{"id":74250,"date":"2025-12-03T11:49:11","date_gmt":"2025-12-03T11:49:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-tx\/74250\/"},"modified":"2025-12-03T11:49:11","modified_gmt":"2025-12-03T11:49:11","slug":"kerr-county-was-among-dozens-of-texas-communities-to-turn-down-state-flood-money-saying-it-wasnt-enough-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-tx\/74250\/","title":{"rendered":"Kerr County was among dozens of Texas communities to turn down state flood money, saying it wasn\u2019t enough"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>   Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story. See our  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/about\/ethics\/#ai-policy\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">   AI policy  <\/a>  , and give us  <a href=\"https:\/\/airtable.com\/appFeleeKVUN0Iytx\/pagPG40gbkU0EfjIr\/form\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">   feedback  <\/a>  . <\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">This article is co-published with ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. <a href=\"https:\/\/go.propublica.org\/big-story-tt\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener nofollow\" target=\"_blank\">Sign up for ProPublica\u2019s Big Story newsletter<\/a> to receive stories like this one in your inbox as soon as they are published.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Three weeks after flash floods in Texas\u2019 Hill Country killed more than 100 people, state lawmakers chastised Kerr County leaders for rejecting money a year earlier to create a warning system that could have alerted residents to rapidly rising water.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Several lashed out as a Kerr official representing the local river authority tried to explain why it declined money from a $1.4 billion state fund to help guard against destructive flooding.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">One state senator on the special legislative committee tasked with investigating the deadly floods called the decision \u201cpathetic.\u201d Another said it was \u201cdisturbing.\u201d <a href=\"https:\/\/directory.texastribune.org\/drew-darby\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">State Rep. Drew Darby<\/a>, a Republican from San Angelo, said the river authority simply lacked the will to pay for the project.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">But Kerr leaders were not the only ones who rejected the state\u2019s offer, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found. In the five years since the fund\u2019s launch, at least 90 local governments turned down tens of millions of dollars in state grants and loans.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Leaders from about 30 local governments that the news organizations spoke with said the state grants paid for so little of the total project costs that they simply could not move forward, even with the program\u2019s offer to cover the rest through interest-free loans. Many hoped the state program would provide grants that paid the bulk of the costs, such as the ones from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which typically supply at least 75%. They believed that they could raise the rest.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Instead, many were offered far less. In some cases, the state offered grants that paid for less than 10% of the funding needed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">In Kerr\u2019s case, the state awarded a $50,000 grant for a $1 million flood warning system, or roughly 5%. It said the river authority could borrow the rest and repay it over the next three decades, but local officials were not sure they would be able to pay back the $950,000 \u2014 and failure to do so could carry state sanctions.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">City officials in Robinson, located between Dallas and Austin, sought about $2.4 million in funding to buy and tear down homes directly in the floodway. The state offered $236,000 and required that the city conduct an engineering study that would have eaten up more than half of those grant funds, the city manager told the news organizations.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">The state also proposed giving the East Texas city of Kilgore a fraction of what Public Works Director Clay Evers had anticipated for a drainage study aimed at minimizing flooding. The city needed the money, Evers said, but the state\u2019s offer required a far larger match than the council members had planned to set aside based on the federal grant system as a guide. The state also required the city to go through a second application process to secure the grant, which Evers said would further strain resources.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">So, Evers dropped out.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Four years after he turned down the state funding, Evers watched in shock as lawmakers lambasted Kerr leaders. It could have just as easily been him trying to defend a choice he never wanted to make in the first place.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cI don\u2019t have this unlimited pot of money,\u201d Evers said. \u201cThat is an incredibly difficult decision, and when the impossible, improbable, traumatic happens, how do you defend the decision you just made?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Several Texas leaders who created and oversaw the fund defended the program as a significant investment and said that local communities must also be willing to invest in flood warning and mitigation projects.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Local officials, particularly those in smaller, rural communities, said a limited tax base, along with continued state restrictions on their ability to raise new taxes, have made it difficult to fund necessary projects.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">After learning of the newsroom\u2019s findings, two lawmakers and a former state employee who helped launch the fund expressed concerns over the high number of communities that turned down the money. Though <a href=\"https:\/\/directory.texastribune.org\/joe-moody\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">state Rep. Joe Moody<\/a>, a Democrat from El Paso, and Darby said that the state can\u2019t pay for the entirety of every project, they acknowledged lawmakers created a flawed system.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cI absolutely know that what we\u2019re doing now is not adequate for the people that we represent,\u201d Moody said. \u201cIt\u2019s OK for us to admit that the system isn\u2019t good enough. We shouldn\u2019t be afraid of saying that. The question then is, what are we going to do about it?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Moody and Darby said the state program merits a thorough review by lawmakers during the next legislative session in 2027.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cIt is a frustrating prospect that we have this program that\u2019s designed to be important to help people\u2019s lives, and the Legislature determined it to be a priority, and we put money in, and to find it still in the bank accounts, and not being deployed,\u201d Darby said. \u201cWe need to fix it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-212597\" data-attachment-id=\"212597\" data-comments-opened=\"0\" data-image-caption=\"&lt;p&gt;During a 2016 flood in Kilgore, Turkey Creek, which runs through the town, inundated nearby neighborhoods. Residents were rescued from their homes by emergency management officials.&lt;\/p&gt;\" data-image-description=\"&lt;p&gt;An aerial view of a rural town with a small stream running through trees and houses.&lt;\/p&gt;\" data-image-meta=\"{\" aperture=\"\" data-image-title=\"20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-15_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-15_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=780%2C585&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-medium-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-15_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=300%2C225&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-15_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=2560%2C1920&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"2560,1920\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/2025\/12\/03\/texas-kerr-county-state-grants-flood-warning-system\/20251008-cavazos-fiffunding-15_preview_maxwidth_3000_maxheight_3000_ppi_72_embedcolorprofile_true_quality_95\/\" data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" fetchpriority=\"high\" height=\"585\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-tx\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/1764762551_18_20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-15_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_qu.jpeg\"  width=\"100%\"\/><\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">During a 2016 flood in Kilgore, Turkey Creek, which runs through the town, inundated nearby neighborhoods. Residents were rescued from their homes by emergency management officials. Michael Cavazos for The Texas Tribune and ProPublica<\/p>\n<p>Too little for some<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Lawmakers in 2019 approved the Flood Infrastructure Fund, making Texas one of the few states in the country with a dedicated program to invest in helping cities and counties pay for flood prevention projects, experts said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">The investment was a response to the destruction wrought by Hurricane Harvey two years earlier. Applicants seeking to qualify for grants must meet criteria that includes securing supplemental federal funding, showing that they have a median household income below the statewide average or meeting a narrow definition of a rural community that is more restrictive than the ones used by other Texas programs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Lawmakers tasked the Texas Water Development Board with creating a ranking system for proposed projects and determining how much each community would receive. The board awarded $670 million to 140 projects, with the largest grants going to applicants that had the lowest median household income.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">That meant communities like Kerr, which have higher median income, received far less money than other areas with needs deemed less pressing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">A spokesperson for the water board defended its grant distribution, saying the aim was to fund as many projects as possible across the state. While the agency had received some feedback from communities that felt the offer was too low to be a feasible avenue for them, spokesperson Kaci Woodrome said it was challenging to attribute their choice to turn down the money to a single root cause.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Tom Entsminger, a longtime water board employee who helped launch the fund, said he and his colleagues were charged with figuring out how to divvy up the money before they knew how many local agencies would apply, what projects they would propose or how much they would cost. He said there wasn\u2019t a \u201cspecific logic behind\u201d the exact grant amounts \u201cthat anybody would have defended.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cWe had to just get through that funding cycle before we knew that it was too little for some folks,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">The state began a second round of funding last year, but its leaders made few changes to the rubric used to distribute it. So far, they have seen similar results.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Entsminger, who left the state agency in 2021 for a consultant job, considers the program an overall success. Still, he said the fact that local governments, many of which were rural or had fewer than 20,000 residents, declined the state funding shows the board\u2019s grant process likely needs to be reviewed. About $100 million went unused for years, the newsrooms found.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Among local governments that rejected the money was the Trinity Bay Conservation District, which provides water services to 6,000 customers in two rural counties in Southeast Texas. It would have received 9% of the nearly $12 million needed to fund projects that would widen a local bayou and reduce flooding in the area. The 300-resident town of Rose Hill Acres, also in Southeast Texas near Beaumont, was offered a 14% grant for its $12 million flood mitigation efforts.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Another such community was Kilgore, which has fewer than 14,000 residents.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">The city needed $575,000 to assess and create an updated map of its drainage system. Without it, Evers had to rely on maps left by previous city officials in a green spiral notebook dated 1965 that kept him guessing which outdated pipes he needed to replace before they failed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Dozens of pipes had collapsed since 2018, when his office began tracking the destruction that creates sinkholes in residents\u2019 yards, church property and, in the worst-case scenarios, the middle of busy roads. The chaos forced Evers to triage emergency funds to fix the most dangerous basketball-sized holes across the city, only for another to pop up in a citywide game of Whac-a-Mole.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cIt\u2019s only accelerating. Every year that passes, the infrastructure that\u2019s still in the ground gets a year older,\u201d Evers said. \u201cI\u2019m trying to get ahead of it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">The announcement of the state water development board program gave him hope that he could secure enough money for needed projects. But that feeling quickly deflated when the board published its master list ranking all the projects and outlined how much funding each would get.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Kilgore was offered a grant covering 13% of the drainage study\u2019s cost. To stay in the running for the grant, the program required applicants to submit a separate lengthy application, which Evers said would have required him to hire a pricey consultant. The board had ranked Kilgore so low among hundreds of projects that Evers felt the city\u2019s chances of getting the money were slim.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Evers faced a choice that many other applicants recounted to the newsrooms: spend more resources for a chance at some state money or cut their losses now.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cWe are disappointed in our ranking,\u201d Evers wrote in an email to the water development board in which he declined to move forward with the application. \u201cOur small town needs apparently pale in comparison to the other 200 projects ahead of us.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\n<img loading=\"lazy\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-212599\" data-attachment-id=\"212599\" data-comments-opened=\"0\" data-id=\"212599\" data-image-caption=\"&lt;p&gt;Evers points to a map showing the areas that were inundated during a 2016 flood.&lt;\/p&gt;&#10;\" data-image-description=\"&lt;p&gt;A man with brown hair and a short beard wearing a purple polo shirt points to a map hanging on an office wall.&lt;\/p&gt;&#10;\" data-image-meta=\"{\" aperture=\"\" data-image-title=\"20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-13_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-13_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=780%2C520&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-medium-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-13_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=300%2C200&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-13_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=2560%2C1707&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"2560,1707\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/2025\/12\/03\/texas-kerr-county-state-grants-flood-warning-system\/20251008-cavazos-fiffunding-13_preview_maxwidth_3000_maxheight_3000_ppi_72_embedcolorprofile_true_quality_95\/\" data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" height=\"520\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-tx\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/1764762551_209_20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-13_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_qu.jpeg\"  width=\"780\"\/>Evers points to a map showing the areas that were inundated during a 2016 flood. Michael Cavazos for The Texas Tribune and ProPublica<br \/>\n<img loading=\"lazy\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-212598\" data-attachment-id=\"212598\" data-comments-opened=\"0\" data-id=\"212598\" data-image-caption=\"&lt;p&gt;A map in Kilgore\u2019s 1965 comprehensive plan depicts the city\u2019s storm water drainage system.&lt;\/p&gt;&#10;\" data-image-description=\"&lt;p&gt;A spiral bound book, opened to a page showing a topographic map with blue lines, laying on a desk covered with documents.&lt;\/p&gt;&#10;\" data-image-meta=\"{\" aperture=\"\" data-image-title=\"20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-38_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-38_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=780%2C520&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-medium-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-38_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=300%2C200&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.texastribune.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/11\/20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-38_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_quality_95-scaled.jpg?fit=2560%2C1707&amp;quality=89&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"2560,1707\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/2025\/12\/03\/texas-kerr-county-state-grants-flood-warning-system\/20251008-cavazos-fiffunding-38_preview_maxwidth_3000_maxheight_3000_ppi_72_embedcolorprofile_true_quality_95\/\" data-recalc-dims=\"1\" decoding=\"async\" height=\"520\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-tx\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/1764762551_140_20251008-Cavazos-FIFFunding-38_preview_maxWidth_3000_maxHeight_3000_ppi_72_embedColorProfile_true_qu.jpeg\"  width=\"780\"\/>A map in Kilgore\u2019s 1965 comprehensive plan depicts the city\u2019s storm water drainage system. Michael Cavazos for The Texas Tribune and ProPublica\n<\/p>\n<p>Still waiting<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">After stepping away from the state program, Evers searched for other funding sources as the need for a drainage study became more pressing. Pipes kept breaking, flooding streets and homes, and forcing the city to tap into dwindling emergency funds.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Finally, Evers landed a $300,000 federal grant this year. It didn\u2019t cover the full cost of the project, but Evers said he would start by examining the most flood-prone neighborhoods and then try to scale up.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cIt won\u2019t be 100%, but it\u2019ll be enough to where I can at least have some semblance of a plan to begin,\u201d he said. \u201cI got lucky.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">But Kerr has not been as lucky.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Tara Bushnoe, general manager of the Upper Guadalupe River Authority, which applied for and then declined funding from the state program, said in an email that the agency approved incrementally using money from its budget for a flood warning system, but having a complete system with all planned sirens to alert residents could take years.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Immediately after the deadly floods, state leaders promised to help, saying they would allocate additional funding specifically for such warning systems.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">\u201cWe\u2019re not going to be able to stop everybody from dying,\u201d said <a href=\"https:\/\/directory.texastribune.org\/paul-bettencourt\/\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">state Sen. Paul Bettencourt<\/a>, a Houston Republican. \u201cBut we could have gotten a lot of people out of the way if they had heard those sirens and went to higher ground, and that\u2019s the best thing you can do, is try to save lives as a legislator.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">This summer, lawmakers passed Bettencourt\u2019s legislation that would provide <a href=\"https:\/\/capitol.texas.gov\/BillLookup\/Text.aspx?LegSess=892&amp;Bill=SB5\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">$50 million for flood sirens in some Texas counties<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">But Kerr County, whose devastation after the floods spurred the state to infuse dollars in the first place, won\u2019t automatically get help to pay for its warning system.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">State lawmakers put money into a new fund with a new selection process that will be open to a few dozen flood-prone counties.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\">Kerr leaders will again have to apply.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dist__Box-sc-1fnzlkn-0 dist__TextBase-sc-1fnzlkn-3 bYFsJw cuqaEv article-text\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.propublica.org\/people\/pratheek-rebala\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Pratheek Rebala<\/a> of ProPublica contributed data reporting.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Audio recording is automated for accessibility. Humans wrote and edited the story. 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