Rural Texas county's top leaders were asleep, out of town during initial 
		hours of flood crisis
		
		[August 01, 2025]  
		By NADIA LATHAN and SEAN MURPHY 
		
		KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) — Two top leaders in a rural Texas county were 
		asleep and a third was out of town in the initial hours of a 
		catastrophic flood that came barreling through the region, causing 
		widespread destruction and killing more than 130 people earlier this 
		month. 
		 
		Kerr County's sheriff and its emergency management director both 
		acknowledged Thursday during a legislative hearing that they were asleep 
		in the early morning hours of July 4, even after emergency calls were 
		coming into county dispatchers and it became apparent that a major flood 
		event was unfolding. Moreover, Judge Rob Kelly, the top executive of 
		Kerr County, was out of town on the day of the flood. 
		 
		Their testimony, which came during a joint House and Senate panel of 
		lawmakers who visited the hard-hit Texas Hill Country, was the first 
		indication of the whereabouts of the trio of men who were charged with 
		preparing for the impending weather and dispatching resources to rescue 
		those affected. It also revealed a lack of on-duty leadership in the key 
		initial moments of the flooding that killed at least 136 people, 
		including 27 youths and counselors at an all-girls camp. 
		 
		Public records requested by The Associated Press seeking their 
		communications, schedules and other materials that could shed light on 
		the flooding response have been rejected or remain pending, and the 
		three have not replied to repeated interview requests. 
		 
		County leaders were asleep, out of town 
		William “Dub” Thomas, Kerr County's emergency management coordinator, 
		told lawmakers that he was sick the day before the flooding occurred and 
		missed two calls with Texas Emergency Management officials. Kerr County 
		Sheriff Larry Leitha and Thomas both acknowledged being asleep as a 
		crisis was unfolding. 
		 
		Kelly, who holds a position in Texas that functions as the county’s 
		chief executive officer, testified that he was out of town at Lake 
		Travis, located near Austin about 100 miles (160 kilometers) away, on 
		the morning of the flood and woke up around 5:30 a.m. 
		 
		Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick expressed his frustration. 
		 
		“I’m not pointing a finger. I’m not blaming you. I just want to set the 
		record straight," he said in comments directed toward Kelly, prompting 
		applause from those in the audience. "Everyone was here that day working 
		their ass off, and you were nowhere to be found.” 
		 
		Thomas said that on the morning of July 4, he was first awakened by his 
		wife around 5:30 a.m., about two hours after emergency rescue operations 
		were underway, and quickly drove to the sheriff’s office. 
		 
		“There was no visible flooding on my drive into the office, but it 
		quickly became clear that the situation was escalating,” he said. 
		 
		Officials say better warning needed 
		In other testimony, local officials said they needed but lacked an 
		updated warning system, when flash flooding swept away homes and 
		vehicles and left families begging for rescue on the roofs of their 
		homes earlier this month. 
		 
		Others who testified Thursday before an audience of hundreds of people — 
		some who wore green ribbons in memory of the victims — called for urgent 
		improvements for better flood warnings and flood mitigation. 
		 
		[to top of second column] 
			 | 
            
             
            
			  
            Rain falls as Irene Valdez visits a make-shift memorial for flood 
			victims along the Guadalupe River, Sunday, July 13, 2025, in 
			Kerrville, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) 
            
			
			  
            Over the last decade, an array of Texas state and local agencies 
			missed opportunities to fund a flood warning system, repeatedly 
			failing to secure roughly $1 million for a project to better protect 
			those who spend time along the Guadalupe River, the AP previously 
			reported. The plan, which would have installed flood-monitoring 
			equipment near Camp Mystic, cost about as much as the county spends 
			on courthouse security every two years, or 1.5% of its annual 
			budget. 
			 
			Kelly said residents had virtually no warning of the impending 
			weather catastrophe until it was too late. 
			 
			“We need stronger communications and better broadband so we can 
			communicate better,” he said, adding that poor cell service did not 
			help those along the river. “What we experienced on July 4 was 
			sudden, violent and overwhelming.” 
			 
			Sheriff lays out timeline 
			Leitha presented a timeline of events to lawmakers and said 
			emergency responders realized they had an “all-hands-on-deck” 
			situation as early as 3:30 a.m., when dispatchers received a call 
			from a family stranded on their roof requesting air evacuation. But 
			Leitha acknowledged that he was not alerted of the flooding until 
			about an hour later, at around 4:20 a.m. 
			 
			Rep. Ann Johnson, a Democrat from Houston, asked Leitha whether the 
			county should have a protocol in place for when three of the top 
			county officials are not available during an emergency. 
			 
			“Yes, ma'am, we can look at that real hard,” Leitha said. “Yes, I 
			can look and maybe they can call me earlier.” 
			 
			Local residents caught off guard 
			Residents along the Guadalupe River have said they were caught off 
			guard and had no warning when rainfall struck. Kerr County does not 
			have a warning system along the river after several missed 
			opportunities by state and local agencies to finance one. 
			 
			The hearing comes as authorities have begun publicly releasing 
			records and audio — including 911 calls — that have provided new 
			glimpses into the escalating danger and chaos in the early hours of 
			the July Fourth holiday. They include panicked and confused messages 
			from residents caught in trees as well as families fleeing with 
			children from homes with water creeping up to the knees. 
			 
			“People are dying,” one woman tells a 911 operator in call logs 
			released by nearby Kendall County. She says she had a young relative 
			at a church camp in Kerr County who was stranded along with his 
			classmates because of the high waters. 
			 
			“I don’t want them to get stuck in a low-water crossing. And what 
			are they going to do? They have like 30 kids," the woman says. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Lathan is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America 
			Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit 
			national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms 
			to report on undercovered issues. Murphy reported from Oklahoma 
			City. 
			
			All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved  |