At least two people have died as “life-threatening” flooding takes hold in south-central Texas, where up to 28in of rain has already fallen in some areas – just a year after the same region endured catastrophic flooding that killed more than 100 people.
Flash-flood emergencies were issued on Thursday for parts of Kerr and Uvalde counties, where emergency crews performed water rescues, and areas around the Guadalupe River and the Pedernales River, according to morning updates from the National Weather Service (NWS).
Rescuers have been plucking stranded drivers and people trapped in homes since flood waters began rising quickly overnight on Thursday.
“This is a PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION. SEEK HIGHER GROUND NOW!” reads an update from the NWS in San Antonio. “Life threatening flash flooding of low water crossings, small creeks and streams, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses.”
Texas’s governor, Greg Abbott, said in a Thursday press conference that at least two people have died as a result of the flooding: a man who was swept away in an RV near Comfort, and a woman swept away while driving in Uvalde. Abbott said more than 200 people had been rescued, including people trapped in their homes and stranded on flooded roads.
Drones and helicopters are flying over the region still recovering from devastating floods just a year ago, the governor said. In summer camps near the Guadalupe River in Kerr county, the sheriff’s office said all campers were safe.
Flash flood warnings were also in effect for parts of Kinney, Maverick and Zavala counties, among others close to the border with Mexico and in the Texas Hill Country near San Antonio.
A line of storms moving through the region has brought heavy rainfall, causing the Guadalupe River at Comfort, Texas, to rise more than 30ft in a few hours overnight on Thursday. Shelter-in-place orders have been issued for residents in Kerrville and Uvalde, and a broader flood watch remains in effect until Thursday evening.
Officials told the Associated Press that people in Travis county were mostly trapped in trees and on rooftops, while residents in Uvalde were trapped in vehicles overnight.
The catastrophic weather comes just a year after devastating floods during the Fourth of July weekend in the Texas Hill Country killed more than 100 people, including 25 girls and two counselors at Camp Mystic. The Christian girls’ summer camp was located on the banks of the Guadalupe River, where a flash flood emergency was once again in effect on Thursday.
skip past newsletter promotion after newsletter promotion
“Our primary focus right now and throughout the remainder of this torrential rain is saving lives,” Abbott said in a Wednesday statement.
Thunderstorms have produced up to 20in of rain in the Uvalde area over the previous 48 hours, while 3-12in of rain have fallen across parts of Bandera, Kerr and Real counties, with officials warning drivers to avoid crossing flooded roads.
“All major highways and many city streets are CLOSED due to flooding and water over the roadway,” the Uvalde county office of emergency management wrote in a post on social media on Thursday. “Please remain at home unless you are in immediate danger or your location is no longer safe.”
