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Two massive disasters this year are leading some to grapple with the question of how to get officials and the public to care and take action.
At least 135 people, including 37 children, died in the torrential downpour over the July 4 holiday weekend. The number of missing people dropped sharply on Saturday.
A San Antonio woman is taking matters into her own hands, after watching the tragedy in the Hill Country unfold, saying no ...
All 14 sirens are fully operational and feature new technology that issue distinct signals for various emergencies, allowing residents to discern the nature of a threat and take appropriate action.
The Department of Commerce Office of the Inspector General will investigate staffing shortages at the National Oceanic and ...
NWS forecast offices across the country currently have no meteorologist in charge, including the League City office, which ...
More than 25 billion gallons of water have been added into Canyon Lake over the past few weeks, raising water levels by ...
It's one of many troubling questions being asked about the Hill Country flooding disaster: why didn't local officials send ...
County officials did not issue a locally targeted emergency alert to warn people in town of the rapidly rising waters until two days after the deadly flood, according to Federal Emergency ...
Some National Weather Service offices in California are among those hit hardest by meteorologist vacancies, heightening ...
Rain chances fall to less than 10% across the San Antonio metro area on Wednesday, and long-range forecast models say this ...
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