In Kerr County, Texas, where floodwaters swallowed entire neighborhoods and left families clinging to rooftops just days ago, the mood remains heavy. Search teams are still combing through debris-choked lakes and swollen creeks, looking for signs of the dozens who remain missing.
Now, officials are considering something drastic: draining a lake altogether. The hope is that lowering the water level could reveal cars, homes, and heartbreaking answers that have been hidden beneath the murky surface since the floods began.
It’s a grim and difficult decision. As flood threats continue to loom with more rain in the forecast, the urgency to find the missing grows stronger by the day. For families still waiting, each hour stretches painfully long, caught between hope and the harsh reality that time — and water — are working against them.
Across Kerr County, the scars left behind are everywhere. Trees uprooted, roads torn apart, and lives abruptly divided between "before" and "after." Officials say safety remains the top priority, but they also acknowledge the emotional weight driving this next step. The community doesn’t want closure delayed any longer than necessary.
In a place where water brought so much devastation, it’s water they’re now trying to take away — in the hope it will finally reveal the truth.
Now, officials are considering something drastic: draining a lake altogether. The hope is that lowering the water level could reveal cars, homes, and heartbreaking answers that have been hidden beneath the murky surface since the floods began.
It’s a grim and difficult decision. As flood threats continue to loom with more rain in the forecast, the urgency to find the missing grows stronger by the day. For families still waiting, each hour stretches painfully long, caught between hope and the harsh reality that time — and water — are working against them.
Across Kerr County, the scars left behind are everywhere. Trees uprooted, roads torn apart, and lives abruptly divided between "before" and "after." Officials say safety remains the top priority, but they also acknowledge the emotional weight driving this next step. The community doesn’t want closure delayed any longer than necessary.
In a place where water brought so much devastation, it’s water they’re now trying to take away — in the hope it will finally reveal the truth.