Cyclone Alfred live updates: 'Staggering' number of power outages, mainland braces as category one system crosses islands
Welcome to Yahoo's live coverage of Tropical Cyclone Alfred. The Bureau of Meteorology has revised the cyclone to a category one system however millions are being warned the conditions remain life-threatening.
There are power outages for close to 300,000 people, which energy networks are calling a "staggering" number. In a brutal assessment, they believe those without power should expect to be without it for at least a week.
The Bureau of Meteorology had earlier warned residents they will face extreme conditions for six or more hours once the cyclone makes landfall. That is expected to happen on the mainland very shortly, with the cyclone already crossing Moreton Island.
Follow along as we bring you regular updates throughout the day.
OK, we have a major update from the Bureau of Meteorology.
Just hours after the cyclone was revised down to a category one system late on Friday, it has now been downgraded to a tropical low.
Now that does not mean the dangers millions have been warned about will become less likely as the sheer amount of rain predicted is still expected.
"Some of the biggest weather event I've seen in my career have been tropical lows," the ABC's meteorologist Adam Morgan said
Energex says there are widespread power outages in Queensland's southeast.
A staggering number of 239,000 people are currently off in the southeast area. Those are the main ones. Significant numbers," area manager Chris Graham told the ABC news channel.
The worst hit is the Gold Coast with nearly 120,000 people without power.
And in a bleak update for residents, Graham said people needed to "be prepared for prolonged outages". He said that could be at least a week some are left without power.
Good morning and welcome to Yahoo's live coverage once more.
In a key update this morning, the Bureau of Meteorology has said Cyclone Alfred has been revised to a category one system after weakening slightly. However that does not mean life-threatening conditions will not occur, with damaging gusts and flash flooding expected on the mainland.
The cyclone is expected to make landfall shortly between Maroochydore and Bribie Island.
This is where we'll be leaving our live coverage for the day, however the Yahoo homepage will have the latest news from the cyclone here.
And for vital information from the Bureau of Meteorology, you can find that here.
Our live coverage will return early tomorrow morning before Cyclone Alfred is expected to make landfall.
With Tropical Cyclone Alfred now just hours away from landfall, authorities are warning residents it's now time to get serious.
Residents are being urged to stay inside 'immediately' as the wild weather ramps up.
The cyclone was 125km east-southeast of Brisbane and 90km east-northeast of the Gold Coast on Friday afternoon, moving west southwest at 8km/h.
'Everyone should be off the roads and at home almost from immediately after this press conference,' Acting Gold Coast Mayor Donna Gates said at 2pm (AEST).
'It is serious and strong winds can't be underestimated."
OK, passing 2pm (AEST), all Brisbane Coles stores are now closed.
Woolworths had earlier said the select number of stores open in Brisbane would close early.
We'll stick with Acting Gold Coast mayor Donna Gates as she's just revealed police are working to remove four children from the ocean at Southport.
"They're ignoring warnings to get out... it's very, very foolish and very, very dangerous," she said.
Gates said two teens had earlier been rescued from the water.
She clarified a previous warning people could get fined $16,000 for entering the water, saying they were not on-the-spot fines, however the maximum someone could be fined if taken through the courts.
She said trying to scare people with that information appeared to have "fallen on deaf ears".
Acting Gold Coast mayor Donna Gates has urged people not to call Triple-0 to report fallen powerlines with emergency services inundated amid the cyclone.
"Don't clog other resources," she urged, telling people to call 131962 instead, stressing it was still an important call residents still need to make.
Well we mentioned before a few of the Gold Coast's iconic lifeguard towers had succumbed to the coastal erosion there, so let's take a closer look at that now.
Remarkably the ones that have fallen around Southport remain in tact after falling down the sand cliff onto the beach below.
NSW Premier Chris Minns has told anyone who ignores evacuation orders in northern NSW will be "by yourself".
While he said the majority of people are following the advice, there are concerns a small number of people will stay.
"If you're one of the few people that are remaining in your house and you're in an evacuation area … you will literally be by yourself,' he said.
Mr Minns warned that despite the heavy emergency service presence, it did not mean those remaining in the evacuation zone could 'ride out the storm'.
'There aren't the same number of boats as houses, and in the event of a major natural disaster we can't be everywhere at the same time," he said.
The Bureau of Meteorology has released a new update, saying Cyclone Alfred is expected to remain a category 2 system as it approaches the coast. It is now just 150 kilometres east southeast of Brisbane.
It's on track to cross the Moreton Bay islands on Saturday morning as a category 2 cyclone, before potentially dropping to a category 1 around midday. By Sunday, BoM predicts it will become a tropical low.
Damaging wind gusts of up to 140km/h are still forecast for today, with locally 'intense' rainfall and the risk of flash flooding.
'Destructive wind gusts of up to 155 kilometres per hour may develop about the Moreton Bay Islands and exposed coastal location on the northern Gold Coast from tonight,' BoM said in the update.
'Although Alfred is expected to weaken and move inland during Saturday, damaging wind gusts may continue, particularly over elevated terrain during Saturday, before easing throughout during Sunday.'
People between Cape Moreton and Yamba, including the Moreton Bay Islands should remain inside until conditions have eased and listen to the next advice.
People between Yamba and Grafton in New South Wales, as well as Brisbane and Double Island Point in Queensland should take precautions and listen to the next advice.
And how about this unfortunate moment for this Brisbane driver? With fears e-scooters and e-bikes could prove to be a deadly projectile, they've all been gathered up and stored together in the CBD.
But one driver was left trapped by them all. Unsurprisingly the motorist's plight went viral this morning.
Read more about it from the Yahoo team here.
Two Currumbin Valley residents are lucky to be alive after a massive gum tree fell on their home on Friday morning.
Damaging winds from Cyclone Alfred sent the tree crashing into the roof of the house, ripping open the roof and flattening walls.
The occupants thankfully sustained only minor injuries and were taken to the Gold Coast University Hospital in stable conditions.
On Facebook, a woman claimed it was her brother's home, and emergency crews had to cut up the tree in order to free him from the house.
Your home is your castle, as they say and it appears those who live in this Currumbin apartment block certainly see it that way. They've managed to build one of the most sophisticated sandbag walls we've seen.
There's been plenty of vision from the Gold Coast's Currumbin and the waterfront there showing the water swamping the local surf life club's car park with fears the water will shortly cross the coastal road there.
There's plenty at threat thanks to the coastal erosion on the Gold Coast with reports some of the city's iconic lifeguard towers have fallen.
And crews in Southport are working to save the iconic bronze sculpture 'Melody on the foreshore' in front of the surf live saving club. The sculpture's neighbouring lifeguard tower is nowhere to be seen.
Surf cam shows a digger looking to pull the sculpture to safety, which can be seen below. And take a look at what the site normally looks like.
The NSW SES has issued 25 evacuation orders in anticipation of severe flooding from Cyclone Alfred.
The most recent additions have been New Brighton and South Golden Beach on the Tweed Coast, and areas of Macksville and Bowraville on the Mid North Coast as river levels continue to rise.
The NSW government admitted its evacuation orders were made too late during the 2022 Lismore floods so it is making early calls on areas it expects will need to be evacuated.
There are currently 19 evacuation centres open in NSW.
In Queensland four areas along the Moreton Bay coast, including Wynnum and Brighton, have beed ordered to prepare to evacuate. Redland City Island communities were last night at 9pm warned to 'Take Shelter Now'. The cyclone is forecast to reach the Queensland mainland at midday on Saturday.
Well this is a somewhat positive update for millions anxiously waiting in Brisbane.
The Bureau of Meteorology's Matthew Collopy told reporters just now the cyclone should weaken by the time it reaches Queensland's capital.
"As the cyclone moves across Moreton Bay islands, it is expected to weaken from a Category two to a Category one system," he said.
"That will mean that destructive winds are unlikely for Brisbane itself, but damaging wind gusts to 120km/h are expected and they will develop quickly as the system approaches."
He expects the cyclone to pass north of the city's CBD about midday on Saturday.
Collopy said waves bigger than 10 metres are expected to continue while he said flooding remains a "major concern", with the southern flank of the cyclone expected to bring 800mm across the next two days.
In what Premier David Crisafulli was a "little moment of magic" amid the chaos, a set of twins have been born on North Stradbroke Island overnight.
The island has been badly impacted by Tropical Cyclone Alfred however midwives and paramedics were able to deliver the twins in the town of Dunwich on the western side of the island.
We've seen plenty of viral videos from Currumbin's Vikings Surf Life club over the past few days as the storm surge engulfed its car park right on the beach there.
Well vision shared to Instagram by local photographer Luke Workmann now shows the damage caused.
While plenty of sand has been washed away either side, the car park's tarmac has been completely ripped up.
Tens of thousands of people are being warned they could be without power for over a week after storm debris took out a substation on the Gold Coast.
Roughly 38,000 people in southeast Queensland have lost power, with the majority of those on the Gold Coast.
'The strong winds have carried debris, tree branches, whole trees, everything onto the network," Energex spokesman Danny Donald told the Courier Mail.
Donald said if the cyclone hits part hard, restoration work will be delayed.
Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@yahoonews.com.
You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.
OK, we have a major update from the Bureau of Meteorology.
Just hours after the cyclone was revised down to a category one system late on Friday, it has now been downgraded to a tropical low.
Now that does not mean the dangers millions have been warned about will become less likely as the sheer amount of rain predicted is still expected.
"Some of the biggest weather event I've seen in my career have been tropical lows," the ABC's meteorologist Adam Morgan said
Energex says there are widespread power outages in Queensland's southeast.
A staggering number of 239,000 people are currently off in the southeast area. Those are the main ones. Significant numbers," area manager Chris Graham told the ABC news channel.
The worst hit is the Gold Coast with nearly 120,000 people without power.
And in a bleak update for residents, Graham said people needed to "be prepared for prolonged outages". He said that could be at least a week some are left without power.
Good morning and welcome to Yahoo's live coverage once more.
In a key update this morning, the Bureau of Meteorology has said Cyclone Alfred has been revised to a category one system after weakening slightly. However that does not mean life-threatening conditions will not occur, with damaging gusts and flash flooding expected on the mainland.
The cyclone is expected to make landfall shortly between Maroochydore and Bribie Island.
This is where we'll be leaving our live coverage for the day, however the Yahoo homepage will have the latest news from the cyclone here.
And for vital information from the Bureau of Meteorology, you can find that here.
Our live coverage will return early tomorrow morning before Cyclone Alfred is expected to make landfall.
With Tropical Cyclone Alfred now just hours away from landfall, authorities are warning residents it's now time to get serious.
Residents are being urged to stay inside 'immediately' as the wild weather ramps up.
The cyclone was 125km east-southeast of Brisbane and 90km east-northeast of the Gold Coast on Friday afternoon, moving west southwest at 8km/h.
'Everyone should be off the roads and at home almost from immediately after this press conference,' Acting Gold Coast Mayor Donna Gates said at 2pm (AEST).
'It is serious and strong winds can't be underestimated."
OK, passing 2pm (AEST), all Brisbane Coles stores are now closed.
Woolworths had earlier said the select number of stores open in Brisbane would close early.
We'll stick with Acting Gold Coast mayor Donna Gates as she's just revealed police are working to remove four children from the ocean at Southport.
"They're ignoring warnings to get out... it's very, very foolish and very, very dangerous," she said.
Gates said two teens had earlier been rescued from the water.
She clarified a previous warning people could get fined $16,000 for entering the water, saying they were not on-the-spot fines, however the maximum someone could be fined if taken through the courts.
She said trying to scare people with that information appeared to have "fallen on deaf ears".
Acting Gold Coast mayor Donna Gates has urged people not to call Triple-0 to report fallen powerlines with emergency services inundated amid the cyclone.
"Don't clog other resources," she urged, telling people to call 131962 instead, stressing it was still an important call residents still need to make.
Well we mentioned before a few of the Gold Coast's iconic lifeguard towers had succumbed to the coastal erosion there, so let's take a closer look at that now.
Remarkably the ones that have fallen around Southport remain in tact after falling down the sand cliff onto the beach below.
NSW Premier Chris Minns has told anyone who ignores evacuation orders in northern NSW will be "by yourself".
While he said the majority of people are following the advice, there are concerns a small number of people will stay.
"If you're one of the few people that are remaining in your house and you're in an evacuation area … you will literally be by yourself,' he said.
Mr Minns warned that despite the heavy emergency service presence, it did not mean those remaining in the evacuation zone could 'ride out the storm'.
'There aren't the same number of boats as houses, and in the event of a major natural disaster we can't be everywhere at the same time," he said.
The Bureau of Meteorology has released a new update, saying Cyclone Alfred is expected to remain a category 2 system as it approaches the coast. It is now just 150 kilometres east southeast of Brisbane.
It's on track to cross the Moreton Bay islands on Saturday morning as a category 2 cyclone, before potentially dropping to a category 1 around midday. By Sunday, BoM predicts it will become a tropical low.
Damaging wind gusts of up to 140km/h are still forecast for today, with locally 'intense' rainfall and the risk of flash flooding.
'Destructive wind gusts of up to 155 kilometres per hour may develop about the Moreton Bay Islands and exposed coastal location on the northern Gold Coast from tonight,' BoM said in the update.
'Although Alfred is expected to weaken and move inland during Saturday, damaging wind gusts may continue, particularly over elevated terrain during Saturday, before easing throughout during Sunday.'
People between Cape Moreton and Yamba, including the Moreton Bay Islands should remain inside until conditions have eased and listen to the next advice.
People between Yamba and Grafton in New South Wales, as well as Brisbane and Double Island Point in Queensland should take precautions and listen to the next advice.
And how about this unfortunate moment for this Brisbane driver? With fears e-scooters and e-bikes could prove to be a deadly projectile, they've all been gathered up and stored together in the CBD.
But one driver was left trapped by them all. Unsurprisingly the motorist's plight went viral this morning.
Read more about it from the Yahoo team here.
Two Currumbin Valley residents are lucky to be alive after a massive gum tree fell on their home on Friday morning.
Damaging winds from Cyclone Alfred sent the tree crashing into the roof of the house, ripping open the roof and flattening walls.
The occupants thankfully sustained only minor injuries and were taken to the Gold Coast University Hospital in stable conditions.
On Facebook, a woman claimed it was her brother's home, and emergency crews had to cut up the tree in order to free him from the house.
Your home is your castle, as they say and it appears those who live in this Currumbin apartment block certainly see it that way. They've managed to build one of the most sophisticated sandbag walls we've seen.
There's been plenty of vision from the Gold Coast's Currumbin and the waterfront there showing the water swamping the local surf life club's car park with fears the water will shortly cross the coastal road there.
There's plenty at threat thanks to the coastal erosion on the Gold Coast with reports some of the city's iconic lifeguard towers have fallen.
And crews in Southport are working to save the iconic bronze sculpture 'Melody on the foreshore' in front of the surf live saving club. The sculpture's neighbouring lifeguard tower is nowhere to be seen.
Surf cam shows a digger looking to pull the sculpture to safety, which can be seen below. And take a look at what the site normally looks like.
The NSW SES has issued 25 evacuation orders in anticipation of severe flooding from Cyclone Alfred.
The most recent additions have been New Brighton and South Golden Beach on the Tweed Coast, and areas of Macksville and Bowraville on the Mid North Coast as river levels continue to rise.
The NSW government admitted its evacuation orders were made too late during the 2022 Lismore floods so it is making early calls on areas it expects will need to be evacuated.
There are currently 19 evacuation centres open in NSW.
In Queensland four areas along the Moreton Bay coast, including Wynnum and Brighton, have beed ordered to prepare to evacuate. Redland City Island communities were last night at 9pm warned to 'Take Shelter Now'. The cyclone is forecast to reach the Queensland mainland at midday on Saturday.
Well this is a somewhat positive update for millions anxiously waiting in Brisbane.
The Bureau of Meteorology's Matthew Collopy told reporters just now the cyclone should weaken by the time it reaches Queensland's capital.
"As the cyclone moves across Moreton Bay islands, it is expected to weaken from a Category two to a Category one system," he said.
"That will mean that destructive winds are unlikely for Brisbane itself, but damaging wind gusts to 120km/h are expected and they will develop quickly as the system approaches."
He expects the cyclone to pass north of the city's CBD about midday on Saturday.
Collopy said waves bigger than 10 metres are expected to continue while he said flooding remains a "major concern", with the southern flank of the cyclone expected to bring 800mm across the next two days.
In what Premier David Crisafulli was a "little moment of magic" amid the chaos, a set of twins have been born on North Stradbroke Island overnight.
The island has been badly impacted by Tropical Cyclone Alfred however midwives and paramedics were able to deliver the twins in the town of Dunwich on the western side of the island.
We've seen plenty of viral videos from Currumbin's Vikings Surf Life club over the past few days as the storm surge engulfed its car park right on the beach there.
Well vision shared to Instagram by local photographer Luke Workmann now shows the damage caused.
While plenty of sand has been washed away either side, the car park's tarmac has been completely ripped up.
Tens of thousands of people are being warned they could be without power for over a week after storm debris took out a substation on the Gold Coast.
Roughly 38,000 people in southeast Queensland have lost power, with the majority of those on the Gold Coast.
'The strong winds have carried debris, tree branches, whole trees, everything onto the network," Energex spokesman Danny Donald told the Courier Mail.
Donald said if the cyclone hits part hard, restoration work will be delayed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Yahoo
Oregon's Heat Waves Are More Dangerous Than Ever — That's Deadly For Renters
This article may contain affiliate links that Yahoo and/or the publisher may receive a commission from if you buy a product or service through those links. It's Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2024: the first day of a three-day heatwave in Portland, Oregon, with temperatures predicted to be the hottest since 1958. Inside my outdated single-family home, the thermometer is climbing to 96 degrees. The poorly maintained windows, cracked open by adjustable window screens to allow for any cross breeze, are covered with blackout curtains. My partner and I are sitting on our couch, sweat dripping from every orifice, and our dog lies on a cold spot on the old wooden floors, tongue hanging out. All inclement weather can be dangerous, but the heat we experienced over those three days was especially so. Hot weather is the leading cause of weather-related fatalities in the United States, resulting in hundreds of deaths per year. The body temperature has a believed 95-degree wet-bulb limit (which is the theoretical temperature at which it's too humid for sweat to be evaporated enough to cool you down), but some scientists at Penn State recently reported it might be even lower, at 87 degrees. And veterinarians say that temperatures above 90 degrees can get dangerous for dogs, and fast, since they don't sweat like humans do. Needless to say, we were suffering. And yet, even with an AC unit in each room of our home, nothing seemed to cool it down. Due to the poorly insulated, drafty windows, all the cool air was escaping. We faced a tradeoff: suffer inside with all the windows shut and hope the AC eventually worked, or aim for a crosswind and forgo trying the AC altogether. I felt hopeless. Those who could afford to escape to the Oregon Coast during the heatwave (and the skyrocketing Airbnb prices) had already done so. After some serious scavenging, I found a single yurt three hours away in Reedsport, where the temps hovered in the manageable upper 70s. Thank goodness for National Parks. While we escaped that heatwave, I hoped that once we returned, the weather wouldn't climb again. Deep down, I knew it was just the first hot day of many. When my family and I toured our rental that April, the weather was perfect: in the upper 60s and sunny. From conversations with locals and my own research, I was led to believe that the climate in Portland is moderate from April to September, with temperatures rarely climbing above the 80s. But times are changing. The summer we moved, Portland reported the hottest July to date, and more than two heat waves with average temperatures around 100 degrees, lasting from two to five days, according to the National Weather Service. Now, these heat waves are more of the norm. In the 2021 Western North America Heat Wave, temperatures soared past 116 degrees, and 800 people died in the Pacific Northwest, 100 of them Oregonians. The heatwave also caused a myriad of challenges: a surge in 911 calls and emergency department visits; commuter services like the MAX Light Rail and WES Commuter Rail and the Portland Streetcar service were suspended due to heat-related issues; and Seattle's steel drawbridges had to be hosed down to prevent infrastructure issues such as cracking. In parts of Washington, the pavement was literally melting, causing buckling and potholes, and some counties reported power outages. Later, reports of 2,800 heat-related emergency department visits were made from July 25-30, 2021, in Multnomah County, Oregon, alone. The county published an analysis that found that a majority of deaths that occurred in households were from residents who only had fans or no air conditioning. For the uninitiated, it may seem patently ridiculous that folks out here don't have AC units. But Portland is different. In cities like New York City, where I rented for over eight years, AC is standard, even expected. In fact, 86% of Portland owner-occupied homes have air conditioning — yet only 66% of renter-occupied homes do, says The Office of Darla Andrews of Rent Portland Homes. That statistic includes rental units where renters provide their own portable AC units. During my Portland search, I toured one high-rise apartment where the leasing agent mentioned that we'd need to keep all the doors inside the apartment open in the summer and use fans to help circulate the air, as the mini split AC unit wouldn't cut it. For the cost, you'd expect better insulation and, at minimum, proper cooling devices. It was also the only unit I toured that included air conditioning at all. For Portland's rental market, extreme temperatures pose serious challenges. There is a push to preserve neighborhood character — understandably so; Portland is a breathtaking city. But this means zoning restrictions and height limits for apartment construction. Much like our unit, a single-family home, most rentals are older houses with converted ADUs in the basement, which often have poor insulation and lack central air conditioning. While basement units tend to stay cooler, installing an AC is nearly impossible due to the ground-level windows. There is also a widening class disparity, causing issues with availability and pricing for portable units. Portland has long wait lists for cooling centers and free AC units. If you were lucky enough amid a heat wave to snag a portable AC unit from your local hardware center before they sold out, the cost itself was unfathomable, at two to three times the going rate. Some reports found that price gougers were selling units, which already go for several hundred dollars, for $2,000 a pop. In the end, when it gets so hot that the roads are buckling, only those who can afford it or have the luxury of having a car can escape. However, protecting vulnerable and priority populations such as seniors, low-income individuals, those with disabilities, communities of color, and those living outside during extreme heat, is not optional. Nobody should be left behind because of where they live, how much they earn, or the support systems they have access to. As my family and I were piecing together cooling solutions with box fans in front of our AC units, curtain dividers from IKEA in every room, and luck, we thought of how to avoid this situation in the future. Ultimately, we decided to move to a much smaller apartment with central AC and ample tree coverage in the neighborhood after weighing our choices. Others, too, will need to create a plan of action far in advance — if they're lucky enough to be able to afford to move. Residents are being advised to prepare for 'possible extreme heat' this summer. The release revealed that last year in Multnomah County, '170 people visited the hospital or urgent care for heat-related illnesses, up from 141 in 2023,' health authorities said. 'Four people died last year in connection with heat exposure, compared with three heat-related deaths in 2023.' Since Oregon is now one of the top five states for incoming residents, I went down the rabbit hole to see what renters' protections and action plans could work to protect others and their furry friends from the extreme heat. The state has regulations to protect residents during freezing temperatures, which require landlords to provide adequate heating to 68 degrees or above inside when it drops below 20 degrees. But the state does not do the same for extreme heat, despite the fact that it is so dangerous. Should landlords be held responsible for ensuring tenants have access to adequate cooling? Currently, SB 1536, which regulates temperature control in rental units, does not require landlords to install air conditioning; it only protects tenants' right to install it. But, in discussion is SB 54, which would require multiunit property owners to provide efficient cooling devices — central air conditioning, heat pump, or portable cooling device — in at least one room on hot days. The goal is to have a cooling device in every bedroom by 2036. Could the city support retrofitting older homes, many of which house renters, to improve cooling efficiency? In 2016, FEMA awarded Portland approximately $500,000 for a pilot program that subsidized half the cost of seismic retrofits for 150 residents. Why not implement a similar program for heat resilience? According to Housing Solutions Lab by the NYU Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, investments in insulation, efficient cooling systems, and moisture control, especially in the damp Pacific Northwest, could reduce energy consumption, increase property values, and improve comfort and livability. These upgrades would also support climate equity, as older homes are disproportionately occupied by lower-income residents who often face higher utility costs and greater vulnerability to extreme heat. The Portland Clean Energy Community Benefits Fund has made promising strides, pledging an additional $10.3 million in December 2024 to expand the Cooling Portland program, which provides portable cooling and heating units to low-income Portlanders and plans on serving an additional 10,000 households through 2026. But portable AC may not even be enough. Last year's study at three Home Forward properties revealed that portable air conditioners often fell short: Many residents avoided using them due to concerns about costly electricity bills, and even when in use, they had limited effectiveness in cooling indoor spaces. While programs like Cooling Portland are a meaningful start, long-term solutions like robust infrastructure changes and policy shifts that treat heat as a serious public health issue are required. Additionally, tenant unions remain a strong grassroots solution. The Portland Tenants Union, which shares accessible information about local elections and the proposed Tenant Protection Ordinance, recently interviewed Candace Avalos, city councillor for District 1, and other local politicians working to pass the Renters' Bill of Rights. This bill supports policies such as protection from eviction due to late rent during extreme weather, the right to safe indoor temperatures year round, and collective bargaining power when basic needs aren't met. Climate change is no longer theoretical. As a renter who can't afford to buy, I believe access to temperature-controlled housing is a basic right, not a luxury for the few who can afford it. My family and I often wonder: What incentives do landlords have to upgrade their properties with adequate cooling systems? If living conditions become unsafe for my family or our dog, what recourse do we have? Through my research, I did find opportunities for meaningful change: offering subsidized housing in tree-covered neighborhoods, revising building codes for hotter areas, and prioritizing renter protections like those outlined in a Renter's Bill of Rights. Housing must adapt to a warming world, and those most vulnerable cannot be left behind. No one should have to sacrifice health and stability for something as essential as livable temperatures. I Tried the 90/90 Rule and My Closet Is Now Fully Decluttered Everything You've Ever Wanted To Know About Article's DTC Furniture We Asked 5 Contractors Which Kitchen Reno Trend Homeowners Regret Most, and They Basically All Agreed Sign up for Apartment Therapy's Daily email newsletter to receive our favorite posts, tours, products, and shopping guides in your inbox.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
‘Winter has arrived': Coldest morning of year
Millions woke to an icy chill on Thursday morning as a polar snap blanketed much of the southeast coast, marking the coldest morning of the year for Sydney, Canberra and Brisbane. The first week of winter has arrived in Australia in spectacular fashion, with a pressure system and southerly wind bringing cold air and frost to Sydney and spreading into South East Queensland and much of Victoria. Bureau of Meteorology meteorologist Jonathan How said the polar conditions were just the beginning. 'We're already sort of feeling the chill across much of eastern Australia,' he told NewsWire, adding it was already stretching into neighbouring states. 'Yesterday was very cold in Sydney and then this morning we've had some very cold temperatures, particularly through the Darling Downs and also inland parts of NSW,' Mr How said. Overnight, temperatures dipped to a chilly 0C in Oakey, 1C in Dalby and 3C in Toowoomba, but conditions were even colder in NSW, plummeting to -7C at Goulburn Airport and across the coast. Sydney woke to a teeth-chattering 7C on Thursday morning, nearly 2C lower than the June average and marking one of the iciest mornings of the year. It was an exceptionally chilly start to the day for Canberra, which recorded -4C on Thursday morning. Temperatures dipped to an icy 4C in Melbourne, also dropping past the 5.3C average for the month. Thursday morning was the coldest for residents in Queensland, with a polar blast so intense that some residents in southern Queensland could be hit with a rare sight of snow. 'Winter has arrived,' Mr How told NewsWire. The chill is set to stick around for the several more days as the icy blast spreads into Victoria and parts of Queensland. 'We are expecting to see some very wintry conditions coming through for NSW and Victoria,' Mr How said. 'Queensland will see that cold air really pushing in later the week, on the weekend and into sort of early next week.' While the skies will be dry for most of the week in Sydney and Brisbane until Saturday, the cold front is expected to trigger thunderstorms, widespread rain, frost and 'lots of snow'. 'We'll see some snowfall from across the Central Tablelands to the west of Sydney on Monday,' Mr How told NewsWire. 'Then by Monday night, that cold air will stretch all the way up into the tablelands.' Between Thursday and Tuesday, Mr How said there could be between 60cm and 70cm of snow across the alpine resorts, spanning Perisher, Thredbo, Mount Hotham, Falls Creek and Mount Buller. '(It's) really good news for the start of the ski season,' Mr How said. 'It would be very windy, so we would see blizzard conditions as well, but very good news for the ski resorts.' As the ski season kicks off on the King's Birthday long weekend, it's not just the tourist alpine regions set to be blanketed with snow – Queensland may also witness a rare sight of snowfall in the southern regions. Snow and flurries are forecast to settle in the southern regions of Queensland, with a forecast of 14mm of snow to fall from late Monday to Tuesday. 'We'll see minimums getting down to below 5C along southern Queensland,' Mr How told NewsWire. 'Brisbane will get pretty cold as well.' Brisbane residents can get used to the cold mornings, with temperatures forecast to dip to single digits for 'some of those mornings next week', though there will be very little chance of rain. While it's not particularly rare for parts of southern Queensland to experience a cold snap, Mr How said the timings aligned perfectly with the first week of winter. '(The conditions) are not out of the ordinary, but given how mild it has been across Queensland (recently), it might be a bit of a shock to the system,' he said. It's a good time to take out the blankets and slippers, as cold conditions are set to stick around for several days. 'It'll stay cool across Queensland for much of the week with those cooler southwesterly winds but mostly dry,' he said, adding temperatures would start to creep back up by the second half of next week. For NSW and Victoria, however, the icy temperatures are likely to continue for much of next week. 'So certainly winter has arrived,' Mr How said. Brisbane residents will feel the chill on Thursday morning but conditions will improve in the afternoon, with sunny skies and a top of 21C. Sydney residents can anticipate a mostly sunny day, with clouds and a slight chance of a shower in the morning near the coast, reaching a top of 17C. It's frosty and a cold morning in Canberra, with light winds and sunny skies and a maximum temperature of 14C. Melbourne residents are also in for a frosty and cold day, with light winds and partly cloudy skies, reaching a top of 15C. It's cloudy skies, frost in the east and a possible shower in the early morning for Hobart, reaching a maximum of 13C. It will be a wet day for Adelaide, with a medium chance of showers in the evening and cloudy skies, with a top of 17C. Perth residents can expect a partly cloudy day with a medium chance of showers and a maximum of 20C. It will be mostly sunny in Darwin, with light winds and a top of 31C.
Yahoo
01-06-2025
- Yahoo
Travel chaos as thick fog blankets Sydney
Flights have been affected, ferries have been brought to a standstill and motorists are facing traffic nightmares from a thick blanket of fog which has descended over Sydney. Eerie pictures show fog blanketing the Sydney Harbour Bridge on Monday, reducing visibility to barely more than 100 metres during morning peak hour. Sydney Ferries suspended all voyages for a time. Flights have also been affected, with air traffic control spacing out arrivals and departures due to the poor visibility. Road users were being cautioned right across the metro area. 'Reduced visibility in fog will make road conditions dangerous during Monday in all suburbs,' an early morning Bureau of Meteorology alert said. However, by 8.30am the issues on the road had eased. 'The road weather alert for all suburbs has been cancelled, but the situation will continue to be monitored and further alerts will be issued if necessary,' an updated alert says. Despite conditions easing on the roads, ferries were not expected to operate. 'No Sydney ferries are running at all due to the heavy fog,' Sydney Ferries said on Monday morning. 'Make alternative travel arrangements.' However, as the fog lifted, ferries from began operating again, from about 9am, a Transport for NSW spokesman told NewsWire. Footage posted online shows the thick blanket of fog engulfing the city. While there are blue skies above the low level of fog, the mist covers city skyscrapers and landmarks. Video posted from what appears to be an apartment, at least 15 stories high, shows just the top of the Sydney Tower poking out. 'Most of the Sydney landmarks – Harbour Bridge, Opera House and even some of the Sydney Tower, are still asleep behind a blanket of fog. I think it's giving us a message for the start of the work week,' the video caption reads.