News

As catastrophic floods swept through Central Texas on July 4, several National Weather Service (NWS) offices across the state were already in crisis due to DOGE cuts.
Former NOAA administrator Rick Spinrad said an NWS vacancy could have been why some people didn't receive flood warnings.
Death toll surpasses 100 as hope fades in search for dozens still missing - Ten campers and a staff member from Camp Mystic are among the two dozen still missing, as the search for survivors enters it ...
As the number of deaths reaches at least 104 people after floods swept across Texas Hill Country, the timeline of events ...
The White House slammed critics who said cuts made to the National Weather Service contributed to key forecast warnings ahead ...
Search and rescue operations in central Texas entered their fifth day on Tuesday after heavy rainfall overwhelmed the Guadalupe River, sending floodwaters through homes and summer camps and killing ...
Just like during his first stint in the White House, President Donald Trump’s inaugural visit to Texas in his second term ...
While Texas may feel far from the Northeast, the lessons from the Texas Hill Country disaster matter here, too, particularly ...
NOAA's former leader points to staffing cuts and lack of key personnel as contributing factors in the mismanagement of recent ...
This Dripping Springs, Texas-based distillery is taking donations for cleaning, household, emergency supplies, personal ...
"With saturated soils over a good portion of the local area especially the Hill County and I-35 corridor including the Austin ...