Texas, flooding
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Texas, Chicago and Flash Flood
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Miranda Lambert, Texas and Parker McCollum
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Hundreds of North Texans took in a drive-in movie at Texas Motor Speedway to help rebuild flood-ravaged lives in Central Texas."How to Train Your Dragon" may have been the feature film, but Central Texas was the focus.
The Hill Country has a hold on the hearts of many Texans, meaning the suffering caused by the disaster is reaching as far as the region’s appeal.
The last time Lindsey McLeod McCrory saw her daughter Blakely alive, the young girl was heading to camp wearing a simple yet profound necklace – one that would later reconnect Blakely to her mother after she died.
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A look at the devastation, the lives lost, the heroism and the timeline, premiering tonight at 6:30 p.m. on KHOU 11+.
Eight-year-old girls at sleep-away camp, families crammed into recreational vehicles, local residents traveling to or from work. These are some of the victims.
Lindsey McLeod McCrory’s 8-year-old daughter, Blakely, was attending Camp Mystic when she was killed in the devastating floods that hit Central Texas. McCrory remembers her daughter in an interview with CNN’s Pamela Brown.
Many of Texas' reservoirs and lakes are near full capacity, with some jumping more than 30 feet since early July.
New analysis highlights where the most residential structures were located during the deadly Texas flash flooding.
A spokesman for Camp Mystic, the Texas enclave devastated by a July 4 flash flood, is raising concerns about communication failures during the disaster.
It's now been two weeks since the devastating floods hit Central Texas, killing more than 130 people, and recovery efforts are far from over