Morwell
mine fire: vulnerable residents advised to relocate
Health
chief urges pregnant women, elderly, young children and those with
lung conditions to leave the area as a precaution
"The
coalmine fire has been belching thick smoke since 9 February.
Photograph: Mike Keating/Newspix/REX
28 February, 2014
Vulnerable
people living near a raging coalmine fire in Morwell, still burning
three weeks after it was deliberately lit on 9 February, have been
advised to leave their homes.
Speaking
in Morwell on Friday, Victoria’s chief health officer Dr Rosemary
Lester advised “particularly at-risk groups” in south Morwell,
including pregnant women, the elderly, young children and anyone with
a pre-existing lung condition, to temporarily relocate from the area.
“We
are not currently seeing serious health effects from the smoke, such
as an increase in ambulance callouts or hospital attendances,” she
said. “Health impacts may change if vulnerable people continue to
be exposed to smoke.”
She
added that the advice was precautionary and that there had been no
significant increase in air danger.
The
Victorian premier, Denis Napthine, said there was “no compulsion”
for people to leave, and stressed that no evacuation had been called,
but said that some residents’ health might be in danger “based on
the prolonged exposure to the smoke and the prospect of further
exposure”.
The
premier said he understood the “frustration” of Morwell’s
13,000 residents, facing their 19th day living under a fog of smoke
and ash. “The government is leaving no stone unturned to fix the
problem, to provide support for the community, to provide support for
families, to look after the wellbeing of the people Morwell, and to
tackle the fire,” he said.
Earlier,
fire services commissioner Craig Lapsley told reporters the fire
would continue to belch thick smoke over the area for days. “We
still believe if everything progresses well the best-case scenario is
another 10 days before that fire is to a position that it won’t put
up significant smoke or ash over Morwell,” he said.
Victoria’s
Department of Human Services will make grants available to those
Morwell residents who wish to move, and extra police will be called
in to guard their homes.
Political
fallout from the fire looks set to linger long after the smoke
blanketing the rural Victorian town finally clears. Speaking in
Morwell on Thursday, Victorian deputy premier Peter Ryan said an
inquiry was needed to “get to the bottom” of the origins of the
massive fire, which is expected to continue burning for at least two
weeks.
“We
need to get to the bottom of why it has developed in the first place
and all the contributing factors to it and we need to learn from
this,” he said.
“I
have no doubt inquiries will be conducted in great detail by
respective agencies to make sure we get to the bottom of all of
this.”
Earlier,
the Environment Defenders Office (EDO) called for an independent
public inquiry into what it labelled a “major pollution and public
health incident”.
“It’s
time the local community around the mine and the Victorian public
were given some answers as to how this has been allowed to happen,”
Felicity Millner, EDO principal solicitor, said.
High
smoke alerts remained in place on Friday with air quality measured at
around 767, according to Victoria’s Environmental Protection
Authority, an improvement on scores of above 1,000 late on Thursday.
A reading above 150 is considered very poor.
Authorities
have given 25,000 face masks to locals but Lester, said on Thursday
that carbon monoxide levels were not yet high enough to trigger an
evacuation.
Morwell
residents have organised a rally on Sunday to demand compensation
from mine owner GDF Suez Australian Energy.
Five
hundred people are expected to attend the demonstration at
Immigration park in Morwell, where organisers will gather details on
health issues and the financial impact of the fire to form the basis
for a potential class action against the mine owners.
A
rally organiser, Nerissa Albon, said the disused part of the mine
that was currently ablaze was supposed to be covered with soil and
grass to prevent flammability.
She
said she had visited a solicitor about legal action on behalf of
Morwell residents.
“I
was advised to have a class action or royal commission, that we need
to have data from the people of Morwell,” Albon said.
“We
want to be compensated for loss of earnings, compensated for health
issues over the last two weeks.”
GDF
Suez said the mine’s rehabilitation, including the capping and
covering of disused coal pits, was “ongoing”, and that large
parts of the area currently on fire had already been “grassed” as
part of the program.
Police
on Wednesday gave chilling details of the massive fire’s origins.
Victorian police chief commissioner Ken Lay said it was believed the
firebug lit a “test fire” in Hazelwood on 28 January to study its
behaviour, before setting another in the area on the morning of 9
February.
The
arsonist then set three fires on the Strzelecki Highway at Driffield,
near Morwell, around 1.30pm on the Sunday, which spotted into the
Hazelwood open-cut coalmine and continues to burn.
“This
fire was set on the worst fire day for this year and had the
potential to cause an enormous amount of damage and loss of life,”
Lay told reporters.
Police
believe the person responsible was likely to be someone who lives or
works in the Latrobe Valley or wider Gippsland region, with the fires
lit along dirt tracks leading into plantations behind the highway
which also provided easy getaway routes.
“This
was someone with a vehicle, a mode of transport, to set three sets of
fire within a 15-minute period,” Inspector Mark Langham said.
The
test fires lit two weeks earlier were also in similar locations, set
within a few kilometres of each other on high fire-danger days, he
said.
“We
believe that there’s a bit of a systematic arsonist and we really
want to put a stop to this person very quickly,” Langham said.
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