Topline
Texas officials provided search and rescue updates Saturday on a flash flood that has killed at least 32 people, including 14 children, and left some 27 others missing, a day after authorities blamed the National Weather Service forecasts for not predicting “the amount of rain that we saw” after the agency faced federal budget and staffing cuts, according to W. Nim Kidd, director of the Texas Division of Emergency Management.
Flooding caused by a flash flood at the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas.
Key Facts
Texas authorities confirmed at least 32 people were dead as of Saturday afternoon, noting 14 of the deceased are children and that around 850 people have been rescued or evacuated so far.
Rescue teams are continuing to search for a group of around 27 people who were attending an all-girls Christian summer camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River.
Kerr County judge Rob Kelly provided a similar statement to Kidd’s on Friday, when he was asked why camps along the Guadalupe were not evacuated, telling reporters, “I can’t answer that, I don’t know,” before saying the county had “no reason to believe that this was going to be anything like what’s happened here.”
The NWS issued a flash flood watch Thursday afternoon that noted Kerr County, where much of the flooding began early Friday morning, was a particularly vulnerable area.
The NWS was one of several federal agencies targeted by the controversial cost-cutting efforts of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, and has recently laid off nearly 600 employees—around the same amount of staffers it lost in the 15 previous years, the Texas Tribune reported.
Forbes has reached out to the NWS for comment.
How Has The Nws Been Impacted By Federal Funding Cuts?
Some NWS field offices have reported the loss of around-the-clock staffing and reductions in weather balloon launches, which are crucial in collecting data on humidity, pressure, temperature and more elements needed to produce forecasts. The NWS office overseeing Kerr County, where at least 24 people have died in the floods, is the Austin/San Antonio Weather Forecast Office. Longtime meteorologist Troy Kimmel, who leads his own meteorological services company, told CBS Austin in May that local Texas offices such as the Austin/San Antonio office experienced some staffing shortages. The Austin/San Antonio office’s website shows a total of six vacancies across its meteorological, management, observations and technician teams, though it is not clear how many of the vacancies are a direct result of cuts engineered by the Department of Government Efficiency.
What Has Trump Said About The Flooding?
Trump said Friday the deaths reported in Texas were “shocking” and that the government would work with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to provide federal aid. He added in a statement on Truth Social Saturday morning his administration is working with state and local officials in Texas, adding Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem would visit the state Saturday. Trump has insisted states should play a larger role in handling their own weather disasters, saying last month his administration intends to “wean” states off help from the Federal Emergency Management Agency following this year’s hurricane season. FEMA has lost hundreds of employees since Trump took office and ended its Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program, which awarded around $4.6 billion to communities throughout the U.S. in an effort to prepare them for future weather disasters.
What To Watch For
The National Weather Service issued a flood watch for San Antonio and several neighboring cities, warning of two to four inches of additional rainfall and excessive runoff that may result in flash flooding for rivers and creeks, low-lying areas and low water crossings.
What Do We Know About The Missing Children?
The children considered missing as of Saturday were attending an all-girls Christian summer camp known as Camp Mystic. The camp has been around since 1926 and operates two sites along the Guadalupe River. The organization told parents in an email Friday morning it experienced “catastrophic level floods.” according to The New York Times.
Big Number
Over 1,000. That is how many rescuers were deployed in Texas on Saturday morning, the Associated Press reported.
Key Background
The Guadalupe River has had a history of floods, with one of the most prominent incidents occurring in 1987, when five to 10 inches of rain fell in the upper headwaters of the river’s basin. The river crested at 31.5 feet and flooding resulted in the deaths of 10 teenagers and 33 injuries. Inclement weather in Texas may continue in the coming months, as it and several other states are approaching the most active part of the 2025 hurricane season. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted an above-average Atlantic hurricane season, forecasting a range of 13 to 19 named storms, six to 10 of which are forecast to become hurricanes.