Flood recovery: Listen to locals next time, says Wall Flat farmer
Sam Martin has added his voice to a chorus of Lower Murray irrigators who have urged the state government to value their expertise.
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The river is lower than it was seven months ago, but frustration is still high among at least some of the Lower Murrayâs floodplain farmers.
Wall Flat producer Sam Martin is the latest to add his voice to a chorus urging authorities to place a greater value on local expertise the next time disaster strikes.
âTime and time again weâve tried to give advice,â he said at a flood recovery meeting in Murray Bridge last week.
âBefore the flood, we suggested breaking the levee ⌠so thereâd be limited damage to the levee bank; now instead of two breaks weâve got seven.
â(As the flood receded) we suggested you break the levee bank to let the water out for free, and they said âno, we canât do thatâ.
âWe got told we werenât allowed to pump out using our pumps, and if we were, we wouldnât be compensated, and that there were no flood pumps available; but I did a Google search, âflood pumps for hireâ, and they were.â
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He became more frustrated still when Department for Environment and Water engineers came to fix the levee.
âWe said âred clay canât sit on the side of the levee bank, because itâs just going to wash awayâ,â he said.
âThe engineers said âitâs fineâ and within a couple of days they were rocky ditches because red clay just washes away.â
Mr Martin also argued that floodplain de-watering had taken longer in 2023 than in 1956; and took issue with the fact that the governmentâs recovery grants were the same for all producers, whether they had five hectares or 500.
Flood recovery coordinator Alex Zimmerman acknowledged that authorities still had things to learn, and were open to criticism.
âEvery part of the process, from response to recovery, we want to review,â he said.
âWhere we can do things differently, and better, we will.â
Levee systemâs future remains unclear
The meeting, at Murray Bridge Performing Arts and Function Centre last Wednesday night, offered little clarity about the future of the Lower Murrayâs levees.
Department for Environment and Water spokeswoman Birgitte Sorenson said a âbig proposalâ would be put to the state government next month.
She suggested funding would be sought to establish a business case for a later stage of work.
âWeâre looking at that longer-term approach to the levees in terms of ⌠how they are managed, how they are maintained into the future,â she said.
âWeâve had some really good discussions in the (Lower Murray reclaimed irrigation areas) sub-committee and others around their feedback and thoughts.â
However, Murray Bridge Mayor Wayne Thorley warned the department to consult much more widely before coming to any final decision.
âWeâre making decisions about the future ⌠but you havenât talked to the people who are going to have to pay for it,â he said.
âYou need to have good consultation.â
DEWâs Scott Ashby assured him that committee members did not want the government to take control of all the levees, or for all of them to be placed in private hands.
âIf there was anything changing, weâd require the sort of consultation youâre talking about,â he said.
âThis canât be something thatâs decided behind closed doors.â
Floodplain de-watering should be finished next month
Almost 3300 properties, totalling 91,000 hectares in area, were flooded during the summerâs floods, Mr Zimmerman said.
Included among them were 142 farming businesses within the Lower Murrayâs irrigation areas, with an area of 1247ha.
More than 200 people were still receiving help from case managers at last count.
The state and federal governments made available $194 million worth of assistance, though Mr Zimmerman did not say how much had been spent.
He did say that 40 gigalitres of water had been pumped off the flats so far.
De-watering of the seven floodplains which are still partially inundated â including Mobilong, Glen Lossie and Toora â was expected to finish by the end of September.
All of the levees along the Lower Murray remain closed to the public.
- Watch a recording of the meeting: www.youtube.com/@murraybridgeperformingarts3260.
- Get help: Visit www.recovery.sa.gov.au or the flood recovery centre at 28 Bridge Street, Murray Bridge between 9am and 5pm on weekdays, or call 1800 302 787.
- Read more: Updates on the recovery from the 2022-23 River Murray floods