Brigade Magazine - Spring 2021 Edition

Page 4

INCIDENTS

STORMS BATTER VICTORIA In early June heavy rain and strong winds caused widespread damage in Victoria, with the Dandenong Ranges and Traralgon being especially hard hit.

EXTENSIVE DAMAGE IN THE DANDENONG RANGES A devastating storm brought down so many trees in the Dandenongs that the electricity network was extensively damaged, and some people had to wait for several weeks before power was restored. Across the state, more than 9,000 requests for assistance were received during the storm and in the following days. CFA volunteers worked tirelessly alongside SES members and other emergency services agencies to clear massive trees that came down onto homes and across roads. Dandenong Ranges Group Officer Stuart Parker said he had never seen a storm of this magnitude. “On Wednesday evening, 9 June, as the winds really picked up, we kept getting pager reports about structure collapse, trees through houses and possible people trapped,” Stuart said. “There were also reports of gas leaks because tree roots were getting pulled out of the ground which was then pulling out the gas mains.” Given the dangerous environment, Stuart said he was grateful that no community members, firefighters or first responders were lost during the storm. “At one incident on Thursday morning, someone was trapped at Olinda and the responding brigade and Strike Team 1313 not only had to cut the access for the ambulance on the way in, but trees were falling behind them so they also had to cut the access for the ambulance exit as well. “There was a lot of damage right along the ridge of the mountain in areas like Kalorama, Olinda, and Sassafras, but the outlying areas like Monbulk, Silvan, Lilydale were all impacted as well. The extent of the damage and the clean-up was just huge. “Knox Group members also helped on the weekend, and individual brigades came to do some welfare door knocking on Monday. It’s been great to see all groups out of District 13 helping out throughout the week, as Maroondah and Yarra Valley Groups have all been up on the mountain.”

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On Saturday Clematis Fire Brigade Captain Jarryd Miller was part of a strike team that helped to clear fallen trees. “Arriving at Olinda on Clematis Tanker 2, I was honestly shocked to see the amount of damage through the town. It was crazy. There was so much ruin it was hard to even get through the roads,” Jarryd said. “Parts of the Mount Dandenong Tourist Road had been wiped out by enormous historic trees, some of the biggest trees I have ever seen. I instantly thought what It must have been like on Wednesday night hearing and seeing these horrific conditions. “We managed to get some support from Forest Fire Management Victoria and their excavator which could lift big chunks of tree. “It was probably one of the most rewarding strike teams I’ve been on. To be able to see the job through and work alongside the residents, I’ll always remember that. You could see just how much it meant to these people.” STORY MARK BLACKMAN

FLOODING HITS TRARALGON There was heavy rain in Central Gippsland and the wider southeast region on 9 June that continued into the early hours of 10 June. Traralgon Creek burst its banks at about 6.30am, and shortly after water streamed down residential streets of Traralgon and an evacuation warning was issued for the Traralgon Creek area. Eighty-seven houses were damaged by flooding. Traralgon Creek rose four metres in around four hours on Thursday morning and the area peaked at around 5.8 metres, its highest since 1978. Brigades in CFA’s Hyland and Merton Groups were busy across the La Trobe Valley region, banding together to help community organisations and residents. Traralgon East 3rd Lieutenant and 1st Deputy Group Officer Hyland Group Leigh Roberts said following the destructive


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Articles inside

New Disability Inclusion Guide

6min
pages 79-80

New Juniors sign up across the state

6min
pages 76-77

Through the Ages: Wangaratta Group

1min
pages 74-75

Upwey Juniors learn how to save lives

2min
page 78

Safer Together work continues to flourish

6min
pages 72-73

New station for Tatura

1min
page 71

New station at Port Fairy

4min
pages 66-67

Breathing new life into Wodonga West brigade

3min
page 65

FEATURE: How brigades have spent VESEP grants

6min
pages 62-64

FEATURE: Family support is crucial

4min
pages 52-53

Volunteer Recruitment Hub update

2min
page 57

Phillip Island station build continues

2min
pages 60-61

Wayne’s cooking legacy

2min
page 56

New equipment for road rescue crews

2min
page 51

Commendations for saving captain’s life

2min
page 55

Faces of CFA

2min
page 50

The Member Wellbeing Advisors team

3min
page 47

Eat well and stay healthy

2min
page 48

Understanding PTSD

3min
page 49

Mental Health Continuum Model

3min
page 45

Strengthening capability using diversity and inclusion

5min
pages 37-38

Structure fire case studies

17min
pages 39-44

Improving how we engage with communities

3min
page 36

The benefits of burn camps

2min
page 33

Recognising scarred trees

2min
page 32

Winners of the CFA 2021 photo competition

1min
pages 24-25

Volunteer Succession Planning Framework

2min
page 31

Donations rollout update

3min
page 30

Women’s Reference Groups

4min
pages 26-27

Remembering our fallen firefighters

3min
page 28

Understanding fire-generated weather

3min
page 29

Using tools to predict bushfire behaviour

2min
page 23

Chief Officer’s Quarterly Operational Update

12min
pages 12-15

CFA operations in a climate-challenged world

5min
pages 16-17

Incident statistics

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page 8

The latest news from the CEO, Chief Officer and senior leaders

12min
pages 9-11

CFA helps with NSW flood response

3min
page 7

General Firefighter training update

5min
pages 18-19

Apollo Bay double emergency

3min
page 6

Storms batter Victoria

5min
pages 4-5
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