'An
absolute weather bomb' - Severe flooding shuts 61 bridges across
Tolaga Bay
MetService said the area had moderate to heavy rain overnight, and the rivers would still be running high as the soil was too saturated to absorb any more water.
TVNZ,
5
June, 2018
Tolaga
Bay on the East Cape was hit the hardest by flooding on Sunday night,
while the 29 customers inland who lost power during the storm have
now had it restored.
MetService said the area had moderate to heavy rain overnight, and the rivers would still be running high as the soil was too saturated to absorb any more water.
Lines
company Eastland Power said it was having trouble getting to the
properties with road closures but it did have some crews on the
ground and hoped to return power to most customers later this
afternoon.
MetService
lead forecaster Michael Martens said Auckland, Northland, Coromandel
and Bay of Plenty - which also had a wet holiday weekend - also had
between 25 and 60 millimetres of rain overnight.
Twenty
families in Tolaga Bay spent the night with friends and neighbours
after evacuating their homes because of the flooding.
One
family of three was airlifted off their roof yesterday after being
stranded for four hours. Other households potentially at risk have
also been monitored.
Farmer
Mike Parker told Morning Report he took a look at the devastation
from a helicopter yesterday.
"We
just didn't realise that the devastation, like it was actually higher
than cyclone Bola which was very scary because where we are on the
Tolaga bay flats - we are probably the highest point of it and it's
been vey localised up the back of the Mangaheia River and
Tauwhareparae there.
"It's
sort of been an absolute weather bomb up there by the looks of it,"
he said.
"We
are just really in clean up mode, a lot of fences are down and yeah,
the tidy up is sort of starting really."
Tolaga
Bay farmer Dean Brensell said locals have been raising concerns for
years about the remains of forestry operations - know as slash.
The
slash caused widespread damage along the East Coast during the
weekend's storm when it clogged up the Waiomoko river - flowing into
paddocks and onto roads.
"There
has been meetings here in huis here in Uawa regarding issues the
community have raised about the amount of wood, so it's definitely
been an ongoing thing and not just here in Uawa, in lots of parts of
Gisborne and the coast especially, it's definitely been raised with
the council prior to this," Mr Brensell said.
Resident
Linda Goff said she woke up to find a river of water around 3m deep
running underneath her elevated house.
"We
had a huge big cage trailer and we found out that it's down in the
river, and that's moved from behind a bus and been dragged right out
.. it's just the power of these logs ... this would not have happened
if these logs were not left to be washed down into our rivers,"
Ms Goff said.
Tairawhiti
Civil Defence emergency manager Lousie Bennett said she does not
anticipate needing to move more people.
Ms
Bennett said she hoped to be going from response to recovery mode
today.
Niwa's
principal weather forecaster Chris Brandolino said he doesn't expect
much more rain today.
"There
will be some across the Bay of Plenty, but nothing like we saw over
the long weekend," he said.
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