Fri. Nov 8th, 2024
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Jemima Macdonald and her family had only moved into their new home in the Wollongong suburb of Thirroul a fortnight before disaster struck.

Jolted awake by the sound of neighbours banging on their doors, it was 5am on Saturday when they found floodwater pouring through their backyard and into their home.

“We knew that we had to get out immediately. We didn’t grab anything, we just grabbed our son,” Ms Macdonald said.

“At that point the water had gotten to about a metre and a half at the back of our house.”

Water gushing down a driveway.
Floodwater pours out of the Macdonald home at Thirroul.(Supplied: Jemima Macdonald)

The family sought shelter at their cousin’s house nearby and returned an hour later to a scene of utter devastation – their home and yard completely submerged.

“It was just devastating to see all of our stuff just ruined,” Ms Macdonald said.

“I think the whole of yesterday, just walking around not knowing what to do, not knowing where to start — just loss.”

Am empty room with flood water beneath

The damage inside Ms Macdonald’s home.(Supplied: Jemima Macdonald)

No insurance

Ms Macdonald took out an insurance policy to secure the purchase of her house, but she said she had not had a chance to investigate flood insurance.

“We don’t have flood insurance, my partner has just been made redundant,” she said.

“What are we going to do, how are we going to survive this?”

Ms Macdonald has found a “silver lining” to the past devastating 48 hours, in the neighbours and community who have rallied around them.

“We had neighbours, people from the other side of Thirroul coming over and bringing their shovels and their mops and saying what can we do, where do we start?” she said.

Women and men cleaning a house.

Ms Macdonald says she is incredibly grateful for the community’s help.(Supplied: Jemima Macdonald)

“Or not even asking us, just going in and doing it because we didn’t know where to start.

“We didn’t know a single person when we moved here, and we moved here to be part of the community and that is what we got yesterday.”

Flooding ‘worse than ’98’

Just up the road, John Dark woke to the sound of “rumbling” rocks coming down Hewitts Creek, which runs along the back of all the properties.

John Dark

John Dark has lived through four major floods in Wollongong and says this weekend has been the worst.(ABC Illawarra: Tim Fernandez)

He later heard “an almighty bang” as his neighbour’s wall broke and water rushed through his house.

“I knew then it was on for young and old,” he said.

“We were here in ’98, so we have lived through four of them [floods], the ferocity and the volume of water in a short space of time … this is far worse.”

Mr Dark said the management of the bank of Hewitts Creek was the responsibility of property owners and they needed more support and coordination to widen the creek and help keep it clear of debris.

Man standing over huge concrete slabs that have been ripped from the ground.

Mr Dark says he was shocked by the ferocity and volume of water.(ABC Illawarra: Tim Fernandez)

Council working with residents

Wollongong Council staff were on site today, talking to locals.

“We are so appreciative that council has come this time,” Mr Dark said.

“This is the first time since ’98 that they are really getting involved and we are stoked.”

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