court for these hearings. the house homeland security member, florida republican congressman carlos jimenez. i want your reaction. the u.s. supreme court putting that keeping title 42 in place and they re going to hear in february oral arguments on the merits of this case. i want your initial reaction to that. that s really good news. you had a 7-1 release rate. every person that is september back for title 42, you have seven people that are released in the united states. don t take much of this thing with title 42. it s good. it s better than nothing. the whole problem is actually the policies implemented by the biden administration and have caused this tremendous influx and continue to allow thousands and thousands of illegal immigrantses in our country like you said more than five million in the last two years. the decision is 5-4 in order
authority determined by the cdc. border state republicans have warned as many as 14,000 migrants may enter illegally every day if title 42 goes away. you know, title 42 goes away and all hell breaks loose. instant reaction to this supreme court order from law enforcement is mixed. i think we are too focused on the fact that title 42 is going to be lifted but, you know, we are still seeing record numbers. that s as many migrants captured in the title 42 era are released into the u.s. anyway. that s good news but i don t take too much of it. you had a 7-1 release rate. even with title 42 there is a growing humanitarian crisis at the border. but new policies will have to wait until the new year as president biden and the first family prepare to vacation in the u.s. virgin islands. people are suffering and he s going on vacation. the title 42 ruling came out more than two hours before the first family is set to leave for
flooded. i knew it was here, so i m just speechless right now. reporter: it s a familiar feeling for all too many across the plains and midwest. many places recovering on the tail end of a week that brought deadly tornadoes, heavy rain and life saving water rescues. this series of dams. the water continues to flow. with the u.s. army core of engineers. over the course of days, they have slowly had to increase the amount of water releaseed from the tulsa area dam to near historic levels to keep up with the high water. keystone dam has a release rate of approximately 250,000 cubic feet per second. if you do the math, it equates to approximately 1,000 school
days, they have slowly had to increase the amount of water they release from the tulsa area keystone dam to historic lefvel to keep up with the high water. keystone dam which has been the focus has a release rate of approximately 250,000 cubic feet per second. if you do the math, that equates to approximately a thousand school buses per second going through the dam. across the tulsa area, more than a thousand residents have been impacted by flooding so far. please, please pay attention because the weather can be fickle as can the river, and obviously we re watching the levees very closely. it s advice that applies across the state. the governor declaring a state of emergency for all 77 counties in oklahoma. just north of oklahoma city, these homes are barely hanging on after flooding eroded the ground beneath them. and in tulsa, this river side neighborhood is now very much part of the river. and walk to the end of the