SYDNEY BRACES FOR FLOODS
Evacuations ordered as authorities warn of potentially life-threatening situation
SYDNEY braced for its worst flooding in decades yesterday after record rainfall caused its largest dam to overflow and as deluges prompted mandatory mass evacuation orders along Australia’s east coast.
Emergency services ordered people living in low-lying areas on the city’s northwestern fringes to flee to safety, as authorities warned of a potentially “life-threatening” situation in New South Wales state.
It came after the Warragamba Dam, which provides much of the drinking water for Sydney, spilled over on Saturday afternoon, causing officials to warn the downstream Hawkesbury River was expected to peak at levels not seen since 1961.
Floodwaters had risen in several areas, prompting mass evacuations, and officials said another 4,000 people could be told to leave their homes in the coming days.
Authorities urged residents to heed the “dozens” of official warnings in place across affected areas, with state Emergency Service assistant commissioner Dean Storey saying those in evacuation zones “must leave immediately”.
People had begun flocking to evacuation centres in towns north of Sydney on Saturday as torrential rains pummelled a vast coastal region soaked by an unusually wet summer.
State Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the region was experiencing a “one in 100 year event” and a national disaster had been declared.
In Taree, where television images showed one house floating down a bloated river, about 150 people slept in a local auditorium overnight that has been used a refuge for people fleeing bushfires.
Club Taree chief executive Paul Allen described the floods as a “catastrophe”, telling public broadcaster ABC that some locals had “lost everything”.
The Bureau of Meteorology said the wild weather was forecast to re-intensify north of Sydney today before easing later in the week.
Conditions were “going to be treacherous yet again,” senior climatologist Agata Imielska said.
Rainfall records were forecast to continue tumbling in the coming days, she added.
Emergency services reported receiving more than 7,000 calls for help and carrying out about 650 flood rescues since Thursday, with reinforcements being called in from other states.