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New data reveals the inadequacy of FEMA flood maps : NPR

More cabins and buildings at Camp Mystic — the tragic site of more than two dozen deaths in the Texas flood — were at risk of flooding than what the federal government had previously reported, according to new analysis from NPR, PBS’s FRONTLINE and data scientists.
Maps by First Street, a climate risk modeling company in New York City, show at least 17 structures in the path of flood waters, compared to maps produced by FEMA, highlighting a longstanding risk facing many Americans. The analysis also shows at least four cabins for young campers were in an area designated by FEMA as an extreme flood hazard, where water moves at its highest velocity and depth.
For decades, FEMA’s maps have failed to take rainfall and flash flooding into account, relying instead on data from coastal storm surges and large river flooding, even as climate change is supercharging rainfall intensity. Nationwide, First Street found more than twice as many Americans live in dangerous flood-prone areas than FEMA’s maps suggest, leaving many homeowners and even local officials unaware of the risk.
“The unknown flood risk is bad from a preparation, financial standpoint, but there’s a human element here that often gets overlooked,” said Jeremy Porter, head of Climate Implications at First Street.
FEMA’s maps can serve as critical warnings to the public about potential danger, but they are also one of the few ways the federal government can require people to take precautionary measures. FEMA requires homeowners in certain flood prone areas to build in ways that could help them withstand a flood, often by elevating their homes.
But in recent years, many properties affected by disasters are turning up outside FEMA’s floodplains. When Hurricane Helene struck western North Carolina last year, 98 percent of the damaged homes were not included in FEMA’s maps. This meant that not only were most homeowners unable to claim flood insurance, most of them had not been obligated to build in a way that could have helped them better survive the storm.
FEMA has known about this problem for years, but the agency lacks the mandate and funding from Congress to address it, according to Porter.
“You think in principle people would say we should have better flood coverage, look what just happened,” Porter says, “but it’s so heavily politicized that you can’t get anybody to bring it forward because they don’t want to be the people that raised flood insurance costs.”
A recent investigation by NPR and FRONTLINE found special interests were also playing a role. Groups like home developers’ associations have lobbied Congress for less flood regulation and in some cases, delays in updating the nation’s flood maps. Developers told NPR they are trying to keep homes affordable.
Outdated FEMA maps played out in a significant way along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County. Using FEMA’s data, First Street found just 2,560 homes at risk in the area. Using their own data, the group discovered more than 4,500 homes were actually in danger.
Even when FEMA does mark the most dangerous flood areas, though, those warnings are not always heeded. At Camp Mystic, NPR found at least eight buildings, including four cabins used to house younger campers, are located inside what FEMA designates a floodway, the most dangerous area of the floodplain where water is expected to move rapidly during a storm.
While many of the camp’s cabins may date back nearly a century, FEMA imposes strict limits on development in these areas, and often outright prohibits it altogether.
“No one should be in a floodway,” says Jim Blackburn, co-director of the Severe Storm Prevention, Education and Evacuation from Disaster Center at Rice University in Houston. “Floodways are the most dangerous of a danger zone.”
A painted broken heart is seen near Camp Mystic along the Guadalupe River in Hunt, Texas, on July 8, 2025, after severe flash flooding over the July 4 holiday weekend.
Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images
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Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images
Camp Mystic’s dining hall, recreation hall, and four cabins all appear to be in the floodway, less than a couple of hundred feet from where the river makes a tight bend.
Blackburn says it’s been difficult to get Texas officials to act on the severity of the threat from floodways and floodplains.
“In Texas, we don’t think the floodplains are that serious,” he says. “We treat floodplains as a kind of good old boy, kind of wink and nod, [as though] it’s environmental red tape. And that’s going to get a lot of people killed.”
Kerr County officials declined NPR’s request for an interview, citing the ongoing emergency. In 2020, the county passed two ordinances to tighten rules on building in high-risk areas and prevent development in floodways. FEMA did not respond to NPR’s request for comment.
Chad Berginnis, head of the Association of State Floodplain Managers, said that recent delays with grants and agreements have impeded state and local efforts to better map flood risk in their communities, adding that cuts from the Trump Administration could make it even harder.
“When I look at the flood map in the area of Camp Mystic, there is a small water course that comes in right there that doesn’t have good flood mapping data,” he says. “The action is simple. Get the notice of federal funding opportunities out and get those grants approved for funding. Those are things right off the bat that the administration could do.”
Blackburn, from Rice University, says it’s no longer helpful for officials to call these events rare, or unpredictable. He says while no one can know which area will be hit next, the risk is known and communities should prepare for a catastrophe.
“It is happening,” he says. “The science is solid. What we need is reasonable decision making based on the best available science and we don’t have that right now.”
NPR Correspondent Rebecca Hersher contributed to this report.
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Robert Redford death latest: Meryl Streep, Barbra Streisand and others mourn Hollywood icon

Screen icon Robert Redford, the Oscar-winning actor, director, and founder of the Sundance Film Festival, has died at the age of 89.
The news was confirmed in a statement by his publicist, Cindi Berger, who said he died in his sleep “surrounded by those he loved,” at his home in Utah. A cause of death was not disclosed.
Redford shot to global fame opposite Paul Newman in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) and went on to deliver acclaimed performances in The Sting (1973), Three Days of the Condor (1975), and All the President’s Men (1976), among many others.
He made his directorial debut with Ordinary People (1980), which won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director.
Beyond his work on screen, Redford founded the Sundance Institute, which launched the Sundance Film Festival — now the largest and most influential celebration of independent film in the United States.
He is survived by his two daughters, Shauna and Amy, and his wife, Sibylle Szaggars Redford, the 68-year-old German-born multimedia artist whose environmental work as been exhibited around the world.
He had four children with his first wife, Lola Van Wagenen. One son, Scott, died of sudden death syndrome when he was just 10 weeks old. David died from cancer in 2020 at the age of 58.
Hailed as Hollywood’s former golden boy, tributes have poured in for the late star.
Follow live updates below
Robert Redford remembered for his deep legacy in environmental activism and Native American advocacy
Redford, who died Tuesday at age 89, was hardly the only liberal activist to emerge out of Hollywood, but few matched his knowledge and focus, his humility and dedication. Fellow actors and leaders of the causes he fought for spoke of his unusually deep legacy, his fight for Native Americans and the environment that began at the height of his stardom.
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 09:30
Sundance Institute reflects on Robert Redford’s lasting legacy
The Sundance Institute mourned the loss of its founder, Robert Redford, in a statement that highlighted his contribution to cinema.
“We are deeply saddened by the loss of our founder and friend Robert Redford. Bob’s vision of a space and a platform for independent voices launched a movement that, over four decades later, has inspired generations of artists and redefined cinema in the US and around the world,” the non-profit shared on Tuesday.
“Beyond his enormous contributions to culture at large, we will miss his generosity, clarity of purpose, curiosity, rebellious spirit and his love for the creative process. We are humbled to be among the stewards of his remarkable legacy, which will continue to guide the Institute in perpetuity.”
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 09:15
Remembering Robert Redford in photos: the life of the Oscar-winning director and activist
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 09:00
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid: How Robert Redford and Paul Newman captured Hollywood’s greatest outlaws
The multiple Oscar-winning Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was a groundbreaking revisionist western, with Paul Newman and the late Robert Redford giving a timeless portrayal of a pair of law-breaking adventurers in one of Hollywood’s greatest examples of the “buddy film”.
Although William Goldman was convinced his film script about two American outlaws who fled a posse of Pinkerton detectives and escaped to Bolivia had the potential to be a blockbuster hit, the initial response was disheartening. “Every studio but one rejected it,” Goldman recalled in The Reluctant Storyteller. “One studio head said, ‘Well, I’ll buy it if they don’t go to South America.’ I said, ‘But they went there!’ He said, ‘I don’t give a s***. All I know is John Wayne don’t run away.’”

The true story of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
The 1969 movie wasn’t an immediate success with critics, yet it charmed the public. As Robert Redford dies aged 89, Martin Chilton tells the tale of one of Hollywood’s best buddy films and the two outlaws who inspired it
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 08:30
Marisa Tomei on Redford: ‘He showed up for the world’
Marisa Tomei shared a heartfelt tribute to Robert Redford, calling him “the Sundance Kid, waving one last time.”
Tomei recalled a moment from early in Ms. Magazine’s history, when Redford’s PR office shared a building with the publication. “He volunteered his gorgeous back for their Oct ’75 cover, knowing the attention would help,” she wrote.
“Always lending his weight to something bigger than himself,” Tomei added. “A legend in every sense.
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 08:15
Classic films, pranks and a crushed Porsche: Robert Redford and Paul Newman’s rare friendship
Robert Redford and Paul Newman enjoyed a “bromance” long before the word had even been coined. Here’s a look back at their storied friendship – and the sports cars they crushed into a cube along the way:
Kevin Perry17 September 2025 07:56
Journalist Bob Woodward remembers Robert Redford as a fierce storyteller and friend
Bob Woodward paid tribute to Robert Redford on Instagram, looking back on their long connection.
Redford famously portrayed Woodward in the 1976 film All the President’s Men, and the two remained close over the years.
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 07:45
Robert Redford: 11 of his most memorable performances and where to watch them
Redford died Tuesday at 89, leaving behind an arsenal of great roles that he owned, whether he was playing a quiet CIA agent, a con man, a baseball player, a grizzled mariner, an ambitious journalist, or a charming WASP in love. His very last role came this year, a cameo in Dark Winds, the AMC show about Navajo police officers he produced.
This is a list of some of Redford’s most memorable performances, but don’t forget about the films he directed, too: among them are the all-timers Ordinary People ( streaming on MGM+ ), which won him the best director Oscar, and Quiz Show (rent on AppleTV+ ), which got him another nod.
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 07:31
Hillary Clinton honours ‘American icon’ Robert Redford
Hilary Clinton honoured Robert Redford with a post on Instagram, reflecting on his career and the lasting impact he made beyond film.
“I always admired Robert Redford, not only for his legendary career as an actor and director but for what came next,” she wrote.
Shahana Yasmin17 September 2025 07:15
Joe Mantegna remembers Redford as a co-star and ‘role model’
Joe Mantegna, the character actor known for appearing in The Godfather Part III and voicing Fat Tony in The Simpsons, fondly recalled working with Redford.
He wrote on X: “How lucky was I to be able to share the screen in 1996 with Robert Redford in Up Close and Personal. He was a role model not just as an actor but as a human being.”
Kevin Perry17 September 2025 07:00
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UK’s GSK announces $30 billion U.S. pharma investment amid Trump state visit

Rafael Henrique | Lightrocket | Getty Images
Britain’s GSK on Wednesday became the latest pharmaceutical firm to commit bumper investment into the U.S., as President Donald Trump is in the U.K. for a three-day state visit.
The drug maker committed to investing at least $30 billion in U.S. research and developing (R&D) and manufacturing over the coming five years.
The investment includes $1.2 billion toward advanced manufacturing, AI and advanced digital technologies to deliver “next-generation biopharma factories and laboratories in the United States,” the drug maker said.
The investment commitment comes as President Donald Trump is in the U.K. for a three-day state visit.
“This week’s State Visit brings together two countries that have led the world in science and healthcare innovation. We are proud to be part of both,” GSK CEO Emma Walmsley said in a statement.
“Today, we are committing to invest at least $30 billion in the United States over the next 5 years, further bolstering the already strong R&D and supply chain we have in the country,” she added.
A number of global pharma firms have been ramping up their U.S. investments amid pressure from the Trump administration to bolster U.S. manufacturing and lower domestic drug prices.
AstraZeneca in July announced plans to invest $50 billion in U.S. manufacturing and research capabilities by 2030, following a slew of commitments from companies including Novartis, Sanofi and Roche, and U.S.-headquartered Eli Lilly and Johnson & Johnson.
GSK’s $1.2 billion commitment to advanced manufacturing is set to include the construction of a new biologics factory in Pennsylvania to produce respiratory and cancer medicines, the company said, as well as the addition of advanced digital technology capabilities across GSK’s existing five manufacturing sites in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Maryland, and Montana.
The wider funding is also due to go toward capital investments across GSK’s U.S. supply chain and increased investment in R&D drug discovery and development and clinical trial activity, it added.
Trump’s state visit has turned out to be a lucrative affair, with a number of firms including Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, OpenAI and Salesforce this week announcing multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence investments in the U.K. in a symbol of strengthened transatlantic ties.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
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UK inflation data for August 2025

Interior of cheese monger specialist cheese shop, Mons cheese mongers, East Dulwich, London, England, UK.
Geography Photos | Universal Images Group | Getty Images
The U.K.’s annual inflation rate was steady at 3.8% in August, according to data released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Wednesday.
Economists polled by Reuters had expected inflation to reach 3.8% in the twelve months to August.
August core inflation, which excludes more volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices, rose by an annual 3.6%, down from 3.8% in the twelve months to July.
“The cost of airfares was the main downward driver this month with prices rising less than a year ago following the large increase in July linked to the timing of the summer holidays,” the ONS’ Chief Economist Grant Fitzner said on the X social media platform.
“This was offset by a rise in prices at the pump and the cost of hotel accommodation falling less than this time last year.”
Food price inflation climbed for the fifth consecutive month, the ONS noted, with small increases seen across a range of vegetables, cheese and fish items.
The data comes after the consumer price index hit a hotter-than-expected 3.8% in July, exceeding forecasts.
Finance Minister Rachel Reeves commented that she recognized that “families are finding it tough and that for many the economy feels stuck. That’s why I’m determined to bring costs down and support people who are facing higher bills.”
Pound sterling was slightly lower against the dollar after the data release, at $1.3637.
The Bank of England is closely watching inflation data after forecasting the consumer price index could peak at 4% in September, before retreating in the early half of 2026.
The central bank cut interest rates in August, taking the key rate from 4.25% to 4%, and saying it would take a “gradual and careful” approach to monetary easing, mindful of inflationary pressures but aware of the need to promote growth and investment.
It next meets on Thursday, but it is not expected to adjust rates this month, and there’s uncertainty as to whether it could cut in November.
Sticky inflation is restricting the opportunity for a fourth rate by the BOE this year, Scott Gardner, investment strategist at J.P. Morgan-owned digital wealth manager, Nutmeg, commented Wednesday.
“While wage growth has fallen in recent months, more progress is required on the inflation front to convince the Bank’s policymakers that a further rate cut is possible in the current economic environment. A fourth rate cut in 2025 will require further labour market weakness, a somewhat pyrrhic victory,” he said in emailed comments.
“With forecasts suggesting inflation could rise even further in the short-term and hit 4% going into the autumn, the cost-of-living strain on household finances will persist in the months ahead,” Gardner said, adding that “in short, already sticky inflation is likely to get stickier.”
This is a breaking news story, please check for further updates.
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