public officials in the area have come under repeated criticism amid questions about the timeline of what happened and why widespread warnings were
NWS says Flash Flood Warnings were issued on July 3 and early July 4 in Central Texas, giving more than three hours of warning.
Social media posts piece together a timeline of apparent delays in public notification by government officials in Kerr County, as devastating flood waters rose on the Guadalupe River early Friday