Texas hill country, flash flood
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Search crews continued the grueling task of recovering the missing as more potential flash flooding threatened Texas Hill Country.
It was the first time a new round of severe weather has paused the search since the flooding earlier this month. Search efforts are expected to resume Monday.
More than 2,100 searchers from a dozen Texas Counties, other states and Mexico are continuing recovery efforts to find more victims of the deadly flash flooding in central Texas.
Flash floods in Texas have killed at least 107 people over the Fourth of July weekend, with more than 160 still missing.
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Betty Matteson’s four children, nine grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren have squeezed into her Texas Hill Country home countless times since 1968.
Would a flood scale like those used for hurricanes and tornadoes have prompted different actions by Texas officals and the public before July 4th flooding?
Noem and others have faced criticism for their response to the tragedy in which more than a hundred are dead or missing.
On the night the deadly floodwaters raged down the Guadalupe River in Texas, the National Weather Service forecast office in Austin/San Antonio was missing a key member of its team: the warning coordination meteorologist,