The disastrous flood of 1998 practically annihilated the town of Katherine.
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Every echelon of the community was affected from the homeless to the town’s leaders.
The memories of furious flood water still lingers in the forefront of many minds.
For former Katherine MLA Mike Reed Katherine’s biggest natural disaster “feels like yesterday”.
Mr Reed and his wife had just bought a new home on the north side of town and were planning to move in the following week.
The move was postponed when both of their homes were trashed by raging flood waters.
“When you have lived here for a while you get to know what the river is doing. Cyclone Les had dropped a lot of rain in the Katherine catchment area and it became evident that the river was rising fast,” Mr Reed said.
“It was by far the most intense rain I have ever experienced. It beat on the roof for hours on end.
“When the river broke its banks we knew we had a major flood on our hands.”
Mr Reed was in a unique position during the floods.
Not only was he a victim of the disaster, but as the local MP, he was responsible for the lives of his constituents.
At the time of the 1998 floods he was also the deputy chief minister, police, fire and emergency minister and treasurer.
“Obviously my job was to ensure assistance and support was provided to the community. As the minister I also needed to provide support to emergency services to safeguard lives,” Mr Reed said.
“It soon became apparent that the police and emergency services were doing their best but they were getting overwhelmed, that was when a state of emergency was declared.
“We were very lucky to have help from RAAF Base Tindal, without the air force it would have been much worse. They provided a lot of resources and support and did some incredible work.”
Katherine residents can be proud of how they handled themselves and rebuilt their lives.
- Mike Reed
While fleeing his own home and coordinating an emergency response, Mr Reed found time to help his neighbours escape rising flood waters.
“It was not a pretty sight. I used a boat I borrowed from my neighbour and spent most of the day helping people leave their homes,” Mr Reed said.
“The human side of the flood is the most difficult to talk about. Picking people up from flooded homes and seeing others on their balconies and roofs was hard.
“It was especially hard with all of the children involved and seeing families lose everything,” he said.
Mr Reed said morale was boosted by the visit of then prime minister John Howard on January 30 to announce disaster relief payments.
“I think people appreciated the fact that the prime minister came and was interested in their problems,” he said.
“His visit had other benefits as well.
“He gave me a business card and said if there is anything you need, phone this fella and he will make sure it happens. We used that a number a few times and that was really helpful, it allowed us to access extra resources immediately,” Mr Reed said.
The real blow came for many residents after the floods when they discovered many insurance companies would not pay up.
“The trauma people faced of leaving their homes and losing everything was one thing, but then to have to deal with the insurance companies was something else entirely,” Mr Reed said.
“Some of them were just appalling, the difficulties they put people through caused so much extra trauma.
“People were very cross and rightly so, they had to fight with insurance companies about whether the first water to touch their property was flood water or storm water, it was frustrating.”
Twenty years on from the devastating floods, Katherine’s hospital remains in the flood zone.
“Relocating the hospital is something that still needs to be considered. Katherine has grown since the floods and is likely to increase further so hospital services will need to be expanded,” Mr Reed said.
“I think it is reasonable for government to start planning ahead. There should certainly not be any new extensions to the current hospital.”
Mr Reed said other flood mitigation plans were also explored after the floods.
“There were calls for things like levee banks, I think there were a few attempts at providing those but none were ever put into place,” Mr Reed said.
“There was a lot of community support for warning sirens as well. Frankly I never supported those because I never saw them playing a significant role.”
The four town flood warning sirens, installed after 1998 flood,were decommissioned in 2007.
Mr Reed said the devastation had a way of uniting the community.
“When I visited the evacuation centre and talked with those people, I cannot remember anyone being angry,” Mr Reed said.
“The community handled it very well. Katherine residents can be proud of how they handled themselves and rebuilt their lives.
“Within a few weeks a lot of the businesses were trading again. It showed the resilience and strength of the community.”
Mike Reed’s story features in our ‘98 flood commemoration edition, out now