On Monday, Victorian Premier John Brumby said a royal commission would investigate every aspect of the Victorian bushfires, including the possibility of greater danger resulting from climate change.
To me this will be the most critical and important process of the past events. It must be handled with all due and care with nothing over looked. It must be approached from every angle, from BOM forecast to management of building and land management to emergency response and education of people living within high prone natural disaster areas , and what other factor comes into play. This is were it could become very difficult for a lot of people especially from what I have been reading regarding Govt policy, it states as follows
"In mid 2001, the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) acknowledged this challenge and commissioned a wide-ranging review of natural disaster relief and mitigation arrangements in Australia. The recommendations contained in the Review Report, Natural Disasters in Australia: Reforming Mitigation, Relief and Recovery Arrangements, August 2002, were endorsed in principle by COAG in December 2003.
The Review Report recommended fundamental structural reform as the foundation for a new approach to natural disaster management in Australia. Central to the new approach is a systematic and widespread national process of disaster risk assessments, and most importantly, a fundamental shift in focus towards justificatory, evidencebased disaster mitigation – a shift beyond disaster response and reaction, towards anticipation and mitigation.
· priority should be given to projects that are derived from or contribute to strategies to address the fundamental causes, rather than symptoms, of Australia's natural disaster related problems and that bring long-term natural disaster mitigation benefits and, in addition, environmental, economic and social benefits.
To help achieve this outcome, States will strive to introduce statutory land use planning policies and requirements governing development in areas, which are subject to a significant risk of flood, bushfire, cyclone, landslip and storm surge.
In addition, the Australian Building Codes Board will strive to ensure that the Building Code of Australia includes acceptable levels of building construction and performance for resistance to natural hazards and introduce appropriate Australian Standards and/or guidelines.
The statutory land use planning policies and requirements, building codes, standards and/or guidelines described above will be enforced diligently to mitigate the effects of natural hazards;"{ for a full review of the mitigation go to (
http://www.ema.gov.au/agd/ema/emainternet.nsf/Page/Communities_Natural_Disasters_NDMP_Natural_Disasters_Mitigatio) }
I know some of these country towns ars very long standing, but land management, especially after 7 years of drought, has not be addressed and other issues are involved.
Since this act came into existence I know in the building game, it has not been fully upheld. I know of one luxury estate, recently built, that will be a least 30 feet under water when another 1974 flood hits Brisbane.
Another headline posted Friday Feb 09 at 7.08 am "Ash Wednesday' warning as Victoria bakes
"Victorian fire authorities are preparing for extreme fire conditions today and tomorrow, with conditions being compared to those before the 1983 Ash Wednesday bushfires which killed 47 people."
Unfortunately with human nature, you have the issue of Authority, in which some people with a little power feel they are god. " I have seen this so many times, a person of little authority has told the person in charge that such and such has to happen now! The person of authority did not like the push, so went out, had a coffee, phoned his wife, came back in, and made the decision to go ahead with what was told to him half an hour earlier (his reply was "nobody will tell me what to do when I am in charge". that is in very nice english,no harsh words quoted). In this case it was loss of man power, which cost money. I am being carefull on how I try to explain this, but I think you get the general idea. You put that into a disaster management or alert scenario, how many lives could this costs.
It was, not as if nobody new of the impending event, but we have to see what the inquiry unfolds and hopefully a better disaster management and prevention of high loss of lives that could have been avoidable in some instances.