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More than 17,000 properties impacted by latest Brisbane City Council flood mapping
More than 17,000 properties impacted by latest Brisbane City Council flood mapping

ABC News

time4 days ago

  • Climate
  • ABC News

More than 17,000 properties impacted by latest Brisbane City Council flood mapping

The Brisbane City Council has updated its flood risk map, earmarking more than 10,000 properties as being at some risk of a future flood event. In a statement, the council said these changes stemmed from studies conducted at Breakfast Creek, Jindalee and the Lota Creek catchments in 2024. An extra 10,129 properties have been incorporated into the revised flood risk map, with more than 2,000 other properties subject to an increase in flood risk category. Four hundred properties have been removed from the map. The updates only apply to creek and waterway flooding, not Brisbane River or overland flooding. The risk facing many of the owners "can be as low as a one-in-2,000-year event" and council has warned insurance companies not to unfairly hike their premiums as a result. Chair for Environment, Parks and Sustainability Councillor Tracy Davis said the changes would help to improve disaster preparedness. "Whether it's preparing a family home or planning new infrastructure, knowing your flood risk matters and we want residents to have the latest information," Cr Davis said. Letters will be sent to affected owners next month to explain the update and changes are expected to be made to the online flood awareness map tool. Greens Paddington Ward Councillor Seal Chong Wah said council had not provided impacted residents with enough time to understand the changes. "Residents should have been told about this last year so they had the opportunity to challenge or discuss the study," she said. "I was pretty shocked because I didn't get a briefing on it, which I think is irresponsible because I want to be able to respond to my community. "The communication that council is providing is very limited … this is serious for many residents."

Brothers who bashed an elderly man in attack so violent he almost lost his sight blasted by no-nonsense judge
Brothers who bashed an elderly man in attack so violent he almost lost his sight blasted by no-nonsense judge

Daily Mail​

time02-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Brothers who bashed an elderly man in attack so violent he almost lost his sight blasted by no-nonsense judge

A judge has jailed two brothers over a 'deplorable' attack on an elderly man so violent the 78-year-old almost permanently lost his sight. Alex Benjamin Dower, 23, and Brandon Adam Dower, 21, were sentenced in the Western Australian District Court on Tuesday. They pleaded guilty to attacking Herbert Schmidt in a Hungry Jacks carpark in the Perth suburb of Jindalee about 3am on August 2, 2024. The grandfather, who had been out collecting recyclable cans, was rushed to Royal Perth Hospital with serious head injuries. He underwent treatment to prevent him from losing his eyesight and spent a week in hospital recovering from the ordeal. While Mr Schmidt recovered from his physical injuries, the court heard he still suffered from anxiety and ongoing dizziness. Judge Linda Petrusa SC described the assault as 'utterly deplorable', adding the Dower brothers had 'robbed this elderly gentleman of his enjoyment of life'. Mr Schmidt was taking his usual early-morning walk, a habit he had formed when his dog was alive, when he was spotted by the pair. The brothers had been intoxicated and doing burnouts in the Hungry Jacks carpark when they saw a light coming from a torch held by the elderly man. After Brandon mistakenly assumed the grandfather was recording him, he exited the car and approached him in an aggressive manner. Judge Petrusa said Mr Schmidt had been frightened by the man and had been within his rights to defend himself with pepper spray. Brandon then pushed Mr Schmidt, causing him to fall backwards onto the ground. His older brother, Alex, then ran over and stomped on and kicked him at least nine times. Brandon then punched Mr Schmidt in the head at least three times and kicked him in the head at least once. 'This was a persistent attack by the two of you on this defenceless old man', Judge Petrusa said on Tuesday. 'It lasted about a minute. It doesn't seem like a long time. But when you're being kicked and stomped on whilst you're on the ground, it's a long time.' Pictured is a street view of the Hungry Jacks outside which Mr Schmidt was attacked One of them then stole Mr Schmidt's reading glasses before the pair returned to the car and fled the scene. Judge Petrusa said the pair returned to the scene but only to retrieve something Brandon thought he had left behind. Upon their return, Alex moved the bruised and bloodied old man from the roadway in the carpark and sat him against the footpath. The assault was recorded on CCTV and witnessed in part by a man who called emergency services, before returning to assist Mr Schmidt. The brothers were arrested later that day and both subsequently pleaded guilty to aggravated grievous bodily harm. Lawyers for the brothers said they both expressed remorse for their actions. Brandon was sentenced to three-and-a-half years in jail, backdated to the date of his arrest on August 2, 2024. He will be eligible for parole after serving 21 months. Alex was sentenced to seven years behind bars for the assault and breach of three previous suspended sentences for separate offences. He will be eligible for parole after five years, also backdated to August 2.

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