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Flash Flood Emergency Declared in Kerr County, Texas

Danial Ahmed Danial Ahmed
Flash Flood Emergency Declared in Kerr County, Texas

A Flash Flood Emergency has been issued for Kerr County, Texas, effective immediately through 7:00 PM CDT on July 16. This is the highest alert level for flooding and indicates that flash flooding is imminent or already occurring in the area.

What’s Happening

Severe rainfall has triggered a Flash Flood Emergency—a step above the standard Flash Flood Warning. This means water is rising rapidly in streams, low-lying roads, and flood-prone areas across Kerr County. Residents in affected zones should expect significant water accumulation within minutes to hours.

Who This Affects

Anyone in Kerr County, particularly those in low-lying areas, near creeks and streams, in mobile homes, or on roads that cross waterways. Even if you’re not directly in Kerr County, be aware if you’re traveling through the region or have family there.

What You Might Notice

Rising water levels in normally dry or shallow areas, debris-filled runoff, road closures, and rapidly changing water flow in local creeks and rivers. Power outages are possible if flooding affects utility infrastructure.

Three Practical Steps

1. Avoid floodwaters immediately. Do not attempt to cross flooded roads or drive through moving water—even shallow water can sweep vehicles away. Find alternate routes or stay sheltered. 2. Move to higher ground now if you’re in a flood-prone zone or mobile home. Have your go-bag ready and know your evacuation route. 3. Monitor local alerts through the National Weather Service and local emergency management for updates on road closures and shelter locations.

Keep emergency supplies accessible: water, medications, flashlights, and a battery-powered or hand-crank radio. Check on neighbors, especially elderly or vulnerable residents, and share warning information with family outside the area.

For live updates and detailed weather tracking, visit the National Weather Service dashboard at https://survivalsiren.com/spaceweather/feed.html.

Source: National Weather Service (NWS)

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