News

July 4th is supposed to be a day of celebration. Family and friends come together to enjoy grilling, fun in the sun, local ...
There will be a temptation to restore things just as they were, but the river has shown us we can never go back.
In the wake of the deadly July 4 flood that killed at least 134 people and left dozens more missing along the Guadalupe River, a coalition of land and water conservation organizations are calling for ...
The exact volume of floodwaters heading down the Guadalupe may not have been predictable, but anyone familiar with Hill ...
More than 2,000 first responders and countless more volunteers continue to search for the missing in Kerr County nearly two ...
After a tragedy, records from local archives can help us understand how a community understands itself. Here’s some of what ...
In response to the catastrophic flooding across central Texas, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins, a native ...
In the aftermath of the 2025 Texas floods, a look back at some of the most destructive and defining flood events in the state ...
The Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority, along with the Upper Guadalupe River Authority, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and the U.S. Geological Survey monitor the Guadalupe River.
A new report has found that officials in Kerr County, Texas, did not use technology that would have sent potentially ...
In October of 1983, tropical Storm Octave dumped five-to-nine inches of rain across Tucson, instigating the worst flood in city history.
At least 161 are still unaccounted for after the July Fourth floods that saw the waters of the Guadalupe rise to historic ...