Wollondilly Council has made a submission to the 2022 NSW Flood Inquiry, raising a number of concerns about the level of support provided for local flood recovery efforts.
The Council says it has identified problems with the process for accessing flood relief funding and the time it takes for payments to be made.
“The level of evidence required for a claim is very difficult to provide – with photos of assets required from before and during the event – and Council is now suffering from the accumulated damage from successive events while claims are made only on each specific event,” Council said in a statement.
While Wollondilly Council benefitted from an initial grant from the Office of Local Government and recovery money from Resilience NSW to assist with the response and clean-up in 2022, some claims from 2020 and 2021 are still to be paid to Council, and Council has little to no assurance that all the claims made for 2022 will be successful, said Mayor, Matt Gould.
“A review is required on the process and system for emergency relief claims, in particular the roles and responsibilities of the various agencies to ensure proactive, consistent, efficient and direct support to councils and community members in a timely manner,” the Mayor said.
“Council’s budget and operations are significantly impacted when there is an emergency situation that we must respond to.
“We are on the ground looking making sure the community is safe, undertaking road and bridge closures and fixing the damage as fast as possible. We need to be able to get this assistance through much more quickly.”
Council’s submission also highlights the issue of a lack of understanding about ownership and responsibilities for watercourses, including vegetation management on privately held Crown Land and Crown waterways.
The Mayor said there is also confusion around ownership, responsibilities and coordination for cross-agency impacts, such as when rail lines and roads are jointly affected and large repairs need to be managed.
Council has requested accessibility and consistency of information from rain and water gauges and timeliness and consistency of flood warning and evacuation messaging.
It has also raised the issue of external communications for road management, including closures and integration to Live Traffic, which currently only shows closures in relation to State Roads and misses many of the major connecting roads in the Wollondilly network, according to Council.
It says consecutive emergency events such as the June 2016 flood, Black Summer bushfires of 2019/20, flooding in February 2020, March 2021 and in February to March this year, have taken a significant toll on the Wollondilly road network.
“Council’s appropriate response during these events was to keep the road network functioning as well as supporting our community and the emergency services; however, this has compromised Council’s ability to adhere to its long-term asset management strategy and is impacting its short term and long-term financial forecasts,” the Mayor said.
“Council is continuing to call for State and Federal Government support to help Wollondilly get back on its feet.”