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2022 Floods

Support for flood affected communities in the Northern Rivers

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Support for flood affected communities in the Northern Rivers

As Northern Rivers communities prepare for recovery, RDA Northern Rivers is working to provide information to assist our communities as we move forward from this unprecedented flood event. We will continue to send updates and information as it becomes available.

Assistance available
Immediate assistance is available to businesses through Services Australia (https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/northern-nsw-floods-february-2022?context=60042) and Service NSW (https://www.service.nsw.gov.au/campaign/storm-and-flood-assistance-businesses).

The Australian Taxation Office has announced support including extra time to pay tax or lodge tax returns, activity statements or other obligations, and are prioritising any refunds owed to you (https://www.ato.gov.au/General/Support-in-difficult-times/).

The NSW Government disaster assistance website ( https://www.nsw.gov.au/disaster-recovery/disaster-relief-and-support )provides information and links to support for individuals, businesses, not for profit and community groups.

Information about financial assistance to individuals and families is available from Service NSW (https://www.service.nsw.gov.au/floods/financial-assistance).

Government announcements for long term flood recovery will be regularly updated the National Recovery and Resilience Agency website (https://www.nsw.gov.au/disaster-recovery/disaster-relief-and-support).

Access to up to date information and links to services are available through your local LGA emergency/disaster dashboard.

Tweed Emergency Dashboard
https://emergency.tweed.nsw.gov.au/

Lismore Disaster Dashboard
https://disaster.lismore.nsw.gov.au/

Clarence Disaster Dashboard
https://emergency.clarence.nsw.gov.au/

Byron Emergency Dashboard
https://emergency.byron.nsw.gov.au/

Richmond Valley Disaster Dashboard
https://richmondvalley.disasterdashboards.com/dashboard/overview

Kyogle Disaster Dashboard
https://kyogle.disasterdashboards.com/dashboard/overview

Ballina Disaster Dashboard
https://ballina.disasterdashboards.com/dashboard/overview

Donations
There are a number of organisations collecting donations to support the flood recovery.

Lismore City Council Flood Appeal (100% of donations to go to flood recovery)
Donations by direct deposit to:
Lismore City Council – Flood Appeal Account
BSB: 062 565
Account: 1086 4366

Red Cross Flood Appeal
https://www.redcross.org.au/floodsappeal/

Salvation Army Flood Appeal
https://www.salvationarmy.org.au/about-us/news-and-stories/media-newsroom/the-salvation-army-launches-flood-appeal-with-1-million-contribution/

Evacuation centres across the region may also be receiving donations of food, clothing, bedding and other items. Please check in with your local evacuation centre to find out what is needed.

We understand that Southern Cross University Evacuation City (Lismore) are in need of inflatable mattresses and blankets, toilet paper and bottled water. If you can help out with those items, head to the end of Rifle Range Road, East Lismore where the road will turn to the left 180 degrees. Please no clothes, they have enough.

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2022 Floods

Diary of a Flood Survivor

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Diary of a Flood Survivor Woodburn Service Station

Diary of a Flood Survivor

 

I feel like we must have been one of the first cars to get petrol at the newly-reopened service station at Woodburn.

They did not have their ATM lines up so were only taking cash.

As I walked into the shop, I could smell the newness of the plastic and products as I went to pay for the tank’s worth.

AND the price was the lowest I have seen in a long while.

No doubt, once the ATM lines are up and if they keep the same price, it will be a popular spot.

It makes the town feel like it is back on the road to healing.

Now we just need to see our IGA open and we will be all grown up again.

I recently went to the funeral of the wife of a friend.

It was a very poignant moment to see him reach out and gently touch the coffin next to where he sat in the church during the requiem mass.

Her children read out her own words that she had written about her life and it was interesting to note she was born in the middle of a flood in 1928.

From there, she remembered as a young wife and mother the devastation of 1954’s flood.

When we first arrived on the Northern Rivers, the 1954 flood was spoken about in hushed tones or a type of reverence at the enormity of it.

Without taking away from the devastation that happened during that flood, as many more people lost their lives, I don’t think I have the same awe for it as I once did, now having experienced the aftermath of the 2022 flood.

Little steps.

 

For more 2022 floods news, click here.

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2022 Floods

Two years on Annette has her keepsakes returned

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Matchbook Collection.

Two years on Annette has her keepsakes returned

 

By Samantha Elley

Most people who experienced the loss of personal items in the 2022 flood have come to terms with the fact they will never see them again.

Annette Dale of East Wardell was no different.

Her jar of matchbooks that she had been collecting since her twenties was a hobby of hers for forty years.

“My ex-husband and I would travel about to restaurants and nightclubs and I used to collect their matchbooks,” she said.

“I managed to salvage them in the first flood and put them in a shed, but then the second flood actually took my water tank.”

The second flood also took her collection of matchbooks, still in their jar.

“I hadn’t thought about them until half way through last year,” said Annette.

Fast forward to 2024 and Annette’s daughter Katelin was scrolling on her social media when she saw a post where a staff member from the Ramada in Ballina was looking for the owner of a jar of matchbooks.

“Spotted floating along the river during the floods. Ramada staff fished this jar out of the water. We would love to return this item to its owner.”

This was the sign on the jar.

Matchbook Collection.

Matchbook Collection.

“(Katelin) rang me and said ‘Mum, I have something of yours you lost in the floods’,” said Annette.

“I started crying and she filmed me when I got it back.”

That video was posted on the Wardell CORE Community Organised Resilience Effort page and Annette has been overwhelmed with all the positive comments and good wishes.

“To have my glass jar float all the way from East Wardell to the Ramada is amazing,” she said.

Annette said the flood waters didn’t affect Wardell until March 1 and she thought she was safe on a mound.

However, when she woke up that morning she realised she was on an island and needed rescuing.

“I got rescued on a jet ski by two (very handsome) men,” she said.

“It was a terrifying experience, it was a leap of faith and I prayed the whole time.”

For the next six months Annette lived with her daughter and son-in-law in Tuckombil until the house was in a decent state to move back into.

Having her long lost collection of match books back has lifted her spirits no end and she visited the Ramada last Friday to meet the staff who saved her keepsakes.

“I am totally grateful to the Ramada staff,” she said.

 

For more 2022 floods news, click here.

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2022 Floods

RC of Ballina-on-Richmond Temporary Home Project

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RC of Ballina-on-Richmond Temporary Home Project

RC of Ballina-on-Richmond Temporary Home Project

 

January 2023 the Rotary Club of Ballina-on-Richmond embarked on the biggest projects it has ever undertaken in its 38 years; The Temporary Housing Project which supplies small homes on people’s properties where their homes are unliveable due to the devastating floods of 2022.

A recovery team from the Rotary Club comprising Col Lee Flood Recovery coordinator, marketing and finance, Donella Kinnish  Project manager and Paul Sleeth builder was set up. The team is involved in all the interviews, site inspections and the building program.

RC of Ballina-on-Richmond Temporary Home Project

Temporary Home Project Kitchen

The criteria is: the applicant must have had their home flood affected and unliveable. They must have running water, a working toilet of some sort and some form of electricity which are State Government requirements.

The homes come as a flat pack and open out when raised. They are positioned  on footings concreted into the ground and elevated around 110-150ml off the ground to allow adequate air flow under the temporary house to limit mould. They are built in China, have all the electrics and ADR compliance carried out in Australia before the are transported to the site for erection.

They come with full security bars on the windows, LED lighting, multiple power points and 15 amp circuit breaker and wiring. The erection of the homes takes around 20 minutes after the crane truck positions the home on the footings . Once secured in place they are fitted out with a kitchenette, gas hot water service, fire alarm, microwave and fridge. Some also have showers added externally.

RC of Ballina-on-Richmond Temporary Home Project

Temporary Home Project

The project has supplied homes in all local LGAs with the latest 5 x homes going into Nimbin due to landslides . In all 36 homes have been supplied with a further two to be erected in Nimbin when the access to the properties dries out. Once completed it will be a $630,000 project providing a warm, secure and solid temporary home for up to five years.

A great advantage with this product is that once the recipients have repaired or replaced their original home to a liveable standard , the temporary home can be easily dismantled, transported and reused on another site where a natural disaster has occurred. Not going into landfill which is often the case for other temporary homes.

 

For more 2022 floods news, click here.

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