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.
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.
A year after the Texas flood, the camp's future remains uncertain amid legal action.
23hon MSN
One year after Texas' deadliest flood in decades, survivors rebuild as families still seek answers
Take a closer look at how the flooding unfolded on July 4, 2025, and how the region is rebuilding.
On June 18, the Texas Legislature released a 115-page investigative report, based on 140 interviews. The losses at the camp, it says, were avoidable. Days later, Camp Mystic filed for chapter 11 ...
Flash floods in Texas killed at least 100 people over the Fourth of July weekend and left others still missing, including ...
A year later, the community honors the 119 people who died, tries to comfort their loved ones and keeps looking for ways to ...
One year ago, the Guadalupe River became the center of one of the deadliest disasters in Texas history. In the early morning ...
Leaders promised a lot of change after floodwaters tore through Kerr County in 2025, killing more than 100 people. A year ...
Camp Mystic's operators filed for bankruptcy amid revelations of inadequate flood response, as a report details failures ...
How an unusual atmospheric pattern, the Hill Country's unique geography and drought combined to create the deadly 2025 Hill Country flood.
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