logo
Rain reprieve expected for north NSW after deadly flooding ‘smashed' communities

Rain reprieve expected for north NSW after deadly flooding ‘smashed' communities

The Guardian22-05-2025
A reprieve from heavy rainfall is expected to arrive on the NSW mid north coast on Friday after three days of flooding, as authorities desperately search for a missing man with three people confirmed dead.
Residents in the region are hoping for easing conditions on Friday after the NSW premier, Chris Minns said on Thursday flooding had 'smashed through' communities with 'levels of rise in local tributaries, creeks [and] rivers that we haven't seen since 1920'.
'Many people would have never seen this level of inundation or flooding in their communities,' Minns said.
The bodies of three people have been found since the flooding: a man found in Rosewood likely in his 30s missing since Wednesday night, a 63-year-old man at a home in Moto, and a 60-year-old woman who was caught in flood water travelling from Sydney to Coffs Harbour in a 4WD on Wednesday night.
A 49-year-old man who failed to come home after walking near a flooded road at Nymboida is still missing.
The NSW State Emergency Service said on Thursday afternoon that 48,000 people still remained isolated by flood waters in the region.
According to the Bureau of Meteorology, after rain of up to half a metre in some places since Sunday, there is expected to be a reprieve on Friday, as the coastal trough moves south towards the Victorian border.
The bureau said conditions were set to ease during Thursday night, with rainfall shifting to parts of the southern Hunter, Blue Mountains and Southern Highlands. On Friday morning, heavy rainfall will extend further south to the Southern Tablelands and inland parts of the south coast.
For the mid-north coast, there was expected to be isolated areas of heavy rainfall leading to flash flooding up until midnight, with six-hourly totals of between 60mm and 100mm of rain likely.
As the system moves down the coast, it is not expected to have the same level of flooding, but up to 100mm of rain over 24 hours are expected in those areas.
Major flooding is occurring on the Manning, Paterson, Hastings, Williams, Nambucca and Macleay Rivers. Renewed river rises were likely into the weekend, the NSW SES assistant commissioner Dean Storey said.
'Although rainfall may be reprieving in some areas, we haven't seen the end of renewed river rises in northern NSW and people should not become complacent,' Storey said.
There were 149 active warnings on Thursday evening, with 37 at emergency warning, and 86 at watch and act.
There had been more than 4,600 calls for assistance recorded, and 600 flood rescues utilising nine helicopters, 500 boats and ground crew. There were 2,500 personnel, including 2,200 SES workers, in the field.
Telecommunications services had been affected by the flooding, but the NSW SES had been door-knocking residents in the affected areas.
There are 15 evacuation centres open, including at Dungog, Gloucester, Taree, Wingham, Kempsey, Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie.
Emergency services personnel from Victoria were travelling to NSW on Thursday night to assist in the response, with 24 en route including staff from the Victorian SES, Fire Rescue Victoria and the Country Fire Authority.
On Thursday evening, NSW police northern regions commander David Waddell announced the third reported death in the floods, which have been brought on by three consecutive days of rain.
He said the woman, who was yet to be formally identified, was located in Brooklana, west of Coffs Harbour. Her family has been informed.
Police earlier said a body, believed to be that of a man in his 30s missing since Wednesday night, was found near Rosewood on Thursday morning. The body of a 63-year-old man was found on Wednesday at a home affected by flood waters on North Moto Road at Moto.
The 60-year-old woman had travelled with a police officer towards Coffs Harbour at 7pm on Wednesday night until they reached flood waters at Wild Cattle Creek Bridge. The officer was in a BMW sedan and could not continue. The woman was in a 4WD and decided to continue after the officer checked the water levels, Wardell said.
The woman called 30 minutes later saying she was in trouble near Brooklana, but could not be located after a search. Her vehicle was found at 2pm on Thursday.
Waddell pleaded with people not to enter the flood waters.
'It is a really dangerous, once-in-a-lifetime event, and there's been some tragedy surrounding this death, obviously, the police officer who spoke the woman is very traumatised, and we're wrapping support services around him.'
The federal government activated disaster recovery allowance for people who live or work in the Kempsey, Port Macquarie-Hastings, Mid-Coast, Dungog local government areas, available from 2pm Monday 26 May.
People who have lost income as a direct result of the event may be eligible for up to 13 weeks of income support for workers and sole traders. Claims can be made online through myGov or the myGov app.
This is in addition to the joint federal and state disaster recovery funding available across 16 local government areas, which is administered by the NSW government.
Mutual obligation requirements have been suspended for job seekers in the Hunter region and the mid north coast until 29 May. The federal government also said people who need to change or pause Centrelink debt payments can do so online or in the mobile app, or by calling 1800 076 07.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Black storm warning paralyses Hong Kong as torrential rain triggers floods and landslides
Black storm warning paralyses Hong Kong as torrential rain triggers floods and landslides

The Independent

time7 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Black storm warning paralyses Hong Kong as torrential rain triggers floods and landslides

Hong Kong came to a standstill on Tuesday as torrential rain pounded the city for the second time in less than six hours, triggering a rare black rainstorm warning, paralysing public services and flooding key urban districts. The Hong Kong Observatory issued its highest-level alert at 5.50am local time, warning that more than 70mm rain was falling per hour across the territory. A similar black rain warning had been issued at 11.45pm Monday night. The weather forecaster said that the downpour was driven by an active southwest monsoon and upper-air disturbances near the Pearl River Estuary. By morning, Queen Mary Hospital, the city's largest, was battling severe flooding, with ankle-deep water accumulating around the main building, China Daily reported. Emergency services had to reroute patients to the Ruttonjee Hospital in Wan Chai while the Drainage Services Department deployed pumps to manage the inundation. Flash floods ripped through several districts including Central, Pok Fu Lam, Tseung Kwan O, and Tai Po, turning staircases into cascading streams and major roads into rivers of mud. In Quarry Bay, torrents swept down hillsides, inundating King's Road and nearby residential areas, the South China Morning Post reported. 'Persistent rainstorm will cause serious road flooding and traffic congestion. Members of the public are advised to take shelter in a safe place,' the observatory warned. It also issued a landslip warning, urging people to avoid steep slopes and hilly areas. Between midnight and 8am, most Hong Kong districts recorded over 40mm of rainfall, while parts of Sai Kung and Tai Po witnessed nearly 300mm. The flooding prompted widespread closures. Schools, courts and most public services, including immigration offices, were suspended. The Education Bureau cancelled all morning, afternoon and full-day classes. The Department of Home Affairs opened nine temporary shelters while district councillors and emergency teams were on standby. The Drainage Services Department reported 18 confirmed flood cases by 8am, including in Sha Tin, Lee Yue Mun, and Tolo Harbour Highway, and deployed over 180 emergency teams to inspect and respond at 240 known flood-prone locations. A car park in flood-prone King Yin Lane, Tseung Kwan O, was submerged overnight, with water rising halfway up about 20 parked vehicles. "Many residents tried to drive away their cars but some in vain because the engines of the cars did not work," said Christine Fong Kwok Shan, district councillor for Sai Kung. Minibuses, ferries and buses witnessed major disruption. In Tsuen Wan, police were filmed helping push a green minibus out of rising floodwater. KMB suspended several routes across the New Territories, while the Peak tram and Mid-Levels escalators ceased operation due to safety concerns. The MTR network was also affected. Several station exits at Sham Shui Po, Wong Tai Sin, Tai Po Market, and Choi Hung were temporarily closed due to flooding. A vessel sank in Yung Shue Wan on the Lamma Island and another capsized in Sai Kung's Sam Mun Zai area. The storm on Tuesday followed a weekend of deadly flash floods in southern China, where five people died in Guangdong province. Over 1,300 rescuers were dispatched in the aftermath. Hong Kong, Guangdong, and Macau - which issued a red rain warning - form the backbone of Chinese president Xi Jinping 's flagship Greater Bay Area initiative, aimed at fusing Hong Kong's financial firepower with Guangdong's manufacturing and technological strength. Airports across the region faced heavy disruption, with cancellation rates around 20 per cent according to Flightmaster data. Speed limits on the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge were reduced due to poor visibility, though the Hong Kong international airport remained operational with some flight delays. The Hong Kong Stock Exchange also continued trading, having changed its policy last year to keep open during weather disruptions. Leung Wing Mo, former assistant director of the Hong Kong Observatory, said work arrangements during severe weather were at the discretion of individual companies. The Labour Department reminded employers to ensure the safety of their employees, and consider remote work or early release during extreme conditions. Hong Kong usually receives about 2,200mm of rainfall annually, with over half concentrated between June and August. This latest event has underscored the escalating risks posed by extreme weather, which meteorologists globally are increasingly linking to climate change. As of Tuesday afternoon, the black rainstorm warning remains in effect.

Road in Leicester closed after 'significant' water leak
Road in Leicester closed after 'significant' water leak

BBC News

time37 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Road in Leicester closed after 'significant' water leak

A road in Leicester is closed due to a burst water pipe which has caused "significant damage" to its said St Peters Road in Highfields was closed between the junctions of St Stephens Road and East Park Road due to flooding. Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service said crews from the Central Station were in attendance at the water leak and advised members of the public to avoid the Trent said teams were working to repair the burst water pipe and added it was confident the fix would be complete by 10:00 BST. A spokesperson for the water company added: "We'd like to apologise to those experiencing no supply, poor pressure or discoloured water in the LE2 and LE5 areas of Leicester this morning. This is due to a burst water pipe on St. Peters Road."Our teams are on site working to repair this and restore your water supply as soon as possible."

Hong Kong reels from heaviest August rain since 1884
Hong Kong reels from heaviest August rain since 1884

Reuters

time37 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Hong Kong reels from heaviest August rain since 1884

HONG KONG, Aug 5 (Reuters) - Blackened skies unleashed record-breaking rains on Hong Kong and the high-tech cities surrounding South China's Pearl River Delta on Tuesday, disrupting hospitals and shuttering schools and law courts across the Asian financial hub. More than 350mm (13.8 inches) of rain had drenched Hong Kong by 2 p.m. (0600 GMT), the city's weather authorities said -- the highest daily rainfall for August since 1884. Videos showed torrents of water cascading down steep hillsides in the former British colony, breaking into white-water streams as they rushed down the many staircases linking Hong Kong's multi-tiered cityscape. The deluge prompted the weather bureau to extend its highest "black" rainstorm warning until 5 p.m. The water had risen to ankle-height outside Hong Kong's largest hospital, as medical authorities announced they would be closing clinics across the city due to the downpour. Extreme rainfall and catastrophic flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, pose mounting challenges for officials in mainland China, sweeping people to their deaths, displacing thousands, and threatening billions of dollars in economic losses. The storms follow deadly flash floods in Southern China over the weekend, which left five dead in Guangdong province and prompted a large-scale search operation involving over 1,300 rescuers. As of Tuesday morning, four rivers in the province had risen to such a height that they were at risk of bursting their banks, China's state broadcaster CCTV reported. China is being battered by heavier-than-usual downpours as the East Asian monsoon stalls over its north and south, resulting in weeks of atmospheric chaos since early July. On Monday, a tornado took hold in the northern region of Inner Mongolia, while officials in Beijing on Tuesday braced for further flooding. Back in the south, Hong Kong's 'black' rainstorm warning marked the fourth time in just eight days, breaking the record for the most frequent issuance of the city's highest weather alert within a single year, according to China's state news agency Xinhua. Hong Kong, Guangdong Province, and Macau - which issued a Red rain warning - form the backbone of Chinese President Xi Jinping's flagship Greater Bay Area initiative, aimed at fusing Hong Kong's financial firepower with Guangdong's manufacturing and technological strength. Airports across the region reported cancellation rates of around 20% on Tuesday, according to data from Flightmaster, while speed limits on the Hong Kong-Zhuhai Macau Bridge - a flagship GBA infrastructure project - were lowered due to poor visibility. Hong Kong's airport has maintained normal operations throughout but said some flights had been delayed and passengers were advised to head to the airport only after their flight time was confirmed. The Hong Kong Stock Exchange remained open, having changed its policy to continue trading whatever the weather late last year, but the judiciary announced that courts, tribunals and register offices would remain shut until at least two hours after the 'black' rainstorm alert was cancelled. Hong Kong typically receives an annual average of 2,200mm of rainfall, more than half of which usually falls from June through August. But it is not all doom and gloom - Hong Kong Disneyland announced it remains open.

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