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marmar

(78,669 posts)
Tue Jul 22, 2025, 09:38 AM 9 hrs ago

TX lawmakers largely ignored recommendations aimed at helping rural areas like Kerr County prepare for flooding



(Texas Tribune) Sixteen months had passed since Hurricane Harvey tore through the Texas coast in August 2017, killing more than 80 people and flattening entire neighborhoods. And when Texas lawmakers gathered in Austin for their biennial session, the scale of the storm’s destruction was hard to ignore.

Legislators responded by greenlighting a yearslong statewide initiative to evaluate flood risks and improve preparedness for increasingly frequent and deadly storms. “If we get our planning right on the front end and prevent more damage on the front end, then we have less on the back end,” Charles Perry, a Republican senator from Lubbock who chairs a committee overseeing environmental issues, said at the time.

In the years that followed, hundreds of local officials and volunteers canvassed communities across Texas, mapping out vulnerabilities. The result of their work came in 2024 with the release of Texas’ first-ever state flood plan.

Their findings identified nearly $55 billion in proposed projects and outlined 15 key recommendations, including nine suggestions for legislation. Several were aimed at aiding rural communities like Kerr County, where flash flooding over the Fourth of July weekend killed more than 100 people. Three are still missing. .................(more)

https://www.texastribune.org/2025/07/21/texas-hill-country-flooding-inaction-state-legislature/




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TX lawmakers largely ignored recommendations aimed at helping rural areas like Kerr County prepare for flooding (Original Post) marmar 9 hrs ago OP
And then there's their diverse antiquated electrical grid that's been a mess for decades. Firestorm49 9 hrs ago #1
Good read malaise 9 hrs ago #2
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