The unfortunate death of a family member
due to the devastating floods in Texas
has been confirmed by Clark Hunt’s wife,
the owner of the Kansas City Chiefs. The
Guadalupe River flooded and surged by up
to 30 ft beyond its normal water level
on Friday, bringing the total number of
fatalities to 82. There are 28
youngsters among the 68 bodies
discovered. Tavia, Clark’s wife,
disclosed that one of the Camp Mystic
Campers who perished in the tragedy was
Janie Hunt, a young relative. Our hearts
are devastated by the damage from the
floods in Wimberly and the awful loss of
so many lives including a darling young
hunt cousin along with numerous friends
little daughters. She posted on
Instagram when a god who is said to be
kind, all knowing and all powerful
permits such horrible things to occur
even to children. How can we have faith
in him? That is a delicate and holy
subject and the Bible doesn’t avoid it.
The screams of those whose hearts have
been broken and who still struggle to
believe in the same God who they believe
permitted the suffering are abundant
throughout scripture. The all girls
private Christian summer camp camp
Mystic Bear Hunt, Texas, was wrecked by
surging waters, leaving five campers
dead and 11 females missing. Richard
Dick Eastland, 70, the beloved director
of Camp Mystic, lost his life attempting
to save girls as a month’s worth of rain
fell in a few minutes. Videos of the
kids joyfully dancing around on stage
during their first term coral and dance
production were posted on social media
by the camp one week before the
disaster. According to the NT, older
females slept in rooms on higher ground,
while the youngest children slept on
low-lying flats inside the camp’s
cabins. The majority of the missing
girls are younger and were resting a few
yards from the Guadalupe River’s banks.
About 750 girls were residing at the
camp when the floodwaters struck,
according to Texas Governor Greg Abbott.
Abbott later proclaimed Sunday to be a
day of prayer and promised that
officials would continue to hunt for
missing persons around the clock. I ask
every Texan to join me in prayer this
Sunday for the lives lost, for those
still missing, for the recovery of our
communities, and for the safety of those
on the front lines, he added in a
statement. In order to give
investigators DNA samples, relatives of
the missing have begun traveling from
all over the Lone Star State to the
Kurville region. At 1:18 p.m. on
Thursday, the government agency issued a
flood watch, predicting that South
Central Texas will see up to 7 in of
rain on Friday morning. At 1:14 a.m. on
Friday, a flash flood warning was
issued. And at 4:03 a.m., a more severe
alert was issued, advising people to
immediately escape to higher ground
because the situation was extremely
dangerous and life-threatening. However,
local officials have criticized the NWS
for issuing delayed warnings,
particularly in Ker County’s Hill
Country, which has been called flash
flood alley, and has seen the worst
destruction. Matt Lanza, a
meteorologist, told the Texas Tribune
that this was not a forecasting failure.
There was a communication breakdown.
There were warnings. They simply failed
to reach individuals in time. On Sunday,
The Daily Mail exclusively reported that
Texas’s Division of Emergency Management
estimated that more than 100 people
would die as a result of the devastating
flooding that occurred in Kurville on
July 4th. According to two separate
sources who spoke to Daily Mail, the
State Disaster Administration informed
partners in an email sent out on
Saturday that the death toll will exceed
100. The message state officials are
publicly portraying, stating that they
are still looking for people who are
alive and declining to acknowledge that
rescue efforts have moved to recovering
remains is considerably different from
the estimate of the dead. At a press
conference on Saturday, W Nimkid, the
chairman of TDEM, said reporters, “Our
state assets and local partners are
continuing to search for live victims.
We pray and hope that there are still
people alive out there.
News
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