Members of the newly formed Hydeaway Landslide Action Group have potentially found a way forward for the disaster-stricken residents of Hydeaway Bay.
A letter containing 70 signatures was presented to council last week, requesting a submission be made to the Queensland Reconstruction Authority (QRA).
Spokesperson for the group Dan Glasgow said this would allow Hydeaway Bay to qualify for disaster status as per Cyclone Yasi and the Queensland floods.
“We’re sitting on a time bomb. This could happen again,” Mr Glasgow said.
Mr Glasgow said the group was calling on the Premier to visit Hydeaway Bay.
“She has visited every other natural disaster area this year so we’re requesting that she visits us to see the circumstances we’re living in firsthand. We have discovered that the then Premier Wayne Goss visited Hydeaway Bay after landslides in 1991,” Mr Glasgow said.
Former Mayor Glen Patullo, (1988-94) confirmed this, saying he personally flew over the area with Premier Goss and decided further development should be prohibited at the western end of Hydeaway Bay.
“The shire council spent about $460,000 on a new town plan to that effect. We almost had it completed and then in 1994 I was voted out. As I understand it the following council saw fit to sack the consulting town planner,” Mr Patullo said.
“It’s my understanding the state government and department of local government approved further development, and that makes them directly responsible for what has happened now,” he said.
Current Mayor Mike Brunker confirmed council had now made a submission to QRA as requested, but Cr Brunker stressed the process would take time.
“This is not going to be fixed overnight,” he said.
Mr Glasgow said he was very happy to hear council had referred the matter to QRA.
“However, we suspect that if we can’t move this to a state government level the process will stall,” he said.
Mr Glasgow also said council needed to release geotechnical reports as previously promised.
“We need that for the first step and in order to decide what further geotechnical investigations may be necessary,” he said.
Member for Whitsunday Jan Jarratt said she believed QRA was the appropriate body to be assessing the situation at Hydeaway Bay under the disaster declaration.
“I’m fairly confident that the process is proceeding as it should,” Ms Jarratt said.
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