Sign up for TPR Today, Texas Public Radio’s newsletter that brings our top stories to your inbox each morning.
Note: This story is being continuously updated with information as it’s made available.
Rescue and recovery efforts following Friday’s catastrophic Guadalupe River floods continued on Tuesday. At least 84 people have died, including 56 adults and 28 children. Not identified are 22 adults and 10 children.
Emergency, county, and state officials reported that multiple flood events throughout Central Texas, including Guadalupe River flood, have killed at least 104 people since July 4.
As of Monday afternoon, there were:
San Antonio vigil mourns Gudalupe River flood victims
A vigil was held Monday night in downtown San Antonio for the dozens of people who were killed in the deadly floods in Kerr County.
“At this moment, many questions will still run in our minds, but presence — presence — to survivors clinging to hope, to grieving parents and to every family resting with sorrow … we begin to process what we have lost,” said San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller.
The vigil also served as a donation drive for Goodwill. Local residents brought items like canned tuna, feminine products, baby formula, soap, and more.
A Goodwill driver took the donations to the Kerrville Goodwill to be distributed to the community. Kerrville authorities asked for monetary donations to go through the Kerr County Flood Relief Fund.
UTSA lecturer among the flooding victims
The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) said one of its faculty members, psychology senior lecturer Katheryn Eads, was among those killed in deadly flooding in the Hill Country.
Eads joined UTSA in 2022 and became a full-time faculty member in the Department of Psychology this year.
Two UTSA students are also believed to be among those still missing.
Former NOAA chief defends National Weather Service
A former head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Rick Spinrad, defended the National Weather Service (NWS) from criticism after the Kerr County flood.
Spinrad told TPR’s “The Source” that he believed the NWS out of San Angelo and Austin/San Antonio did its job. He said the problem was with the final step of communication and emergency alerts that were not acted on by local officials.
Spinrad also said NWS’s staff were affected by Trump administration cuts, including at weather forecast offices directly involved with Guadalupe River flooding.
San Antonio Democratic Congressman Joaquin Castro told NPR it was too early to say if recent staffing cuts under the Trump administration impacted the agency’s ability to warn the public.
Drone collides with helicopter
The search and rescue efforts were hampered Monday afternoon, Kerrville officials reported, when a privately owned drone “illegally operating in restricted airspace collided with a helicopter involved in emergency operations in Kerr County.”
Officials explained in a statement on social media that the helicopter had to make an emergency landing, “and a critical piece of response equipment is now out of service until further notice. This was entirely preventable.”
“Temporary Flight Restrictions (TFRs) are not suggestions,” officials wrote. “They are federal airspace rules designed to protect lives during emergency situations. When you fly a drone in restricted areas, you’re not just breaking the law — you’re putting first responders, emergency crews, and the public at serious risk.”
On Sunday, Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice had asked people not to fly personal drones in the search areas.
Also, on Monday, Kerr County placed a burn ban in effect. Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said people burning debris were interfering with recovery efforts in and along the Guadalupe River.
He said the heat put off by fires interferes with drone and heat-detecting equipment being used in the search process.
Camp Mystic acknowledges lost campers and counselors
In a statement on Monday on its website, Camp Mystic said it mourned the loss of more than two dozen campers and counselors:
“Camp Mystic is grieving the loss of 27 campers and counselors following the catastrophic flooding on the Guadalupe river. Our hearts are broken alongside our families that are enduring this unimaginable tragedy. We are praying for them constantly.
“We have been in communication with local and state authorities who are tirelessly deploying extensive resources to search for our missing girls. We are deeply grateful for the outpouring of support from community, first responders, and officials at every level.
“We ask for your continued prayers, respect and privacy for each of our families affected. May the Lord continue to wrap His presence around all of us.”
Among the dead was Dick Eastland, the director of Camp Mystic. His nephew Gardner Eastland confirmed his death in a Facebook post on Saturday.
‘It’s a darker place today without her’
Jane Ragsdale, a camp director and counselor at the Heart O’ the Hills Camp for Girls on the Guadalupe River, was also among the people who died.
Ava Steindl attended the camp beginning in 2010 and was a counselor there in 2017. Of Ragsdale, she said, “she taught me and most of these girls everything that we know, from basic life skills to learning how to change a tire.”
Thomas Mayo’s daughter Caroline started attending Heart O’ the Hills when she was six years old. He said the impact that Ragsdale had on thousands of girls and their parents was immeasurable. “She loved the camp, and she loved those kids,” Mayo said. “And it’s a darker place today without her in it.”
Ragsdale became a co-owner of the camp in 1976 and became camp director in 1988. Although camp was not in session on Friday, some of the camp counselors were staying at the camp for the Fourth of July holiday.
Count, state and federal disaster declarations
Kerr County extended its disaster declaration on Monday as search and rescue efforts continued. County commissioners voted to extend the declaration during an emergency meeting.
Gov. Greg Abbott signed and expanded disaster declarations last weekend for counties affected by the floods, including Bexar County.
President Trump also approved a major disaster declaration over the weekend to supplement recovery efforts in Kerr County and other affected areas.
In a statement on Sunday, the Trump administration approved a disaster declaration for Texas “to supplement recovery efforts in the areas affected by severe storms, straight-line winds and flooding from July 2, 2025, and continuing” for “affected individuals in Kerr County. Assistance can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses and other programs to help individuals recover from the effects of the disaster.”
‘People underestimate Mother Nature all the time’
Throughout the past weekend, people strolled along the riverbank and water crossings to view for themselves the malevolent power of water.
Some gingerly stepped over branches, pieces of concrete and other wreckage to get closer looks at a pickup truck half submerged in muck and bent like a neglected toy. Children waded in muddy puddles.
Nearby brush and trees were filled with flotsam, including shreds of black plastic sheeting and metal shards. A soaked U.S. flag was crumpled among the branches, its vibrant colors contrasting with the greens and browns of the broken vegetation surrounding it.
James and Lisa Allison, both retired ranchers who live in Kerrville, called what they were looking at “overwhelming.” James Allison remembered welcoming the rain at first on Friday morning, “but as the morning progressed, it started becoming more than just a small flood.” Lisa Allison said a modest flood with rain did not faze her. She remembered a major flood in 1978, but what she saw on Friday was worse. And the death toll was unprecedented.
Brian Rubino, a retired firefighter, was stunned as he processed the scale of destruction around him. He pointed to the roof ripped away from a park pavilion. The former professional rescuer kept in mind “the destructive force of water, knowing the way this particular flood hit, there was nothing you could do. … This thing hit so fast. … People underestimate Mother Nature all the time.”
Mary Stone, a teacher who lives in Kerrville, said she was shocked when she viewed the riverbank area where she normally walks. “It’s devastating,” she said, as she viewed a car mangled in a nearby tree and chunks of asphalt where she said she regularly parks her car. But she held on to hope. Stone said the disaster was “unsettling, but at the same time I know that we’ll move forward. That’s how this community is.”
Ricky and Dody Pedraza, who live in Comfort, shared that hope. “Kerrville will bounce back,” Ricky Pedraza said. “All these little Hill Country towns — they will bounce back.”
How it happened
Jason Runyan, a meteorologist with the NWS, said a combination of factors led to the unexpected rain.
“The first being some high amounts of moisture for this time of year — some near records of moisture — vertically into the atmosphere,” Runyan said. “The second were the remnants of a midlevel disturbance from what used to be tropical storm Barry. So a combination of that disturbance and these record levels of moisture have led to the very heavy rainfall, especially over Kerr County.”
All that rainfall on Friday drained into the Guadalupe River Basin. He said it started up by the headwaters near Hunt, in western Kerr County, and “traveled downstream through Kerrville where it crested” and then traveled toward Comfort.
“We saw some pretty sharp and steep rises on the river,” he said, “in some cases rivaling the 1987 flood, the famous 1987 flood.” That year, 11 inches of rain flooded the region, and ten teenagers died when their church bus ran into flood waters.
Friday’s floods, Runyan said, were so high and forceful that some of the water gauges along the river were affected or washed out entirely. “So it’s a pretty catastrophic type flood wave coming down the Guadalupe River.”
Because of the damaged river gauges, it may take the U.S. Geological Survey a few days to get accurate data on how high the river crested in the Hunt and Kerrville area.
He said some parts of the Hill Country, including Kerrville on Friday and Burnet on Saturday, were placed under a rare flash flood emergency, which is different from a flash flood warning.
“Typically, most people are familiar with flash flood warnings,” he said. “Our typical flash flood warnings are when we expect imminent flooding in areas — rises and streams and creeks that go over low water crossings.”
Flash flood emergencies, Runyan explained, are “saved for days where we’re expecting catastrophic type damage or widespread damage or even loss of life.”
The Texas Newsroom’s Ana Campbell and NPR’s Sergio Martínez–Beltrán contributed to this report.