The substance of the OPs complaints are baseless. This is force majeure.
A reasonable take once the recovery efforts are done would be to evaluate the zoning. From doing THOW for years, Texas was a stand out state in regards to lenient building codes and enforcements.
My hindsight thoughts are maybe some of these properties should not have been where they were.
Like in parts of my State where there are huge urban developments in former flood plains.
As for the alerting, even the best alerting systems would have not been enough here. That, and the more alerts people get the more they are ignored like the boy who cries wolf. My weather guy is accurate about 10% of the time. Thunderstorms on rainy days, clear skies on thunderstorm days. No alerts about fires fire just see smoke over trees.
Another aspect people don't realize is the US is vast, huge regions of mostly uninhabited space.
Anyways, not much take away but zoning properly. Seems flood zones from 100 years ago are acceptable building sites all over. I'm not well informed on the Texas geography, but probably would avoid building in a runoff
This post was edited by RedFromWinter on Jul 10 2025 05:54am