gayet wrote:If a property is regularly impacted by flood or fire, then it shouldn't be there, regardless of the hard work and money and family history plowed into it. It was a poor decision originally and continues to be a bad decision.
If it shouldn't be there due to flood or fire risk then we are back to the problem of moving large sections of the community again. Poor decisions have always been made in the past.
The last ECL just wiped out homes on the Northern beaches so do we remove all the homes along the eastern seaboard as a solution to consistent storms ? No, we manage by building better erosion proof frontages. Was the decision to build so close poor? Probably.
I really think it requires time spent in some of the areas affected. I have the benefit of spending the last 30 years skiing on the river and also working in and around properties that are often not even close but still affected. We've been lucky enough to dodge a few bullets with the Dam getting close but not adding to a river system that is already in low to moderate flood as we saw on the weekend. It wouldn't take much to see another big flood like the early 90's. I don't want to see the Kowmung under threat but if we are going to make a stand, there has to be a better answer than, "well they shouldn't have built anything downstream of the Dam."
They have improved some of the old problematic roads in McGraths Hill with bypasses which have helped. Every major road in Sydney has upgraded over time due to the population increases. It's easy to cry poor planning but the existing roads used to cope quite well for the time.