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    Home»World»Texas flooding live updates: nearly 90 people killed, including 27 campers and counsellors from girls camp | Texas floods 2025
    World

    Texas flooding live updates: nearly 90 people killed, including 27 campers and counsellors from girls camp | Texas floods 2025

    By Emma ReynoldsJuly 7, 2025No Comments11 Mins Read
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    Texas flooding live updates: nearly 90 people killed, including 27 campers and counsellors from girls camp | Texas floods 2025
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    Death toll across Texas reaches 89

    As we heard earlier, the death toll in Kerr County rose to 75, bringing the total number of victims from the flash flooding in Texas to 89. Here is the latest count from the affected areas:

    • Kerr County – 75 people, including 27 children

    • Travis County – six people

    • Burnet County – three people

    • Kendall – two people

    • Williamson – two people

    • Tom Green – one person

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    Key events

    Trump will travel to Texas later this week, says White House

    Karoline Leavitt also said that Donald Trump will travel to Texas later this week, but she didn’t provide further details about the timing of the trip.

    President Trump loves you. We are praying for you, and he will be traveling to see you later this week.

    She added shortly after that the trip was tentatively scheduled to go forward on Friday.

    But of course, we want to do it at the most appropriate time on the ground for state and local officials. We don’t want to interrupt the recovery efforts.

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    ‘Blaming Trump for floods is a depraved lie,’ says White House

    “Blaming President Trump for these floods is a depraved lie,” Karoline Leavitt said at the White House briefing, accusing the Democrats of weaponizing the disaster. “It serves no purpose during this time of national mourning,” she said.

    People have not been accusing Trump of being responsible for the flooding. Experts and others have been questioning whether the cuts to the federal workforce carried out by his administration, including to thousands to the the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – the agency that oversees the National Weather Service – leaving many weather offices understaffed, led to a failure by officials to accurately predict the severity of the floods and issue appropriate warnings ahead of the storm.

    As we reported earlier, ahead of the floods, the NSW office near San Antonio, which oversees warnings issued in Kerr County, for example, had one key vacancy – a warning coordination meteorologist, who is responsible for working with emergency managers and the public to ensure people know what to do when a disaster strikes. The person who served in that role for decades was among hundreds of NSW employees who accepted early retirement offers and left the agency at the end of April.

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    Updated at 18.38 BST

    Death toll across Texas reaches 89

    As we heard earlier, the death toll in Kerr County rose to 75, bringing the total number of victims from the flash flooding in Texas to 89. Here is the latest count from the affected areas:

    • Kerr County – 75 people, including 27 children

    • Travis County – six people

    • Burnet County – three people

    • Kendall – two people

    • Williamson – two people

    • Tom Green – one person

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    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt is due to brief reporters shortly and will surely face questions about the deadly flash flooding in Texas. We’ll be covering her briefing in detail over on our US politics live blog, and I’ll also bring you any relevant lines here.

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    ‘Anything Texas needs, the answer is yes,’ Trump tells Cruz

    At the press conference earlier, Ted Cruz said he had spoken to Donald Trump, who told him that anything Texas needs “the answer is yes”.

    Answering questions about whether the warning system in place had been adequate, the senator said there will be a period of retrospection, and batted away what he called “partisan finger pointing”.

    He also said the idea that Doge cuts to the National Weather Service had impacted the warning system was “contradicted by the facts”, saying extra staff were working at the time.

    We reported his comments here.

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    Updated at 18.02 BST

    Louisiana’s governor Jeff Landry has sent 14 swift-water rescue personnel to Texas to assist in the flood response, including a task force leader, three boat operators, three boat bowmen and three boat support personnel.

    “Louisiana will always answer the call to help our neighbors in need. Our first responders are among the best in the nation, and these men and women will always step up when disaster strikes,” Landry said in a statement. “Louisiana stands with Texas, and we are committed to doing whatever it takes to assist in their recovery.”

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    The day so far

    • The desperate search for missing campers, vacationers and residents continues after catastrophic flooding over the 4 July weekend killed at least 82 people in Texas, including more than two dozen campers and counsellors from an all-girls Christian camp.

    • Texas senator Ted Cruz has pushed back on what he called “partisan finger-pointing” that has blamed staff cuts at the National Weather Service for failures to predict the intensity of the rainfall last week over the Guadalupe river headwaters. But he did say that, in hindsight, it was regrettable that the most vulnerable areas hadn’t been evacuated.

    • It comes as some experts are questioning whether cuts to the federal workforce by the Trump administration, including to thousands to the the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – the agency that oversees the National Weather Service – leaving many weather offices understaffed, led to a failure by officials to accurately predict the severity of the floods and issue appropriate warnings ahead of the storm. Ahead of the floods, the NSW office near San Antonio, which oversees warnings issued in Kerr County, had one key vacancy – a warning coordination meteorologist, who is responsible for working with emergency managers and the public to ensure people know what to do when a disaster strikes. The person who served in that role for decades was among hundreds of NSW employees who accepted early retirement offers and left the agency at the end of April.

    • Ten campers and one counsellor from Camp Mystic remain missing, according to Larry Leitha, the Kerr County sheriff. An earlier statement from the camp confirmed that some 27 campers and counsellors were dead after the flooding.

    • Slow-moving thunderstorms are expected to continue through early afternoon across parts of the Texas Hill Country, with flash flooding likely, according to the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center. In its latest update, the center reported that thunderstorms producing localized rainfall rates over 3 inches per hour are ongoing and expected to continue into the early afternoon.

    • The National Weather Service office for Austin and San Antonio also issued a flash flood warning for Llano County in south-central Texas this morning. As of 10:01am CT, the agency said that radar indicated thunderstorms producing heavy rainfall across the area. Between 1 and 4 inches of rain have fallen already, with an additional 1 to 3 inches possible.

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    Edward Helmore

    Texas senator Ted Cruz was in Kerr County today talking to reporters about the warnings that were issued before the Guadalupe river burst its banks after heavy rains, killing 82 including 27 children.

    Amid criticisms of the lack of warnings about the severity of the storm to local residents, Cruz said:

    Now, obviously, most people at 1am and 4am are sleeping, so I think we will have a reasonable conversation about are there any ways to have earlier detection? Some of the limits of the flash flood are that they’re very difficult because they can arise so quickly. But everyone would agree, in hindsight, if we could go back and do it again, we would evacuate, particularly those in the most vulnerable areas.

    He then pushed back on what he called “partisan finger-pointing” that has blamed staff cuts at the National Weather Service for failures to predict the intensity of the rainfall last week over the Guadalupe river headwaters.

    Some are eager to point at the National Weather Service and saying that cuts there led to to a lack of warning. I think that’s contradicting by the facts and and if you look in the facts in particular number one and these warnings went out hours before the flood became a true emergency.

    It’s worth noting that the National Weather Service Union, which has been very critical of the Doge cuts, has publicly said that they don’t believe that a reduction of staffing had any impact whatsoever on their ability to warn of this event.

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    Here is a clip featuring timelapse footage provided by a witness shows flood waters rising over a causeway in Kingsland, Texas, and completely submerging it in the span of a few minutes.

    Timelapse footage shows how quickly Texas flood waters rose over causeway – video

    The flooding occurred after torrential rain fell in the central Texas area on Friday 4 July, the US Independence Day holiday.

    The death toll from catastrophic floods reached at least 80 on Monday, including 28 children, as the search for girls missing from a summer camp continued and fears of more flooding prompted evacuations of volunteer responders.

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    The news conference has ended.

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    “Evacuation is a delicate balance” Dalton Rice, the Kerrville city manager, said at the news conference. “If you evacuate too late, you then risk putting buses, or cars, or vehicles or campers on roads, into low water areas, trying to get them out, which then can make it even more challenging.”

    “It’s very tough to make those calls, because what we also don’t want to do is cry wolf” he said. “It’s very difficult, very challenging.”

    Rice explained that some of these areas take a lot of time to get out to so even when the first responders were on the ground at 3:30 in the morning, “we had first responders that were getting swept away, actually responding to the first areas of rainfall” he said, “that’s how quick it happened.”

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    In a post on Facebook Monday morning, Kerrville city officials said search and rescue efforts remain underway across both the city and Kerr County.

    “Rescue teams worked throughout the night and ground teams are searching the river corridor” officials wrote. “We are not slowing down.”

    City leaders urged the public to stay away from affected areas, noting that heavy traffic – largely from sightseers – slowed emergency response efforts on Sunday.

    Sightseers, they said, “are making things worse.”

    “If you’re not from here, don’t come here to see flood damage” officials added. “If you live here, avoid the river corridor so our first responders can do their jobs.”

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    Cruz insists ‘now is not a time for partisan finger pointing and attacks’

    “After we come through search and rescue, after we come through the process of rebuilding, there will naturally be a period of retrospection, where you look back and said what exactly transpired, what was the timeline, and what could have been done differently to prevent this loss of life” the Texas senator said.

    “My hope is, in time, we learn some lessons to implement the next time there is a flood” he added.

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    Updated at 17.11 BST

    “Those children, those little girls, who were lost at Camp Mystic, that’s every parent’s nightmare” Cruz said. “The pain and agony of not knowing your children’s whereabouts is the worst thing imaginable.”

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    Updated at 16.35 BST

    Ted Cruz: ‘Texas is grieving right now’

    “Texas is grieving right now” said Texas senator Ted Cruz at the news conference on Monday morning.

    “The pain, the shock, of what has transpired these last few days has broken the heart of our state” he said. “As of yesterday the confirmed death toll was 82 and those numbers are continuing to go up.”

    Cruz said that there have been over 850 high water rescues since this flooding began.

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    Updated at 16.37 BST

    “This will be a rough week” Joe Herring Jr, the mayor of Kerrville, said at the news conference.

    “Primary search continues, and we remain hopeful, every foot, every mile, every bend of the river, our work continues” he said.

    “We need your prayers” Herring Jr added.

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    Dalton Rice, the City Manager of Kerrville, said at the news conference said that search and rescue operations will continue today in North Kerr County to Canyon Lake and Comal County.

    “This is unprecedented, unprecedented flood events” Rice said. “We are still currently in the primary search phase, which is the rapid one, they are running it, we have different segments that are gridded out. Each one of those segments are taking anywhere between an hour to three hours, up to 2km for each segment.”

    “They are running into a lot of technical challenges with terrain, with water, even potentially with weather and the rising fields” he added.

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    10 campers and one counsellor remain missing from Camp Mystic

    Larry Leitha, the Kerr County sheriff, said that 10 campers and one counsellor from Camp Mystic remain missing.

    “We continue to offer our condolences to those affected” he said. “Reuniting the families remains our top priority.”

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    Updated at 16.27 BST

    75 killed in Kerr county

    As of Monday morning, 75 people have died in Kerr county, including 27 children and 48 adults, Kerr county sheriff Larry Leitha said.

    Leitha added that the identities of 15 adults and 9 children are still pending confirmation.

    Share

    Updated at 16.26 BST

    Camp campers counsellors flooding floods Girls including killed live people Texas updates
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    Emma Reynolds is a senior journalist at Mirror Brief, covering world affairs, politics, and cultural trends for over eight years. She is passionate about unbiased reporting and delivering in-depth stories that matter.

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