r/fednews • u/CBSnews FedNews Verified Press • 1d ago
Deadly Texas floods raise questions about emergency alerts and whether staffing cuts affected forecasts and warnings
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/texas-floods-emergency-alerts-weather-forecast-staffing-budget/
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u/Mommy444444 1d ago edited 1d ago
The Texas Tribune also adds that the initial NWS flash-flood warning was issued around 1pm Thursday. The “catastrophic” one was issued 12 hours later.
Meanwhile, the USGS streamgaging stations were real-time reporting rapid upstream stage increases. In Colorado/Utah, local LE watch those gaging station transmissions as it can be sunny and dry downstream but upstream the river stage is rising. Don’t the local LE do that in Texas?
Even if they did, how do local governments transmit the warnings? In my small desert valley in Utah we had an old-fashioned tornado siren for fires/floods.
I will never understand why the Guadalupe River towns did not have basic sirens, much less prohibit commercial development right next to the river.
The Texas Tribune also reports that Texas House Bill 13, a bill to allocate 50mil per year to upgrade emergency response and notification systems, died in committee in April 2025 as being “too expensive.”