Skip to content
Latest
News

Flash Flood Emergency: Central Texas Under Urgent Warning

Danial Ahmed Danial Ahmed
Flash Flood Emergency: Central Texas Under Urgent Warning

A Flash Flood Emergency has been issued for Blanco and Gillespie counties in central Texas, effective from 8:40 AM CDT through 4:30 PM CDT on July 16. This is an urgent alert indicating life-threatening flood conditions are either occurring or imminent in these areas.

What’s Happening

The National Weather Service Austin/San Antonio office has elevated the warning status to Emergency level, the highest classification for flash flood situations. This means heavy rainfall is creating dangerous water accumulation in a short timeframe—conditions can develop within minutes to hours.

What You Might Notice

Residents and travelers in Blanco and Gillespie counties may observe rapidly rising water in creeks, streams, and low-lying roads. Roads and underpasses may become impassable. Runoff from higher elevations can overwhelm drainage systems quickly, particularly in areas near waterways or in valleys.

Who Is Affected

This emergency primarily impacts residents, workers, and travelers in Blanco and Gillespie counties. People living near creeks, in mobile homes, or in flood-prone areas face the highest risk. Those commuting through the region should expect road closures and delays.

Practical Steps Now

1. Move to higher ground immediately if you’re in an affected area—don’t wait for evacuation orders. Never drive or walk through flooded roads; even shallow moving water can sweep vehicles and people away.

2. Monitor local alerts actively through emergency sirens, weather radio, or your phone’s emergency notification system. Keep your phone charged and have a battery-powered radio ready.

3. Prepare to shelter in place if evacuation isn’t possible. Stock water, medications, and non-perishable food for 24 hours; keep important documents in waterproof containers.

For real-time space weather monitoring and emergency preparedness resources, visit our live dashboard at https://survivalsiren.com/spaceweather/feed.html. Data sourced from NOAA and the National Weather Service.

Source: National Weather Service (NWS)

Related Reading

Related Stories

Leave a Reply