Number of people missing from Texas floods drops to just 3
Digest more
The agenda includes 18 legislative priorities determined by Gov. Greg Abbott, including addressing the Central Texas floods, regulating THC and redistricting.
Texas officials now say that just three people remain missing in the devastating floods that struck the state’s Kerr County, killing at least 135 people. The new total of those still missing in the county from the shocking July 4 weekend flooding was revised down from 97 people on Saturday.
Follow along for new developments on the floods along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County and Central Texas. Dozens of subdivisions across Comal County are under boil-water notices because Canyon Lake's water quality has been compromised by an influx of ...
The number of people reported missing in the hardest hit Texas flood region during the catastrophic floods has plunged dramatically from nearly 100 as most have been found safe, officials announced Saturday.
The search for victims along the Guadalupe River has become a grueling, painstaking slog. Several thousand volunteers from across the country are helping.
New flood warnings have been issued along the Guadalupe River in Texas less than two weeks after flooding killed more than 100 people.
The Kerr County Flood Disaster Joint Information Center has confirmed that three individuals remain missing as of Saturday. State and local agencies have verified many people initially reported as missing to be safe, the Kerrville release says, and those people have been removed from the list.
From jewelry to a heart-shaped summer camp sign, these are some of the objects found in the wake of this month's devastating floods.
Flash flooding is common enough around the crescent-shaped region from Dallas through the Hill Country, the area earned the nickname "Flash Flood Alley."
People on social media are sharing dramatic videos of rushing flood waters as if they're footage of the deadly July 2025 flooding. They're not.