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Thomson's bail ban from ex-sex partners

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Januari 2013 | 03.29

MP Craig Thomson denies any wrongdoing as he faces charges of 150 counts of fraud.

INDEPENDENT MP Craig Thomson has been bailed on fraud charges on condition he doesn't attempt to contact any person he allegedly sought sexual services from.

The bail condition was one of three read out to Mr Thomson by magistrate Susan McIntyre when he appeared at Wyong Court this afternoon on fraud charges.

Mr Thomson was formally charged with one count of misusing of a credit card to the value of $330. He did not enter a plea but was remanded to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on February 6.

The three bail conditions were: that he notify police within 24 hours of any change of address, that he give 24 hours notice of any travel overseas or interstate with the exception of travel to Canberra and that he not contact "directly or indirectly", in person or through another party, any person whom he has allegedly engaged for sexual services.

Mr Thomson, who represented himself, nodded when he was asked if he understood the bail conditions.

The court was told further charges were expected to be laid.

No further details of the charges were revealed in court.

Member for Dobell Craig Thomson being arrested at his Tuggerah office. Picture: Waide Maguire

Thomson: I did nothing wrong

Mr Thomson made a statement outside Wyong Court and said he would appear in court in Melbourne next week to "vigorously defend" against the charges.

"Under legal advice, I've been asked not to give a speech," he said.

"I've done no wrongdoing".

"As you can understand, given what has occurred today, it is inappropriate for me or anyone else to comment."

Police: Thomson refused to surrender

Craig Thomson's lawyer Chris McCardle slams the police and media over the handling of his client's arrest.

Police said Mr Thomson was arrested in his electorate office this afternoon after he refused to surrender himself, police said.

But Thomson's lawyer disputes this, saying his client was only invited to travel to Victoria for an interview.

The federal independent MP was arrested at his electorate office in Tuggerah, on the NSW Central Coast, on Thursday under a warrant from the Victorian police.

The NSW fraud squad assisted Victorian police in his arrest.

Head of the fraud squad, Detective Superintendent Colin Dyson, has seen the Victorian warrant.

"I believe from reading the warrant that he was invited to travel to Victoria to surrender himself prior to Christmas," Det Supt Dyson told reporters outside Wyong Police Station.

Media gathered outside the electorate office of Craig Thomson. Picture: Waide Maguire

"He didn't do that, or refused, and the end result was the issue of that warrant."

But Mr Thomson's lawyer, Chris McArdle, said the police version of events was "completely untrue".

The request for his client to travel to Victoria was to attend an interview, not surrender to police, he said.

"If we had been given that invitation we would have done so and we wouldn't have needed this reality TV show that's going on," he said.

Mr McArdle said he and his client would travel to Melbourne on Wednesday and follow the court's instruction after that.

"This is something out of the Roman colosseum; this man's been thrown to the lions," he said.

The Opposition leader questions Julia Gillard's judgment after it emerged Craig Thomson had been arrested over allegations of fraud.

"Five policemen arrested a man for minor misappropriation charges, which we deny. You don't need five policemen to do that. You only need five policemen if there's a risk of violence."

Det Supt Dyson said Mr Thomson was charged with one arrest warrant and served with paper relating to 149 charges.

He could not comment on the Victorian police probe, but added Mr Thomson "remains a person of interest" in a NSW police probe.

NSW Police's Operation Carnarvon is investigating allegations of fraud committed against the Health Services Union.

"He remains a person of interest in the Strike Force Carnarvon inquiry," Det Supt Colin Dyson said.

Asked about Mr Thomson's demeanour since his arrest, the policeman responded: "He has been co-operative. He has been very calm. He has accepted what has been said to him, he has not argued."

Craig Thomson is arrested at his Tuggerah office. Picture: Waide Maguire

Craig Thomson's arrest

Mr Thomson was arrested at his Dobell electorate office about 1.15pm today by officers from the NSW State Crime Command's Fraud and Cybercrime Squad.

Shocked shoppers watched as seven plainclothes officers attended Mr Thomson's electorate office in the Westfield Tuggerah shopping complex to serve the warrant for his arrest.

Four detectives went inside the office and emerged to escort Mr Thomson to a waiting unmarked police car.

Victorian police accompanied NSW colleagues to the building.

A coatless and tieless Mr Thomson, wearing a blue striped white shirt, said nothing as he walked 40m past shoppers to the car - with an officer each side of him and one behind him.

Labor MP Craig Thomson is being charged with 150 counts of fraud after being arrested today.

"Is he being arrested?" one shopper asked.

He sat in the middle of the back seat and was driven away.

Staff at the electorate office said they had no advance notice of the police raid and were upset Mr Thomson was not given  the opportunity to report to the police station in a pre-arranged meeting.

In a statement, NSW Police said a man, 48, was arrested following investigations into allegations of fraud committed against the Health Services Union.

"He was taken to Wyong Police Station where he is expected to be charged by virtue of the arrest warrant with a fraud offence," police said.

"It is expected he will go before Wyong Local Court where a further 149 fraud charges are to be laid.

Craig Thomson is arrested at his Tuggerah office. Picture: Waide Maguire

"It is anticipated that Victorian detectives will apply for the man's extradition to Victoria."

Lawyer slams 'the circus'

Mr Thomson's lawyer Chris McArdle was being interviewed by Sky as his client was being charged.

He stressed that Mr Thomson would be pleading not guilty on all charges.

He noted that Mr Thomson's forthcoming appearance at Wyong Local Court was a "formality" and that the politician would appear in court in Victoria next week. He also objected to use of the term "extradited" in relation to Mr Thomson's journey to Victoria, saying it sounded like the accused was being forced.

Mr McArdle said the politician had been given no advance notice of the arrest and had briefly phoned the lawyer from the office as he was arrested, before going, without legal representation, with the police.

Craig Thomson is arrested at his Tuggerah office. Picture: Waide Maguire

He slammed the police for what he dubbed a "heavy-handed" approach to the arrest – and blasted the force for handing out press releases about the operation.

Mr McArdle called the proceedings a "circus" and queried why there was a need for five police – two from Victoria and one from NSW – to make the arrest.

"Two from Victoria, three from NSW – why did they not just have one of each?" he asked. "What were the others doing, handing out press releases?"

Taking aim at the fact a TV camera captured the arrest, Mr McArdle said: "It's unbelievable that the rule of law has been supplanted by reality TV and a circus."

Without naming individuals, he also took a swipe at "rather unintelligent politicians" – urging them to "observe the rule of law" around the case.

"I call upon the circus performers to honour the rule of law".

"This fellow is innocent and will maintain his innocence throughout."

The Prime Minister tells reporters in Bundaberg she had no prior knowledge of the Dobell MP's arrest.

"He's been taken completely by surprise."

"He's done nothing wrong."

Mr Thomson has strenuously denied allegations he misused union funds to pay for prostitutes, air travel, entertainment and cash withdrawals when he was national secretary of the Health Services Union (HSU) from 2002 to 2007.

Health Services Union responds news

The Health Services Union's national president Chris Brown said he had been expecting charges against Thomson since before Christmas.

"It's something we have been working with Victoria Police with," he said.

"It was anticipated to happen prior to Christmas but it has taken a bit longer."

PM unaware of arrest

Prime Minister Julia Gillard was touring the flood damage in Bundaberg this afternoon and refused to comment on the arrest, saying it was a "matter for police".

"I have been focused here and what has been happening in these communities," she said.

"I know there has been some media reports."

Abbott: 'This reflects on the PM'

The Opposition is expected to use the arrest to step up its campaign against the "judgement" of the Prime Minister in the run up to the September 14 election.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott couldn't prevent a smile when asked today if the police action meant he would cease comments on the former Labor MP's role in the HSU controversy.

"We have certainly respected or tried to respect the rule that you do not comment on the specifics of cases which are currently before the courts. And we will respect that rule," he told the National Press Club.

Shadow attorney general George Brandis and other senior colleagues had been scrupulous in observing this rule, he told the NPC.

"But the Thomson matter isn't just about what Craig Thomson may or may not have done, what he did or didn't do,'" said Mr Abbott.

"It's always been about the judgement of the Prime Minister."

"And you certainly can't expect that there won't be questions raised about prime ministerial judgement by the Coalition."

Ms Gillard said she did not want to engage in the "argy-bargy" of Mr Abbott's comments.

Federal government frontbencher Craig Emerson said Mr Thomson was entitled to the presumption of innocence.

-  Errol Smith, Mal Farr, Stephen Drill and AAP


03.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Train crash investigation to take months

A Cleveland train station worker hugs his relieved family after this morning's accident. Picture: Richard Walker Source: The Courier-Mail

TEN people have been taken to hospital after a commuter train derailed and smashed into a station in Brisbane's southeast this morning.

The train struck Cleveland station about 9.40am this morning, damaging the platform and exposing live electrical wires.

At 6.36pm Queensland Rail said crews were gearing up to remove the train that ploughed into Cleveland station.

It is expected crews will take about 13 hours to remove the three remaining carriages.

Services are suspended between Cleveland and Wellington Point and buses are being used instead.

A passenger train east of Brisbane has failed to stop at the end of the line and crashed into the station.

Queensland Rail said these arrangements would remain in place until at least early next week.

At 4.15pm Queensland Rail announced an investigation into the train crash at Cleveland is expected to take three months.

Addressing the media at the scene this afternoon, acting chief executive officer Jim Benstead said he would not speculate on what caused the train to overshoot the station and crash through a toilet block.

A WOMAN at Cleveland train station following this morning's derailment. PIC: Richard Walker

He said investigators would use CCTV footage, information from the train's "black box" and statements from witnesses to determine the cause of the crash.

At 1.18pm it was learned that all those injured in the crash had been released from hospital.

Redland Hospital's Medical Services director, Doctor Rosalind Crawford, confirmed that 10 patients with minor injuries including cuts, bruises, back and shoulder pain, were treated in the emergency department following the crash.

Dr Crawford said Redland Hospital prepared for the influx of casualties by transferring existing patients from the emergency department to hospital wards.

A train derailed and collided with Cleveland Station around 9.40am Thursday. Picture: Richard Walker

Additional medical and nursing staff members from other areas of the hospital were also placed on stand-by.

"It is our standard practice to prepare for a worst case scenario," Dr Crawford said.

"In the initial stages of the emergency, we did not know how many people were involved, and what their injuries would be.

"Staff from across the hospital worked together smoothly and swiftly to prepare for a serious event involving multiple casualties and I'd like to acknowledge their professionalism."

Scenes from the train crash at Cleveland station. Picture: David Smythe

At 12.35pm, it was learned that Cleveland's senior firefighter found himself scarily close to the action in today's train crash: his teenage son was among those in the station at the time of the disaster.

Acting Cleveland station manager Rob Hawxwell was at the scene responding to the crisis when he received a call from his wife saying his son was also on site.

The 16-year-old had been seconds from entering the station's male toilets - which were destroyed - when the train hit the facility.

"My son just came into the station and was going to the bathroom when he heard a loud bang," Mr Hawxwell said.

A train derailed at Cleveland Train Station. Photo SUPPLIED

"He was very lucky and got out of the station very quickly."

Mr Hawxwell said his son was just seconds from disaster.

"It wasn't a good message to get," he said.

With about 15 firefighters working to help the 13 train passengers from the train, Mr Hawxwell said the scene was apocalyptic.

People are treated for minor injuries following a train crash at Cleveland station. Picture: David Smythe

While the passengers were able to crawl through the back of the train in a matter of minutes after the crash, emergency crews took about an hour to cut power.

Downed power lines were strewn over some of the train's carriages.

A station worker's wife rushed to the scene as well, fearing the worst; thankfully, the recent train station refurbishment included moving the office to the back of the building.

The couple and their son reunited at the station.

A train derailed at Cleveland Train Station. Photo SUPPLIED

An eye-witness, Mikayla Gedye, 17, was one of the first on the scene, rushing to pull a woman from the station toilets.

Waiting on nearby Harbourview Court for RACQ to help with her broken down car, Miss Gedye said she couldn't believe her eyes when she saw the train crash into the station.

"My friend and I pulled a girl out of the toilets, we weren't sure if any guys were in the male bathroom but she was trapped."

Calling triple zero, Miss Gedye said the girl, about her own age, was shaken but fine.

"We wrenched the door open and got her out," she said.

Describing the scene, Miss Gedye said the train was completely through the wall.

"You could see the wall had half fallen down." 

At 11.34am, it was reported that a "technical flaw" with the braking mechanism is believed to have caused the shocking crash.

Owen Doogan from the Rail, Tram and Bus Union said he was very relieved it was not a major catastrophe for the general public, as it could have been.

"I understand the driver did everything he could to stop the train," Mr Doogan said.

"I also have a clear understanding there is a fundamental concern with the braking mechanism, that meant the driver wasn't able to operate as he would normally going into a station."

The Rail Safety Regulator has been informed, and Queensland Rail is expected to launch an investigation.

At 11.20am, it was reported that 19 people in total were examined for injuries.

Wynnum Police District Superintendent Jim Keogh said the outcome could have been "catastrophic" if a person had been in the station's male bathroom, which was destroyed in the crash.

"It was a dramatic accident," he said.

"The men's toilet here has been all but destroyed, but fortunately no one was in the men's toilet at the time.

"We got out of it by the skin of our teeth... it could have been catastrophic."

Supt Keogh could not say how fast the six-carriage train was going at the time of the crash.

Thirteen people plus a driver were on the train while two staff members were in the office and two people were waiting on the platform. There was one person in the female toilets.

"The driver is shaken, understandably," Supt Keogh said.

Those hurt suffered minor injuries and are being treated for shock at Redlands Hospital.

The driver and guard were among those taken to hospital, but mostly as a precaution.

At 11.10am, the Department of Community Safety said 14 people in total were injured in the crash, though only 10 people were taken by ambulance to Redlands Hospital.

A spokesman said the injured were "all walking around wounded" and nobody was carried from the scene.

At 10.55am, authorities had finished searching the train and station building and all people were accounted for.

Onlookers Lyn and Gavin Fullerton heard the sirens from their Cleveland home and rushed to the scene.

"I've never heard so many sirens in my life," Mrs Fullerton said.

"It's normally so quiet around here."

The couple said the station had only recently been upgraded to include GoCard turnstiles.

"Normally the trains slow down as they go around the corner but it obviously hasn't happened," Mr Fullerton said.

The line had been closed for several days as Translink dealt with damage caused by the weekend's wild weather.

Witnesses described how the moving train kept going at some speed into the new terminal building, before finally coming to a stop 15m into the recently-refurbished structure.

Wayne Hartley, owner of nearby Redlands Realty, said the sound of the train hitting the station was deafening.

"It was chaotic; everyone from surrounding businesses came rushing out to see what we could do to help," he said.

The front carriage of the train struck the station barrier, lifting the train off the ground and launching it onto the platform behind it.

Mr Hartley said he believed a woman may have been in the restrooms located at the entrance to the platform at the time as the train crashed but was unable to confirm any further details.

Around 10.15am, paramedics had boarded the train and were in the process of treating injuries to passengers in a nearby cordoned-off area, he said.

There are no confirmed reports of any serious injuries at this stage. Eight people were reported to have suffered minor injuries.

"There were no screams of pain, it went very quiet after the crash," Mr Hartley said.

The local area has been evacuated.

Power problems have been experienced on the Cleveland line throughout the morning, and arose again shortly before the derailment.

It is not clear if the power issues contributed to the crash.

Yasmin Aldiosio, who works at the dental studio across the road from the Cleveland rail station, described hearing a bang but presumed it was a car crash and did not think much of it at the time.

"We initially thought it was a car accident because the bang was not that loud," she said.

"Then later a patient looked out the window and saw smoke (billowing) from the train."

"The scene is busy at the moment - there are so many trucks and ambulance blocking the view."

The station is the last stop on the Cleveland line.

It was initially thought a woman with serious head injuries was on the train but ambulance officers and QFRS teams were unable for a time to get access to her due to live electrical wires.

Buses have been organised to run in the place of trains from Murarrie but passengers on the Cleveland line have been warned to expect 60-minute delays.


03.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Police 'find body of sixth victim'

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Januari 2013 | 03.30

Grave fears for two men lost while the cleanup and recovery effort is now in full swing in Brisbane.

A SECOND body has been discovered in the Lockyer Valley west of Brisbane, bringing the death toll from the Queensland floods to six.

The Toowoomba Chronicle is reporting that the body, presumed to be missing Taiwanese man Jerry Yukun, was found 300 metres from where cars were found submerged in the flooded Sandy Creek at Glen Cairn.

Police media could not confirm the reports.

Mr Yukun, 25, went missing at the same time as a Malaysian farm worker, 34, whose body was found this morning.

The men, who were in separate cars, had been travelling from Gatton to Mulgowie to start work at a farm at 5am (AEST) and are believed to have been swept off the road by floodwaters.

A white 1997 Mitsubishi Magna, which police believe was being driven by the 25-year-old Taiwanese man, was found in the area yesterday afternoon.

"We're not too sure if they were known to each other,'' a police spokesman told AAP.

Vowing to rebuild Queensland, Premier Campbell Newman announced a Flood Appeal Committee, headed by former Bligh government treasurer Terry Mackenroth.

Governor General Quentin Bryce visits Bundaberg Hospital evacuee June Roberts with Premier Campbell Newman and his wife Lisa Newman. Picture: Philip Norrish

With the magnitude of the disaster becoming apparent, Mr Newman said the destruction to Queensland had been "absolutely massive''.

He called on the support of all Queenslanders to help rebuild.

"We can do this,'' he told reporters in Brisbane today.

Those confirmed dead are a three-year-old boy who had a tree fall on him in Brisbane and three men who died in floodwaters: one south of Brisbane, one at Burnett Heads near Bundaberg, and the other near Gympie.

In worst-hit Bundaberg, which was devastated as the Burnett River peaked at a record 9.6 metres, authorities moved into recovery mode today after the floods inundated about 2000 homes and 200 businesses.

Mr Newman said soldiers were en route to the sugar-farming town where more than 7500 residents have been forced to seek refuge in evacuation shelters or with family and friends.

A man comforts his daughter on their roof as they inspect damage to their neighbourhood in Bundaberg. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

"This morning we have 120 soldiers from the Enoggera army barracks in 44 vehicles heading north to Bundaberg,'' Newman told the ABC.

More army resources were on standby to help in Bundaberg and other surrounding flood-hit communities, he added.

An ABC reporter in the town said petrol stations had run out of fuel while a helicopter and boats were resupplying some of the smaller settlements around the area that remain cut off.

Meanwhile police said three people, including two teenage girls and a 25-year-old man, had been charged with looting in the Queensland town of Gympie during flooding there.

While Brisbane escaped the worst of the floodwaters, the deluge damaged water treatment plants and Lord Mayor Graham Quirk said there were concerns parts of the city of two million could run out of water.

"There is still a very real concern that water could run out,'' he told reporters, although Newman said provisions were in place to supply bottled water to any areas affected.

A boy has died after a tree fell on him and his mother, bringing the death toll from the flood emergency to four.

Governor-General Quentin Bryce urged the nation to dig deep and donate to Queensland's flood disaster victims, during an emotional visit to Bundaberg Hospital evacuees in Brisbane.

Ms Bryce said the people of Bundaberg are facing an extreme situation and urged Australians to give all the support they can.

"Come on Australians, remember who we are, what we stand for, our generosity, our volunteerism, our care for others,'' she told reporters outside the Royal Brisbane Hospital.

In Brisbane, the key challenge in the coming days will be to maintain water supplies after the flooding forced the shutdown of two processing plants.

Stocks of bottled water have been positioned around Brisbane amid fears taps could run dry in some suburbs today.

Flooding in the Brisbane River catchment has caused major problems at water treatment plants at Mt Crosby.

The streets of Bundaberg are underwater today. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Repair crews are making some progress and have them partially running again, Brisbane Lord Mayor Graham Quirk says.

But there are fears they could break down again due to the extremely high amount of mud being carried by water feeding into the plants.

The suburbs at risk of losing mains water supply include Tarragindi, Camp Hill, Carina, Mount Gravatt, Tingalpa, Rocklea, and Oxley.

Premier Campbell Newman said supplies of bottled water have been positioned on the southside in case supplies run out.

''If any reservoir runs dry, we'll be immediately providing that for distribution to local areas,'' he told ABC television.

''This is very serious.''

Flood waters peaked at 9.53 metres in Bundaberg yesterday and began receding overnight. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

He said residents across Brisbane and Ipswich must limit water use to the necessities of drinking, bathing and cleaning until the treatment plant was back on line.

Queensland Urban Utilities says production at the Mount Crosby plant has increased, but consumption is also going up - despite the call for people to conserve water.

He said water in Brisbane was currently being drawn from three sources - the Mount Crosby plant, North Pine dam and from a southern connector pipe drawing water from areas south of the city.

He said he expected to decide by about midday whether to make the bottled water stocks available to people in at-risk suburbs.

Mr Lewis said releases from Wivenhoe dam, that would help dilute the silt in water feeding into the Mount Crosby treatment plants, would gradually help production return to normal.

But he could not say exactly when full production would resume.

The sun rises over the Burnett river in Bundaberg today. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

For more on Queensland's recovery, see The Courier Mail

There was also a big clean up task ahead in the Lockyer Valley, and particularly in the town of Laidley, Mr Newman said.

''They haven't been forgotten out there, but there is great difficulty in getting around,'' he said.

The crisis was not over, with flooding expected in Rockhampton from Friday or Saturday, Mr Newman said.

''I advise people to plan trips carefully. They won't be able to get past Rockhampton later this week.''

In Maryborough, a young man who went missing while swimming in floodwaters has been found alive and well.

Residents of these Bundaberg homes will have to wait for water to recede before they can return for a mammoth clean-up. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

He had been seen swimming between the Queensland city's courthouse and Lennox Street on Monday night.

Police said the man, whose age is not known, was found this afternoon.

There was also good news for a hiker who set off alone for a bushwalk in central Queensland.

The 36-year-old man was was found in the Mount Dalrymple area at 9.30am today.

He started a solo day trek at Mount Dalrymple on Tuesday morning, west of Mackay and police were told at 10.45pm (AEST) that he'd failed to return.

A search began at first light  involving an RACQ Rescue helicopter.

A young woman cleans up debris in her Bundaberg street. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Also today police ruled out  the possible drowning of a woman at Pacific Haven near Maryborough.

A witness reported seeing a woman drive into flood waters there on Sunday .

But police  today said there had been no reports of anyone missing in that area.

Mr Newman toured Bundaberg on Tuesday and urged Queenslanders to aid disaster victims.

"They all need our support. We've got to reach out and help them now," he said.

WHERE TO TURN TO FOR HELP AND INFORMATION

Sisters Sandra and Michelle Dorron in Bundaberg, at the Agro Trend evacuation centre start the search for clothes. Photo Paul Beutel

NSW:

Government Flood Information

Ministry for Police and Emergency Services

NSW flood warnings

Queensland:

Guide to essential services

Tweed Valley in NSW this morning, not normally a wet area. Picture: mockingbirdcafe/Twitter

QLD flood warnings

Brisbane city council flood maps

Mr Newman also paid tribute to the resilience of residents, who in some cases have weathered four floods in three years.

About 2000 homes and 200 businesses were inundated when the river reached a record height on Tuesday afternoon.

More than 7500 displaced residents are seeking refuge in evacuation centres or with friends and family on higher ground.

"It's incredible to see the spirit of Queenslanders out on the streets of their cities and towns as they grapple with what is a big crisis."

Voluteers prepare food at temporary evacuation centre in Bundaberg. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Governor-General Quentin Bryce today will visit the valley towns of Laidley, Grantham and Withcott after spending time at a Brisbane hospital with patients evacuated from Bundaberg.

The news was better for residents of Brisbane and Ipswich in the southeast, where water levels peaked lower than expected.

Early indications are that water stayed below floorboard level in Brisbane, while about 35 homes in Ipswich had water in their living areas.

It was a world away from the disaster of January 2011.

Then, tens of thousands of homes in the southeast were inundated and Brisbane's damage bill ran into the tens of millions.

As the flood waters recede, attention will turn to the huge damage bill and recovery task.

Already 9800 insurance claims have been lodged in Queensland worth a combined $116 million, according to the Insurance Council of Australia.

The damage to infrastructure is still being assessed but it's been estimated the bill will still reach the hundreds of millions, without counting crop and livestock losses.

The Queensland Premier is urging people to donate to the government's Queensland Flood Appeal which is being coordinated with Red Cross.

Bruce Grady from Emergency Management Queensland said all efforts were underway to reach isolated communities outside the major flood-hit centres.

''While Bundaberg is the focus, we haven't forgotten about those other isolated communities,'' he told the Seven Network.

''I can assure everyone we have our best efforts in place to make sure we get to all of those communities as quickly as we possibly can.''

Bundaberg flooding is seen from space through NASA's telescope lens. Picture: Chris Hadfield/NASA/ https://twitter.com/Cmdr_Hadfield/status/296199814838894592

Meanwhile, Mr Newman opened his wallet after a patient evacuated from flooded Bundaberg complained about the cost of hiring a TV.

Mr Newman and Governor-General Quentin Bryce spent time with evacuees at the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital hospital today.

When patient Sean Crozier complained to the Premier about the $30 cost of hiring a TV, Mr Newman handed him a $50 note.

The Premier had earlier said every Queenslander must do their bit to help those affected by the state's latest disaster.

In NSW, a massive clean-up is under way in the state's north as floodwaters subside, but some communities remain cut off and townspeople and farmers are struggling without power and supplies.

State Emergency Service Clarence-Nambucca spokeswoman Sam Colwell said while the Clarence River had dropped from Tuesday's record levels, Yamba and Iluka at the river's mouth were likely to be isolated for at least two more days.

An aerial view of East Bundaberg. Picture: Paul Beutel

The SES has issued a minor flood warning along the Macintyre River for Boggabilla in northwest NSW.

The river is expected to peak at 9.7 metres today.

Bogabbilla is about 9km downstream of the Queensland town of Goondiwindi, where major flooding is occurring with levels steady at 8.6 metres.

Minor flood warnings are also in place for the Hunter River at Singleton with a peak expected around midday (AEDT).

Moderate flooding is expected at Maitland later tonight and minor flooding from the Wollombi Brook occurred at Bulga, also in the Hunter region.

Meanwhile, the SES says major flooding continues to ease along the Clarence River at Grafton and Ullmarra.

The Clarence hit 3.1 metres near Maclean and is not expected to rise further, the Bureau of Meteorology said today.

On Tuesday, the river peaked at 8.08 metres in Grafton, upstream from Maclean, the highest level in recorded history.

About 750 people evacuated from Maclean on Tuesday night have been able to return after an ''all clear'' was issued this morning.

About 2000 people were evacuated from Grafton which avoided widespread devastation with waters only two centimetres below a level expected to cause severe inundation.

There's a possibility of showers around Maclean over the next few days, but the rain isn't expected to cause further flooding, the Bureau of Meteorology told AAP.

"It does appear as though the worst of it is over," NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell said.

Mr O'Farrell jointly announced with Prime Minister Julia Gillard the declaration of 10 local government disaster areas to unlock federal and state funds for flood-hit families and businesses.

The Insurance Council estimates about 2000 claims worth $10 million have already been lodged in NSW.

For more on NSW's recovery, see The Daily Telegraph

Concerns remain for some towns downstream, including Yamba, Ulmarra and Maclean, but Mr O'Farrell said he was delighted the river level had gone down to 7.95m and was still dropping.

"Now we are in recovery mode," said State Emergency Services commissioner Murray Kear, as the low-pressure system responsible for the severe flooding in Queensland and NSW moved off the coast.

NSW escaped the loss of life suffered in Queensland, although 50 people had to be rescued and 3500 called for assistance, mainly around Grafton.

Citrus growers devastated by floods

Judy Shepherd, the secretary of the Gayndah and District Fruit Growers Association, says damage in the town and surrounding fruit orchards has been catastrophic.

She said the latest flood is the third natural disaster in recent years and she's afraid many growers won't recover.

As well, some citrus orchards had been completely wiped out, parts of others had simply dropped into the Burnett River and the infrastructure damage was enormous.

''We've heard of some that have gone,'' she told ABC television.

She said the impact on the region, particularly Gayndah and Mundubbera, would be severe and long-lasting.

''Catastrophic - hundreds of millions of dollars damage just in the citrus industry,'' she said.

Chief Executive of Citrus Australia Judith Damiani says there may be a shortage of Australian lemons in supermarkets for the start of the season in February.

About 50 per cent of Australia's lemons and 60 per cent of mandarins are produced in the Burnett region.

Ms Damiani said 40 farmers in the region say their packing sheds, irrigation systems, farm equipment and homes have been seriously damaged.

The damage bill will be higher than two years ago.

Insurers blame councils for flood damage

The fight over who is to blame for the damage from the Queensland floods has begun.

The Insurance Council of Australia says the local and state governments should and could have done more to protect their communities from flooding.

Nearly 10,000 claims have been lodged and the damage bill is $116 million and rising.

Brisbane-based Suncorp, the owner of AAMI and GIO, is set to be the worst affected of the major insurance companies, already fielding about 4000 claims for flood and storm damage.

Insurance Council of Australia CEO Rob Whelan says some of the damage could have been avoided if the state and local governments had done more.

He said the state government's flood mitigation budget was not enough.

''$40 million is good but it needs way more than that,'' he told ABC's Lateline program on Tuesday.

''Let's take a levee for example, $15 million roughly to build a levee, but that may actually save that community $100 million.''

Mr Whelan singled out Brisbane and Ipswich as councils that could have done more, especially by preventing development in certain areas, or insisting that homes be built on stilts.

''Mitigation works and control of certain flood areas and prevention of development in certain areas actually will increase the overall level of protection in the community and lower the overall level of risk, which goes to the premiums and the costs,'' he said.

''If you continue to build developments on a flood plain, ultimately they're going to be affected and that's what we've been doing for the last 20, 30, 40 years.''

The comments outraged Ipswich Mayor Paul Pisasale, who says Mr Whelan is in for a war.

''The whole of Australia, the whole of Queensland and all of these people are hurting and you want to come in and start the blame game,'' he told ABC.

''It's very un-Australian.''

Mr Pisasale said the council had spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on flood mitigation and had stringent town planning requirements.

He said he would talk to federal Financial Services Minister Bill Shorten seeking further reforms to the insurance industry.

Queensland Premier Campbell Newman doesn't have a problem with a debate about what more could be done for flood mitigation, but questioned the appropriateness of the timing of Mr Whelan's comments.

He said a statewide flood mitigation program is underway, where local government chips in $20m and the state $40m.

''We're getting on with it,'' he said.

''Would we like to put more money in? Yes.

''More needs to be done to find engineering solutions or alternative innovative solutions to protect our communities and make them more resilient.''

Mr Newman said he'd be fighting in the corner of people who are going to need insurance payouts.

But he said that although the state and local governments had chipped into the statewide flood mitigation scheme, the federal government was yet to come to the table.

He had asked the Commonwealth to contribute $40 million.

''So far we actually haven't had the federal government leaping to their feet to say, 'Hey we'll be part of this','' he said.


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Flood death toll rises as man's body found

Watch the Brisbane River rise due to the ongoing flooding problems around the state.

QUEENSLAND is a state tormented by water. In Bundaberg and other towns, thousands of people remain homeless. In Brisbane, residents face running out of water because of flood-related problems at the city's largest treatment plant.

7.03pm: Floodwaters are dropping slowly in Logan, south of Brisbane.

Logan Mayor Pam Parker says eight homes in Logan Reserve have had water through them, 7500 are without power, and about 200 residents in the suburb of Buccan are isolated.

5.35pm: Bundaberg police have sent a helicopter to catch looters in some flooded areas.

Looters were spotted in kayaks and tinnies roaming around abandoned houses about 5pm.

At this stage , it is not known which areas of Bundaberg have been affected by looting.

A car being pulled from Sandy Creek between Gatton and Laidley. Picture courtesy Channel 9.

3.13pm: THE death toll in the Queensland floods has risen to six with the discovery of a second body in the Lockyer Valley, west of Brisbane, on Wednesday.

The body of a 34-year-old man was found in a car submerged in Sandy Creek at Glen Cairn, near Gatton, on Wednesday morning.

The body of a 25-year-old man was found nearby by police divers several hours later.

Their cars were swept off the road by floodwaters as the two men drove from Gatton to Mulgowie to start work at a farm at 5am on Sunday.

Three other men have died in floodwaters and a three-year-old boy died after a tree fell on him in Brisbane.

Robert Holtzberger returns to his Glenforest, Bundaberg, home for the first time after flooding. PIC: Paul Beutel

Police media could not confirm the reports.

3pm: ABOUT seven suburbs of Brisbane remain at risk of running out of water as authorities work to bring a major water treatment plant back online.

The Mt Crosby Water Treatment plant is still operating at less than 50 per cent capacity.

It has put some suburbs in Brisbane's southern suburbs at risk of running dry.

Premier Campbell Newman confirmed water consumption had risen since a warning was issued yesterday for residents to conserve water, but would not speculate on whether panicked residents were stockpiling water.

"If people had continued to use water at the normal rate that is where there could have been potential, and there still remains potential, for taps to run dry," Mr Newman said.

Governor General Quentin Bryce visits Bundaberg Hospital evacuee June Roberts with Premier Campbell Newman and his wife Lisa Newman. Picture: Philip Norrish

He urged residents not to panic buy bottled water, saying bottled water supplies had been positioned around Brisbane should the town water supply run out.

A total 210 Australian Defence Force soldiers are on their way to Bundaberg, where further evacuations are taking place.

Extra police have also been stationed around flooded towns to stop looters raiding shops.

2.40pm: PREMIER Campbell Newman has announced a flood appeal committee to oversee the distribution of disaster relief funds.

The committee will be headed by former deputy premier Terry Mackenroth.

Members will include State MP Liz Cunningham and Local Government Association of Queensland Greg Hallam.

Pallets of bottled water are waiting at sites in Brisbane's south, guarding against a possible shortfall in public supplies. Picture: Britt Vonow

Mr Newman promised the delays that dogged the 2011 disaster relief funding distribution would not occur.

"Australians can be absolutely confident every dollar donated to this appeal will get to people in need," he said

It comes after the Commonwealth Bank donated $500,000 to the appeal and the ANZ Bank $400,000.

2pm: THE recovery operation has begun in Bundaberg as some residents return to their homes for the first time to survey damage.

Police patrols have also been stepped up to prevent looting, after some unconfirmed reports of people on boats stealing from flooded homes.

Tens of thousands of people in the region are believed to have been affected by flooding, including smaller towns like Winfield, Yandaran and Eidsvold.

Cathy Kable of Little Darlings childcare centre is concerned about running short of water. Picture: Brittany Vonow

The water in Bundaberg continues to recede at the rate of about 100mm to 150mm an hour, after peaking at a record 9.5m yesterday.

Police minister Jack Dempsey said the operation had shifted into recovery mode.

But authorities are urging displaced residents not to return home until they have been given the all clear because of the dangers.

Solar powered homes are considered an electrical risk.

A recovery centre has been established at the Wide Bay TAFE and at Bargara.

About 200 defence force personnel are anticipated to arrive today to help with the recovery.

THE possibility of restricted supply has prompted a rush on bottled water at Brisbane supermarkets, leaving shelves empty in some areas. PIC: Brittany Vonow.

The Don Tallon bridge over the Burnett River has been damaged at the northern access and will remain closed for two weeks.

The main Burnett Bridge to North Bundaberg will be assessed for structural integrity.

1.05pm: WATER tankers have been brought in to three southside Brisbane hospitals to guard against fire if local water supplies break down.

A spokesman for Queensland Health Minister Lawrence Springborg said a fire pump was also moving between the Princess Alexandra, QEII and Logan hospitals for use, if necessary.

Plans for the possibility of having to fight a fire at one of the hospitals had to be made after concerns about a potential disruption to the water supply.

Pallets of bottled water are waiting at sites in Brisbane's south, guarding against a possible shortfall in public supplies. Picture: Britt Vonow

The Mt Crosby Water Treatment Plant has not been operating at full capacity due to the amount of mud in pre-treated water as a result of the flood.

Brisbane residents have been asked to only use water for essential purposes - drinking, cooking, bathing and the toilet.

1.04pm: THE recovery operation has begun in Bundaberg as some residents return to their homes for the first time to survey the damage.

Police patrols have also stepped up to prevent looting, after some unconfirmed reports of people on boats stealing from flooded homes.

Tens of thousands of people in the region are believed to have been affected by flooding, including smaller towns like Winfield, Yandaran and Eidsvold.

The water in Bundaberg continues to recede at the rate of about 100mm to 150mm an hour, after peaking at a record 9.5m yesterday.

A man comforts his daughter on their roof as they inspect damage to their neighbourhood in Bundaberg. Picture: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Police minister Jack Dempsey said the operation had shifted into recovery mode.

But authorities are urging displaced residents not to return home until they have been given the all-clear.

Solar powered homes are considered an electrical risk.

A recovery centre has been established at the Wide Bay TAFE and Bargara.

The Don Tallon bridge over the Burnett River has been damaged at the northern access and will remain closed for two weeks.

The main Burnett Bridge to North Bundaberg will be assessed for structural integrity.

Thousands of people across Queensland are spending the night in evacuation centres because of flooding.

1pm: A MAN'S body has been found in a car submerged in a flooded creek near Gatton this morning, police have confirmed.

The discovery at Sandy Creek brings the Queensland flood death toll to five.

Police are yet to identify the body but it is believed to belong to a Malaysian farm worker, 34, who, along with a Taiwanese man, has been missing since Sunday.

Police and SES volunteers launched a search of creek beds in the Lockyer Valley after the pair, who were travelling in separate cars from Gatton to Mulgowie, failed to turn up to work at a Mulgowie farm for work on Sunday.

A white 1997 Mitsubishi Magna, which police believe was being driven by the 25-year-old Taiwanese man, was also found in the same area yesterday afternoon but they are yet to find a sign of the man.

Police said SES crews will continue to search the area.

A Private ex army LARC takes to the streets of East Bundaberg to help evacuate people. Picture: Paul Beutel

Anyone with information which could assist in police is urged to contact Policelink on 131 444 or Crime Stoppers.

12.41pm: BRISBANE residents may notice a change in the taste of drinking water during the next 24 hours but authorities maintain it is still safe to drink.

SEQwater said the taste may vary as supplies are brought in from North Pine dam and water grid sources on the Gold and Sunshine coasts to supplement the Mt Crosby Water treatment plant, which still remains partially operational.

The water quality still meets Australian drinking water standards and does not need to be boiled before use.

A spokesperson from SEQwater has confirmed the Mt Crosby treatment plant has increased production from 100 megalitres per day up to 240 megalitres per day but cautioned we are not out of the woods yet.

Residents are still being urged to conserve water for essential purposes only for the next 48 hours.

A house that has been washed from its foundations. Picture: Paul Beutel

12.38pm: THE threat of water shortages have hit businesses including childcare centres.

Speaking from Little Darlings Early Development Centre in Mt Gravatt, director Cathy Kable said power outages had not affected the centre but water shortages were worrying.

"We've got little drinking containers, filled them and made sure we had boiled them all," she said.

"It's probably not enough if we do run out though."

With babies often needing a bath, thirsty children and cleaning regulations that must be met, Ms Kable said she was unsure how centres like hers would cope.

"We would have about half a day's supply here... unless parents start bringing in big bottles of water for their child to drink."

12.35pm: THE Weather Bureau has dispelled concerns of a new cyclone forming off the Queensland coast.

Forecaster Michelle Berry said television reports of a low off Cairns forming into a cyclone were incorrect.

The low was 1000km east of the Australian continent and moving away.

"This is absolute rubbish," Ms Berry said. "There is a very weak low pressure system there but there's nothing much to get it going.

"The chances of it forming up would be 5 per cent to 20 per cent and on the low end of that.

"Because it's moving east, there's every chance it will be in Fiji's area of responsibility on Friday."

Aerial view of Bundaberg during flood crisis. Picture: Mark Calleja

12.25pm: POLICE have confirmed five people have been charged with looting in Gympie in the wake of flooding.

A Mary St hairdressing salon was robbed when the store was accidentally left unlocked after staff worked to move belongings away from flood waters.

It is believed two teenage girls, aged 14 and 16, have been charged with looting, after they were allegedly caught stealing hair straighteners and products at 11.35pm on Sunday.

Three other young men were arrested and charged with looting and related offences after they allegedly entered the flooded Royal Hotel.

The men are expected to appear at Gympie Magistrates Court on February 25.

12.20pm: A BODY is believed to have been found in a creek near Gatton during the search for two missing men.

There are reports a body has been discovered in a second submerged car at Sandy Creek but police could not confirm this.

 11.38am: LORD Mayor Graham Quirk is hopeful water supply issues will be resolved by close of business Thursday.

"There's no need for panic buying (of water) or panic actions, just plain and simple common sense and water conservation and we'll get through this without any issues," Cr Quirk said.

"At the moment we're holding."

Only one of Mt Crosby's two water treatment plants was working last night - and producing less water than usually capable of.

This morning, production levels had improved and the second plant was "online" but both plants could still fail, Cr Quirk said.

"Because of the quality of water going into those treatment plants they could shut down. That then would require a couple of hours of maintenance while filters are cleaned - that stops production," Cr Quirk said.

"So until we get a better quality of water flowing through, and we will as this mud and slush declines over time, we will then be able to increase the amount of water being supplied through that plant."

Dirty, soiled water from the Lockyer Valley coming down through the Bremer River is causing the current issues.

Meanwhile, Cr Quirk said that flooding in low lying areas was inevitable.

"The problem in low lying areas is that it's sometimes impossible to engineer your way out of those things," he said.

Cr Quirk said strong winds during the recent extreme weather event had done most of the damage in Brisbane.

In areas where power has been out for more than 48 hours, skip bins are available for people to dump spoiled food and green waste.

Also, opening hours at transfer stations have been extended so people can clear debris from their homes until Sunday night.

Find locations of the skip bins at brisbane.qld.gov.au

11.35am: GOVERNOR-GENERAL Quentin Bryce has arrived in Brisbane to visit critically ill patients airlifted from Bundaberg Hospital overnight.

Ms Bryce and Premier Campbell Newman are visiting Bundaberg patients at the Royal Brisbane and Women's hospital.

About 100 patients were airlifted from the Bundaberg Hospital overnight in a dramatic rescue as floodwaters lapped at the hospital's doors.

They were relocated to various hospitals around Brisbane.

Mr Newman was accompanied by his wife Lisa in the hospital visit.

He will provide an update on the flood disaster later today.

11.32am: FEDERAL Environment Minister Tony Burke should stop water from coal mines being released into Queensland's flooded waterways, environmentalists say.

Four BHP Mitsubishi Alliance mines in the Fitzroy River basin were last week allowed to carry out controlled releases of water in a pilot program announced by the state government last November.

But the Lock the Gate Alliance says at least 20 coal mines have released contaminated wastewater directly into rivers in Queensland since the floods began last week.

Alliance spokeswoman Ellie Smith said in some cases untreated water had been discharged directly from pollution ponds.

10.55am: SHOPPERS have rushed to supermarkets for water but have been left disappointed.

With reports that Brisbane could hit a water shortage by noon, supplies are selling out.

Holland Park West mother-of-three Andrea Mariot went to a Mt Gravatt supermarket, only to be confronted by empty shelves. "We still have water but we like to be prepared," she said.

Holland Park local Dawn Forester also went searching for water. "I think everyone panicked and bought water last night," she said.

Bottled water distribution points across Brisbane's south are not yet open.

10.35am: ABOUT 160 defence force personnel will arrive in Bundaberg today, followed by 100 more, to help begin the clean-up.

Army officers will hit the streets where water is starting to recede and check for dangers and structural damage.

Some are being deployed to outlying towns like Gayndah and Mundubbera.

10.20am: MOTORISTS have been told not to panic as rumours of fuel supply shortages spread across the state.

RACQ spokesperson Lauren Ritchie, said there are no reported fuel shortages at this stage and warns motorists not to stockpile fuel to allow priority for emergency services.

Petrol stations in Rockhampton through to Maryborough have experienced issues getting fuel into cut-off areas, but the RACQ confirmed supply trucks were just waiting for roads to re-open.

Ms Ritchie said fuel prices have so far remained stable and supply issues were expected to be rare.

10.11am: TRAINS from Beenleigh to Bethania have been suspended due to localised tidal flooding.

Queensland Rail is reporting that the line will be closed for several hours at least until the flood waters subside.

While this is not a major issue it will disrupt services on the Beenleigh and Gold Coast lines.

Trains are currently running from the CBD to Bethania, but passengers will need to transfer to buses after this point.

Delays of up to 30 minutes should be expected.

9.55am: WATER stations are being rolled out on Brisbane's southside but are yet to open as a possible water shortage looms.

It comes as Urban Utilities confirms water usage has gone up in the past 24 hours, putting more pressure on already critical levels

Around seven water stations have been set up by Queensland Urban Utilities.

Twelve pallets of bottled water have been waiting at a site at Camp Hill, guarded by a security guard and QUU worker.

Tarragindi local Chloe Jones arrived at the site in the hope of finding water but was turned away.

"We do have water at the moment but mum said it might run out by midday," she said.

"We haven't had power since Saturday."

But luckily the Jones family is living on a street partially hit by the power outages and have been helped by a kind neighbour who still has power.

"He's keeping our fridge... but otherwise we've been having barbecues," she said.

More locals have come for water but have had to be turned away.

It is unknown when or if the water stations will be opened.

9.23am: QUEENSLAND citrus growers have lost hundreds of millions of dollars, with some orchards entirely wiped out by flooding, one grower says.

Judy Shepherd, the secretary of the Gayndah and District Fruit Growers Association, says damage in the town and surrounding fruit orchards has been catastrophic.

She said the latest flood is the third natural disaster in recent years and she's afraid many growers won't recover.

As well, some citrus orchards had been completely wiped out, parts of others had simply dropped into the Burnett River and the infrastructure damage was enormous.

"We've heard of some that have gone," she told ABC television.

She said the impact on the region, particularly Gayndah and Mundubbera, would be severe and long-lasting.

"Catastrophic - hundreds of millions of dollars damage just in the citrus industry," she said.

8.30am: THIRTY SES volunteers will join police today searching creek banks in the Lockyer Valley region for two men who failed to turn up to work on Sunday.

Grave concerns are held for the pair after a car was found fully submerged in flood waters near Gatton yesterday.

Police investigating the disappearance said one man is a Malaysian national and the other is Taiwanese.

They were both on a working holiday to Queensland, living in Gatton, though it is not clear if they knew each other.

It is understood the men had been contracted to work at Mulgowie through a labour hire company at least two months ago.

Police said the men had left Gatton for work at Mulgowie Farming about 5am on Sunday but failed to arrive.

They were travelling in separate cars and it is not known if they were travelling in convoy.

A Mitsubishi Magna, which the 34 year-old man was driving, was retrieved from flooded Sandy Creek, near Glen Cairn, on Tuesday.

Police are still searching for the 25-year-old man's Toyota Camry, which has a registration number of 425RWU.

The area being scoured is north of Glen Cairn, and through the Lockyer Valley, though exact perimeters are unclear.

Crews will concentrate on the creek bank surrounds where the vehicle was found and three possible routes the missing car could have travelled between Gatton and Mulgowie.

Police could not estimate the height of the water level at 5am Sunday, only saying the causeway was likely among the first areas to flood.

Anyone with information should contact police or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 00.

7.46am: SUBURBS on Brisbane's southside could run out of water by 9am (AEST) on Wednesday, authorities are warning.

Flooding in the Brisbane River catchment has caused major problems at a water treatment plant at Mt Crosby.

It's partially back on line, but full restoration won't happen for another day and a half and reservoirs that service some southside suburbs are running very low, Premier Campbell Newman said on Wednesday.

Supplies of bottled water had been positioned on the southside in case supplies ran out on Wednesday morning, Mr Newman said.

"If any reservoir runs dry, we'll be immediately providing that for distribution to local areas," he told ABC television.

"This is very serious."

He said residents across Brisbane and Ipswich must limit water use to the necessities of drinking, bathing and cleaning until the treatment plant was back on line.

7.45am: SUPPLY of drinking water to Brisbane remains tight, but SEQwater expects the situation to improve throughout the morning.

Mike Foster from SEQwater said supplies were unlikely to run out as long as consumption does not increase.

"People should only use water for essential purposes only, if they stick to this message we should not run into any issues", he said.

Mr Foster said increased water production was looking better this morning as the first of the scheduled water flushes from Wivenhoe Dam reduced turbidity levels at the Mt Crosby treatment plant overnight.

SEQwater have confirmed residents do not need to boil water before drinking as it still meeting Australian drinking water guidelines.

"We have no issue with water quality; it's quantity that's the issue. People can be very confident about the quality of the water being produced", he said.

SEQwater aims to increase production from 100 megalitres/day to 200 megalitres/day by 9am this morning but said there is no guarantee they will meet the target.

7.10am: ENERGEX says more than 70,000 homes and businesses in the southeast are still without power.

Of that, power has been lost to more than 18,200 properties in Brisbane and 12,600 on the Gold Coast.

An Energex spokeswoman said the goal was to reconnect the majority by 6pm today, though this was subject to access and whether there would be any significant rebuilds in the power network.

7.05am: BRISBANE households will have access to free green waste kerbside pickup from Monday, February 4, as the flood clean-up gets underway.

Residents will also be able to dispose of any spoiled food at one of 50 skip bins that are set to be placed around Brisbane.

Transfer stations will also be free for both green and general waste dumping, with hours extended until 9pm.

"While council crews have been urgently attending to hundred of cases of large trees down that are safety risks, we also understand that residents will be keen to start cleaning up the smaller leaf litter and branches strewn across their backyards and footpaths," Lord Mayor Graham Quirk said.

"Given the amount of damage I've given clear direction that council will undertake a free, one-off green waste pick up from Monday to lend residents a hand with their recovery.

"There's plenty of time to prepare for the clean-up, you just need to gather up any green waste, put it on the kerb outside your house and make sure you've got it out by Sunday night, it's that simple."

Cr Quirk is urging residents to be careful of "hidden dangers", including fallen powerlines and sharp objects, during the clean up.

He is also asking people to wait until the river "fully subsides" before trying to dismantle sandbags.

6.58am: TRAIN stations in Brisbane's inner-city that were previously closed have re-opened but commuters should expect delays.

At 6.55am, Translink said Central, Fortitude Valley and Bowen Hills stations are open, though not all platforms will operational.

They said services are running on all lines "at reduced frequency" and commuters could face delays.

Meanwhile, fares will be automatically adjusted on go cards over the coming days after ticketing issues from flooding and power loss.

Overnight, it was reported that Queensland's flood emergency was not over yet, with entire suburbs in Bundaberg to remain submerged until the weekend.

And, in Brisbane, about 60,000 people in seven Brisbane suburbs faced the grim prospect of having no water last night as engineers desperately tried to keep the city's main water treatment plant running.

Brisbane City Council has stockpiled 40,000 1-litre bottles of water as an emergency measure.

The Mt Crosby water treatment facility was shut down when ex-Tropical Cyclone Oswald's downpours choked it with muddy water from the Bremer and Brisbane rivers.

Sediment from a flooded Brisbane River overwhelmed the plant, causing water levels to plunge in hilltop reservoirs serving hundreds of thousands of people.

Supplier Queensland Urban Utilities last night warned that Tarragindi, Camp Hill, Carina North, Mount Gravatt, Tingalpa, Rocklea and Oxley were most at risk of running dry, but a spokesman said that it was "very unlikely".

Brisbane City Council was taking no chances, organising bottle drops to suburbs while water trucks were on standby in case taps ran dry.

Elective surgery and specialist outpatient appointments at three major southeast Queensland hospitals were suspended after water supply concerns.

Metro South Health CEO Richard Ashby said he was advised at 4pm yesterday of potential water supply problems because of the floods and had cancelled elective surgery and thousands of specialist outpatient appointments today at the Princess Alexandra, QEII and Logan hospitals.

Lord Mayor Graham Quirk last night described the water situation facing Brisbane, Logan, Ipswich, the Lockyer Valley, Redlands and the Scenic Rim as "critical".

He said there was a very real chance the taps could run dry by this morning if people did not urgently cut their usage to the essentials of drinking, cooking and washing themselves.

The crisis was sparked when the city's two main water treatment plants - at Mt Crosby in the upper reaches of the Brisbane River - had to be shut down yesterday due to silt levels in the water there being four times as thick as during the 2011 floods.

The Mt Crosby facility was at least partially back online last night, but water bottle drops and water trucks were being sent into southern suburbs as a precaution.

Until cleaner water being released from Wivenhoe Dam reaches the processing plants some time later in the week, water will have to be pumped into Brisbane from the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast and a treatment plant at the North Pine Dam.

But that will only supply half the city's normal needs.

"I don't want panic, but I want a lot of common sense to apply over the next 48 hours," Cr Quirk said.

"We're through the flood but we're not out of this event at this stage."

Cr Quirk assured people that the water coming through the taps would remain safe to drink.

The water crisis was just one of many still facing a state last night reeling from its second flood disaster in two years.

While floodwaters began to recede across most of the state's south:

* Rockhampton residents were preparing for a flood roaring down the Fitzroy River, which is expected to hit at the weekend;

* Several communities remained cut off last night, including Mt Tamborine near the Gold Coast and a string of towns inland of Maryborough;

* Flood peaks in the Brisbane River were lower than expected, sparing most properties in Brisbane and Ipswich;

* In northern NSW, the town of Grafton came perilously close to being inundated by the surging Clarence River which peaked at a record level just 2cm below the town's levee;

* About 50,000 properties remain without power across the southeast, with 400 Energex crews repairing what has been the region's widest-ever blackout;

* Rail commuters were warned about the potential for further delays and cancellations today despite the majority of services expected to be up and running by this morning;

* Producer groups warned that food prices would rise as early estimates put the total damage bill in excess of $1 billion.

But Premier Campbell Newman said the major concern was still Bundaberg, where the situation remained serious and the Government was working with local authorities to ensure the thousands of evacuees had access to food, water and bedding.

Just over 10 per cent of the city's population has been flood-affected, with more than 2000 properties inundated and 7500 people forced out of their homes - 1500 of whom were sheltering in evacuation centres last night.

The Burnett River peaked yesterday afternoon at 9.5m, and is expected to remain high for up to four days.

Flying into the "rum city" yesterday, Mr Newman compared the sight of the bloated Burnett River with the Brisbane River in 2011.

"I've seen the city from the air," Mr Newman said.

"I've seen perhaps even more extraordinary sights than we saw two years ago in southeast Queensland, given the relative impact on Bundaberg.

"I've spoken to a number of people who've lost an awful lot, but they're not going to give up on this.

"They're not going to be crushed by this."

Holed up at the Bundaberg Civic Centre for the third day, mother-of-six Samantha Rechenberg was matter-of-fact about the situation.

"Our place is definitely flooded, but I didn't wait to see how badly. I didn't want to get evacuated off the roof," Ms Rechenberg said.

"We don't know what we'll find when we go back. Not much, I'm thinking."

Jolie Howard and partner Anthony Tynen were just as resigned to losing everything at their East Bundaberg house.

"Within half an hour of us being evacuated, the water was half way through the house," Mr Tynen said.

"My father's the one who owns the house, and it's all gone. The house is completely destroyed."

East Bundaberg Rotary Club member Marilyn Batty said volunteers were coming into the evacuation centre "all the time".

"Anybody who's dry is coming to help. We had 500 for breakfast this morning, and we're just going through clothes making sure everybody has clothes and toiletries," Ms Batty said. "People are rallying together; it's very good."

In flooded Water Street, Harvey Knapp was not about to let muddy ankle deep water force him out of his house.

"I slept there last night. It was alright. Think it's going to get smelly though," he said.

Local MP and Police and Emergency Services Minister Jack Dempsey, said the floodwater would take a while to recede which would reveal the extent of the damage, but

thanked emergency workers for their efforts and the Australian Defence Force which had helped rescue 94 people isolated at North Bundaberg on Monday night.

Mr Dempsey said the group had avoided evacuation to remain with their pets until they realised their own lives were in danger, and attracted the attention of rescue helicopters with torches.

Mr Newman said the ADF "saved the day" preventing the record flood turning into an even greater disaster.

"We did have a situation with fast rising floodwaters and people becoming very rapidly isolated on ever diminishing islands of ground," the Premier said.

Bundaberg Regional Mayor Mal Forman said he was encouraged by Mr Newman's offer of assistance, and buoyed by his visit.

The Premier requested all local governments to let the State Government know what help they needed to clean up and recover from the crisis.

"We'll be asking them to pull together the estimates of their damage," he said. '

"Often in these events people put out a figure far too early. I think we've got to get it right before we start talking about the numbers."

 -- reporting by Robyn Ironside, Kathleen Donaghey, Kate McKenna, Kris Crane, Jacinda Tutty


03.30 | 0 komentar | Read More

Floods continue to batter east coast

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Januari 2013 | 03.29

About 7500 people have been displaced in Bundaberg as it contemplates a recovery from the flood disaster.

NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell says the worst is over for Grafton residents in the state's north but now evacuations are underway for locals in Macelan.

As a result of the flood level predicted by the Bureau of Meteorology for Maclean, the NSW SES is directing residents within the nominated areas to evacuate now.

Areas covered by this Flood Evacuation Order include the following streets:

Argyle, Bakers, Bank, Basin, Cameron, Centenary, Central, Church, Clyde, Diamond, Dunoon, Dwartes, Emerald, Houghs, Howard, Iona, John, Jubilee, McLachlan, McNaughton, Morven, Rannoch, River, Rush, Sapphire, Stanley, Taloumbi, and Union streets.

Their latest statement said: "Do not delay your evacuation. Roads will be congested or closed. You could become trapped and need rescue. Remaining in flooded areas is dangerous and may place your life at risk."


The evacuation order comes after the Clarence River peaked today just below the height of the levee wall in a record flood that caused the evacuation of 2000 people.

Visiting Grafton after the peak, Mr O'Farrell told reporters that while there was still concern for communities downstream, "it does appear as though the worst of it is over''.

He said the State Government would work with the local council and other relevant authorities to ensure the flood mitigation measures continued to work as well as they did today.

"I'm delighted that whilst at 11 o'clock the river peaked at 8.08 metres, it's now at 7.95 metres, it is going down.''

The levee was breached along some parts of the wall but Clarence Valley Mayor Richie Williamson said council workers contained it with sandbags and were now concentrating on towns downstream, including Iluka, Yamba, Ulmarra and Maclean.

"It's looking more positive but the situation is still very dire. It's improving for Grafton and our attention is now on Ulmarra and the levee system around Maclean," Mr Williamson said.

Ten local government areas hit by the flooding have been declared natural disaster areas, allowing relief funds to flow to assist in recovery.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Mr O'Farrell today announced joint funding from the federal and NSW governments.

The declaration triggers a number of disaster assistance schemes to assist with the cost of disaster relief and recovery.

A boy has died after a tree fell on him and his mother, bringing the death toll from the flood emergency to four.

Natural disaster assistance would be available to affected residents, small business owners and primary producers in the Ballina, Bellingen, Byron, Tweed and Nambucca shires, the Clarence Valley, Coffs Harbour City, Kyogle, Lismore City and Richmond Valley.

As the threat recedes in Grafton, crews are working across the state to restore power to thousands of properties after trees and debris became tangled in powerlines.

More than 19,000 homes are blacked out in the area stretching from Kempsey on the mid-north coast, right up to the Queensland border.

The NSW State Emergency Service has been inundated with calls for assistance with the heavy rain, strong winds and flash flooding bringing down power lines and trees and ripping roofs off homes.

Further areas could be declared in coming days as the clean-up effort continues.

Earlier, more than 1500 people were told to evacuate their homes in Lismore, Ulmarra, Cowper and Brushgrove in northern NSW with warnings of flooding as rivers peak throughout today.

A severe weather warning for Sydney was downgraded, after the city did not get the 100km/h winds that were forecast.

Thousands of travellers are still trying to make their way home after the long weekend are facing delays and disruptions at Sydney Airport, as ex-tropical cyclone Oswald forces airlines to cancel flights.

The majority of the flights affected are those to and from Brisbane, the Gold Coast, Canberra and Melbourne.

SES sandbagging near Grafton's Clarence River on Tuesday. Picture: Nikki Short

A Qantas flight from Brisbane to Townsville this afternoon has been diverted to Rockhampton, though the airline refuses to offer any details on the incident.

Meanwhile, those affected by the disaster have been posting images and message on social networking websites showing the impact the crisis is having on communities on the east coast.

In Queensland, Ipswich residents are breathing a sigh of relief after a lower-than-expected flood peak caused far less damage than expected.

The clean-up has begun after the swollen Bremer River, which flows through the southeast Queensland city, burst its banks and reached a flood peak of almost 14 metres last night, inundating about 350 properties.

The council says the evacuation centres are still open and some roads are cut off because of floodwater or sludge.

Premier Campbell Newman has also urged Brisbane residents to conserve water, warning that some parts of the city could run dry.

"The water (coming downstream) is four times muddier than it was in 2011. The effect of that has been to cause the two treatment plans to shut down.

He said at normal levels of consumption, the city went through 450 megalitres per day. "Right now we can only produce and supply about half that."

Bronte Beach in Sydney being hammered by the wild weather. Picture: John Grainger

"It is serious. We need people to conserve water."

More than 2000 homes and businesses have been flooded in the devastated town of Bundaberg.

Mr Newman called on all Queenslanders to roll up their sleeves and help those affected by the floods.

The Brisbane River has peaked and fallen short of causing serious damage. But it is thought that high tides in coming days could see the river rise again.

The Bureau of Meteorology said a smaller than predicted tidal surge will give the capital a small reprieve.

But Mayor Graham Quirk says he doesn't want locals to be complacent and any slight difference could have big impacts.

Hundreds of state schools in Queensland are closed on the first day of the new school year.

Update: Find out which Queensland schools are closed here

More than 30 private schools are also shut because of the floods and storms which have battered the state.

Rising water in the Clarence river is expected to test levee banks around Grafton

A number of schools in central Queensland, the Gold Coast and Brisbane, which were expected to be closed today, have had power restored and are open.

Sugar cane crops have been ravaged by torrential rain, leading canegrowers to seek financial support from the government.

Industry body Canegrowers says it's too early to determine the full extent of the damage but it appears the Bundaberg, Maryborough and Childers areas were worst hit.

Floodwaters have also reached the rooftops of more than a hundred businesses in the town of Gympie. About 25 homes have been also been affected by flooding, but it's not yet known if water has entered living areas.

The Mary River peaked at the major flood level of 20.3 metres on Monday afternoon, with floodwaters higher and flowing faster than in the disaster which hit Gympie two years ago. The river is taking its time to recede and remains at a major flood level of 17.4 metres.

Water is still swamping businesses in the heart of town.

Channel Nine's Paul Burt reports form Brisbane River earlier today

Along the Queensland coastline, shark nets are now adrift after being ripped from moorings along the Sunshine and Gold coasts.

Fisheries Queensland Shark Control Program manager Jeff Krause says nets have been torn from their moorings  along hundreds of kilometres of coastline in southern Queensland.

The Manly ferries had a hard time seeing the swells in the Sydney Harbour. Picture: John Grainger

"Nets have been dislodged from Rainbow Beach, Coolum, Marcoola and Maroochydore on the Sunshine Coast and Kurrawa, Mermaid, Miami, Currumbin, Kirra and Coolangatta beaches at the Gold Coast,'' he said in a statement.

The ongoing disaster has already claimed four lives, including a three-year-old boy who was hit by a falling tree in Brisbane's north on Monday, while thousands around the state have been forced to evacuate their homes.

For the latest from Queensland see the Courier Mail

The others were a motorcyclist whose body was pulled from a creek south of Brisbane, an 81-year-old man whose body was found near Bundaberg, and a 27-year-old man who tried to cross a flooded creek near Gympie.

Premier Campbell Newman toured the stricken city by air this morning and said he was shocked by what he saw.

''I've seen perhaps even more extraordinary sights than we saw two years ago in southeast Queensland,'' Mr Newman told reporters.

He says Bundaberg is at the centre of the state's flood crisis, with so many in need of help now and in the future.

''This is the number one priority for myself, for my government - to do everything we can for the people of this city.''

So far there are no reports that homes have been swept from their foundations, as feared.

Houses on the Clarence river in Grafton this morning. Picture: Nikki Short

But authorities say that won't be known for sure until the floodwaters have cleared.

Mr Newman visited evacuation centres and accompanied one senior SES worker on a boat tour of her home, which had water up to its ceiling.

He says the courage some people are showing in continuing to work for the community, even when their own homes are going under, is amazing.

The Premier promised all possible support for Bundaberg residents in the days, weeks and months ahead.

''They've shown a lot of guts, they're not going to give up, they're not going to be crushed by this,'' he said.

Most of the 7500 people displaced by the flood have gone to stay with family and friends.

Police Minister Jack Dempsey says there are 1500 residents in evacuation centres across the city.

Three other people are trapped inside a house by rising water from the Tweed River at Fingal Head, the SES said.

Overnight, 14 helicopters rescued more than a thousand people in the city's north.

''Black Hawks were operating to midnight, using night vision equipment,'' Mr Newman told Sky News earlier today.

''There may still be people in there and we have to get them out.''

The immediate focus was to rescue people stranded on islands created by floodwaters moving at more than 70km/h.

Mr Newman urged people to try to make contact with authorities or get up on their roofs so they could be seen.

''We are concerned about houses being lifted off their stumps and swept away,'' the premier said.

''People cannot stay in north Bundaberg.''

Authorities are preparing to evacuate scores of hospital patients from Bundaberg, where 2000 properties have flooded.

CareFlight Queensland has relocated two Learjets and four helicopters to Bundaberg to help the evacuation operation.

One Learjet flew a critical care patient from Bundaberg to Brisbane on Monday night and CareFlight says more critical medical evacuations are expected throughout today.

Emergency crews in Penkivil St, Bondi, after a five-stoery high tree fell down outside an apartment building. Picture: Spielman Photography

Queensland's Chief Health Officer, Jeannette Young, said the first Hercules flight out of Bundaberg arrived at Brisbane airport at 11am (AEST), carrying 41 patients.

The patients will be taken to the Royal Brisbane and Women's, Princess Alexandra and Prince Charles hospitals.

A second Hercules is expected to arrive at Bundaberg later in the day and will transport a further 41 patients.

The evacuation will be completed with a return flight of the first Hercules.

Dr Young said as well as the hospital patients, around 60 dialysis patients from the Bundaberg region were also being transferred to Brisbane, in different aircraft.

The Burnett River is raging amid a record flood, and is expected to climb to 10 metres over the next few days.

That's about two metres higher than the 2010/11 flood.

Mayor Mal Forman said there was still a lot of water headed towards Bundaberg, with flood levels expected to reach 9.5 metres this evening.

He said helicopters continued to work through the night, carrying 120 more residents to safety.

A man and woman make the most of the foam on the Sunshine Coast. Picture: www.brandonrooney.com

''We are very concerned that everyone has been evacuated from north Bundaberg. Until the water has receded it's very hard to know, but we pray they are all safe,'' he told ABC News 24.

The mayor said 60 elderly people at the city's RSL aged care facility were isolated by floodwaters, but they will be moved on Tuesday morning.

About 12,000 properties are without power.

The city has adequate supplies of drinking water but the city's sewage plants have been flooded, Mr Forman said.

About 167,000 homes are currently still without power in the southeast of Queensland after 50,000 properties were reconnected overnight.

Four hundred Energex crews will work through today to restore more homes and are hopeful improved weather conditions will assist their efforts.

The Brisbane City Council had warned that up to 3600 homes and 1250 businesses could experience some flooding, but that could be revised down.

Brisbane will also see a flood peak on the high tide on Wednesday. The flood peak will be nothing like what the city saw during the 2011 flood disaster.

However, floodwaters have breached levee banks in the city of Maryborough overnight, and it's believed some homes and businesses may have been inundated.

A helicopter rescues a family at Fairmead on the Burnett River downstream of Bundaberg. Pic: Paul Beutel

Fraser Coast Mayor Gerard O'Connell said the Mary River peaked at 10.65 metres at 4am (AEST) today and inspections were underway.

''The water is creeping into homes and businesses but I think most people were able to expect that,'' he told the ABC.

In the Darling Downs town of Warwick, southwest of Brisbane, there are hopes most homes and businesses have escaped flooding after the Condamine River peaked overnight half a metre lower than predicted.

Mayor Peter Blundell hopes the lower peak will have saved about 60 homes and businesses that were at risk of having water above the floorboards.

But up to 40 properties would still have had some form of inundation.

''How many had water into their living areas, we're not sure,'' he said.

Energex says 160,000 customers are still without power across the state, and 1100 power lines are down in the southeast.

The State Emergency Service had received 3400 calls for help in the 24 hours to 5am today.

Most jobs were in central Queensland, the north coast, Brisbane and the wider southeast region, for evacuations, sandbagging and roof damage.

RAW FOOTAGE: Sections of the John Muntz Causeway in Queensland are completely submerged as the flooding continues.

A total of 46 council areas are now eligible for government assistance, including Brisbane City, the Gold Coast, Logan, Redland, Scenic Rim and South Burnett local government areas.

There is good news for residents in the flood-prone Ipswich suburb of Goodna, west of Brisbane, after escaping any damage from flooding.

The Bremer river peaked at Ipswich at 13.9 metres on Monday evening, well below the predicted 15 metres.

Ipswich councillor Paul Tully told the ABC not one of the 600 homes and businesses evacuated in his suburb of Goodna had flooded.

''People are going to wake to the most joyous news,'' he said.

Mayor Paul Pisasale said people would be able to return home today.

Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan visited Ipswich today, where a only maximum of 50 properties have had some level of flooding.

Mr Swan said there was a palpable sense of relief.

''It's good to be back here today and to see we've escaped the worst nature can throw at us,'' he told reporters.

Mr Swan said it was heartening to see the mud army out in force in the flood-prone suburb of Goodna.

''I think that's what we're known for, not just here in Queensland but right around the country and it's what I think the world admires about Australia, our capacity to pull together in a time of threat, neighbour helping neighbour,'' he said.

''It's all been on display and I think it is one of the great things that comes out of tragedies.''

He said the damage bill would not be known for some time, and the priority now was dealing with the human impacts of the disaster.

Queensland Premier Campbell Newman has attempted to reassure residents of the affected areas that the overall flooding won't be as severe as in 2011, but concedes that local flooding is worse in some parts of the state.

Mr Newman said floodwaters moving at more than 70km/h in Bundaberg had the potential to wash away houses.

But with the disaster affecting most of central and southeast Queensland, he said the government had to be careful where it placed emergency resources.

"Once again, sadly Queensland is facing a major disaster crisis," the premier said.

"(But) this state and its people will rise to the challenge. Together we will get through this."

Several other regional centres in central and southern Queensland are flooding or expecting significant floods, including Gympie, Maryborough, Warwick, Laidley and Rockhampton.

The cities of Brisbane and Ipswich in the southeast are also experiencing their own floods.

Queensland Treasurer Tim Nicholls estimates the damage bill will run into the hundreds of millions of dollars.

"(The damage is) obviously going to be in the tens, and more likely the hundreds of millions of dollars," Mr Nicholls said.

"The damage is going to be as diverse as local schools and local community halls to major infrastructure."

The state government on Monday opened up disaster assistance funding to residents of 10 more Queensland regions, including those in Brisbane and Ipswich.

The prime minister will visit Queensland in coming days as the federal government steps up assistance to the flood-ravaged state.

Julia Gillard says federal authorities are working at every level with the state to help people get through the disaster.

The prime minister says a massive C17 transport aircraft has now been added to a fleet of Black Hawk helicopters and two C130 Hercules aircraft evacuating patients from Bundaberg Hospital to Brisbane.

As well 100 defence force personnel have been deployed to the city.

The Hercules are flying patients into Brisbane and returning to Bundaberg with essential supplies while the huge C17 will transport heavy equipment needed by Queensland Fire and Rescue and the ambulance service.

Ms Gillard says the federal and state governments are working well together.

''I wish I could put this differently but the truth is our systems ... have been tried and tested time and time again because we've had to face so much in Queensland so we know how to work together - we know how to do it well,'' she told the ABC.

Disaster funding is already in place.

''Working with the state government, we've commenced the Natural Disaster Relief and Recovery Arrangements which are active in 46 local government areas,'' the Prime Minister said.

Meanwhile, Keith Urban will return to Brisbane for a rescheduled show on February 5. The country star was forced to cancel his Brisbane concert due to the floods.

Irish ensemble Celtic Thunder, who were due to play Brisbane Entertainment Centre today, said they were unable to perform in the flood-affected area.

Ticket holders are advised to contact the point of sale for refunds.

IN NSW, in Lismore, where 500 people are under evacuation orders, conditions are easing, with no reports of homes being inundated.

And in Darkwood, where more 400 people have been cut off since the weekend, floodwaters are now receding.

Reports that 20 have been stranded by floodwaters in Grafton is also being investigated, NSW SES spokesman Michael Eburn said.

It comes as more than 2000 people remain isolated, with around 850 people isolated at Ewingar west of Lismore and 400 at Darkwood on the mid-north coast.

But so far there have been no reports of any properties being inundated.

For the latest from NSW, see The Daily Telegraph

Mr Eburn said there has been 18 flood rescues since the wild weather began hitting the state, with people continuing to ignore warnings.

''If people could get the message of not entering flood waters that would really reduce that number,'' he told AAP today.

WHERE TO TURN TO FOR HELP AND INFORMATION

NSW:

Government Flood Information

Ministry for Police and Emergency Services

NSW flood warnings

Queensland:

Guide to essential services

QLD flood warnings

Brisbane city council flood maps

Meanwhile the SES said it was rescuing four people trapped in a 4WD in floodwaters at Bellingen, southwest of Coffs Harbour.

Calls for assistance, which has now reached more than 2900, are expected to increase as the weather system brings localised downpours of up to 200mm and winds of more than 100km/h to the cities.

There are reports of localised flooding around Camden in Sydney's southwest but that there was no threat for any rivers to flood, he said.

''Don't get out on the road if you don't have to today and stay clear of fallen power lines.''

In Sydney, motorists woke to blacked-out traffic signals and road closures as flash flooding swept through the city.

Summerland Way is now open to all vehicles between Grafton and Casino in the State's North after earlier flooding.

This means motorists can now travel between Sydney and Brisbane using the Pacific Highway to Grafton, then Summerland Way to Casino, then the Bruxner Highway to Ballina, then rejoin the Pacific Highway.

Summerland Way remains closed in both directions two kilometres south of the Queensland border at Dairy Flat due to a landslide.

The following roads also remain closed in both directions due to flooding:

In the State's North:


•    The Pacific Highway between Grafton and Ballina
•    The Gwydir Highway about 70km west of Grafton at Jackadgery due to a landslip
•    Armidale Road between Ebor and Nymboida
•    Bangalow Road between Bexhill and Lagoon Grass
•    Tweed Valley Way in Murwillumbah


The Ulmarra and Lawrence ferries remain out of service.


In the State's North West:
•    The Newell Highway at Goondiwindi
•    The Gwydir Highway between east of Moree and Pallamallawa


In the Illawarra:
•    The Illawarra Highway at Albion Park between the Princes Highway and Tongarra Road
•    Fern Street at Gerringong between the Princes Highway and Belinda Street


In Sydney:
•    Audley Weir has reopened in the Royal National Park
•    Stoney Creek Road remains closed at the Causeway at Shanes Park

Flooding and heavy rain has also stopped train services between Port Kembla and Wollongong in the Illawarra.

There had been 500 calls for help in the Sydney region, with a minor flood warning for the Nepean River at Menangle in Sydney's southwest.

NSW escaped the loss of life suffered in Queensland, although 50 people had to be rescued, 3500 called for assistance, mainly around Grafton, but also as far south as Sydney and the Illawarra.

19,000 homes were blacked out, from Kempsey on the mid-north coast up to the Queensland border.

Wild weather is hampering a search for a man feared drowned off the NSW Central Coast.

He was last seen walking into the water in Cabbage Tree Bay at Norah Head about 4pm (AEDT) on Saturday.

Another swimmer contacted police when he noticed the man's belongings still lying on the beach.

A search involving Tuggerah Lakes Police and Surf Life-Saving Australia resumed this morning but wild weather was restricting the search, police said.

But there was good news in the search for a canyoner who went missing in the Blue Mountains on Monday in the midst of wild weather.

The 26-year-old was found safe and well near Bowens Creek about 8.30am (AEDT) today, police said.

He is currently being walked out and will receive treatment for mild hypothermia and dehydration.

BoM forecaster Katarina Kovacevic said Sydney was spared the worst of the storm overnight.

Around 70 to 80mm of rain fell in the Sydney basin, with Frenchs Forest in the city's north the worst affected after being belted with 160mm since 9am (AEDT) on Monday.

However, the city did not get the 100km/h winds that were forecast.

''We did see the gusts, but we saw them offshore rather than impacting the coast,'' Ms Kovacevic told AAP.

A Sydney buoy, however, recorded waves of up to 10 metres.

The widespread disaster, triggered by heavy rainfall and wind from ex-tropical cyclone Oswald, comes two years after floods devastated much of the same areas of Queensland, resulting in 35 deaths.

The Insurance Council of Australia says $43 million worth of insurance claims had already been lodged.

Deputy Prime Minister Wayne Swan told reporters the Defence Force was ready to help disaster-hit communities in NSW, in the same way it was doing in Queensland.

''Flooding is emerging through NSW and the defence forces are on standby to assist as this crisis unfolds elsewhere,'' Mr Swan told reporters today.

Too early for a flood levy

Liberal Queensland Senator George Brandis today said it was premature to be saying ''categorically yes or no'' to a new flood levy.

It comes after Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan yesterday said the summer of heatwaves, fires and floods would hit the budget but it was too soon to discuss another flood levy.

''We don't yet have an early assessment ... of the costs,'' he told Sky News.

''The first thing someone like Wayne Swan and other Labor politicians think of is 'Ah ha, here's another excuse to have another tax'.''

He said whatever federal assistance was needed to help Queensland and NSW rebuild infrastructure could be accommodated if the Gillard government ''tightened its belt''.

Labor parliamentary secretary Mike Kelly said Australia had a ''proud tradition'' of using levies when necessary.

He pointed to the Howard government's gun buyback following the Port Arthur massacre.

Defending the Gillard government's $1.8 billion flood levy, Mr Kelly said some of that money had been deployed on flood damage prevention measures.

In Victoria, Premier Ted Baillieu says firefighters may never be able to extinguish some of Victoria's largest bushfires without a big soaking of significant rainfall.

It's been weeks since a major rain storm drenched parts of the state while a watch and act remains in place for residents of Violet Town, around 170 kilometres north of Melbourne.

A bushfire there of about 13-hundred-hectares in size is continuing to burn south of the community.

Firefighters are also working on two controlled fires at Harrietville, near Mount Feathertop in the northeast, and the Aberfeldy fire in Gippsland, to the southwest, that has already destroyed homes while burning through 71-thousand hectares.

Milder weather has allowed firefighters to strengthen bushfire containment lines, as late yesterday Ms Gillard visited fire-affected towns in the state's east.

Ms Gillard and Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu on Monday visited the towns of Seaton and Heyfield, where the Gippsland bushfire destroyed more than 20 homes and claimed the life of an 84-year-old man earlier this month.

Ms Gillard urged communities to be prepared and vigilant.

"I've also been here, too, to say to this community that we are thinking of them," Ms Gillard told reporters.

"We are yet to face what could be the worst of the bushfire season. Often in Victoria the weather in February is at its hottest and most dangerous," she said.

Ms Gillard said the fire was not out but only contained.

"I'd be asking people here in Victoria and around the nation to recognise that the bushfire risk is not over and people do need to be prepared and need to be very careful."

In Western Australia, a bushfire threatening homes had been contained last night, but firefighters warned it was not yet under control.

It had burned out 40 hectares in the southern part of Ambergate, in the city of Busselton, with authorities saying the cause of the blaze was suspicious.

DFES says the fire was contained but there was the potential for it to jump containment lines and affect nearby properties.

The fire started between Queen Elizabeth Avenue and Doyle Road near the Ambergate Nature Reserve.

It was moving slowly in a northwesterly direction towards the intersection of Ambergate Road and Edwards Road.

In a separate blaze, homes and plantations are being threatened by a bushfire burning about 900 kilometres north of Perth.

A watch and act alert has been issued for people in Miaboolya Road, Bibbawarra Road, North River Road and surrounding areas in the northeastern part of Carnarvon, on the state's north coast.

DFES said the fire, which started on Monday morning, could affect plantations along North River Road.

Residents were advised to put their bushfire survival plan into action.


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