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NSW floods live updates: Eugowra resident found dead, one still missing as Central West ravaged by dangerous floodwaters

Sarah Keoghan and James Lemon
Updated ,first published

Forbes awaits predicted peak, Eugowra spared further floods

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Residents of Forbes will go to sleep tonight awaiting a major flood peak to rival the infamous 1952 event predicted by the Bureau of Meteorology.

The local flood plan says a flood of similar size to the 1952 event would now inundate about 500 homes in the town, home to about 7000 people. Many homes have already suffered that fate.

The clean-up begins in Eugowra after flash flooding hit on Monday.Rhett Wyman

Thankfully, no further flooding is expected at Eugowra where a woman has died but a man remains missing after flash flooding affected most of the town.

The Herald will resume coverage of the flood on Thursday. To read more about the NSW floods, follow this link.

NSW Labor won’t commit to raising dam wall

By Tom Rabe and Angus Thompson

The NSW opposition will not commit to raising the Wyangala Dam in the state’s Central West, with Labor leader Chris Minns saying the multibillion-dollar project is being used by the government to peddle “false hope” for flood-ravaged communities.

Hundreds of thousands of megalitres have spilled over the dam each day this week as communities downstream are inundated by a torrent of floodwater, prompting renewed calls for the wall to be raised.

Hundreds of thousands of megalitres of water being released from Wyangala Dam on Tuesday.Nick Moir

The government in 2019 committed to raising the Wyangala Dam wall by 10 metres as a drought security and flood mitigation measure, however a business case analysis for the project remains incomplete.

Despite Premier Dominic Perrottet insisting the wall must be raised, the Herald revealed on Wednesday that laws giving the government power to expedite that process expired last year before any major work was ever undertaken.

As progress on the project languishes, Minns on Wednesday said he would not commit to raising the dam wall if elected next year, and cast doubt over whether it would even improve the flooding situation for communities on the Lachlan River.

Read the full story here.

Snakes, sewage add to flood’s health risks

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NSW Ambulance has received more than 70 calls for assistance in Eugowra alone, a town where one woman has died and the vast majority of homes and businesses were inundated during flash flooding this week.

NSW Ambulance Chief Superintendent Mark Gibbs warned people to avoid flood waters, including not walking or driving in them, but also to be aware of other associated health risks, including snakes.

The clean-up begins at St Joseph’s Primary School in Eugowra on Wednesday. Rhett Wyman

“We are seeing an increase in snake movements across the [Central West],” he said. “With flooded water, be careful of sewage or effluent or contamination of those waters ... as well as the increase in mosquitoes.

“Be wary, wear the appropriate protection gloves, right appropriate shoes and protect yourselves with insect repellent in those cases.”

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Our photographers capture heartbreak, resilience

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Herald photographers have been on the ground in the Central West, capturing the immense power of the flood water, the devastation it leaves behind, and the people caught up in its wrath.

Shops along Lachlan Street, Forbes, on Wednesday.Alex Ellinghausen
NSW Maritime crews ferrying people on the Lachlan Street in Forbes on Wednesday.Alex Ellinghausen
Eugowra locals Ron Hay (left) and Jack Barnes at the Eugowra Men’s Shed on Wednesday, after it was destroyed this week.Rhett Wyman

Up to 50 degree temperature swing across the country

By Millie Muroi

If you’d been at Fitzroy Crossing in Western Australia on Tuesday afternoon, then flown to Mount Hotham in Victoria the next day, you would have experienced a 50-degree drop in temperature.

Within just 12 hours, the two locations confirmed the country’s reputation as the land of extremes.

There was a 50 degree temperature contrast across Australia during the last 24 hours. Weatherzone

Hot air masses building up over the tropics while regular pulses of colder air swept over southern Australia delivered a dynamic mix of late-spring weather.

Weatherzone meteorologist Jessica Miskelly said while the heat is not unusual, the extreme cold is a surprise for this time of year.

Forbes knows floods, but residents say this time is different

By Angus Thompson

The residents and business owners of Forbes know they live in a flood town, but the consensus is this one is different.

The centre of Forbes is an island – that part is normal. What isn’t to them is the water level, and the speed at which it arrived.

Isabel Haley at her cafe in Forbes on Wednesday.Alex Ellinghausen
Photo:

Watching the water approach her sandbagged shopfront, Isabel’s Place cafe owner Isabel Hayley was staying put in the cut-off centre of town, where supplies are delivered by boat and truck by RFS and SES crews.

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More land buybacks possible: deputy PM

By Tom Rabe

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles said the federal government will continue to talk with state counterparts about the potential for more land buybacks in flood-ravaged parts of NSW.

Marles visited flood-affected parts of the Central West on Wednesday, and described the impact on the local community of Forbes as “profound”.

Acting Prime Minister Richard Marles addresses the media in Forbes alongside Riverina MP Michael McCormack (left) and Emergency Management Australia director-general Joe Buffone.Alex Ellinghausen

Asked whether he would consider expanding a land buyback scheme to other inundated communities across NSW, Marles said that was already being discussed.

“We’ve had that [conversation] with the NSW government in respect of other parts of NSW,” Marles said. “We’ve had repeated flood events in the south-east corner of the continent, and that is a very important conversation which is happening.”

Forbes river peak expected to last into weekend

By Angus Thompson

Born in 1951, Forbes resident Garry O’Neil lived through the last time the town was this badly flooded.

Though he can’t exactly remember the infamous 1952 event, he remembers the 1990 flood and it was “nothing like this”.

O’Neil believes his house will be flooded overnight as the water continues to rise, and he has gone to stay with a friend.

He was among residents being ferried to different parts of the cut-off town by SES and RFS crews.

Eugowra mourns local woman ‘gone too young’

By Natassia Chrysanthos

The Central West town of Eugowra is mourning local woman Diane Smith, 60, who is believed to have died when severe flash flooding destroyed the area on Monday morning.

Police found the body of a woman on Wednesday morning while searching the town. The body’s identity is yet to be formally established by police, but they believe it to be the woman.

Police found a body that is believed to be that of missing 60-year-old woman Diane Smith.

Jack Barnes, who has lived in Eugowra for 70 years, said Smith was from a lovely family “and known by every local”.

He said she co-owned the local newsagent and supermarket, and had also worked as a receptionist at the local doctor’s practice.

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Wombats in distress in flooded regions

By Millie Muroi

Humans aren’t the only species who like to build their homes near waterways. Floodwaters devastating the state are also displacing wildlife including wombats.

Lecturer in veterinary and animal physiology Dr Hayley Stannard said wombats liked to create burrows near river banks and that it put them – and particularly their young – at risk during floods.

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“The soil in those areas is soft and really nice for them to burrow into,” she said. “They tend to climb out of burrows and try to find higher ground when it’s dry. The older animals tend to be switched on, but sometimes the younger ones aren’t as knowledgeable, so they tend to drown when they get stuck.”

Yolandi Vermaak, the founder and president of Wombat Rescue NSW and ACT, has taken calls recently about wombats being seen on tennis courts, in sheds and under cars – a 10 per cent increase on what she usually receives.

“Wombats don’t hop away like kangaroos,” she said. “And when their burrows are flooded, it pushes them into other wombat territory where they fight quite severely, or into suburban areas and around busy roads.”

Wombats are unable to sweat, which means they’re at risk of overheating in summer months when they don’t have their burrow to shelter in.

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