A year after Texas Hill Country floods killed more than 130, Kerr County is testing sirens, Camp Mystic is in bankruptcy and new state laws are in effect.
The project calls for 10 communication towers to be upgraded or newly constructed. But only one tower has been completed so ...
Before dawn on July 4, 2025, the Guadalupe River rose with terrifying speed, turning a holiday weekend in the Texas Hill Country into one of the deadliest flooding disasters in state history.
They don't want the Camp Mystic girls remembered any less. They just want everyone else remembered, too.
Gov. Greg Abbott honors 119 flood victims in Kerrville, Texas, at a remembrance ceremony, highlighting community resilience.
Kids, campers and those enjoying the holiday weekend had no idea what was coming.
Crider’s dance hall is back. Homes are rebuilt. Kids swim in the river. But there’s also deep grief after the river killed 119 people and traumatized more.
No single factor caused the weather disaster. Here’s how the combination of pieces came together to create the catastrophic ...
Leaders promised a lot of change after floodwaters tore through Kerr County in 2025, killing more than 100 people. A year ...
Even after seeing what can happen when the Guadalupe River swells, residents in neighborhoods hit hardest by the 2025 floods ...
The people who faced the most scrutiny are still leading Kerrville.
Take a closer look at how the flooding unfolded on July 4, 2025, and how the region is rebuilding.