Otago Daily Times

‘Muddlemarc­h’ flood despair

- JOHN GIBB john.gibb@odt.co.nz

A SECOND Middlemarc­h flood in two years has residents calling for urgent action.

‘‘There’s got to be a solution,’’ Norma Emerson, owner of the Tap & Dough Bistro, in Snow Ave, said yesterday.

‘‘Something now should . . . have been done,’’ Mrs Emerson said.

She did not know of a specific remedy, but did know the situation was ‘‘totally unacceptab­le’’, she said.

Her husband, Emerson’s Brewery founder Richard Emerson, yesterday said Middlemarc­h could be renamed ‘‘Muddlemarc­h’’after all the unsightly mud left by Saturday evening’s floodwater­s.

Mrs Emerson, who runs the bistro with her husband, said the business was insured, but this flooding, after flooding in November 2018, disrupted business in the peak summer season.

A burst of heavy rain and hail from about 2.30pm yesterday reflooded several of the buildings that had already been partiallly cleaned.

Strath Taieri Community Board chairman Barry Williams said it was ‘‘hugely disappoint­ing’’ two major flood events had happened within about two years, and more action was needed.

‘‘I feel very disappoint­ed and let down,’’ he said yesterday.

A Dunedin City Council spokesman said power to Middlemarc­h — initially cut by a lightning strike at 2.30pm — was restored about 5pm, and it was safe for residents to resume flushing their toilets.

Middlemarc­h residents were advised not to drink water from bores unless treated with a filter, and a water tanker was at the Strath Taieri Community Hall for anyone wanting clean drinking water, the spokesman said.

Mrs Emerson said the former Dunedin City Councilown­ed train no longer came to Middlemarc­h, and the adverse effects of flooding added to that earlier loss of tourism business.

More planning and resources should be devoted to overcoming the adverse economic effects of flooding, she said.

Observers said the water level in Snow Ave had risen much more quickly on Saturday evening than when the bistro flooded in November 2018.

Heath Frew, a Middlemarc­h contract worker, yesterday helped clean up a friend’s previously flooded house in Bank Ave.

The DCC and Otago Regional Council might have already taken some steps to resolve the situation, but more action was clearly needed to avoid further flooding, given that the Bank Ave house had been affected by the 2018 flooding, he said.

Water flowed into Bank Ave via a side street from the Middlemarc­h main street, State Highway 87, but improved drainage was needed, because the water had ‘‘nowhere to go’’ and just built up.

Shebikeshe­bikes bike rental firm coowner Steve Goodlass, of Omakau, said it was ‘‘devastatin­g’’ that the firm’s Snow Ave Middlemarc­h depot was twice flooded at the weekend in the summer high season.

He was also ‘‘really concerned’’ that not enough flood control support was being provided for the township.

 ?? PHOTO: RICHARD EMERSON ?? Big challenge . . . Snow Ave, Middlemarc­h, with the Tap & Dough Bistro at left, looked more like a river, during flooding on Saturday evening.
PHOTO: RICHARD EMERSON Big challenge . . . Snow Ave, Middlemarc­h, with the Tap & Dough Bistro at left, looked more like a river, during flooding on Saturday evening.
 ?? PHOTOS: GERARD O’BRIEN ?? Cleaning up . . . Middlemarc­h resident Heath Frew spent yesterday helping dry out the contents of a friend’s flooded house in Bank Ave.
Inglorious mud . . . Mud surrounds the Tap & Dough Bistro, in Snow Ave, Middlemarc­h, yesterday after floodwater­s receded.
PHOTOS: GERARD O’BRIEN Cleaning up . . . Middlemarc­h resident Heath Frew spent yesterday helping dry out the contents of a friend’s flooded house in Bank Ave. Inglorious mud . . . Mud surrounds the Tap & Dough Bistro, in Snow Ave, Middlemarc­h, yesterday after floodwater­s receded.
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