More than 100 people have been confirmed dead, with at least 84 in Kerr County alone
A girls’ summer camp Camp Mystic confirmed at least 27 girls and staff were among the dead, with 10 children and one counsellor still missing
Questions have been raised about whether adequate flood warnings were provided by the National Weather Service – find BBC Verify’s analysis of the claims here
Some parts of central Texas, including Kerr County, experienced several months’ worth of rain in a few hours on Friday – A fuller explanation of what happened can be found here
President Donald Trump is planning to visit the devastated region later this week, according to the White House
n the aftermath of the fatal Texas floods, some have hit out at the Trump administration’s spending and staffing cuts may have impeded the ability of the National Weather Service (NWS) to adequately predict the floods and raise the alarm.
But White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has said: “These offices [of the NWS] were well staffed../ so any claims to the contrary are completely false.”
BBC Verify has examined the impact of cuts under Trump, and while there has been a reduction in the workforce at the NWS, experts who we spoke to said the staffing on hand for the Texas floods appears to have been adequate.
The Trump administration has proposed a 25% cut, external to the $6.1bn (£4.4bn) budget at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA), the agency which oversees the NWS, though these cuts do not take effect until October.
Staffing levels at the NWS have already been separately reduced by the Trump administration’s wider personnel cuts, which began in January.
In total, the NWS lost 600 of its 4,200 staff, says Tom Fahy, the director of the NWS union, causing several offices across the country to operate without the necessary staffing.
But Andy Hazelton, a climate scientist who modelled hurricane paths for the NOAA until he was fired during the layoffs in February, says of the Texas floods: “I don’t think the staffing issues contributed directly to this event. They got the watches and the warnings out.”
Among the current NWS job vacancies in Texas is a senior hydrologist, a scientist who specialises in flooding events, in the San Angelo office, NSW union director Fahy tells BBC Verify.
The San Antonio office also lacks a “warning coordinating meteorologist”, who coordinates communications between local forecasting offices and emergency management services in communities, Fahy says.
However, he notes that both offices had temporarily upped their staffing in anticipation of a dangerous weather event, which is typical in these circumstances.
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