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Jirel

(2,369 posts)
30. What a ridiculous article.
Tue Jul 8, 2025, 03:21 PM
Jul 2025

I. Live. In. Comfort.
By. The. Guadalupe. And. Cypress. Creek.

This out-of-town reporter is so full of crap, their eyes are brown.

Fact: nobody here was saved by the sirens because we all had LOTS of warning from multiple sources long before sirens went off. Comfort residents take floods seriously because we’ve had a lot, including some infamous ones with deaths (the most recent one has a memorial built just up my street where she died), and we watch the weather, NOAA and USGS water gauges, etc. Everyone was glued to town gossip as well, in part because the 4th of July parade had been canceled. (Fun fact: the lineup area was right in the lowest area by the river.) The VFD and other first responders had door-knocked house to house well before that. Sheriffs, constables, etc. were all over the streets blaring warnings over their loudspeakers long before the sirens went. By that time, everyone was out of their homes. If anyone had waited until the sirens blew, they would’ve been in deep water, too late. Water had covered the escape route for homes along the river road an hour before that - we were monitoring the creek flow, and friends were in a big truck monitoring that area and had taken video of the highway in the process of being covered (not yet deep, but the road to it was) that early on.

Fact: Comfort is a HUGELY different situation than Kerrville, Hunt, or Ingram. We’re a small town 1/10 the size of Kerrville. Simply fewer people to flood. We don’t make bank off the tourist trade with RV parks, cabins, and camps on the water’s edge. So the most vulnerable people who don’t know the flooding situation and are not taking it seriously, weren’t here in town to make a fatal error. We did have flooding in one RV resort, but even that one is much farther away from water and much smaller than the behemoth in Kerrville where many died.

Fact: While Hunt had about 3 hours warning but it was the middle of the night (gotta be awake and willing to respond to warnings at o-dark-early for them to matter), Comfort had effectively 8 hours warning, and we were all already well aware of what had happened upriver for hours before we were smacked.

This is out-of-towner armchair quarterbacking at its finest.

Recommendations

2 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

"because some local officials felt it was too expensive to install" DBoon Jul 2025 #1
They will discover how expensive it is with all the lawsuits that will be filed. mwmisses4289 Jul 2025 #13
Might not Old Crank Jul 2025 #24
The following is from Wikipedia regarding the phrase "Cutting off one's nose to spite one's face." John1956PA Jul 2025 #22
it should say barbtries Jul 2025 #23
Many/most small Texas towns have an alarm system used by the fire department to warm of tornadoes. efhmc Jul 2025 #2
Not in this part of Texas. LeftInTX Jul 2025 #14
Austin does not have them either. pinkstarburst Jul 2025 #17
I'm not saying I have $10k floating around to buy one but... cadoman Jul 2025 #21
More involved than the cost of a siren. Old Crank Jul 2025 #25
I'm not saying it's $0, but I think this gives us a scale of the cost we're talking here cadoman Jul 2025 #27
Most of the cities around here do not have them pinkstarburst Jul 2025 #29
The Texas Hill Country's Balcones Fault line makes tornados rare and usually cause limited damage. summer_in_TX Jul 2025 #36
Austin does not have sirens pinkstarburst Jul 2025 #16
Air raid siren. efhmc Jul 2025 #32
1,800 people in our small borough, gab13by13 Jul 2025 #3
They have them in Tsunami zones and the Hill Country has more flash floods. The cost can't be too prohibitive. surfered Jul 2025 #4
Yes I know Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Jul 2025 #6
They also have lahar warning sirens here in the Mt. Rainier river valleys Trailrider1951 Jul 2025 #11
exactly gopiscrap Jul 2025 #20
K&R spanone Jul 2025 #5
Re short-sighted, selfish people who don't want to pay taxes for what communities need: Attilatheblond Jul 2025 #7
Even TX Lt. Gov. gets it. Now. moondust Jul 2025 #8
te same kind of siren that every town had whem we were ducking and covering under our desks rampartd Jul 2025 #9
Where I grew up they tested air raid sirens every Saturday at noon. No matter where you were you could hear them. flashman13 Jul 2025 #19
Wow - how much would it cost to install a few sirens and perhaps warning lights? waterwatcher123 Jul 2025 #10
What? There aren't "forests" on the Edward's Plateau. It's a "savanna" LeftInTX Jul 2025 #15
The imagery certainly makes it look like lots of the upland areas have been cleared. waterwatcher123 Jul 2025 #35
No. Upland areas have never been cleared. As a matter of fact, trees have increased due to human settlement. LeftInTX Jul 2025 #37
Thanks for the nice pictures, imagery and explanations (appreciate it). waterwatcher123 Jul 2025 #39
Flood alarms are for fancy book learnin' librul smarty pants. Hassin Bin Sober Jul 2025 #12
A warning siren in a flood plain town? Gimpyknee Jul 2025 #18
Not the good idea you think it is. Jirel Jul 2025 #33
My small town has several sirens, and they get tested once a month at 10 a.m. on a Saturday morning. Sogo Jul 2025 #26
Ours are tested Littlered Jul 2025 #28
What a ridiculous article. Jirel Jul 2025 #30
You know what's prohibitive to me? The cost of losing a loved one. Buddyzbuddy Jul 2025 #31
A siren/water depth gauge systm on the river bank is not that expensive. The governor and Sen. Cruz... brush Jul 2025 #34
Sirens might help to a degree pinkstarburst Jul 2025 #38
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