Texas Hill Country, flood
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HOUSTON — The Texas Hill Country is still reeling after deadly flooding left behind a trail of destruction and heartbreak. Lives were lost and forever changed by a single storm. Scientists are now warning this disaster was made worse by climate change and are sounding the alarm about what it means for the future of Texas.
A special session of the Texas Legislature will address the deadly floods in Hill Country, but the fireworks will come from President Trump’s demand for a newly gerrymandered House map.
The Facebook group Found on the Guadalupe River has racked up 38,000 followers as volunteers seek to reunite treasured items with Texas Hill Country flood victims.
Calvary Chapel Waco Pastor Albert Fuentes served 300 mostly barbeque meals out of a mobile kitchen last week in Kerrville.
"God be with us. This is bad." That's what Texas bus drivers were saying to each other as they navigated destroyed roads to rescue stranded campers.
Presented by Buc-ee’s, a beloved chain of Texas-based travel centers, "Robert Earl Keen and Friends: Applause for the Cause," is set for Aug. 28 at Whitewater Amphitheater outside of New Braunfels, Texas.