Kerr County missing drops to 3
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Volunteers with Samaritan's Purse were helping to clear out a home on the Guadalupe River that was destroyed by the flood and found the cat inside an oven, according to Kerrville Pets Alive! It's quite fortunate for the cat that the volunteer decided to take a look inside the appliance.
Kerrville residents tell us about their grief, recovery and what future holds for this part of the Texas Hill Country.
23hon MSN
Kerrville's city manager met with the deputy head of mission from the Czech Republic's U.S. embassy Saturday at the local emergency operations center.
Kerr County teams have located most of the 160 people previously unaccounted for in the wake of the July 4th Texas flooding, with just three still missing.
The state Legislature will look at proposals for emergency preparedness in a special session that was already planned over hemp laws. A bill to help build emergency systems failed in the spring.
Texas officials face questions over who monitored weather and warned of floodwaters heading toward camps and homes.
Just three people remain missing — down from nearly 100 at last count — since the Texas Hill Country was pounded by massive flooding on July 4, officials said Saturday.
A collection of restaurants, chefs, volunteers and organizers of the Kerrville Folk Festival rallied in the days after the Fourth of July to feed Kerr County.
In a July 16 update, Kerr County officials said at least 107 people, including 37 children, were killed in Kerr County. In a July 14 update, Gov. Greg Abbott said 97 people were known to be missing in the “greater Kerrville area.”
City of Kerrville officials provided an update July 19 on the number of individuals still missing from the July 4 flood.
As the senior pastor at the Kerrville First United Methodist Church, David Payne is familiar with the question: “If God has the ability to stop it, why didn't he?”