Saturday 19 March 2022

One Quote, One YouTube Video & four Tweets of the Week



I’m still wearing the same glasses, and the same suits,” Morrison said, in reference to Albanese’s new look. I’m happy in my own skin … When you’re prime minister you can’t pretend to be someone else.” [Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, quoted in The Guardian, March 2022]


 



Friday 18 March 2022

If Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison thought his partisan funding decision in the middle of a national emergency would go unnoticed, he has been daily disabused of that notion


ABC News, 17 March 2022:


NSW Liberal MLC Catherine Cusack says she is 'outraged' by Scott Morrison's announcement only some LGAs will be eligible for disaster payments.(ABC News)



A Liberal upper house MP is resigning and a Northern Rivers mayor has gone to the Governor-General over concerns about perceived favouritism in the allocation of federal flood assistance.


The neighbouring flood-affected LGAs of Ballina, Byron and Tweed – all in the Labor-held seat of Richmond – have not received the extra $2,000 per person support.


Ballina Mayor Sharon Cadwallader said she supported the need for targeted funding, but the delay in emergency funding to hundreds of people in her region was not good enough.


"Why can't our people be supported now when they need it?" she said.


Ms Cadwallader met Governor-General David Hurley last week when he visited the flood-ravaged Northern Rivers region, including parts of the Ballina shire.


She decided to phone Governor-General Hurley again on Wednesday after "getting the run around" between ministers and government officials over the past week over the funding.


"He said: 'Haven't you got it yet?' And I said: 'No, we haven't your Excellency.'


"I've been doing lots of lobbying and getting nowhere."


In a statement, a spokesman from the Governor-General's office said General Hurley "is not involved in and does not intervene in operational or policy decisions" but noted he was "struck by the scale of the devastation and inspired by the grit, determination and generosity of the response".


Liberal MLC intends to quit


This issue of additional emergency disaster funding has been the catalyst for North Coast-based Liberal MLC Catherine Cusack to announce she will leave Parliament.


"The idea that being a flood victim in a National Party-held seat makes you more worthy than a flood victim who is in the Richmond electorate ... is probably the most unethical approach I have ever seen," she said.


Ms Cusack has been a vocal critic of her party before, crossing the floor on koala policy.


She said she has informed the Premier and Liberal Party state director of her decision and understood there would be a preselection process to follow.


"I can't defend it and I'm outraged by it."…..


"The whole Northern Rivers should have been given funding according to their need, not according to their LGA, it's unprecedented."


Ms Cusack was elected to the upper house in 2019, with her term due to end in 2027…... 



The Guardian, 17 March 2022:


Cusack, an outspoken upper house MP who represents the north coast, said she had informed the party’s state director of her intention to resign as soon as the party was able to hold a preselection for her position.


I am so tired of it,” she said. “I don’t want to spend all day attacking and sounding bitter. I am not bitter – I just don’t fit into the new Liberal party culture and it drained all my energy trying.


It’s an enormous relief to step away from it.”


While initial reports suggested Cusack would immediately quit, she told Guardian Australia she would wait until local branch members were able to vote for her replacement, both out of respect for her colleagues and to ensure “a constitutional preselection”.


You may have noticed the Liberal Party finding it difficult to have aconstitutional preselection even for federal seats,” she said.


The NSW Nationals MP for Tweed, Geoff Provest, told local ABC radio he had lost faith in Morrison, saying he was “disgusted with the prime minister”.


I just think the federal government has really messed this up … I can put it no other way, they’ve lost the faith of the people,” he said.


Whether in the caravan parks or one of the little villages, there’s a real venom out there directed at the prime minister that he doesn’t understand what’s occurring on the ground. This is like a remake of the bushfires some two years ago.”


He said the decision to exclude residents in his seat and neighbouring Ballina was “deplorable”.


You just have to drive around the area to talk to the people to see they’ve lost everything,” he said.


The federal government is disconnected with the good people of Australia and we’re paying the price for it here … I think they should hang their heads in shame.”…..


NOTE: My yellow highlighting throughout.


In which Scott Morrison backpedals furiously in the face of Northern NSW anger – finally realising that it can be politically dangerous to test the patience of this region


Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, Senator Bridget McKenzie, Ministerial Media Release

Release Date

17 March 2022


Additional Commonwealth financial assistance made available for flood victims in Ballina, Byron, Kyogle and Tweed


More support is now available for families, farms and businesses affected by the catastrophic flooding disaster in northern NSW as part of an additional package of support from the Commonwealth Government.


The National Recovery and Resilience Agency (NRRA) and Emergency Management Australia have further assessed the flood extent area, the proportion of the populations affected, the latest residential impact assessments and the proportion of population seeking assistance for Disaster Recovery Payments to declare the Ballina, Byron, Kyogle and Tweed Local Government Areas (LGAs) impacted areas in need of additional support.


This next phase of support includes:


  • An additional two weekly disaster payments - known as Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment (AGDRP) Special Supplement - for affected residents in Ballina, Byron, Kyogle and Tweed will be automatically paid to those who have already claimed and received the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment, at the current rate of $1,000 per adult and $400 per child. These payments will be made from 22 March.


Minister for Emergency Management and National Recovery and Resilience Senator the Hon Bridget McKenzie said the NRRA has undertaken assessments of the affected areas and as a result the government had agreed to extend the AGDRP in the Northern Rivers Region.


As the full scale and impact to these areas in northern NSW is being realised, the Liberal and Nationals Government is implementing this extra support as quickly as possible,” Minister McKenzie said…..


Full media release here.



Funding announcement delayed to meet election campaigning needs of Prime Minister 'Scotty The Announcer'  Morrison and time required to compare proposed grants with Minister for Emergency Management Bridget McKenzie's Coalition electorates white board?


News.com.au, 16 March 2022:


Flood-ravaged families in NSW will be offered $10,000 “back home” grants to rebuild their homes as thousands face months living in tents and caravans.


But a bitter war of words has broken out between the NSW Government and the Morrison Government over the announcement, with state MPs accusing the Prime Minister of holding up the cash relief as he campaigns in Western Australia.


The $1 billion plan is being finalised in a 50:50 split with the Morrison Government ahead of the May budget…..


The $1 billion “back home” program was signed off on by the NSW government in the last 24 hours at an extraordinary meeting of the expenditure review committee.


According to federal sources, it was sent to the Morrison Government on Wednesday morning.


Late last night, the Prime Minister’s office confirmed the $10,000 grants were under “urgent” consideration.


The NSW Government’s proposal documentation was received this morning by the National Recovery and Resilience Agency and is under urgent consideration by the Commonwealth Government to ensure it meets both governments’ objectives to deliver immediate and longer term relief and support,” a spokesperson said.


The Commonwealth Government hopes to finalise the details of the additional support very shortly.”



Somehow I don't think Scotty has heard the last of his monumentally inadequate Flood Feb-Mar 2022 National Emergency response....


Thursday 17 March 2022

NSW SES Commissioner admits Perrottet Government's increased efficiency dividends required restructuring to meet operating budget cuts that meant “transformation did result in a reduction in staff” and had harmed “connection and support to units” by 2022

 

In March 2022 the NSW State Emergency Service website shows that SES Northern Zone controls 60 SES Units from the Newcastle-Hunter region up to the NSW-Qld border. 


A total of 28 of those emergency service units are in the roughly 100km wide coastal zone in the north east of the state: Ballina, Broadwater, Casino, Coraki, Kyogle, Lismore City, Mullumbimby, Murwillumbah, Tabulam, Tweed Coast, Tweed Heads, Urbenville, Woodburn, Bellingen, Brushgrove, Coffs Harbour City, Copmanhurst, Corindi, Dorrigo, Grafton City, Lawrence, Maclean, Nambucca, Nymboida, Ulmarra, Urunga, Wooli-Yuraygir and YambaUnits appear to be typically housed in basic one, two to three bay sheds. 


All SES Northern Zone units are under the control of a former member of the Australian Federal Police and current Chief Superintendent, NSW State Emergency Service - from headquarters at 72 Turton Street, Metford NSW 2323 on an industrial estate in the Newcastle region, roughly 404km as the crow flies from Yamba and even further away from Richmond Valley, Lismore, Ballina, Byron and Tweed local government areas.


The Guardian, 16 March 2022:


State Emergency Service units in some of the hardest-hit flood areas in northern New South Wales had warned the closure of regional offices in 2020 would reduce their ability to respond to natural disasters.

Communication between the SES units and senior levels of the organisation reveals tension about a restructure which was blamed on NSW government budget cuts.

In November 2020, 12 SES units in the Northern Rivers and Richmond valley wrote to the commissioner warning that a restructure “threaten[ed] the continued existence of units … and the future of the service”.

The complaint was spearheaded by the Kyogle SES unit and co-signed by unit commanders including in Ballina, Broadwater, Casino, Coraki, Lismore, Mullumbimby, Murwillumbah, and Richmond Tweed – some of the towns worst affected by the recent floods. [my yellow highlighting]

In response, the SES commissioner, Carlene York, conceded that “transformation did result in a reduction in staff” and had harmed “connection and support to units”.

However this was necessary to meet government savings targets,” she said.

In the 2018 budget, the then NSW treasurer and now premier, Dominic Perrottet, increased the “efficiency dividend” for government departments from 2% to 3%.

Unions warned at the time the measure would cost jobs and hurt services, but the government justified it on the basis it would “reduce back-office costs and focus expenditure where it is needed most”.

The response by the state SES and Australian Defence Force to what authorities describe as a one-in-500-year flood has been sluggish, prompting criticism that local communities were left to conduct their own rescues and clean-up.


If readers are interested in a stroll back through NSW strong wind, storm, flood, and bushfire history from 2016 to the present day they can go to https://www.ses.nsw.gov.au/news/ and start scrolling.


UPDATE:


ABC News, 16 March 2022:


We are told from a young age that in a life-threatening situation, we should call triple zero and help will come.


But for hundreds, if not thousands, of northern New South Wales residents, their desperate pleas for help at the height of the floods went unanswered.


Those who still had a dry phone and service to call triple zero were told via a recorded message:


"Emergency Triple Zero in New South Wales is extremely busy due to extreme weather conditions. If you require Police, Fire or Ambulance attendance please stay on the line. For State Emergency Service call 132 500, for non-emergency police assistance call 131 444."


But when they rang the SES number, they were met with another recorded message telling them they would receive a call-back.


For the majority, that vital call-back took several hours, even days.


Communications and Security Commander for the New South Wales Police, Assistant Commissioner Stacey Maloney, said the number of emergency calls received on the morning of Monday, February 28, exceeded any other date on record.


She said the recorded message was played on connection to triple zero to "facilitate a timely response to calls from people requiring emergency assistance".


The SES admitted it was completely over-run, with 374 calls for help in just 30 minutes on Monday morning, and volunteers had to prioritise requests.


By the following day, there had been an estimated 2,000 calls for assistance across the Northern Rivers.


Calls for inquiry into handling of triple zero calls

The State Member for Lismore, Janelle Saffin, was one of the many residents whose calls for help at the peak of the floods went unanswered.


"That was terrifying for people," she said.


"Triple zero is the last port of call when there's an emergency and if you don't get answered or you get diverted or you get cut off – that just cuts off your lifeline."


Ms Saffin said there needed to be answers about what went wrong to ensure there is not a repeat in future disasters.


"Can you imagine being in a house, in an attic, on a roof, ringing – if you could – and either being cut-off, not getting through, being diverted, that would be just the most terrible feeling," she said.


"I don't know why [it happened], but that's one thing that clearly has to be answered in an inquiry."


Few in the region doubt the death toll would have been catastrophic had it not been for the heroic efforts of civilians in their tinnies, kayaks and jet skis.


After her own rescue, Lismore resident Sally Flannery used social media to collect hundreds of messages for help, that were then triaged and published online to inform the rescue effort.


"I tried to call SES and I couldn't get through and then I never received a call back and I thought, how many people is this happening to?" she said…...


Wednesday 16 March 2022

NSW Flood February-March 2022: long wait for flood insurance assessments of damaged properties & independent review of emergency services response

 

Grafton NSW
IMAGE: Sydney Morning Herald, 1 March 2022















The Daily Examiner online, 13 March 2021:


The words on the wooden sign have become a symbol of what the Tucabia couple say they’ve repeatedly faced with their insurer in an attempt to save the two-storey house they’ve owned for 30 years.


They’re one of many flood-hit families that have filled the nearby town of Grafton, with insurance delays causing them to keep extending their temporary accommodation.


All but one hotel in Grafton was running at capacity on Friday – with owners largely attributing that to an influx of emergency service workers and newly homeless flood victims from throughout the region.


The clean and tidy Quality Inn Grafton is a far cry from the horrid stench of Suzanne and David Larkin’s water-edge house some 20 minutes away, which was flooded in water half way up its second floor.


It’s devastating, there’s no other way to put it,” Ms Larkin said.


Everything is ruined.”


She said her free-range chickens were cramped in a tiny cage and her rescue dogs were traumatised.


All that’s sentimental is gone,” she said.


She said most days she had spent hours on hold to her insurance company, AAMI, only to have to explain her situation to a new person each time.


That person kept pushing back the house assessment date, pushing the chances of her home being demolished higher each time.


She said AAMI had agreed to cover their temporary accommodation cost until March 30, but the couple expected they’d live in Grafton up to two more months.


The government says it’ll give us a rental grant, but have you seen the market around here,” Ms Larkin said.


Where are the houses?”


It appears they’re not alone.


Quality Inn Grafton owner Janelle Boekman said the majority of her rooms were full of homeless families from nearby towns seeking refuge, and a large portion of them complained of similar delays with insurance companies.


It seems the companies are prioritising other areas and it’s got a lot of people upset, which is really hard to see,” Ms Boekman said.


Abbey Motor Inn Grafton manager Grant Cornish said he had been turning dozens of people away who were looking for temporary accommodation while waiting on insurers.


This town is chockers – it could do with a few more hotels at the moment,” he said.


Although frustrating insurance delays were disrupting many lives, insurance expert from Compare the Market Steven Zeller said there was no simple solution.


Insurers have been inundated with well above 80,000 claims across NSW and Queensland and it’s putting absolute pressure on them,” he said.


They’re trying to get additional staff to help with the shortage and get assessors out, but they might be isolating due to Covid, there could be difficulty getting out to these areas, there are many reasons.”


Mr Zeller said there was a double whammy of a serious supply shortage that posed challenges for insurers trying to access building materials and tradesman.


So even when an assessor gets out, you’re likely to experience a delay for several more months to have your property fixed,” he said.


We’re all in a waiting game here.”


In terms of salvaging homes before it’s too late, Mr Zeller said people could take off damaged carpets and furniture to ease some dampness but could not go “knocking down walls” until the place was assessed.


Suncorp Group, which own AAMI insurance, said it has increased staff to help with the flood response in NSW and Queensland, where it had received more than 32,000 claims.


The most claims came from Lismore, Chinderah and Murwillumbah in NSW and Deagon, Aspley and Everton Park in Queensland.


Suncorp Group CEO Steve Johnston said it had created a new dedicated flood response and recovery team that relied on aerial imagery, real-time data and on the ground insights to direct the right support.


We recognise the scale of this flooding emergency, and the devastating impact it has had on so many people and communities, many of whom are facing a long road to recovery,” Mr Johnston said.....


NSW flood emergency response scrutinised


AAP General News Wire, 13 March 2022:


NSW Emergency Services Minister Steph Cooke says all aspects of the emergency services response to the flood crisis will be examined in an independent review.


An independent review of the NSW government's response to the state's flood crisis will determine what mistakes were made and what can be improved, the emergency services minister says.


"I think we can always do better next time," Step Cooke told Sydney radio 2GB on Monday.


There are now 8000 Australian Defence Force personnel in NSW ensuring supplies reach communities that are still cut off by floodwaters, as well as helping with the massive clean-up operation.


However, there has been criticism of how long it took to deploy troops to help with the crisis and questions are being asked about who is to blame.


SES commissioner Carlene York has also faced questions about why civilian rescue helicopters were left grounded across the state as floodwaters inundated the Northern Rivers.


Ms Cooke says all aspects of the emergency services response will be examined, adding it's a complex issue.


The review will determine why it took so long to get troops on the ground in the Northern Rivers to help thousands of people whose homes were inundated with flood waters.


"The deployment of ADF troops is something that will be considered as part of that review," Ms Cooke said.


"If there are ways that we need to do things differently in the future to ensure that our communities have the maximum amount of notice to prepare and our response is timely and is where it is needed, when it is needed, then that is something that will benefit communities right across NSW."


Ms York says worse than forecast weather explained why civilian rescue helicopters were not called to help with the crisis.


Emergency crews were only expecting minor to moderate flooding in the region; less than had inundated the north coast last year.


"We resourced appropriately on those levels," Ms York said on Sunday.


Instead towns were hit with record floods, including in Lismore where waters were two metres above any event recorded.


Helicopters were meanwhile deployed to areas like Cooma, near the Snowy Mountains, to be on standby for floods that never arrived.


Ms York said the worst of the floods in the Northern Rivers had hit at night when rescue crews were restricted in what they could do.


Meanwhile, the SES has determined 3396 homes are uninhabitable and 6708 were inundated as 120 motor homes were last week on their way to the Northern Rivers to deal with a drastic shortage of accommodation as part of a $551 million housing support package…...


Tuesday 15 March 2022

NSW predicted rainfall over April, May and June 2022


It would appear there is some likelihood that the next three calendar months will see temperatures rise above median and a 60 per cent chance of an increase in median rainfall across New South Wales generally.


With the predicted above median rainfall occurring inland as far as Tibooburra & Broken Hill and along the length of the coastal zone. 


The Northern NSW section of this coast zone - from Clarence Valley  to Tweed Shire and inland as far as Lismore City - having a 60 to 74 per cent chance of exceeding median rainfall.


Brief Outline


Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM), retrieved 14 March 2022:


Climate outlook overview

Issued: 10 March 2022


April to June rainfall is likely to be above median for most of northern and eastern Australia, with small areas of south-west WA and western Tasmania likely to be below median. Elsewhere, there are roughly equal chances of above or below median rainfall.

April to June maximum temperatures are likely to be above median for western, northern and south-eastern parts of Australia. Elsewhere, there are roughly equal chances of warmer or cooler days.

Minimum temperatures for April to June are likely to be warmer than median across virtually all of Australia.

Climate influences include the weakening La NiΓ±a in the Pacific Ocean.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


La NiΓ±a remains active in the tropical Pacific. Outlooks indicate the La NiΓ±a is likely to end around mid-autumn 2022, with a return to neutral El NiΓ±o–Southern Oscillation conditions. While this La NiΓ±a event is weakening, it is expected to continue to contribute to the wetter than median outlooks for parts of eastern Australia.


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BOM: Median rainfall April-June (1981-2018) 











~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Wetter April to June likely for northern and eastern Australia

Issued: 10 March 2022


April to June rainfall is likely to be above median for most of the NT, Queensland, south-east SA, and most of NSW (chance of exceeding median is greater than 60%). Some small areas of south-west WA and western Tasmania are likely to be below median (chance of exceeding median is less than 40%). Elsewhere, there are roughly equal chances of above or below median rainfall (chance of exceeding the median is close to 50%).

There is an increased chance of unusually high rainfall (in the top 20% of historical records) for April to June across the northern half of the NT, northern and western Queensland and small areas of western and coastal NSW (1.5 to 2.5 times the usual chance). However, it should be noted that seasonal rainfall at this time of the year is starting to decrease, so unusually high rainfall for these areas isn't as high as recent months.

While the April outlook reflects the three-month outlook, the May outlook suggests below median rainfall is likely for south-western Australia, and western Tasmania, and only a small part of central Queensland is likely to be above median.

Past accuracy for April to June rainfall is moderate to high for most areas of Australia, with low to very low accuracy across much of eastern WA, northern and western SA, the central NT, western Victoria and southern Tasmania.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Warmer April to June days and nights for most areas

Issued: 10 March 2022


April to June maximum temperatures are likely to be above median for most of WA, the northern and central NT, Queensland, northern and southern NSW, south-east SA, Victoria, and Tasmania (greater than 60% chance). Elsewhere, there are roughly equal chances of warmer or cooler days (chance of exceeding the median is close to 50%).

There is an increased chance of unusually high maximum temperatures (in the top 20% of historical records) for April to June over most of WA, the northern and central NT, most of Queensland except the far south, most of Victoria, and Tasmania (1.5 to 4.0 times the usual chance), with the highest chances in the tropical north, and Tasmania.

Minimum temperatures for April to June are likely to be warmer than median almost Australia wide (chances are greater than 60%), with much of northern and eastern Australia very likely (chances are greater than 80%).

There is an increased chance of unusually high minimum temperatures (in the top 20% of historical records) for April to June over most of Australia except much of southern WA and western SA (1.5 to 4.0 times the usual chance). The highest likelihoods are across far northern Australia and Tasmania.

Past accuracy for April to June maximum temperatures is high to very high for almost all of Australia, with moderate accuracy in a band stretching through central WA and across most of SA. For minimum temperatures, accuracy is high to very high across northern Australia, grading to low to very low accuracy across southern parts of the mainland. Tasmania has moderate accuracy in the south, with low accuracy in the north.


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Historical median and mean rainfall Lismore, Ballina, and Grafton NSW for April, May and June.


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Monday 14 March 2022

So how much is the initial disaster recovery funding outlay going to be in the New South Wales?

 


Since 22 February 2022 the NSW Perrottet Government has declared 45 Local Government Areas to be disaster areas and these are eligible for support through Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements (DRFA).


Between 3-5 March 2022 NSW Office of Local Government has made $1 million direct transfers to each of the following 45 local councils affected by February-March 2022 flooding:


Armidale, Ballina, Bellingen, Byron, Clarence Valley, Coffs Harbour, Glen Innes Severn, Hornsby, Kempsey, Kyogle, Lismore, Nambucca, Port Macquarie/Hastings, Richmond Valley, Tenterfield, The Hills, Tweed, Bayside, Bega Valley, Blacktown, Blue Mountains, Camden, Campbelltown, Canterbury Bankstown, Central Coast, Eurobodalla, Fairfield, Georges River, Hawkesbury, Inner West, Kiama, Ku-Ring-Gai, Liverpool City, Mid Coast, Newcastle, Northern Beaches, Parramatta, Penrith, Ryde, Shellharbour, Shoalhaven, Sutherland, Wingecarribee, Wollondilly and Wollongong.


Premier of New South Wales Dominic Perrottet said the grants are part of a $434.7 million funding recovery package, co-founded by the Commonwealth and NSW governments, with more still to come.


On 9 March 2022 Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced:


  • An additional two weekly disaster payments for the catastrophe zones in the Lismore, Richmond Valley and Clarence Valley LGAs, automatically paid for those who have already claimed and received the Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment, at the current rate of $1,000 per adult and $400 per child. These payments will be made from 15 and 22 March. The NRRA will also undertake assessment of possible additional LGAs that also meet the catastrophic impact assessment


  • Support for Norco in northern NSW on a bespoke business support package, in partnership with the NSW Government, to help restore operations of this key business and employer


  • $10 million to support the mental health of school-aged children in the Northern Rivers region affected by the recent flood event under the ‘Resilient Kids’ program


  • $800,000 to extend the Regional Small Business Support Program to include small businesses impacted by the recent flood event in NSW and QLD for two RFCS regions, with a six month extension until 31 December 2022, as well as free and independent case managed financial counselling through the Rural Financial Counselling Service


  • $5.4 million to boost existing legal assistance services operating within affected communities


  • $25 million for emergency relief, food relief and financial counselling services


  • Approximately $6.9 million in support payments of $10,000 to assist early childhood education and care (ECEC) services affected by the floods where they have been closed for more than seven days. More severely impacted services will also be able to apply for Community Child Care Fund Special Circumstances grants


  • $7 million to expand the Commonwealth’s business recovery and resilience service, Strengthening Business, into at least 30 of the most flood affected regions of northern New South Wales (NSW) and south-eastern Queensland


  • $31.2 million to deliver immediate and longer term local mental health support services for individuals, families, and communities impacted by the disaster and to support communities to recover and build resilience across the flood affected communities


  • $4.7 million to ensure the immediate continuity of primary health care services for flood-impacted Australians


Additional new funding was announced on 10 March providing $551.7 million to support flood affected communities across New South Wales as part of the next round of Commonwealth and New South Wales Government funding. This additional funding will provide support to small businesses, primary producers, councils, households, and families hard hit by the devastating floods. 

Included in this funding round is $285.2 million for the new Temporary Housing Support package, which will support those on the Northern Rivers who cannot live in their homes while they’re being repaired or have lost their home entirely. 

It’s estimated that this could assist up to 25,000 households, and includes; 

  • Immediate hotel accommodation, to provide accommodation for four nights, with flexibility to increase while people make interim arrangements

  • Grants towards initial rental costs, from $6,000 for an individual up to $18,000 for a six person household 

  • Utilising Mobile Motor Homes and Recreation Camps for medium term accommodation Extending the Temporary Dwelling Program, which allows people to stay on their land in a caravan or demountable, for example.


Jointly funded NSW & Federal grants of up to $75,000 for primary producers and up to $50,000 for small businesses and not for profit organisations devastated by flooding will also be extended to the additional 28 disaster declared LGAs, delivered by the Rural Assistance Authority and Service NSW.


There was no indication given as to where all these funds would be sourced and little information as to which federal government departments or agencies would be tasked with distribution.


Given that flood recovery funding from 2021 was still taking until early 2022 to be delivered, a firm timeline for delivery would go some way to reassuring communities in regional & rural New South Wales.


Though I fear that the weakening of Australia's universal welfare system including Medicare, Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, disability insurance and age care services over the last nine years, when combined with the losses incurred during the 2019-20 East Coast Bushfire Season, the 2020 to 2022 SARS-CoV-2/Covid-19 pandemic, the more frequent extreme adverse weather events and the February-March 2022 East Coast Floods, will mean that there will be many individuals and families who will never regain their former level of financial stability.