Texas Floods Leave Dozens Dead, 850 Rescued, and 27 Still Missing

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The devastating Texas floods have left at least 43 people dead, including 15 children, and 27 more remain missing as torrential rain triggered catastrophic flash flooding across multiple counties.

Governor Greg Abbott issued a state of emergency on July 5. He also confirmed that over 850 people have been rescued in just 36 hours from rising waters, fallen trees, and submerged homes.

“So many people have been swept up into an extraordinary catastrophe,” Gov. Abbott said at a press conference, urging prayers for the affected communities.

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Guadalupe River Overflows, Summer Campers Missing

The flooding began after relentless rainfall caused the Guadalupe River to overflow, sweeping through Kerr County and nearby areas. Among the missing were 23 campers from Camp Mystic. A number of children from the camp remain missing.

“My instruction to every state official is to assume everybody who is missing is alive… every minute counts,” Abbott stressed.

Officials confirmed 43 deaths in Kerr County alone, including 28 adults and 15 children. The tragic toll is expected to grow, as the missing are found and all the bodies are identified.

Emergency Response and Expanded Disaster Declaration

Abbott signed an expanded disaster declaration, adding Bexar, Burnet, Caldwell, Guadalupe, Travis, and Williamson counties to the list of flood-impacted areas. He also submitted a request for a federal emergency declaration.