Houses to remain in flood zone under Lismore buy-back scheme

A scheme to buy back people’s houses in flood-hit Lismore will likely target hundreds of homes,not thousands,according to the man in charge of rebuilding the town,meaning many more properties will remain in flood-prone areas.

Almost 11,000 homes were damaged across the Northern Rivers in the February and March floods,and more than 4000 have been deemed uninhabitable,mostly in Lismore.

The Wilsons River in Lismore reaches its peak on February 28.

The Wilsons River in Lismore reaches its peak on February 28.Getty

An independent report into the flood,which is yet to be released by the state government,has recommended a buy-back scheme to help move affected home-owners out of the Northern Rivers flood zones.

But Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation chief executive David Witherdin said the scheme would probably only target those houses where lives were most at risk.

Better emergency warning systems would also be put in place under plans the corporation will put to the government for approval,to ensure residents who remain living in flood-prone areas can evacuate earlier.

The repair bill from the February/March floods in the Northern Riverswill cost another $3 billion,according to the independent flood report,prepared by former police commissioner Mick Fuller and former NSW chief scientist Mary O’Kane.

Rita and Johan Spek,with their daugher Kaitlind (centre),are eager to leave their home in South Lismore after it was flooded in February. They are living under an outdoor awning and sleeping in a van.

Rita and Johan Spek,with their daugher Kaitlind (centre),are eager to leave their home in South Lismore after it was flooded in February. They are living under an outdoor awning and sleeping in a van.Jacklyn Wagner

Frustrated residents and community leaders are calling on the government to immediately release the 700-page report it received a week ago,which also recommends thatResilience NSW boss Shane Fitzsimmons be dumped and the disaster agency be dramatically scaled down.

The report is still under review and the government is expected to respond to its recommendations soon. Premier Dominic Perrottet has already committed to accepting all of them.

The government set up the Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation in April to lead the reconstruction effort in the Northern Rivers. It is charged with co-ordinating the planning,rebuilding and construction work of essential services,infrastructure and housing.

Witherdin said his team was still finalising the details of the buy-back scheme,and the number of houses it would target,but senior government ministers had been briefed on it.

The corporation had also been working closely with the federal government,which is expected to co-fund the reconstruction plans.

The buy-back scheme would be voluntary,Witherdin said,and based on the pre-flood value of properties. Other affected home-owners would be offered funding to rebuild their properties using more flood-resilient materials and design,or to raise their homes.

According to the Lismore City Local Flood Plan,only 60 per cent of houses in the flood-prone areas of Lismore are raised above the one-in-100-year flood level,although this year’s flood was more than two metres higher than that.

Hundreds of people had to be rescued from their rooftops and four people died on February 28,when the Wilsons River reached 14.4 metres –a height which was not predicted in flood bulletins until it was too late for people to leave.

“Even once we’ve worked through this program,after a number of years,I think it’s highly likely people will choose to remain[in the flood-prone area],” Witherdin said,adding the government had a responsibility to warn those people of any impending flood and evacuate them early.

“We will be able to install early warning systems that really do give that community some peace of mind in the future.”

Residents living in and moving into flood-prone areas would also be provided with better information about the risks they face,and the risks they pose to rescuers if they do not evacuate during a flood.

On Saturday,community leaders said the demand for a buy-back scheme was likely to be high, and the challenge would be meeting that demand.

“Lots of people are ready to go,” Resilient Lismore co-ordinator and local councillor Elly Bird said. “They’re just waiting to see what the government will deliver before they decide what they’ll do.”

Houses bought under the scheme would be demolished and the zoning changed on the land to prevent any future development.

Much of the flood-affected parts of Lismore are low socioeconomic areas,where housing is most affordable. Witherdin said the provision of more affordable housing in flood-free parts of the Northern Rivers would also form part of the scheme,to address those needs.

South Lismore residents Rita and Johan Spek said they were living in limbo waiting to find out if they would be able to sell their house to the government.

The February 28 flood was the first one to enter their house,which they bought 30 years ago. For the past four months,they have been living in the home’s outdoor barbecue area and sleeping in a van out the front,with their adult daughter.

“We don’t want to be here any more,” Rita said. “We definitely want the buy-back as soon as possible ...[the flood] could be higher next time.“

Catherine Naylor is regional affairs reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.

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