On top of record heat and bushfires comes floods and now tornadoes in another part of Australia
Queensland
battered
Mini-tornados
hit Queensland
26
January, 2013
Three
tornados have ripped through the Bundaberg region this afternoon,
injuring 17 people and damaging 150 properties.
The
first tornado struck the coastal town of Bargara about 1pm (3pm NZT),
bringing down powerlines, tearing off roofs and smashing windows.
A
man and a woman were seriously injured when their car was crushed by
a falling tree. Both have been airlifted to Brisbane in a critical
condition.
The
second tornado hit Burnett Heads, about five kilometres north of
Bargara, about 3.30pm, before tracing back towards the suburbs of
Bundaberg.
Soon
after, the sleepy seaside hamlet of Coonar, about 6 kilometres south
of Bargara, was hit by a third tornado.
Emergency
Services Minister Jack Dempsey said that a triage centre had been set
up in Bargara to treat 15 other people injured by flying glass and
debris.
"It's
certainly an Australia Day no one in Bundaberg will ever forget,"
he said.
"The
fact that these tornados are completely unpredictable...we can't say
whether they're finished or whether more or coming.
"People
are shocked. They're anxious and the Queensland Ambulance Service has
taken a number of calls from residents with anxiety."
Dempsey
said thousands of homes were without power and efforts to repair
powerlines were hampered by the risk associated with being outside.
"We're
telling everyone to stay inside because we don't know what's coming
over the next 24 hours," he said.
"That
makes it difficult for workers to clean up and repair power lines.
But we're hoping power can be restored overnight."
Bargara
resident Judith McNamara, who witnessed the tornado through her
kitchen window, said it left a car in her yard with a tree through
it.
"All
of a sudden ... I looked up and a tree went flying through the air
... and the car went up," she told ABC radio.
Police
Commissioner Ian Stewart said it damaged homes, shops, a bowling club
and government buildings.
All
roads into the town are closed.
Dempsey
said Bundaberg was still bracing itself for possible flooding from
the Burnett River and said he expected many residents would
experience a sleepless night waiting to see what the weather brings.
"For
this event to have happened here on top of everything else that's
going on...no one can believe it," he said.
Emergency
flood alerts have been issued across Queensland with people in some
areas told to get to higher ground.
Among
them were residents of Gladstone, a town of about 30,000 people, who
were warned by authorities that thousands of homes could be flooded
as the Boyne River swelled to a one-in-100-year level.
The
Local Disaster Management Group at Gladstone advised flood levels
along the Boyne River would exceed one-in-100 flood levels on the
morning high tide at 8.45am (NZT 10.45am) and evening high tide at
9pm (NZT 11pm).
Residents
had been door knocked by SES teams who advised them to leave their
homes and seek higher ground.
Meanwhile,
500km south in Brisbane, people were on standby for the city's worst
flooding since 2011.
Extremely
heavy rainfall, storm tides and Wivanhoe Dam releases have put
low-lying areas at risk of flooding and this morning Lord Mayor
Graham Quirk announced three new temporary sandbag depots; two in
Sandgate and one in Lota, on Brisbane's bayside.
These
were in addition to the permanent depots in Newmarket, Balmoral,
Darra and Virginia.
The
Bureau of Meteorology had issued a severe weather warning for the
area this weekend with damaging winds, heavy rainfall, abnormally
high tides and dangerous surf conditions.
It
said tides were expected to be almost a metre higher than those
listed on tide charts.
"This
is about being alert, but I urge residents to not be alarmed,"
Quirk said.
"We
will continue to monitor the situation closely over the weekend and I
want people to still go out and have a good day on Australia Day,
they simply need to be prepared 'just in case'."
The
Saturday morning storm tides were also expected to put up to 1600
homes in danger of being inundated in the coastal Moreton Bay region,
north of Brisbane.
Moreton
Bay Regional Council Mayor Allan Sutherland said on Friday the
council and SES were door-knocking homes in some of the areas at
greatest risk.
''These
potentially dangerous storm tides are associated with the ex-tropical
cyclone Oswald which could also dump up to 400mm of rain on the
Moreton region this weekend,'' the mayor said in a statement.
Sand
and sandbags were available for areas potentially affected by storm
tides at SES depots on Bribie Island, at Deception Bay and Redcliffe,
he said.
Former
Cyclone Oswald has been causing flooding across the state since
Tuesday, when it crossed Cape York Peninsula's west coast and was
downgraded to a low-pressure system.
Many
Australia Day celebrations have been cancelled across the state due
to the extreme weather.
Elsewhere,
an emergency flood alert was issued on Saturday morning and residents
of Tannum Sands and Boyne Island, at the mouth of the Boyne river,
were being asked to evacuate.
The
Bureau of Meteorology said about 4.8 metres of water was gushing over
the nearby Awoonga Dam into the Boyne River, and levels over the
spillway may reach six metres during Saturday with further continued
rainfall.
West
of Gladstone, over 370 mm fell at Boolaroo Tops, 347mm fell at
Kroombit Tops 347mm in the Boyne catchment, and Captain Creek 307mm
in the Baffle Creek catchment.
Flood
warnings had been issued for the Calliope, Boyne, Baffle and Kolan
Rivers.
The
Local Disaster Management Group at Gladstone said flood levels along
the Boyne River were to exceed one in 100 flood levels on the morning
high tide at 8.45am (AEST) on Saturday and evening high tide at 9pm.
Residents
at Callide Creek, 600km north of Brisbane, were urged to move to
higher ground at the nearby Jambin Hall as a flood release from the
Callide Dam was tipped to reach 1.5 metres.
People
in the coastal towns of Toorbul and Meldale, between Brisbane and the
Sunshine Coast, were meanwhile issued with a watch and act notice,
with the Department of Community Safety warning the communities are
likely to be affected by a dangerous storm surge caused by
ex-tropical cyclone Oswald at 9am.
Meanwhile,
a 22-year-old man who had been stranded for 24 hours by flooding on a
roadside in Queensland's northeast was plucked to safety by a
helicopter on Friday night.
The
man had been driving from Charters Towers to Mackay when his car
became bogged, before rising floodwater left him stranded on the side
of Suttor Development Road around 5pm on Thursday, the RACQ said.
The
man couldn't be reached by road rescuers, so the RACQ CQ Rescue
helicopter was sent to his aid just before 5pm on Friday.
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