Consider This from NPR - After devastating floods a Central Texas community comes together

Episode Date: July 10, 2025

It's been nearly a week since devastating flooding tore through Kerr County, Texas killing more than a hundred people.Now, after unimaginable tragedy, residents are coming together to help each other ...move forward.NPR's Juana Summers and producers Erika Ryan and Tyler Bartlam visited the City West Church, which has transformed from a house of worship into a pop up food distribution site serving thousands of meals to the community and first responders.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's been nearly a week since devastating flooding tore through Kerr County, Texas, killing more than 100 people. Sitting between the towns of Kerrville and Ingram is the City West Church. This house of worship has been transformed into a pop-up food distribution site. Volunteers line each side of folding tables, scooping prepared food into containers, before loading those meals into boxes. They're singing as they pack. Some of those meals will stay here at this church to feed first responders and people who come to a drive-through, but most will be dispatched out across the community.
Starting point is 00:00:39 This massive operation to feed thousands of impacted people and first responders is organized by a Virginia-based nonprofit called Mercy Chefs. CEO Gary LeBlanc said the group started mobilizing on July 4th and had its first meal service the next day. Staff came from outside of Texas, but it relies on local volunteers to fill containers full of hot meals and help them reach the hungry. Everybody here in Kerr County lost someone or knows someone that lost someone. So for those 70 or 100 volunteers that are with us every day, it's therapy for them.
Starting point is 00:01:20 LeBlanc says they're providing as many as 5,000 hot meals to the community here each day. Consider this. Flooding has devastated the communities of Texas Hill Country, but even after the unimaginable, residents are coming together to help each other move forward. From NPR, I'm Juana Summers. From NPR News Now podcast. Listen in the time it takes you to do any of those other activities or while doing them. We bring you the stories you need to know in just five minutes,
Starting point is 00:02:19 every hour of every day. Listen now to the NPR News Now podcast. It's Consider This from NPR. In one room of the city west church, a group huddles around a whiteboard. There's a big list of places in need of food and people to contact. A man stands in front of it, organizing volunteers. His phone seems to ring constantly.
Starting point is 00:02:51 We're trying to feed the county. Normally, it would be feeding a community or a few houses, but this is such a tragedy. That's Tim Thomason. He's from Ingram here in central Texas and leads a group called the Blind Faith Foundation. And we literally are finding other subdivisions that got wiped away that haven't had food in two and three days.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Thomason says this has been a devastating week, but that there have also been many rewarding moments. We got a call that there was 200 little girls at a camp upriver stuck on top of a hilltop. And as we pulled up upon this camp of 200 little girls, they come running out crying and high-fiving and hugging us because they hadn't had a meal in two days. And to know that we had the ability to go do that and to make a difference in those lives and give them a hot meal, there's just no words. But how do you feed an entire county in the aftermath of a disaster like this where the need is so vast, some damaged areas are still challenging to
Starting point is 00:03:59 reach. In moments like these, Texans look to one another. We keep focused, we encourage each other, we love each other here. And I was telling our group here, I have never been hugged by so much sweaty men in my entire life. In this case, people turn to high school sports coaches like Tate Damasco. He's the athletic director and head football coach at Ingram-Tom Moore High School. He offers to let us come along with him as he delivers meals to a hard-hit neighborhood. We're gonna get right in here.
Starting point is 00:04:27 Here, I'll start it while I load these boxes. Damasco and some volunteers waste cardboard boxes full of hot meals, a cooler with cold drinks, and to the back of a white pickup truck. There's a decal of the high school's logo, a white arrowhead with red block letters on the side. All right, y'all ready to roll? Let's do it.
Starting point is 00:04:46 And from there, athletic director Tate Damasco sets on a winding five-mile drive through a portion of the devastation that ripped through his community. My phone started ringing at about 445 Friday morning. One of our other coaches actually lives up in Hunt and called me and he called me three times and so I finally answered the third time he says you got to get up it's bad so I got in my car and headed straight to the fire department to find out what we could do. That's incredible. Was it hard to get other coaches to kind of come out and help or would everybody just kind of
Starting point is 00:05:20 know this is where we need to be and how we need to serve. They know. I mean, and you know, when you pour into kids and parents are are a big supporters of us right now, those are the ones that are affected by all this. So it's easy. I haven't had anybody say no. It's where do you want me at? How can I help? We drive down a state highway that runs parallel to the Guadalupe River. For many in this region, life on the river is a source of joy, but the Guadalupe River flooding was the source of most of the recent destruction and anguish felt here. Water got close to getting over that bridge and it was all throughout this field. Our school's over here on the right, not much, It's kind of up on a hill. So we had minimal damage there But if you start looking down this left-hand side like this is our little league complex
Starting point is 00:06:12 And if you start looking over here to the left, I mean it's gone I mean, there's so much debris and so many right split trees jeez for years over here on this practice field You know you look across you couldn't see across the river because all the cypress trees on the banks and you can see all those are gone. So when y'all asked me, you know about our kids. Imagine being a 15, 16, 17 year old kid that's grown up here in this beautiful place. And this is what it looks like right now. Damasco pulls into another neighborhood a few miles beyond the high school. So a lot of destruction. Some houses are not hurt but a lot of them add water over the roofs and just you know they're gutting everything and getting everything out and that's kind of where we're at and we're pulling in right now.
Starting point is 00:07:05 The damage is immediately clear. So the water just came straight off that bend right there and straight through this neighborhood. Waterlogged furniture and belongings are piled up at the curb outside some houses. Big dumpsters are overflowing. Marcus, you want a chicken pot pie? We stop at one house where a man is power washing grime away from the exterior. Marta Murayama lives here with her husband Miles. They were home sleeping when the flooding started.
Starting point is 00:07:34 So the neighbors called and woke us up and we thought somebody's breaking into the house. So he ran, tried to run out and saw that the water was already, I don't know, about six feet high. So he went out the back door and the water swept him away. And he went over into the outdoor kitchen. And while he was out there, my daughter's car that was here, that blue car, floated by him and ended up in the neighbor's back fence. So once our fences went down, then all the water went around. It did tear off our, actually it folded our garage door in half. And so the water was seven foot high in the garage but in here it only seeped in through the door. From the outside their house looks relatively untouched. Inside
Starting point is 00:08:13 though? Everything inside is gone because if we had one foot bass we had fish, leeches, everything inside the house. Everything you lost everything inside your home. I'm so sorry. They consider themselves lucky. Miles was swept away by the water outside their house, but he survived. While they've lost everything, family members gathered at their house to start the arduous process of rebuilding.
Starting point is 00:08:36 I talked with Ashley Espinosa, Marta and Miles' daughter, as she grabbed food and drinks from the truck. How's your mom doing with all of this? She's dealing with it the best that she can. I mean, she's holding it together the best that she can, and I mean, that's all that she can do. These were the cards that she was dealt, and she's managing.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Just a few steps away from the house, a group sits in a semi-circle, singing hymns, clapping along. I'm gonna sing, I'm gonna shout, oh praise the Lord. When the gates are open wide, I'm gonna sing, I'm gonna shout, oh praise the Lord. After winding our way along the same road along the Guadalupe River, we arrived back at the church. Damasco says he's headed to pick up another local coach and head out to another drop in another impacted community. Chris Russ grew up in Kerrville and
Starting point is 00:09:32 now coaches football and baseball at Kerrville's Tyvee High School. He and his family were on vacation when news of the flooding reached them. They learned that another Tyvee High School coach and his whole family were missing. They immediately returned home to Central Texas. I just drove straight through to get back home and you know this kind of coming and doing this kind of keeps me busy and not thinking about some of the other things.
Starting point is 00:09:57 So I grew up with the Eastlands. There's the camp directors who can't miss it. And so yes and so I knew I met Dick when I was in seventh grade so I've known that family know the oldest brother Richard real well. The Eastlands, Dick and Tweedy owned Camp Mystic since the 1970s. Dick Eastland was killed in the flooding along with scores of young campers and counselors who were swept away. One of Dick Eastland's grandsons plays for Chris Russ's football team. Russ visited Camp Mystic earlier in the day. Well a lot of, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:30 when I was at Mystic, there's quite a few guys. George Eastland is one of our football players and so we have quite a few guys over there helping to clean out houses, clean out cabins and so it's a they're staying busy. We'll push on and I think kids are resilient and they'll and they'll get through it and so yeah I mean they're they're helping when they can and also trying to get back to some normalcy and normalcy might be hard to reach anytime soon but at least for today
Starting point is 00:11:04 Chris Ross Tate Damasco, and a fleet of local coaches have made it possible for people to have the routine experience of sharing a hot dinner. This episode was produced by Tyler Bartlem, Erica Ryan, Vincent Accovino, and Michael Levitt. It was edited by Courtney Doherty. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
Starting point is 00:11:29 It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Juana Sommers.

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