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A nation awash: Mighty Murray yet to peak as thousands forced to evacuate

Waterways are continuing to swell in northern Victoria with no relief for residents facing days of more flooding, with the Murray River yet to peak.

Oct 18, 2022, updated Oct 18, 2022
CFA crews work to sandbag Campaspe Esplanade in the town of Echuca, Victoria, Monday. The ADF has been called in to help flood victims in Victoria, with authorities predicting more than 7500 proprieties could be affected. (AAP Image/Brendan McCarthy)

CFA crews work to sandbag Campaspe Esplanade in the town of Echuca, Victoria, Monday. The ADF has been called in to help flood victims in Victoria, with authorities predicting more than 7500 proprieties could be affected. (AAP Image/Brendan McCarthy)

Across the border, southern New South Wales is also preparing for more heavy rain and floods.

Residents in Victoria’s north are building walls from sandbags to protect thousands of homes as the Murray River rises.

Evacuation warnings are in place for people in Echuca and other towns along the river, with the Murray expected to peak from Wednesday.

Emergency services are concerned river levels could exceed the 94.77 metres recorded in Echuca during the 1993 floods.

People in the northern Victorian town spent most of Monday building a makeshift sandbag levy to protect thousands of homes and businesses.

More than 1000 Echuca properties were already inundated with floodwaters on Sunday after the Campaspe River broke its banks.

There are also concerns the rural town of Kerang, about 95 kilometres northwest of Echuca, will become isolated due to floodwaters.

Major flooding at Kerang along the Loddon River is expected overnight on Tuesday and into Wednesday, with the water forecast to peak around the January 2011 level soon after.

A sandbag levee is expected to help keep the majority of the town dry but it could be cut off for up to seven days, Victoria’s State Emergency Service warned.

A warning has also been issued for the Wimmera River, with Horsham residents told major flooding is possible on Tuesday.

With the crisis growing, the federal government on Tuesday expanded the one-off, non-means tested disaster recovery payment of $1000 per adult and $400 per child to the Benalla, Boroondara, Central Goldfields, Greater Bendigo, Loddon, Moonee Valley, Mount Alexander, Murrindindi and Yarra local governments.

The assistance was already open to those in the Campaspe, Greater Shepparton, Maribyrnong, Mitchell and Strathbogie councils.

Other Victorian towns are moving to the clean-up phase, with the state government on Monday announcing a $351 million flood recovery package.

The disaster funding includes $165 million in emergency road fixes such as filling potholes and repairing surfaces to get people and freight moving.

Close to 13,000 people have applied for state relief payments, with almost 4000 people already receiving support.

The state government also confirmed fees would be waived for those trying to remove flood waste.

Residents in 46 local government areas across the state will have their fees covered through to December 31 this year.

It is projected 300,000 tonnes of waste will be sent to landfill as a result of the floods.

In Maribyrnong in Melbourne’s west, the council will start collecting hard rubbish that has been strewn across nature strips.

The council spent most of Monday clearing debris and mud from roads and drains after dozens of homes were inundated by floodwaters.

Nearly 70 flood warnings are in place across NSW as the focus turns to the far south Riverina region, with more rain expected to lash large areas this week.

Some 300 people have been evacuated from Moama, a town near the Victorian border, where residents are staring down the possibility by Friday of a flood higher than the 1993 event, the area’s second worst on record.

Premier Dominic Perrottet repeated his warning that many communities were in for a tough week, as the Bureau of Meteorology predicted another week of rain beginning Wednesday.

“Our dams are full. Our rivers are full,” he told reporters in Sydney on Tuesday.

“It’s going to be a difficult time but we’ve got through difficult times in the past.”

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