‘No warning at all’: Texas flood survivors question safety planning and officials’ response | Texas floods 2025

As Texas, a tremendous response to the sudden floods that have already killed dozens have declined, questions are now asked About warnings given On Thursday and the Samima early on the intensity of the approaching storm and coordination between local officials and the national weather service.
New alerts were issued for floods Texas “Hill Country” on Sunday, which prompted rescue services to suspend the search for missing persons, including at least 11 of Camp Mystic, the summer camp on the banks of the Guadalupe Hard Hard Hard from Friday Flooding.
At an early evening press conference, the CARE province authorities said they are suspending the research and evacuating the first respondents from the Wadi River. They confirmed that 68 died there, including 28 children. Not all of them were identified, as officials still examine the bodies of 18 adults and 10 children.
Unusual tales of flexibility have also emerged alongside videos of the destruction and loss that revolves around social media. Sunday, a The video was published On X of Camp Mysic girls are evacuated from the camp and the hymns that you pass through and amazing grace while crossing a bridge over the Guadalobi River that is still.
She said that the new round of rains in the region prompted an alert from “a dangerous situation and threatens life,” adding: “Do not try to travel unless you are releasing an area that is subject to floods or under an evacuation order.”
Coordination between Kiir Province officials and the national weather service has become its own flash point.
“We do not want to speculate at this time. There will be an official review that will focus on future preparation,” Dalton Rice, director of the city of Kerville, one of the most difficult areas, told reporters on Sunday afternoon.
When asked why Kiir’s province was not elected to evacuate the area before the storm hit, Rice said that the authorities were preparing for the storm, “but unfortunately, the rain hit an unspecified time in the areas where the north and the south are close to the river.”
He added: “We want to focus on continuous rescue operations.”
CARE province does not contain common outdoor sirens in hurricane areas and was day common throughout the United States as the remains of the nuclear attack alert systems of the Cold War.
Since the flood, local resident Nicole Wilson began Seam online “Urgent” calls for Kerrville and Kerr County to implement an outdoor system. “The siren system will provide a good, decisive minutes for families, schools, camps, companies and visitors to search for shelter and evacuation when needed,” I told Capsan. “This is not just a desire – it is a necessary investment in public safety.”
However, questions are also asked about whether the Kiir County Commissioners and the flood weapon have agreed to development along the river bank that may have faded The rules issued By the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) that controls where homes can be built in floods.
At the Kurville Red Cross Center on Sunday, Kathi Birkins, who survived the floods, said that a testimony had been alerted to the storm by thunder and lightning. Emergency workers came to her city, Ingram, and they operated the sirens.
“Everyone was supposed to wake up but I just left. He was just two young men in a white truck and told me:” You must go out, you don’t have much time. “You must have already been hit in Hunt.”
Perkins was more fortunate than some. Her trailer house was damaged by water, but some of her neighbors’ homes have swept or moved by water. “Many people are angry now, but you are waiting” until parents reach here, “she said, referring to the parents of the children who were lost in the Mystic camp.” These parents from everywhere. “
She added that the authorities: “You will not be able to go silent. These children should have been safe and not.” Perkins said that every person in the area noticed that Judge Rob Kelly, the oldest official in the province of Kiir, seemed to be wandering on the responsibility when he said on Friday: “We did not know this flood was coming. Be reassuring, no one knew that this type of flood was coming. We had floods all the time.
He said: “We did not know anything.” “Everyone has flared up,” Perkins said.
“No warning at all, nothing at all” when the floods came.
“I heard something happening. I put my feet on the floor and felt water. I picked up a handful of cats in a box and woke up to my friend. He had to break a window out of the house.”
But when they got out of the house, Bird, 65, continued a cable involved from the house and reached a tree. “We woke up in the tree and pulled me for the best possible. Thank God I did it because I could hang my feet and feel water. We stayed there as it seemed hours.”
When the water began to recede, climbed and walked to the local Baptist Church. Now she is recovering from her ordeal, Bird said she has never seen the Gawadalobi River badly as it was. Like many others, Bird faces the type of forgetfulness that affects the survivors of natural disasters: she wants to return home.
“There is no house to go to it. It was done,” she said, and she refused to photograph it except for bruises on her arms, while she was in her ordeal. “I may be able to save a set of things here and there, but these are my things,” she said, noting that some of the donor clothes bags.