logo
Inquest into Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland Anniversary flooding deaths gets underway

Inquest into Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland Anniversary flooding deaths gets underway

RNZ News7 hours ago

Flooding on Candia Road in Henderson Valley, west Auckland on 27 January 2023.
Photo:
Supplied
The timeliness and effectiveness of weather warnings and the emergency response to the Auckland Anniversary floods and Cyclone Gabrielle will come under scrutiny in a coroner's inquest that gets underway in Auckland on Monday.
The inquest will look into the 18 weather-related fatalities in the Auckland floods and Cyclone Gabrielle in early 2023, including three men who died in the months following the weather events.
The hearings are set down for about six weeks - with phase one taking place in Auckland between late June and August, and phase two in Hastings between October and November.
The Auckland part of the inquest will focus on the deaths of the four men who died during
the Auckland Anniversary floods
, and
the two firefighters who died in Muriwai during Cyclone Gabrielle
.
Daniel Miller, 34, was helping rescue others in the severely flooded Wairau Valley in Auckland's North Shore, and was later found dead in a culvert on Target Road.
Daniel Newth, 25, was
swept into the Wairau Valley
while kayaking in floodwaters.
David Lennard, 78, died after his Remuera home was destroyed in a landslide.
Dave Young, 58, was swept away in floodwaters in the rural Waikato town of Onewhero.
Two volunteer Muriwai firefighters, Craig Stevens and Dave van Zwanenberg, died in a landslide two weeks following the floods - during Cyclone Gabrielle - after they were critically injured when attending a major slip callout.
A ruling
by Coroner Erin Woolley on the scope of the inquest said she would be examining what warnings were issued to the public about the dangers of the flood waters at the time, and whether they were timely, complete and adequate.
She said she would look into important issues raised by Young's family - which is the messaging for people living in areas near the border between different local authorities or Civil Defence Emergency Management groups, as well as the availability of search and rescue resources on the ground.
Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown's handling of the flooding came in for heavy criticism.
Photo:
RNZ/Angus Dreaver
Woolley will also inquire about whether
the emergency response in Auckland was adequate and well-coordinated
.
The authorities' knowledge of the risks of landslides at Shore Road in Remuera and Muriwai before the weather events will also be examined. Woolley said she will be inquiring whether any parties should have taken actions to address those risks.
Woolley acknowledged that both Fire and Emergency and WorkSafe had completed investigations on the circumstances around the deaths of Van Zwanenberg and Stevens, however she said both investigations were limited in the evidence from witnesses.
She added that she would look into whether it was appropriate for emergency responders to be doing work in areas at risk of landslides during Cyclone Gabrielle.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter
curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MetService quizzed on agency's weather warnings during coronial inquest
MetService quizzed on agency's weather warnings during coronial inquest

RNZ News

timean hour ago

  • RNZ News

MetService quizzed on agency's weather warnings during coronial inquest

An example of MetService weather warnings and watches that were in place on 26 and 27 June. Photo: MetService The chief meteorologist for MetService has been quizzed on the agency's colour-coded weather warnings during a coronial inquest into the deaths of 18 people during Cyclone Gabrielle and the preceding Auckland floods. The inquest , which began Monday, is split into two phases. The first will focus on Auckland and the second on Hastings. MetService chief meteorologist Chris Noble was first to give evidence, questioned by the agency's lawyer Nicola Cuervo on the process used to issue a weather warning. He explained that thunderstorm notifications came in three stages: outlooks, watches and warnings. "Outlooks are designed to give a heads-up that severe or impactful weather is coming at some point in the future (usually three to six days)," Noble said. "As the event draws nearer and it becomes more certain we are likely to have weather that reaches the criteria to justify a warning, we'll issue a watch; this is a heads-up we're close to an event and it looks like it could be impactful." The watch would be upgraded to a warning once it became relatively certain that the storm was imminent. Noble also explained the criteria MetService used to rule that a thunderstorm was "severe". "MetService classifies a thunderstorm severe if one or more of the following criteria are met: heavy rain from thunderstorms of 25 millimetres per hour, large hail, strong wind gusts from thunderstorms of 110 kilometres per hour or more, or damaging tornadoes with a wind speed more than 116 kilometres per hour." Flooding on the corner of Seabrooke and Margan Avenues in the Auckland suburb of New Lynn on 27 January 2023. Photo: RNZ/ Josie Campbell Weather warnings were assigned colours from yellow to red to indicate severity, and given the term "broad scale" if they covered an area of 1000 square kilometres. Noble said it was very rare for a weather event to be both on a broad scale and meet the criteria for a red warning. The "broad scale red warning" label was only issued when there was an event with expected severe impacts and a potential threat to life over a significant area, and just 16 of these warnings had been issued since the colour coded system was introduced in 2019. Auckland's anniversary weekend storm was the ninth of these, and Cyclone Gabrielle the tenth, Noble said. He said when the colour coded system was first established, MetService only expected between one to three weather events on that scale each year - but eight had occurred since the start of 2023. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store