News

A Washington Post investigation reveals why so few people evacuated in the state hit hardest by last year’s deadliest disaster.
At least 135 people, including 37 children, died in the torrential downpour over the July 4 holiday weekend. The number of missing people dropped sharply on Saturday.
Volunteers and rescue crews are still searching for the over 100 people that are still missing from the floods that killed at ...
Ignorance, like history, repeats itself when people refuse to learn from it. One lesson we should have learned is that science and ideology do not mix. We saw this during Biden’s disastrous COVID ...
Less than 5% of homes in the county's FEMA floodplain had flood coverage, well below the national average. Uptake was even ...
Flooding expert says modeling and monitoring can be the backbone of a system that includes training and in-person warnings to ...
The leader of Camp Mystic had been tracking the weather before the deadly Texas floods, but it is now unclear whether he saw ...
As natural disasters like flooding, tornadoes and landslides piled up this spring, FEMA accumulated a backlog of disaster ...
The first State Flood Plan, published last year, identified $54 billion in flood mitigation, warning and data needs. The ...
President Donald Trump has imposed severe cuts on the Federal Emergency Management Agency and denied some states’ requests ...