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Saturday, July 19, 2025

"A decade of missed opportunities: Texas couldn’t find $1M for flood warning system near camp

 Friends:

In a decade defined by indecision, deflection, and short-sightedness, Texas failed to invest just $1 million in a flood warning system—an amount that could have saved so many lives on the Fourth of July, including many children. Despite repeated warnings, a history of deadly floods, and multiple opportunities to act, local and state leaders chose excuses over solutions. As this piece outlines, the cost of prevention was minimal; the cost of inaction is immeasurable.

While the flood itself was a natural disaster, the scale of its devastation was in great part an artifact of avoidable human failure—a tragic absence of will, leadership, and care.

Now that a special session of the legislature begins on July 21—where lawmakers will reconvene in Austin for 30 days to address, among other priorities, flood infrastructure and disaster preparedness—there can be no more delays, no more finger-pointing, and no more excuses. The time for bold, decisive action is now—because lives should never be an afterthought, and families and communities deserve lasting protection, not preventable tragedy.

—Angela Valenzuela

A decade of missed opportunities: Texas couldn’t find $1M for flood warning system near camps


The Associated Press
Thu, July 10, 2025 at 5:58 AM CDT

flooding and who launched an online petition calling 
on Kerr County to install the sirens. 

answer of ‘no’ this time.”
after the flooding, which killed at least 120 people and left scores 
more reported missing.
Andrew, a former Kerrville city council member who voted in 2017
to pull the city out of the grant proposal for the project. “My preference is to look forward to the future.”
Steven Aranyi wrote in an email.
Ingram, Texas, in Kerr County, said Wednesday it’s “unfathomable” 
that county officials never took action despite repeatedly talking about it.
If it comes down to funding, they’re constantly raising taxes 
on us for other stuff. This is more important. This is lives. This is families. 
This is heartbreaking.”
come too late for those who have died.
mergency Management Agency funding to
help communities reduce their risk.
one that required the county have a current 
hazard mitigation plan on file, Texas emergency management spokesperson 
Wes Rapaport said.
for the project for the next funding cycle in 2017. The system 
outlined in the county’s preliminary plan would provide “mass notifications 
to citizens about high water levels and flooding conditions throughout 
Kerr County.”
stations would transmit a signal that would notify local 
officials and emergency management agencies of the rising water levels. 
Officials envisioned using that information to alert the public and call their 
contacts at youth camps and RV parks during emergencies.
Texas in August 2017, “funding was distributed to counties that 
fell under the disaster declaration, which Kerr County was not included 
on,” Rapaport said.
balking at its planned $50,000 contribution, minutes show.
revived the project last year with a $1 million initial request for funding.
interest-free loan for the rest of the project.

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