Biblical floods in one part of Australia while the other end burns
Central Queensland floods
Rockhampton councillor Bill Ludwig said many streets in the city are now under water, and "very destructive winds" are also being felt from the low pressure system that was cyclone Oswald.
Central Queensland floods
Dramatic
rescues have been carried out in central Queensland, with parts of
Rockhampton underwater after its wettest day in more than 60 years.
TVNZ,
25
January, 2013
Rockhampton councillor Bill Ludwig said many streets in the city are now under water, and "very destructive winds" are also being felt from the low pressure system that was cyclone Oswald.
The
system is currently sitting about 120km west of Mackay and is
expected to cause flooding in communities further south in coming
days.
Story
continues below...
Ludwig
said the situation in Rockhampton is serious, and told residents to
stay off the streets.
"They're
saying this is not a cyclone but it's not far off it," he said.
He
said he wasn't game to leave the building where he was on Friday,
because the wind had left a large sheet of corrugated iron flapping
from a nearby building.
"I
haven't seen water like this on our roads. I've come in from a rural
location and it was pretty hairy to say the least."
Swift
water rescues
There
have been about 20 swift water rescues in central Queensland
overnight and this morning.
The
most dramatic happened in the Rockhampton suburb of Frenchville,
where a rescuer was swept away after dragging a 14-year-old boy to
safety.
The
rescuer was able to make his own way to safety, but not before he was
swept under a nearby bridge, the ABC reports.
The
boy has been taken to hospital as a precaution.
Meanwhile,
a house in Frenchville has been hit by a large landslide, the
Department of Community Safety told AAP.
The
house is still standing but debris is piled up against the first
floor of the two storey house in Archer View Terrace.
No
one was injured and the residents have called for council help.
There
were numerous other rescues in the past 12 hours, including one by a
bystander who dragged a motorist to safety from his flooded car after
he tried to drive through floodwaters west of Rockhampton.
The
driver was taken to hospital in a stable condition.
More
than 70 roads, including major highways, have been cut by floodwaters
across the state, since Oswald was downgraded to a low after crossing
the Cape York Peninsula's west coast on Tuesday.
At
Yeppoon, northeast or Rockhampton, more than 10 homes have flooded
and people are sandbagging other properties in a bid to save them,
the ABC reports.
The
Bureau of Meteorology said Rockhampton had recorded its wettest day
since 1939, with 349mm falling in the 24 hours to 9am (AEST) on
Friday, and it's not over yet.
The
city is expected to get at least another 100mm over the next 12
hours. But by tomorrow, the heaviest falls are expected to be further
south.
At
this stage, authorities are not expecting the Fitzroy River to break
its banks at Rockhampton but it is expected to reach minor flood
levels.
At
Gladstone, south of Rockhampton, the city's sewage system is
overflowing, sending excrement into people's homes.
The
local council is using sandbags to try to weigh down manholes to
prevent the problem from becoming worse.
"It
comes up through man holes and bubbles into properties. It's not
pleasant," Gladstone Mayor Gail Sellers told ABC radio.
Supermarket
giant Coles said supplies to 26 of its 32 stores in far north
Queensland had been affected by the torrential rain and flooding.
Stores
in Rockhampton and at Yeppoon had also been forced to close.
With
rail lines cut, supplies are being trucked from Townsville to Cairns
via Charters Towers.
"We
ask our customers to be patient and not to panic buy as there are
groceries on the way," Coles managing director Ian McLeod said.
The
state and federal government on Friday said more assistance would be
made available for flood-hit communities in the far north.
Natural
Disaster Relief and Recovery Arrangements (NDRRA) have been extended
to the local government areas of Cassowary Coast, Hinchinbrook, Hope
Vale, Palm Island and Wujal Wujal.
That
takes the number of councils eligible for assistance to 19.
Dam
release plans
Water
levels in southeast Queensland dams will be reduced to protect urban
areas from any flooding associated with ex-tropical cyclone Oswald.
Premier
Campbell Newman said water levels in Wivenhoe/Somerset and North Pine
dams would begin on Friday afternoon, as a precaution.
"We're
adopting a precautionary principle here," he told reporters.
Newman
said Wivenhoe dam was nowhere near the levels seen before the January
2011 flood.
He
said the dam's entire 1.42 megalitres of flood storage capacity was
still available, in addition to some capacity for drinking water
supplies.
But
Newman said he wanted to give the southeast the biggest buffer he
could to ensure the safety of residents, and the protection of their
property.
"I
am concerned, but I'm not worried," the premier said.
He
said that even without the dam drawdowns, he'd been assured that "we
have enough in that 1.4 megalitre flood storage compartment to take
what's coming".
But
he said Oswald and the low it has become had proven to be an
unpredictable weather system, and the drawdowns were about providing
additional security and peace of mind.
"Let's
make sure we look at what could happen, in the worst case," Mr
Newman said.
Newman
said the greatest risk at this time was considered to be urban
flooding in the usual low-lying areas close to creeks and stormwater
drains.
Asked
if he could categorically rule out a repeat of the 2010-11 floods he
replied: "Of course, nobody can do that."
But
he said with the capacity available in the dams that was extremely
unlikely.
Water
Supply Minister Mark McArdle said 41,000 megalitres would be released
from Wivenhoe dam over 24 hours from Friday afternoon and 8000
megalitres will be released from North Pine Dam over 11 hours from
Friday afternoon.
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