The Watermelon Blog Green on the outside, social justice inside
"We can do better" (Kennedy)
Richest fluency
"This is what you shall do: Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul; and your very flesh shall be a great poem, and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body." Walt Whitman
I don't think it is just me. I reckon all over the bush people are throwing things at the TV and shouting abuse. Is it a politician? No, not this time. It is the weather presenter on commercial, Sydney-based TV. Once more using the word 'fine' to describe the opposite of wet, because 'fine' is just fine and dandy. Yet again saying how wonderful it is to have another clear blue sky day, another day of 30 plus temperatures, promising, with a smile, more of the same to come, and cheekily taking credit for it.
Very often, to add insult to injury, the cheeky chap or girl goes through this song and dance routine immediately after a news item talking about the drought worsening, sheep numbers at record lows, bushfires burning everywhere, dam levels at record lows, or all the above! I have usually come in from outside, scuffing bone dry soil, checking lambs that are not growing, estimating anxiously my own dam levels, seeing weeds thriving on bare ground and grasshopper numbers increasing.
Well, does it matter? You betcha it does. It is a clear sign of the disconnection between people in cities and the environment that city is based in. Not just a clear sign, but one of the many factors that lead to that disconnection. Until city people are encouraged by commercial TV channels (perhaps a start could be made by using the word 'dry' instead of the word 'fine') to understand that rain must fall and that sitting on a beach with blue sky overhead day after day is actually a sign that the environment, and farmers, are under great pressure, it is going to be very hard to get people to understand the actions that are needed to help both the environment and farmers.
Admittedly, lately, Sydney people are beginning to feel the pinch in water restrictions, but there doesn't seem to be much connection made between this fact and the lack of rain, nor beyond that any connection with changing weather patterns as a result of global warming. Instead, before you can say 'red sky at night, shepherd's delight', there will be the usual nonsensical calls for more and more dams to be built, or for rivers to be turned inland. Perhaps a call to your local TV station might have an impact. It's only a little thing, this blue sky mania, but in the environment little things matter.
Government Management of Water infrastructure in QLD
{ 2:07 PM, 6 September 2008 }
{ Posted by Anonymous }
You would imagine that Dam infrastructure in Australia is safe - however our experience on the Burrum River in QLD shows just how easy it is to become a fatality when Dam Infrastructure fails.
Gates constructed in December 2007 at Lenthalls Dam on the heavily impounded Burrum River failed to lower to release flood water as designed in Febuary 2008.
Wide Bay Water was the constructing authority and responsible for the design and operation of the dam gate infrastructure.
Our upstream farm house, where the tributaries join the dam proper was cut of when flood water continued to back up much higher than the constructing authority Wide Bay Water had predicted the water levels would ever go.
Three family members were stuck at our farm house. The emergency evacuation plan found in the Lenthalls Dam Emergency Action Plan called for evacuation after water levels reached RL26.91 - water levels reached 27.4 at the dam wall flowing over the blocked gates and backed up to RL28.5 at our house. No one evacuated the famuily members stranded in rising water.
No one from the constructing authority Wide Bay Water contacted us to undertake evacuation or explain the risk we faced due to Crest Gate Failure.
We believe the CEO Tim Waldron was overseas at conference when the event happed. The Operations manuals for the dam place responsibilty with the CEO as does the action plan. He has not been called to account for his failure to take responsible action to ensure an evacuation would occur in his abscence if required.
If the rain event had not stopped the three people cut off at our flood impacted farm house would have been inundated by metres of water.
We heard about the dam failure from other locals close to the dam wall who had heard the gates have failed - we now have full evidence to verify the dam gate failure.
What our situation highlights is that while most fatalities from failed dams and failed dam infrastructure have occurred in the countries of the south ie third world the west is not imune from dam infrastructure failure.
The capacity of first world dam operators to manage infrastructure/ risk and operational and human failure is not consistent.
We were very lucky the rain event that caused the flooding to back up over the failed dam gate, stopped.
It is however only a matter of time before a dam infrastructure failure in the first world causes fatalities.
We feel that maybe operational and human failures that have occured without fatality have been coverd up and are not generally reported or researched.
It is likely constructing authorities keep these instances quiet.
Please see the small news article that did report the event ( not comprehensively).
See the article:
Resident fears dam gates risk flooding
Posted Wed May 21, 2008 8:26am AEST
Updated Wed May 21, 2008 8:25am AEST
• Map: Hervey Bay 4655
A land-holder upstream of a major dam south-west of Hervey Bay says multi-million dollar barriers on the storage are broken, putting her family at risk of flooding.
Queensland Deputy Premier Paul Lucas will officially open the $16 million project at Lenthalls Dam, which is designed to more than double the storage’s capacity.
In what is claimed to be an Australian first, the two metre high crest gates sink when the dam reaches capacity to prevent flooding upstream and provide for environmental flows.
But Esther Allan says in February the gates jammed, causing water to back up onto her property.
“This is an extremely expensive piece of infrastructure. Ratepayers paid for this and their expectation would be that it would be operable,” she said.
“If it wasn’t, we need to know why - not only because our family’s safety was put at risk, but because ratepayers expect to get a result from the infrastructure they pay for.”
The local government corporation that runs Lenthalls Dam says the gates do not work, but it was monitoring the rising water.
Wide Bay Water general manager David Wiskar says adjustments were needed during the dam’s commissioning and are continuing.
“The gates were all needing some fine-tuning. At the moment we were able to complete that tuning on three of the gates,” he said.
“There’s two that remain to be done, but we’re waiting until the level in the dam falls to an adequate level to [do] those final two.”
The Lenthalls Dam Gates are still not fully operational today September 2008 and heading into the QLD summer flood season.
We can evidence what we are saying.
We dont have too much faith that any government authority will maintain our saftey, and our economy is currently healthy and well economically resourced.
Infrastructure once built needs to be operable ongoing through good economic times and bad.
The risks remain for all of those who live on dammed river systems long after the damage of damming the river is done.
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