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Trump visits Texas flood site amid intensified focus on disaster response

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, left on Friday for a trip in central Texas to assess the damage caused by flash floods that occurred on July 4, which killed at least 120 and left dozens of people missing. The visit is coming at the end a week that has seen questions mount about the government's response to the deluge. Hopes of finding more survivors are also fading. After the floods, thousands of first responders combed the mud and debris that littered the Texas Hill Country. However, no survivors were found.

In the early morning hours of Friday, the U.S. holiday, torrential rainfall sent a wall-like water flow down the Guadalupe River. Independence Day. This disaster is the most deadly of the Republican President's almost six-month tenure in office. Trump told reporters that it was a terrible thing as he left the White House Friday. "Nobody could believe it - such a thing, that much water so fast."

A White House official said that Trump will speak to family members and emergency responders in the south-central Texas area devastated by flooding. The president will tour Kerr County and listen to an official briefing. The county is situated in "flash flooding alley", an area that has been hit by some of the deadliest floods in American history.

In less than an hour, more than a foot fell on the 4th of July. The river rose in height from a few inches to over 34 feet (10.40 meters) within a matter hours. It washed away trees and other structures as it swept its way.

Kerr County officials claim that more than 160 individuals are still unaccounted for.

Experts say

The number of missing people is usually exaggerated after disasters. At least 36 children are dead, including many who were at Camp Mystic - a Christian all-girls summer retreat near the river that has been around for nearly a century.

The response of local and federal officials has been scrutinized, with questions raised about whether or not they could have done anything more to warn the public of the rising floodwaters.

Years ago, the county refused to install a system of early warning because it could not secure funding from the state to cover its costs. Trump seemed to be in favor of installing such alarms during an interview with NBC's Meet the Press on Thursday, ahead of the visit.

Trump said: "After seeing this terrible event, I'd imagine you would put alarms in some form."

Texas' state legislature will hold a special session in the coming weeks to examine and fund disaster relief. Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the U.S. Senate, asked a government monitor to investigate Monday whether the National Weather Service's budget cuts affected its response. The NWS has defended their forecasting and emergency planning, noting that they assigned extra forecasters in two Texas offices during the holiday weekend.

Trump's administration said that the agency had enough staff and was able to respond adequately to an "act of God." On NBC, he described the flooding as a "once-in-every-200-year event." Trump has also avoided questions regarding his plans to shrink the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which coordinates U.S. disaster response efforts and transfer many of its core functions to the state and local government.

When asked about FEMA by a reporter on Tuesday, Trump replied: "I'll let you know another time." Trevor Hunnicutt reported from Kerrville, and Nicole Johnson wrote in Washington. Josephy Ax edited the story.

(source: Reuters)