Norms Impact
In deadly Texas floods, one town had what some didn’t: A wailing warning siren
Texas flood deaths collide with a preventable governance failure: officials now reconsider funding emergency communications only after warnings and coordination broke down.
Jul 8, 2025
Sources
Summary
A deadly flooding event in Texas Hill Country exposed gaps in emergency warning and communications, even as Kerrville had a functioning wailing siren. Local officials said limited cell service and communications towers made coordination and alerting “very challenging.” The practical consequence is that residents and facilities may miss time-sensitive warnings when infrastructure and funding decisions leave redundant alert systems underbuilt.
Reality Check
Failure to build and fund redundant emergency warning systems before predictable disasters erodes our basic right to timely public safety alerts and normalizes governance by regret instead of duty. Nothing here clearly fits a federal crime on this record—there’s no stated fraud, bribery, or deprivation of rights under color of law (18 U.S.C. §§ 201, 242)—but it is a stark breach of public-administration norms that treat emergency communications as nonnegotiable critical infrastructure. When elected officials block grants for alert equipment on “transparency” grounds and only reverse course after deaths, we institutionalize avoidable risk and shift the costs onto families who had no meaningful way to protect themselves.
Detail
<p>Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice said it was unclear whether any communication occurred between law enforcement and Camp Mystic after an initial flood watch alert was issued. Rice identified limited cell service and a lack of communications towers in the Hill Country as ongoing constraints, calling conditions “very challenging.” He said the city intends to review communications options—cell towers, radio communications, and emergency alerting—after search and rescue operations are completed.</p><p>State Rep. Wes Virdell, a Republican representing Kerrville, had recently voted against legislation that would have created a grant program to help local governments obtain emergency communications equipment. Virdell told The Texas Tribune he would have voted differently in light of the flooding, while telling NBC News he opposed the bill because he believed it was not transparent enough.</p>