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Campaign fires up to protect infrastructure

Eurobodalla community groups and associations have thrown their support behind Eurobodalla Council’s push to improve the resilience of telecommunications infrastructure in the shire.

In July last year the Council called on government to take action to protect infrastructure atop Mount Wandera, which transmits to Police and emergency services, ABC and commercial TV and radio, as well as mobile phone services, internet, and more.

Council’s infrastructure services director Warren Sharpe OAM said the loss of communications in the Black Summer Bushfires placed first responders at increased risk and added to the trauma to the broader community but, he said, it was largely avoidable.

“The timber poles that serviced our main telecommunications tower on Mt Wandera burnt to the ground and by necessity at that time had to be replaced in timber,” Mr Sharpe explained.

“We’re fighting to get the NSW and Australian Governments to fund Essential Energy to upgrade these 21 power poles with more resilient composite poles, such as those that survived the intense bushfire in the Merricumbene Valley.

“We’re also seeking a commitment to upgrade and maintain an asset protection zone around the site, improve the safety of the access and to make telecommunications infrastructure more resilient to fire.”

Mr Sharpe said the work would mitigate the risk to the whole community and could be done at relatively low cost – only about $750,000, with the essential power upgrade making up half of that.

Emergency services, Police, government agencies, local Chambers of Commerce and community associations, as well as Regional Development Australia and the Canberra Region Joint Organisation of councils, have all joined Council in ramping up the campaign for action ahead of the federal election.

In its letter to the Australian Regional Communications, ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Recovery and Resilience Minister Bridget McKenzie, the Batemans Bay Chamber of Commerce detailed how businesses could not activate EFTPOS facilities during the disaster, at a time when residents were desperate for food and fuel. The Chamber said a critical part of community recovery was to act on the lessons learnt.

“From the community perspective, everyone was technologically blind and deaf to fire updates, warnings and news for a period of six days. This is not a situation that governments can allow to recur,” the Chamber said.

A Council-led steering group resulted in a few wins – including an agreement for Essential Energy to fund part of the work, improvements to back-up power, some infrastructure work and agreement by RFS to undertake asset protection maintenance as a one-off – however Mr Sharpe said a whole solution was yet to be forthcoming.

“We are really grateful that everyone is getting behind this critical change for our community. The actual work is straightforward and can be implemented before next fire season, if the government decides to act,” Mr Sharpe said.

“We need this work done now, before the next summer, not in another two years.”

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