Mayor says flood repair funds inadequate

A Cape York mayor in far north Queensland says a $16 million State Government grant to repair flood-damaged roads and infrastructure is not enough.

The State Government has announced the disaster relief funding for the Cook Shire Council for damage caused by cyclones Charlotte and Ellie last year.

But Cook Shire Mayor Peter Scott says the grant is “old money” that the council applied for more than a year ago.

He says another $40 million is now needed for repairs after this year’s wet season.

“The wet season last year, which was a heavy one, it was an extended one. We’ve got more claims in for that as well, in excess of that $16 million. I think we’ve got claims in for more than $40 million for this current year,” he said.

Deadly soil bacteria kills 10 people in NT

A dangerous bacteria found in soil has claimed the lives of 10 people in the Northern Territory, the Centre for Disease Control says.

Melioidosis usually strikes during the northern Australian wet season, which runs from about November until April.

The centre’s acting director, Dr Peter Markey, says about 20 to 30 infections usually occur each wet season, resulting in between two and four deaths.

But Dr Markey says this wet season has seen the number of infections surge.

“This year we’ve had 72 cases so far,” he said.

“That is over three times [what we would normally expect] and well ahead of any other season that we’ve had.

“And 10 of those people have sadly passed away from the melioidosis.”

He says all of the people who have died have been aged over 30 and had pre-existing medical conditions, including diabetes, lung disease and alcohol problems.

Dr Markey says melioidosis infections had occurred in urban and rural areas of Darwin, in Arnhem Land, in Katherine and in Central Australia.

“The bacteria live in the soil in the tropics and people can become unwell either inhaling the bacteria if they come into close contact with it or acquiring the infection through the skin via a cut or a sore.”

He said people should wear gloves and shoes when in contact with muddy soil to lower the risk of infection.

2nd tourist in 24hrs suffers irukandji sting

Two tourists have been stung by jellyfish in Broome within the past 24 hours.

The first occurred on a charter boat off Entrance Point on Sunday, with a second tourist stung while swimming between the flags at Cable Beach yesterday afternoon.

Irukandji stings are potentially fatal and more common during the wet season, although they have been known to occur through to late May.

Beach inspector Tim Trew says it is the first recorded sting at Cable Beach in about a year.

“Most people were pretty good – we set off the evacuation alarm on the beach and everyone came out of the water, so that was really good,” he said.

“Before we reopen the beach we’ll do a stinger net to see if there are any more irukandji in the water.

“If that comes up clear then we’ll reopen the beach for swimming.”

Mosquito-born virus detected

Holiday-makers and residents in the North West are being urged to take extra care against insect bites following the detection of the first mosquito-born virus this wet season.

The health department has detected the Kunjin virus during a surveillance program in the Kimberley.

The department warns those most likely to be affected are newcomers such as babies, tourists and new employees.

Department spokesman Mike Lindsay says the detection of the virus has come unusually late this year.

“This is actually the first warning we’ve had to issue for a mosquito-born virus in the North of WA for this wet season,” he said.

“I guess the message is that people do remember, even though the mosquito population’s fairly small at the moment, there’s still some risk and it’s important that you protect yourself from getting bitten.”

Mr Lindsay says the symptoms are similar to those of Ross River virus.

“It includes things like swollen and aching joints, fever and rash,” he said.

“In rare cases, we have seen more severe symptoms, including headache and neck stiffness, fever and delirium and even people lapsing into a coma.”

People are advised to wear protective clothing and avoid outdoor exposure at night.

Mt Isa homeless need to make ‘long-term’ steps

A Mount Isa priest in north-west Queensland says he is trying to find accommodation for a large group of homeless Indigenous people who are living on land near his church.

Father Michael Lowcock says around 30 people have been living near the church for the last few months and he has been offering them meals and showers.

He says while homeless people can access assistance – some are choosing not to.

I think part of the issue is whether they want to find a place to live, because I’ve been talking to them about to trying to go and register with the Department of Housing, they need to make those steps, a lot of it is getting them to make those steps themselves rather than doing it for them,” he said.

“In the end when you do it for them and they’re probably not going to care for the place, a lot of it is trying to get the long-term view of make those steps themselves.”

Father Lowcock says homelessness in the city is a complex issue and with the end of the wet season homeless people will move on from the church.

“From now on I presume that most of the rain is gone and that people will probably spread out more to outer areas, from outside of town,” he said.

Recovery team aids flood-hit community

The State Government has sent a recovery team to Burketown in north-west Queensland’s Gulf country to help in the flood clean-up effort.

The Albert River at Burketown peaked at a record level earlier this week and floodwaters have isolated the community.

Emergency Management Queensland spokesman Bruce Grady will lead the team, which includes representatives from the Department of Main Roads and Economic Development.

Mr Grady says they will be consulting residents about what assistance is needed.

“So is there anything that the community needs from an economic perspective, what does that community need to get their economy up and running again, issues with infrastructure, principally around the roads network up there and if we have any we are also likely to deal with any environmental issues,” he said.

Meanwhile, Telstra says floodwaters have inundated telecommunications equipment in the Gulf and has affected phone lines.

Some residents in the region say they have been without a proper phone connection for almost a month.

Telstra spokesman Wally Donaldson says it is trying to access those properties but that continues to be difficult.

“Unfortunately it is a harsh environment and when you get that much rain, cyclones, the ongoing wet season, it’s a really difficult environment for any sort of electronics, so … we’re always looking at what we do, we put more optical fibre in to make our telephone exchanges much more robust and reliable,” he said.

Sowing hope in hungry East Timor

There are two distinct seasons in East Timor – the wet season and the dry season.

For many East Timorese, the time in between includes three to four months known as the hungry months, when last year’s supplies of rice and maize have run out and the new season’s crops have yet to yield.

East Timor president Jose Ramos-Horta is acutely aware of his country’s annual famine.

“This for me is a most pressing and heartbreaking situation. I see people who cannot even afford to have a proper meal a day,” he said.

“The number one priority for us is food security to eliminate malnourishment.

“Children who are stunted because of malnutrition in the first few years of their lives, they cannot perform too well in school because they are malnourished.

“It takes time, it takes years for us to improve agriculture with better productivity, better seeds, better farming techniques and better roads for the goods to circulate faster and cheaply.”

It’s almost 10 years since East Timor gained its independence from Indonesia.

The steps on its march to nationhood have often been faltering. The departing Indonesian forces left a country in ruins, its infrastructure in tatters.

Political unrest has further stymied progress.

So the impending wet season makes the farmers restless. Everything depends on good rains and bountiful crops.

In the mountains south of the capital, Dili, a woman stabs the earth with a digging stick, bobbing as she flicks seeds into the thin jungle soils, a method unchanged in centuries.

East Timor’s demographics are staggering.

This farmer has five children aged under 10. The national average is eight children per family. Half of East Timor’s population is less than 10 years old.

Of East Timor’s 1 million people, about three quarters live in rural areas and subsist on about one hectare of land.

Infant and maternal mortality rates are among the highest in the world.

Children are seen not so much as burdens but as essential labourers, and most endure hard physical work from the age of six, lumping firewood from the forest or produce to and from market.

Fighting famine

Of the many hundreds of aid organisations that have worked in East Timor during the past decade, it would be hard to find one more elemental or effective than Seeds of Life.

Rob Williams is an agronomist with the aid agency, which is funded by the Australian Government.

“Seeds of Life aims to do two things,” he said. “One is to increase yields on farms.

“The second is to train East Timorese scientists, East Timorese researchers to a level where they can solve their own agricultural problems so they can do research that assists their farmers.”

Seeds of Life scientists have identified and propagated the best strains of the country’s staple food crops of corn, rice, peanut, sweet potato and cassava.

“We’ve tested these new varieties on thousands of farmers,” Mr Williams said.

“And as a result of this, last year we distributed about 100 tonnes of seed in five-kilogram lots that have gone out to more than 20,000 farming families, so it’s starting to have a large impact on farming families in East Timor.

“The varieties are public domain varieties, which means the farmer can plant them, keep the seed and plant them again the next year.”

In East Timor’s Alieu district, Senor Zacharias Mouzinho Gusmao proudly shows us his flourishing corn crop, a high-yielding variety with large cobs.

It is one of two new corn varieties introduced, tested and released by Seeds of Life in partnership with the ministry of agriculture.

Sold as fresh corn, it has made Senor Gusmao a tidy sum.

Demand for crops

Throughout the country’s farming districts, word has spread of the new, superior varieties, and Seeds of Life cannot meet demand.

In Baucau province in the country’s east, newly installed seed cleaning and bagging machines have revolutionised the process of seed distribution.

And nearby, in a communally planted field, local dignitaries attending a field day are pulling large sweet potato tubers from the red soil.

The new variety is yielding about 18 tonnes per hectare – double the traditional varieties and on par with world standards.

These sweet potatoes are being sold in Dili and for the first time families have some disposable income. Some say they will now be able to send their children to school.

In Dili, agriculture minister Senor Mariano Assanami Sabino says his most pressing duty is overcoming rural poverty.

“And how to realise the dream of the majority of people in Timor Leste,” he said.

“We fight for the independence and continue the fight of how to reduce the poverty in Timor Leste.”

Local workers

Locally trained staff members are crucial to the success of Seeds of Life.

“We currently have a group of 40 young researchers, mostly graduated from the University of East Timor as agronomists,” Mr Williams said.

“We’ve taken them on board and we’re training them in many, many skills. Some never knew how to ride a motorbike when they started with Seeds of Life.

“Some now can interview in English. They can go out and run a field day by themselves. They work with farmers testing the new innovations. They can conduct their own research experiments to choose the best varieties for their own country.”

One of those trainees, Luis Perriera, distributes the new varieties in the Maubisse region of the country’s central highlands.

“The farmers really like it. I’ve been working with them for the last two years in this district,” he said.

“They can see with their own eyes that the yields are better and they prefer to keep growing the new varieties.

“The farmers themselves will be producing more seed so that they can grow their own seed in future years.

“I think it’s very important work, very worthwhile work because I am working for the development of my own country through agriculture, and in this way we can marry the hard work of the farmers together with the new varieties to get better yields for farmers.”

Rebuilding research stations

Seeds of Life is working closely with East Timor’s ministry of agriculture to rebuild research stations.

“After the violence in 1999 when Indonesians left East Timor, all the research stations in this country were destroyed,” Mr Williams said.

“Many of the trained, professional staff in East Timor were Indonesians who then moved back to Indonesia, so there was a large gap of trained people in East Timor.

“Seeds of Life has a mandate of rebuilding and re-establishing three agricultural research stations in this country.”

Loes Research Station is a 12-hectare site on a fertile river plain several hours’ drive west of Dili.

“The research stations are important to Seeds of Life,” Mr Williams said.

“That’s the locations where we test a large number of varieties on a small number of locations before choosing a small number of varieties to test on a large number of locations.”

Rowan Clarke and his fiancee Rebecca Andersen are Australian agronomists based at Loes with Seeds of Life.

After the violence and civil unrest in 1999, the complex lay abandoned and derelict for almost a decade.

Now it is undergoing a spectacular revival. The land and buildings are being repaired under Mr Clarke’s guidance.

“The story is there was only one building that had been burnt and that was probably accidental,” Mr Clarke said.

“But the rest had just been robbed of anything of any value. All the roofing iron went with the Indonesians. The copper was all taken out of the wiring. The white ants had been through any wood and they were just shells.”

Ms Andersen trained in horticulture and decided to work in East Timor after a holiday there.

She says their work is important for the country’s food security.

“We’ve got about 15 varieties of maize that we’ve got on station at the moment and about another 15 peanut varieties, and about 20 cassava varieties, and we’re also beginning to test kava crops and different types of legumes,” she said.

“I think the ministry of agriculture has the leading priority in the country and so places like this are making a really big impact on food security.”

Watch the full Landline report at 12:00pm Sunday on ABC 1.

Cyclone knocks tourism confidence

Tourism operators will gather in Mackay in north Queensland today to discuss some of the biggest issues facing the industry.

The annual tourism conference will be held at the convention centre as part of Tourism Week activities, with speakers addressing issues including marketing and quality.

The general manager of Mackay Tourism, David Phillips, says the confidence of the local industry has been affected by Cyclone Ului.

“The wet season’s always the wet season and we prepare for a downturn and expect it some degree of course, but this has knocked a few people around very seriously,” Mr Phillips said.

“But tourism particularly has a history of resilience and being able to bounce back pretty fast.

“You know once it’s off the front pages and people realise that most of the industry is functioning quite normally, I think the confidence is restored fairly fast.”

Mr Phillips says local operators are reporting widespread cancellations and are very keen to move on.

“People down south, particularly, are a little nervous about what’s going on north of Rockhampton, they get an impression that a lot more is out of action or damaged than really is the case,” he said.

“Our estimate is about between five and 10 per cent of our industry has been materially affected … we need to get out there now and convince everybody down south that our region and the Whitsundays are up and open for business.”

Poor wet season boosts fire threat

The Department of Environment and Conservation is concerned an extremely dry wet season has increased the fire risk in the west Kimberley.

Broome this year experienced its driest February since records began in 1939.

Just six millimetres fell compared with the monthly average of 180 millimetres.

Kimberley regional fire coordinator Ed Hatherley says the lack of rain has had both positive and negative impacts as authorities prepare for the dry season.

“Where that has the greatest impact for us is that is accelerates the whole the process,” he said.

“Obviously the limited rain falling across the region … limits some of the grass growth, so that can impact on the fire season later.

“But it also means that the grass cures quicker and makes the land available to fire, and the ravages of fire, for a longer period.”

Rain still hampering coal supply chain

The company that oversees the coal supply chain to the Dalrymple Bay terminal in central Queensland says wet weather continues to affect operations.

The speed limit for trains across the Goonyella supply chain network has been dropped by 20 kilometres per hour to 60.

Phil Bourne from the Integrated Logistics Company says the wet weather and speed restrictions mean two trains per day have to be taken out of the system.

“That would be roughly 18,000 to 20,000 tonnes a day,” he said.

“It does sound like a big figure but … as we draw towards the end of the wet season now, we’ll start to see everything pick up again and we’ll reduce those loses very quickly.”

But Mr Bourne says the improvements are not occurring as quickly as some stakeholders would like.

“The expectations of us an an organisation and as individuals is extremely high,” he said.

“I think there is a degree of frustration across the coal chain that things don’t happen as quickly as we would have liked, but it’s all starting to make small but measurable benefits to the supply chain.”

Mine water woes may force out farmer

A north Queensland cattle producer says he may have to sell his property after it was contaminated with mine water more than a year ago.

Charlie Hughes’ cattle property Charelle Station borders the Mount Leyshon mine outside of Charter Towers.

He says contaminated water has been flowing onto his property and it has been worse since the 2008 wet season.

He says part of his property is no longer useable and he is unhappy with the Government and mine’s response.

Mr Hughes says the Department of Environment and Resource Management took samples more than a year ago, but he has not seen the results and the problems are continuing.

“Stock and humans can’t use the water that’s seeping up out of the ground or in the creek beds there,” he said.

“The mines have been taking water samples in there from since they started in the mid ’80s.

“I’d like those results to be released.”

The department says it has not denied Mr Hughes access to the results and says it is working with Newmont Mining to rehabilitate the site.

The mine is yet to respond.

Rural councils unite for road funding

A far north Queensland mayor says the Federal Government needs to provide up to five times more roads funding to local councils.

Representatives from rural councils across the country are meeting in Canberra today to form a lobby group that will push for more Federal Government money.

The Commonwealth is providing $71 million in roads funding to Queensland councils this financial year through its Roads to Recovery program.

But Tablelands’ Mayor Tom Gilmore says rural councils desperately need more.

“I’m here to speak about hundreds of kilometres of remote gravel and dirt tracks, very often cut by the wet season, always in a poor state and with insufficient money to be able to maintain them,” he said.

“Of course that’s not the whole answer, because since we’ve lost our rail services, we’ve got heavy vehicles serving southern markets with heavy vegetables and fruit and other things and our cattle of course are travelling very long distances in very difficult circumstances.”

Rainy season brings new threat to Haiti

The International Red Cross is warning of a new humanitarian crisis in Haiti, with the approaching rainy season set to wreak havoc in overcrowded ‘tent cities’.

With nowhere else to go, hundreds of thousands of homeless Haitians have set up camp on dangerous ground which is susceptible to flood and mudslides.

Many of the makeshift camps are overcrowded and still growing, and International Red Cross spokesman Alex Wynter says the wet season will only make matters worse.

“There’s no doubt, and no-one is trying to make any secret of the fact, that this country faces a very grave humanitarian emergency with the rainy season,” he said.

“We’ve got 5,000 local volunteers on hand to do things like digging out drainage gullies so that downpours don’t turn into floods.”

With shelters springing up on flood plains and some of the sheer hillsides in the Haitian capital, the UN says at least 200,000 people have to be moved to safer ground.

But Mr Wynter says finding the land is an achingly slow process, even for the big aid groups.

“The Red Cross Red Crescent is negotiating at the moment for two new sites in Port-Au-Prince that would be relatively safe, no more than that, from the rains,” he said.

“And then there are these five new sites that the government has earmarked for decongestion, but it’s not happening fast enough is the short answer.”

Homes contribute to 50 percent more water pollution than previously believed

Washington, August 20 (ANI): A new study has determined that homes are an alarming and probably underestimated source of water pollution, and can contribute to 50 percent more water pollution than previously believed.

Scientists Lorence Oki, Darren Haver and colleagues carried out the study.

In the study, the research team explains that runoff results from rainfall and watering of lawns and gardens, which winds up in municipal storm drains.

The runoff washes fertilizers, pesticides and other contaminants into storm drains, and they eventually appear in rivers, lakes and other bodies of water.

“Results from our sampling and monitoring study revealed high detection frequencies of pollutants such as pesticides and pathogen indicators at all sites,” Oki said of their study of eight residential areas in Sacramento and Orange Counties in California.

Preliminary results of the study suggest that current models may underestimate the amount of pollution contributed by homes by up to 50 percent.

That’s because past estimates focused on rain-based runoff during the wet season.

“Use of pesticides, however, increases noticeably during the dry season due to gardening, and our data contains greater resolution than previous studies,” Oki said.

Pollutants detected in outdoor runoff included ant-control pesticide products.

Previous surveys have shown that the majority of pesticides purchased by homeowners are used to control ants.

To encourage pollutant reduction, the researchers initiated community outreach programs centered on improving both irrigation control and pest management. (ANI)

Bikini babes, wet T-shirt competitions to boost tourism in Queensland

Melbourne, Mar 13 (ANI): Tropical Tourism North Queensland has kicked off a new raunchy campaign with bikini babes and wet T-shirt competitions to boost their backpackers market.

According to The Courier Mail, once dumped in favour of politically correct images of the reef and rainforest, tourism leaders are back promoting sex and sun to attract tourists.

A raunchy new website “Gotta Love the Wet Season” shows the weekly wet T-shirt competitions of the Cairns party scene.

One picture shows a blonde woman with exposed midriff and wet T-shirt dancing away as she’s sprayed with water at one popular inner-city venue.

However, the steamy new image has sparked uproar, and has divided the community.

Tourism Tropical North Queensland chairman Stephen Olle said it was “crunch time” for the industry.

According to him, a lot of tourism-related businesses were in “survival mode”, laying off staff, waiting for the market to pick up again in the traditional tourist season of May to September.

“Sex and raunchiness is part of the backpacker market but it is certainly not all of it,” News.com.au quoted Olle as saying.

“They do the trips to the reef, the tours, the dive courses, and they go out and make a night of it,” he added.

However, the Family First candidate for Cairns, Janice Skipp condemned the flesh-for-fantasy approach of the ad campaign.

“I know sex sells,” she said.

“But to promote sex and wet T-shirts is not a good image.

“Some would like to see Cairns as party town, but families come here, too.I don’t think backpackers are the future of Cairns. I think we should aim at the higher end of town,” she added. (ANI)