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Texas lawmakers investigate flash flooding as death toll reaches 137

Texas lawmakers held a special meeting on Wednesday to discuss for the first-time the deadly floods which hit the Texas Hill Country in this month and killed at least 137.

Senator Charles Perry is the chairperson of the joint Senate and House committee that investigated the preparations for and responses to the floods. The committee does not wish to place blame but instead seeks "constructive policies which will reduce future deaths."

Texas Governor Greg Abbott put the investigation at the top of the agenda for a special session of the legislature that began on Monday. Abbott announced on his social media accounts that the death count from the flash floods of July 4, 2014, had reached 137. A man and a young girl were still missing.

Nim Kidd was the first to be called as a witness by the lawmakers. He called the state's vast emergency response system fragmented. Each of the 254 counties has control over evacuating their residents. This order was not issued in the worst-hit areas of the country earlier this month.

Kidd said that he would need better radar systems in his home, better communication systems to alert local leaders and residents and more resources to help residents evacuate or stay put.

This high death toll is one of the most deadly U.S. flooding events in recent decades. It raises questions about the absence of flash flood warning sirens, especially in the hardest-hit Kerr County. Many people have expressed concerns about the vacancies in National Weather Service offices as a result of staffing reductions under President Donald Trump.

The next meeting of the legislative committee to investigate the floods is scheduled for July 31st in Kerr County. The committee will prepare a report that will be sent to the Texas Senate and House for consideration in drafting legislation during the special session of a month. (Reporting from Brad Brooks, Colorado; editing by David Gregorio.)

(source: Reuters)