Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet have visited the flood-affected town of Forbes to see firsthand the damage of the natural disaster in Central West New South Wales.
Key points:
- 31 NSW LGAs have now been disaster declared
- The prime minister has called for people to prepare for more intense rain later this week
- The federal agriculture minister predicts that the price of fruit and vegetables will rise because of the floods
Forbes is one of 31 local government areas that are disaster declared in NSW; a town that has experienced five floods since 2010.
Mr Albanese, alongside Mr Perrottet, thanked volunteers and emergency service workers for their help as the Lachlan River peaked on Friday at a major flood level.
"People have been magnificent [with] sandbagging … the efforts of people here in Forbes has made an enormous difference," Mr Albanese said.
"But, there is further rain expected later this week and it remains a very dangerous situation."
Mr Perrottet says unfavourable weather is predicted.
"We have stood side by side with communities right across our state during difficult times and we'll continue to do that," he said.
"We do expect more challenging weather, more difficult forecasts, on the way."
Ag Minister predicts higher food prices
The federal agriculture minister Murray Watt has warned consumers will be paying more for fruit and vegetables in the wake of the floods across south-eastern Australia.
"We can expect there is going to be a very large dollar impact," Mr Watt said.
The floods have caused widespread damage across prime cropping and horticultural areas.
"It's likely that these floods are going to have a cost-of-living impact on people because of the impact of prices of fruit and vegetables," he said.
Calls for dam wall to be raised
The State Member for Orange Phil Donato, whose electorate covers Forbes and surrounding communities, told the prime minister that raising the height of the Wyangala Dam wall would be one way to help reduce future flooding in downstream communities on the Lachlan River.
There have been calls for several years for the wall to be raised 10 metres, a move farmers believe would prevent major flooding of paddocks.
The prime minister said any funding agreements would be honoured for infrastructure projects, but business cases were required to be completed.
"We're happy to deliver on any infrastructure project that stacks up," Mr Albanese said.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmFiYy5uZXQuYXUvbmV3cy8yMDIyLTEwLTE3L2FsYmFuZXNlLXBlcnJvdHRldC12aXNpdC1mbG9vZC1hZmZlY3RlZC1mb3JiZXMtaGlnaC1mb29kLXByaWNlcy8xMDE1NDE4NzLSAQA?oc=5
2022-10-17 03:40:55Z
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