Once again, a pity this wasn't timed for the G20
Army
mobilised to help cleanup after Brisbane’s freak storm
28
November, 2014
SIX
people have been trapped inside a Brisbane house since the storm hit
yesterday, with police telling them it’s too dangerous to leave
their home.
Louise
McBryde cowered under a table as her next door neighbours’ roof
ripped off and landed on her house at Herston on the corner of Clyde
and Scott roads.
“I
was hiding under the table in the middle room because I knew
something bad was happening,” Ms McBryde said.
“It
was like hearing a train screeching on the tracks and then this
really weird swooshing noise.”
That
was the sound of the roof tearing off the neighbouring apartment
block, trapping them inside the house.
Unfortunately
Ms McBryde estimates almost two-thirds of her house has received
extensive water damage, including short-stay accommodation she runs
on the bottom level.
“Two-thirds
of the house was a waterfall because the sheeting iron and big,
wooden roofing beams flew and javelined into the roof so there’s
lots of holes in the roof,” she said.
“The
bathroom is sort of dangerous because the VJ has been pushed down and
may collapse.
“There’s
just water everywhere, my kids’ rooms are all wrecked.”
Ms
McBryde said her neighbours have run a power lead from their house
into hers, and have been keeping them stocked up on necessities –
coffee, food and wine.
“The
neighbours have been great, they’ve been bringing us coffee and
somebody has gone on a run to get us some food.”
The
six don’t know how long they’ll be housebound for, and any time
they step on the veranda police firmly direct them back inside.
“The
police get very angry at us because we keep going outside (but) we’re
going stir-crazy,” Ms McBryde joked.
“There’s
tin sheeting that is in the fig trees and on our roof that is a
danger I guess and the wind is picking up so they don’t want
anybody outside.”
Deathy-defying
experience as unit disintegrates
A
RESIDENT of Toowong’s Scenic Point apartments narrowly escaped
death when the roof was torn off the building above him and the
ceiling collapsed behind him as he dashed out the fire exit.
Tin
roof sheeting and insulation is hanging from trees outside the
apartment, while timber frames from the ceiling have been thrown to
the ground and crushed a neighbouring fence.
He said with more rain predicted to come he was concerned about the integrity of the rest of the building.
Council ‘refused’ to remove tree that fell on car
Classrooms hit by hailstorm damage
AT
Yeronga State High School, cricket ball-sized hail smashed through
thousands of windows with enough force to leave shards strewn across
the classrooms and even embedded in the wall.
Principal
Terry Heath said students had been in the rooms just an hour and a
half before the hail crashed into the school “like missiles”, but
fortunately no one was hurt.
“I
was shocked at the amount of damage mother nature can bring to a
school,” he said.
“The
shear strength of the storm not just cracked windows, but cracked
windows with shards of glass through the rooms.
“Almost
every classroom in the school has been affected.”
He
said teachers and parents had been at the school since 6am to clean
up the devastation.
The
damage bill is unknown, but roofs have been cracked, carpets need to
be replaced due to the shards of glass, while windows will be
repaired.
Grade
8 and 9 students will be housed in makeshift classrooms untouched by
the storm, while the school term was already expected to end today
for older students.
Roof
blown off Brisbane church
A
BRISBANE church is facing a huge repair bill after yesterday’s
storms tore off its roof.
Those
in the area were lucky to escape injury when part of the steel roof
atop the Australian Christian Church at Annerley flew about 100
metres along Ipswich Road.
Another chunk of the roof landed in a neighbour’s backyard, while the remainder was left hanging to the framework by a thread.
It is understood the damage to the church’s interior is extensive, with electrical equipment ruined in the absence of a roof.
A
resident of the property where part of the roof fell told The
Courier-Mail of the scenes she saw.
“I
went to get a drink of water from the kitchen and the next minute I
heard the windows smash from all the hail,” Sunita Glykidis said.
“I
just ran away, otherwise the glass would have got me ... everything
was coming in.
“I
went out onto the balcony and was recording and I could hear this
noise and then bang (as the roof flew into their property).
“It
came off bit by bit.”
Ms
Glykidis said the church, who own their property, had advised them to
not stay at the house for safety purposes, with part of the roof
still in a position to fly away.
“They
told us it wasn’t safe to stay here but everything was booked out.”
Supermarket dumps tonnes of food
A
SOUTHEAST Queensland supermarket has thrown out tonnes of food after
power was cut by the storm.
Couriermail.com.au
reader Ajo Ozman snapped the pictures of the thrown out food outside
Coles at Forest Lake. See
more pics here.
Injury toll from Brisbane hailstorm
CAMPBELL
Newman says the supercell storm that hit Brisbane injured 39 people,
with 12 taken to hospital.
But
none of the 39 were seriously injured, including those who needed
hospital care.
He
said one of those injured was an ambulance officer who suffered cuts
when a large hail stone smashed through the window of an ambulance
while she was out on a job. Earlier, soldiers hit the streets of
storm-ravaged Brisbane to help clean up after the state’s worst
storm in decades, after 141km/h winds, large hail stones and heavy
rain battered the city.
In
latest developments:
*Premier
Campbell Newman described it as the worst storm to hit Brisbane since
1985.
*
Energex says 70,000 homes are without power this morning.
*
More than a dozen schools are closed, mostly in Brisbane’s south.
*
Thousands of residents are assessing the damage to homes, businesses
and vehicles.
*
All trains lines have resumed normal operations except the Ipswich,
Rosewood and Springfield lines.
Soldiers
were sent out about 2.30am to assist with the clean-up.
Premier
Campbell Newman last night urgently headed out to assess damage at
Woolloongabba, after the full force of the extreme cell was exposed.
“We’re
getting in as many people as we can on the job this evening,” Mr
Newman said last night.
“Troops
from the Enoggera Army Barracks will be supporting the SES, who are
also coming in from outlying areas outside southeast Queensland and
other areas outside the Brisbane government local area.”
Mr
Newman described it as the worst storm to hit Brisbane since 1985.
“It
is a very significant storm. The Insurance Council have declared a
catastrophic weather event and are mobilising their collective
disaster arrangements the belief at this stage is it is the bigger
than the Gap, I think that is safe to say. Sadly, I am calling it the
biggest storm that has hit Brisbane since 1985.”
Mr
Newman said he new the minute the storm hit it was going to be
catastrophic for the city.
“I
was quite scared. I thought this is big, this is huge This is a
really big event. I was worried for the people of this city,” he
said
He
said he called the Defence Minister personally to request help.
Up
to 200 SES volunteers, 60 Rural Fire Service Queensland volunteers
and 194 urban firefighters will work with police and soldiers to
assess and repair damage.
There
have been more than 1400 requests for assistance to date, with much
of the requests concentrated in the Moorooka and Annerley areas.
It
is expected to take several days to fulfil these requests and SES
volunteers will work, mostly in the eastern suburbs of Brisbane
today.
Firefighters
have responded to 475 storm-related incidents since 4pm yesterday.
.
Most destructive storm since 1985
The
fierce storm was detected on the radar just after lunchtime, but it
wasn’t until afternoon peak hour that Brisbane’s inner south and
CBD was smashed.
Rapid
rainfall, winds of 141km/h and hail culminated into a horror event
for commuters and home owners and left insurance companies with
thousands of claims.
Insurance
Council of Australia spokesman Campbell Fuller said the storm had
been declared a catastrophic weather event with insurers receiving
2000 calls within hours of the storm.
Weather
forecaster Amber Young said: “For Brisbane it’s the worst storm
since the 2008 Gap storm which only hit western suburbs, but this
carved out a considerable path.”
Just
after lunchtime the cell was detected and a severe thunderstorm
warning was issued about 2pm as the storm bore down on the Gold Coast
hinterland.
The
storm didn’t lose any power as it surged towards Boonah and
Beaudesert about 3pm.
A
wind gust of 141km/h was detected at Archerfield about 4.30pm which
alerted the bureau to just how powerful one of the storm cells had
become and the warnings were escalated to alert public, police and
emergency services.
That
storm cell cut a destructive path through the southeast, hitting
Archerfield first where it tossed at least five light planes around
like toys.
With
the storm moving at 30km/h, Inala, Corinda, Annerley and
Woolloongabba were next in the firing line, with trees toppled,
motorists trapped in cars, power lines down and roofs peeled from
buildings.
Hail
the size of cricket balls pelted inner-city areas just as 5pm peak
hour kicked off.
All
trains out of the CBD were suspended with some passengers trapped
inside carriages for three hours with reports people fainted.
From
Inala through to the CBD and up to Brighton, 30 to 50mm of rain fell
in just 15 to 30 minutes as the storm caused flash flooding.
The
damage was so severe at All Hallows’, Brisbane Grammar School, St
Joseph’s on Gregory Terrace, St Lawrence’s, Somerville House, St
Sebastian’s at Yeronga, St Joseph’s at Kangaroo Point, Mary
Immaculate at Annerley, St Brendan’s at Moorooka, Windsor State
School, Yeronga State School and Yeronga State High School that
school has been cancelled today. Our Lady’s College at Annerley is
closed for students in years 8 and 9.
And
fire broke out on a bus at All Hallows in the aftermath of the storm
last night.
Even
superstar Katy Perry’s plans were interrupted, with her concert at
the Brisbane Entertainment Centre delayed.
The
trough continued through the northern suburbs and up to the Sunshine
Coast where it lost steam around Wide Bay.
Suburbs
awash with debris
ROOFS
shredded, walls were punctured by hailstones and lawns were blanketed
with debris as a ferocious storm cell barrelled through the southeast
yesterday, battering suburban homes and businesses.
More
than 500 power lines were down and 76,000 properties in Brisbane
(more than 88,000 in the greater Brisbane region) were without power
last night in the wake of the fiercest cell to strike the area since
2008.
Colin
and Margaret Reid, from West End, said they were mopping up their
sodden lounge room when, “next thing”, the roof peeled off. With
hail bearing down, they took refuge underneath an air-conditioning
duct in the corridor. “We couldn’t get into the bathroom because
the wind was pushing the door shut,” Mrs Reid said.
Mr
Reid, who previously lived in north Queensland, said it was worse
than “any cyclone” he’d experienced.
The
scenes on the streets outside indeed resembled the wake of a cyclone.
Police warned that traffic congestion was hampering crews trying to
reach the stricken areas, telling motorists to delay all
“non-essential travel”.
Paramedics
last night confirmed a woman was struck on the back by a large tree
in South Bank.
A
spokesman said she was conscious and alert and had been taken to the
Princess Alexandra Hospital.
A
Queensland Fire and Emergency Service Brisbane officer said “every”
available firetruck had been sent out on the road as crews scrambled
to incidents.
At
least five light aircraft were “flipped or pushed on to others”
at Archerfield Airport. A spokesman said several doors were blown off
hangars, including one that landed 150m away.
Airport
general manager Corrie Metz last night said the airport would be
impacted for “several hours” while debris was cleared.
The
widespread havoc was captured on social media, with users uploading
images of trees snapped and cars with their windows shattered across
the suburbs.
At
Woolloongabba in Brisbane’s inner-south, residents emerged to
discover sheets of corrugated iron tossed on the road after being
torn from a home.
Meanwhile,
residents at the Regis Yeronga aged care facility were left with
power cut, cracked windows and drenched carpet.
The
West End Uniting Church on Vulture St also had its roof blown off.
Across
the river, firefighters were called out to a building on Coronation
Drive after its roof collapsed. A QFES spokeswoman confirmed there
were no reports of anybody trapped inside.
A disaster is an absolutely dreaded event that is unexpected and can befall upon unquestionably anyone on this planet. We as humans can come up with precautionary measures like stocking up food in storage, building sturdy building foundation, and so on but if the disaster decides to strike us, it still will. We just have to keep our chins up and recover from the tragedy and stay strong to keep on moving forward.
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