The Riverside Press-Enterprise

3 feet of rain set up fourth round of flood misery for Sydney

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SYDNEY » More than 30,000 residents of Sydney and its surroundin­g areas were told to evacuate or prepare to abandon their homes Monday as Australia’s largest city faces its fourth, and possibly worst, round of flooding in less than a year and a half.

Days of torrential rain caused dams to overflow and waterways to break their banks, bringing a new flood emergency to parts of the city of 5 million people.

“The latest informatio­n we have is that there’s a very good chance that the flooding will be worse than any of the other three floods that those areas had in the last 18 months,” Emergency Management Minister Murray Watt said.

The current flooding might affect areas that were spared during the previous floods in March last year, March this year and April, Watt added.

New South Wales state Premier Dominic Perrottet said 32,000 people were impacted by evacuation orders and warnings.

“You’d probably expect to see that number increase over the course of the week,” Perrottet said.

Emergency services made numerous flood rescues Sunday and early Monday and were getting hundreds more calls for help.

Australia’s Bureau of Meteorolog­y manager, Jane Golding, said some areas between Newcastle, north of Sydney, and Wollongong, south of Sydney had received 39 inches of rain in the previous 24 hours. Some has received 59 inches.

Those totals are near the average annual rainfall for coastal areas of New South Wales.

Rain was forecast across New South Wales’s coast, including Sydney, all week, she said.

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y says up to 4.7 inches of rain could fall in Sydney on Monday.

The flooding danger was highest along the Hawkesbury River, in northwest Sydney, and the Nepean River in Sydney’s west.

The bureau Monday afternoon reported major flooding at the Nepean communitie­s of Menangle and Wallacia on Sydney’s southwest fringe.

Major flooding also occurred on the Hawkesbury at North Richmond on Sydney’s northwest edge. The Hawkesbury communitie­s of Windsor and Lower Portland were expected to be flooded Monday afternoon and Wisemans Ferry on Tuesday, a bureau statement said.

State Emergency Services Commission­er Carlene York said strong winds had toppled trees, damaging rooves and blocking roads. She advised against unnecessar­y travel.

Off the New South Wales coast, a cargo ship with 21 crew members lost power after leaving port in Wollongong on Monday morning. It was anchored near the coast and tugboats were preparing to tug it into safer, open waters.

An earlier plan to airlift the ship’s crew to safety was abandoned because of bad weather.

 ?? MARK BAKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A car stops at a flooded road in Richmond, on the outskirts of Sydney on Monday in Australia.
MARK BAKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A car stops at a flooded road in Richmond, on the outskirts of Sydney on Monday in Australia.

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