Texas authorities faced mounting scrutiny yesterday over the response to flash flooding that has left at least 120 people dead, as details surfaced about reported delays of early alerts that could have saved lives.
The confirmed death toll from Fourth of July holiday floods that ravaged the central Texas Hill Country ā including a river bank cluttered with childrenās summer camps ā stood at 120, after police lowered it by one from a day earlier.
And the urgent search for more than 170 people still missing entered a seventh day.
Hundreds of workers in Kerr County and other central Texas communities continue to comb through piles of muddy debris, but with no live rescues reported this week, worries have swelled that the death toll could still rise.
With US President Donald Trump preparing to visit the disaster zone today with First Lady Melania Trump, new questions have emerged about when the first emergency alerts reached the hundreds of people in the path of natureās fury.
At a news conference yesterday, Kerrville police Sergeant Jonathan Lamb deflected a question about police radios being unable to communicate with county and emergency officials, perhaps hampering rescue efforts as the flood raged.
āI donāt have any information to that point,ā he responded.
Lamb said people from all over Texas were volunteering to help with the search effort, offering their own equipment such as boats and earth moving vehicles, and suggested there was a glut of good will.
āI donāt want to say itās been a problem, because weāre so grateful for the amount of people who want to come to this community to help,ā Lamb said.
āBut itās important that we have certified professional search teams out there right now.ā
Several local and state officials in recent days have deflected questions that sought to clarify Kerr Countyās specific actions as the disaster rapidly unfolded.
ABC News reported early yesterday that at 4.22am on July 4, a firefighter in Ingram, upstream of Kerrville, had asked the Kerr County Sheriffās Office to alert residents of nearby Hunt of the coming flood.
The network said its affiliate KSAT obtained audio of the call, and that the first alert did not reach Kerr Countyās CodeRED system for a full 90 minutes.
In some cases, it said, the warning messages did not arrive until after 10am, when hundreds of people had already been swept away by raging waters.
āThe Guadalupe Schumacher sign is underwater on State Highway 39,ā the firefighter said in the dispatch audio published by ABC. āIs there any way we can send a CodeRED out to our Hunt residents, asking them to find higher ground or stay home?ā
āStand by, we have to get that approved with our supervisor,ā a sheriffās office dispatcher replied in the audio.
Kerr County, the tragedyās epicentre and part of an area nicknamed āFlash Flood Alley,ā has confirmed 96 deaths including 36 children, with 161 people still missing.
Kendall County, which has confirmed eight fatalities, reported no change to its toll yesterday.
Reporters pressed area officials this week about whether the Trump governmentās sweeping funding cuts had weakened warning systems, and why so many people did not receive timely flood alerts.
āThereās going to be an after-actionā review, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said Wednesday, adding āthose questions need to be answered.ā
Leitha said āit was between 4.00 or 5.00 (am) when I got notifiedā of incoming emergency calls ā but he declined to address specifics of the warning system and any possible delays.
The flooding of the Guadalupe River was particularly devastating for summer camps on its banks, including Camp Mystic, where 27 girls and counsellors died. Five other Mystic campers and a counsellor remain missing.
Governor Gregg Abbott has scheduled a special session of the Texas Legislature, beginning July 21. Sergeant Lamb said the session will be āa starting pointā for reviewing ways to improve warning systems for weather events.
Source: AFP
–AgenciesĀ Ā










