Check a ZIP

Based on FEMA public data, COLORADO, TX is

MODERATELY FUCKED

Colorado, TX gets a calibrated report score of 61 out of 100. It starts with FEMA's 62/100 overall signal, then checks whether risk is concentrated or broad. Loudest hazards: drought, extreme heat, flooding.

61/100

Calibrated report score

FEMA overall: 62/100 (Relatively Low)

Top reasons

  • Drought
  • Extreme heat
  • Flooding

Disaster receipts

20 federal disaster declarations

FEMA declaration history for Colorado, TX, 1993-2024. County-level receipt, not a house-level prophecy.

Top chaos flavors

Hurricane7Fire3Flood3Biological2

Most recent

  • 2024 HurricaneHURRICANE BERYL
  • 2021 Severe Ice StormSEVERE WINTER STORMS
  • 2021 Severe Ice StormSEVERE WINTER STORM

Receipt note

County-specific federal disaster declarations only. Statewide declarations are not smeared across every county.

OpenFEMA Disaster Declarations Summaries

What the data says

FEMA scores this county 93/100 for drought risk. That is a major warning signal.

Receipt

FEMA National Risk Index (county-level; ZIP matched through Census ZCTA/county relationship)

What to verify

Review drought monitor history, aquifer stress, municipal contingency plans, and outdoor-use limits.

Near your ZIP

PULLING EPA RECEIPTS

Checking the 2024 TRI facility index around ZIP 77442.

FAQ / before you panic

Questions you should probably ask.

Yes. The voice is sarcastic, but the goal is serious: turn public climate, air quality, hazard, and pollution datasets into a readable local risk profile. The joke is the packaging. The data is the point.