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BackCentral Queensland Town Recalls Worst Flood in Over a Century
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ABC Top Stories30.06.2026Welt4 dk okumaAustralia

Central Queensland Town Recalls Worst Flood in Over a Century

Auf einen Blick

  • Six months after the worst flood in over 100 years, Clermont residents recall the devastating impact of Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji.
  • The flood, which hit on January 12, affected over 140 homes, leading to rapid rescues and highlighting a lack of warning.
  • A dispute over disaster funding between state and federal governments continues.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

Six months after Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji caused the worst flood in over 100 years in Clermont, residents are still dealing with the aftermath and questioning future preparedness. A dispute over disaster funding arrangements between the Queensland and federal governments is ongoing.

Schriftgröße

Allan Kelly had driven on the flooded Gregory Highway before, but when he felt his ute start to move sideways, he knew he and his daughter were in trouble.

"Not my greatest moment as a father," the Clermont-based property owner and church pastor said.

The ute eventually became stuck in a table drain, and Mr Kelly and his daughter were forced to sit on the top of the vehicle until 2am.

"I got out and I tested the water and I got up onto the road, it was just above my knees," he said.

Both eventually pulled themselves up onto the road and walked 4 kilometres back to town.

The memory of threatening storm clouds sticks with Mr Kelly.

"I was worried because it was still raining," he said.

In the small Central Queensland town, similar stories are still told six months on from the worst flood in more than 100 years.

As the remnants of Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji barrelled west, it spread consistent heavy rain across broad swathes of the Isaac and Central Highlands regions.

At the convergence of several creeks, more than 140 homes in and around Clermont were impacted on Monday, January 12.

Local helicopter pilots scrambled to rescue stranded families as waters rose rapidly.

State Emergency Service (SES) Clermont group leader Liz Slattery said there were two volunteers, including herself, in town that day.

"There wasn't any preparations here; we were given no warning whatsoever," she said.

Ms Slattery said despite filling sandbags quickly, it was too late to help some people.

"We had an urgent job come in that there was an elderly couple trapped in floodwater," she said.

"We borrowed a neighbour's tinny and went and picked them up, and they had water up to their waist in their house."

Private helicopters spent the day rescuing people isolated by rising water, and more volunteers from across Central and North Queensland arrived in the following days.

Ms Slattery said it was "very lucky" no-one died in the floods.

"We could have been looking at a few fatalities because it just happened so quickly," she said.

State, federal funding stoush

As residents ask how to better prepare the town for future floods, the Queensland government is disputing commonwealth plans to change disaster-funding arrangements.

In the days after the emergency, the state and federal governments allocated more than $66 million to direct disaster support to communities across Central and Western Queensland.

Further bridge and drainage upgrades in Clermont have also been announced in the months since.

The commonwealth has now proposed splitting state and federal funding 50/50, instead of the current 64/36.

Queensland Disaster Recovery Minister Ann Leahy said if the proposal went ahead, it would "seriously impact on the ability of councils and the state government to continue that recovery".

"We can work with councils to make sure that we get that trunk infrastructure into those newer states, which are flood-free," Ms Leahy said.

"But we want to make sure that there's no daylight between response and recovery."

Recurring nightmare

A bright-yellow excavator sits next to a freshly dug pile of dirt at Justin Lawrence's property, about 15km outside town.

He said he bought the digger this year and intended to build a levy bank around his property after being caught by surprise by the fast-rising water in January.

"It washed through the backyard hard, which took the pool fence, and that's when it started getting fairly real," Mr Lawrence said.

While water did not enter the home, he said the chaos of ensuring his children, his horses and valuable machinery were safe had stayed with him.

"Afterwards, you'd be asleep in bed and wake up thinking that water was coming through the window and that you were going to get wet in bed."

Homes, farms rebuilt

At Mr Kelly's home, the force of the water slammed kilometres of fencing and twisted them into metal balls.

The past six months have involved waking up before sunrise to spend two to three hours rebuilding the fences before work, as well as on days off.

"We've probably got 4.5km done and we've got another five to do," he said.

He said neighbours had been sharing everything from Rosewood fence posts to mechanical post-drivers.

"All different people have come out just to help with fencing and pushing and lending a shoulder and pushing in, that's been so encouraging."

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • Queensland government may continue to dispute federal funding model.

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

Offene Fragen

  • Will the funding dispute be resolved?
  • What specific infrastructure upgrades are planned?
  • How will future flood warnings be improved?

Verwandte Themen

This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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