Community meetings for Edgecumbe residents
Community meetings for Edgecumbe residents
Two community
meetings will be held today for residents evacuated from
their homes. The first will be held at 4pm at Rautahi marae
in Kawerau. The second will be held at 6pm at the Whakatāne
War Memorial Hall.
Local representatives, as well as
members of the Whakatāne Emergency Response Team, will be
there to answer any questions the community may
have.
Flood-affected residents whose homes are damaged
are being urged to report them to Whakatāne District
Council by calling its free phone number, 0800 306
0500.
In Edgecumbe alone, 1600 people have been displaced
by the breaching of the floodwall on the Rangitāiki River.
The Edgecumbe township remains cordoned off to ensure public
safety while flood waters are still being managed and pumped
away and to protect people from sanitation risks associated
with sewage system failures and surface water contamination.
A breach repair is in place and working well so water is
not continuing to flow into Edgecumbe anymore. Water levels
continue to drop around the Edgecumbe area; however we still
anticipate the area will take 7-10 days to dry.
Residents
may be away from their homes for up to 10 days and some
Tāneatua residents have also been evacuated due to
flooding, which has prompted concerns about pets’ welfare.
Whakatāne Emergency Response Team, with support from
the SPCA, has been working together to search for animals in
Edgecumbe. Residents in need of animal welfare support
should call 0800 306 0500.
Due to the risk of
contamination from flood waters a boil water notice remains
in effect for Tāneatua residents, alongside Te Teko/Mapou,
Edgecumbe, Awakeri, Braemar and the entire Rūātoki and the
Rangitāiki Plains areas.
Only authorised people are
permitted inside the cordons. Anyone concerned about
security and looting should contact Whakatāne District
Council on 0800 306 0500 and indicate which place they are
concerned with.
Further information
Flows in the
Rangitāiki river during its peak on Thursday exceeded 900
cubic metres per second which is estimated to be between a
200-500 year event.
The Rangitāiki and
Whakatāne/Tauranga rivers reached the highest peak flows on
record.