Texas, the flooding and satellite images
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Texas, Camp Mystic and flash flood
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Robert Earl Keen has a personal connection to Kerrville, TX, the site of massive flooding on July 4 that authorities say resulted in the deaths of 111 people, with nearly 170 still unaccounted for at press time.
The devastating floods that swept through the Texas Hill Country on July Fourth weekend have claimed more than 100 lives, including young campers whose lives were cut tragically short, with dozens still missing.
Heavy rain poured over parts of central Texas, dumping more than a month's worth of rain for places like San Angelo.
Heavy equipment is tearing through massive debris piles in Kerr County as the search for the missing continues.
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'We're overwhelmed' by all the destruction left behind by the flooding, says Kerrville, Texas residentKerrville resident Jeremy Kerth discusses the destruction in the aftermath of the flooding in Texas and asks for help and prayers for the county on 'America Reports.'
The death toll in the central Texas flooding is up to 119 people, 95 of them in Kerr County, including 36 children.
In a Sunday afternoon press conference, Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice indicated for the first time that officials would review their protocols.
The loss of more than 100 lives, many of them children, to Hill Country floods over the July Fourth weekend has shaken Texans to the core. Closer to home, at least 16 people have died in floods in the Austin area .More than 170 people are still reported missing.
Volunteers in Texas are searching for flood victims and combing through debris along a 30 mile stretch of the Guadalupe River. CNN’s Ed Lavandera spoke with Texans who are coming together to bring closure to their community.