Rapier108 said:
Seriously Max...
Of course the flooding in the Hill Country is "climate change" and the only solution is to give up more of our money. /eyeroll
KBTX weather is still a joke.
Edit: I will add that during local severe weather events, they do a good job keeping the public informed.
I worked recovery in the total disaster in Bandera after the hurricane in 1978. I think there was about 27 deaths then. There has been damage from hurricanes in the Texas Hill County for decades and probably for 1,000 years or more. Also work on Katrina recovery. They had zero to do with any possible climate change,
"Tropical Storm Amelia made landfall in Corpus Christi on July 31, 1978, quickly dissipating as it moved inland. The weakened storm system stalled over the headwaters of the Medina and Guadalupe rivers, producing heavy rainfall across the Texas Hill Country. Medina recorded at least 48 inches in a two-day period, making Amelia the wettest tropical cyclone on record in both Texas and the continental United States until Hurricane Harvey in 2017. Twenty-seven people died as a result of the floodwaters across Kendall, Kerr, and Bandera counties. Hundreds more saw their homes and businesses damaged or destroyed."
Bandera Flooding - Paul Schaefer Collection (1978)'
Is there any way we can blame the destruction of Galveston in 1900 on Climate Change?
There was a time in the past when news and weather persons reported what occurred without twisting their performance to fit their agenda,