The Gold Coast Bulletin

Opinion: I have seen disasters and govt responses - and this cyclonic storm response ain’t good enough

- Charlton Hart Charlton Hart is a Gold Coast Bulletin journalist letters@goldcoast.com.au

At the ripe young age of 27, I’ve covered too many natural disasters for my liking and, sadly, in the era of climate change I fear I will cover many more.

I sheltered with families in their homes in the midst of the 2019 black summer bushfires and watched people’s livestock and livelihood­s go up in flames. The stories I shared while working as a reporter at the time, still haunt me today.

In 2021, when I thought things couldn’t get worse, a tornado tore through the regional NSW town of Armidale where I was still working as a TV reporter. I had never seen such damage and destructio­n unleashed by mother nature. It ruined people’s lives.

When I moved back North to the Gold Coast in 2022, I had just left 12 months of reporting on widespread flooding across regional towns sparked by dreaded La Nina’. Little did I know, I would be stepping into another year of disaster. A ‘rain bomb’ as the Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk called it at the time, hit South East Queensland just two weeks into my new reporting job. It caused flooding from Caboolture to Coolangatt­a over the New South Wales

Border to the Tweed and West to Lismore. Again, I spent days in the field among the devastatio­n, sharing stories from more heartbroke­n communitie­s.

I have had the privilege of seeing government­s respond to disasters. It means I can confidentl­y say the state and federal government response to the catastroph­ic storms across the Gold Coast and Scenic Rim was not good enough. It was slow, inadequate and wreaks of politics. You only have to look at the response to Cyclone Jasper in the Labor heartland of North Queensland, 10 days prior to the storms further South. Less than 24 hours after the Far North was battered by the cyclone, the State and Federal Government announced hardship disaster grants of $180 for individual­s and $900 for families across all affected local government areas. The Gold Coast and Scenic Rim, predominan­tly held by Liberal

National Party MP’s, however, waited three days for the same payments. Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel, were deployed to help with the clean up four days after the disaster in the Far North. ADF personnel were not deployed to help across SEQ until 11 days into the clean-up effort.

The Australian Government Disaster Recovery Payment of $1000 for adults and $400 for children were made available

to victims of Jasper within seven days.

Residents across the Gold Coast and Scenic Rim had to wait more than two weeks before the same funding was available to them. Some suburbs have still been left off the eligibilit­y list.

When residents across the Far North were left searching for essential supplies like food and clothing in the aftermath of the disaster, emergency funding was provided to community organisati­ons for food hampers and support. This funding wasn’t forthcomin­g to victims across the Gold Coast or Scenic Rim, despite supermarke­t closures and shelves stripped bare of torches, batteries and other necessitie­s.

On Tuesday Anthony Albanese announced further grants to support affected communitie­s across the Gold Coast and Scenic Rim. Sadly, again it was under cooked. The same grants were backed with $64 million in funding for victims of Cyclone Jasper. However, the federal government has refused to say how much has been allocated for victims across the South East.

The government would say that it’s because I don’t understand the difference­s between the impacts of Jasper and the storms.

I’ll let you decide. When cyclone Jasper hit, homes were destroyed, thousands were left without power and communitie­s were devastated.

When the storms hit South East Queensland, homes were destroyed, thousands were left without power and communitie­s were devastated.

The damage bill for both will run into the billions of dollars. The key difference between Jasper and the storms, one was treated as an emergency, the other was definitely not.

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 ?? Picture: Glenn Hampson ?? Charlton Hart at storm-hit Guanaba.
Picture: Glenn Hampson Charlton Hart at storm-hit Guanaba.

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