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Showing posts with label NSW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NSW. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Think It's Hot in NSW? Climate Change? It's Tepid Compared to 1896

And you thought it was hot now? How a 24-DAY heatwave on Australia's east coast in January 1896 saw temperatures climb to 49 degrees and killed 437 people

An extreme 24-day heatwave in January 1896 saw temperatures hit 49C
It saw people fleeing cities and killed 437 people including many children
The maximum temperature was above 38.9 degrees for over three weeks
Hospitals were overcrowded and people were dropping dead in the streets 

By FREYA NOBLE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA 

Temperatures above 38 degrees for nearly a month, bushfires burning across the country and people dropping dead in the streets.

This was the grim reality of a 24-day heatwave which killed 437 people in Australia in January 1896.

The extreme weather event was described as feeling 'like a furnace' and recorded much higher temperatures than the east coast is set to swelter through this week.

An extreme Australian heatwave in January 1896 killed over 400 people and hospitalised many more.
Pictured is Wilcannia Hospital in 1986

A heatwave across Australia's east coast at the weekend has been described as one of the worst in living memory

Many children were among those who died                                 There were temperatures above 119F (48C)




















Newspapers at the time reported temperatures above 119F (48C), and that many children were among those who died

It was a hot start to 1896 and by January 14, newspapers were reporting people were dying from a range of complications brought on by the extreme temperatures.

By the third week of the year, 12 infants had died from heat-related illnesses in Goulburn, NSW, alone, a report on JoNova about the heatwave revealed.

People were fleeing the cities on trains to seek refuge in the mountainous regions of the country, and one child escaping the heat 'died at the moment the train arrived'.

Hospitals were at breaking point, and the death toll was rising. 

By January 17 the mercury had climbed to 48.9C in Bourke, in north-west NSW. However there has been some dispute about the accuracy in temperature recordings due to changing methods over time.

'The hospital is crowded, and a number of people are dangerously ill. More deaths are hourly expected,' a newspaper article from January 18, 1896 read.

The heat was sending people 'insane', leaving them helplessly wandering the streets before collapsing.

Cattle died by the hundreds, water tanks dried up and the death toll continued to rise as the heatwave entered its fourth week. 

The historic heatwave saw temperatures climb to 49 degrees and forced people to flee to the mountains
in search of reprieve. Pictured is Brewarrina in 1900

At the weekend the regional town of Urarby in NSW's central-west was wiped out by bushfires

Trains leaving Sydney's west for the mountains were packed and the government ran extra services at discount prices for those seeking relief from the heat.

By January 24 the heatwave was declared 'an unprecedented record', and the death toll in Bourke alone had risen to 35.

'The residents are really panic-stricken, and hundreds are leaving for cooler climates', one report in the newspaper revealed.

Most businesses across NSW had closed their doors by this point, except for hotels, as residents laid low waiting for the streak to break.

In other parts of the country temperatures had not dropped below 37 degrees since late 1895.

More than 120 years later, Sydney and other parts of Australia sweated through one of the worst heatwaves in living memory last week, recording four days over 40 degrees.

The 1896 heatwave saw people dropping dead in the streets as the stifling heat stretched on for 24 days.
In Bourke (seen here in 1893) temperatures were nudging 50C

Sydney's Bondi Beach is seen here during one of the hottest summers on record

Fortunately, Aussies have air-conditioners now, where there is power, unlike the poor sots in 1896.

I wonder what caused that heatwave more than a century ago? Climate change? If that had been attributed to climate change, what madness might it have resulted in?

There were widespread blackouts, bushfires continue to burn around the country, and while this week will bring temporary reprieve, the mercury is set to climb once again.

About 60 fires were still burning on Monday night, including 19 uncontained blazes, and a Watch and Act alert remained in place for the Sir Ivan fire in central west NSW.

Despite a relief for NSW residents, hot temperatures are set to climb again from Wednesday, with a top of 28C forecast for Sydney before reaching 34C by Saturday.

Western suburbs are expected to endure a three-day heatwave, with temperatures set to soar 38C from Thursday. 

Meanwhile, heavy rain, strong winds and hailstorm hit southeast of Queensland overnight.

More than 20,000 homes across the state have been left without power as damaging winds and heavy rainfall continue to move east.


Saturday, June 15, 2019

Nearly 200 Dodgy Australian Day Care Centres are Shut Down After Police Find Links to Islamic State, Bikie Gangs and Large-Scale Fraud

Almost 200 day care centres have been shut down in NSW alone since 2016
Suburbs in south-west Sydney were home to the worst-offenders 
Four suburbs in the region accounted for 114 of all 180 shut-down schools

By BRITTANY CHAIN FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA 

Almost 200 day care centres have been shut down in NSW alone as police investigate links to Islamic State, motorcycle gangs and large-scale fraud.

Suburbs in south-west Sydney were home to the worst-offenders, with four suburbs in the region claiming 114 of the 188 private facilities that were closed.

Police shut down 49 facilities in the Canterbury-Bankstown region, another 25 in Liverpool, 23 in Fairfield and 17 in Auburn.  

In one case, the director of the supposed day care was intercepted at Sydney airport, believed to be on his way to fight alongside Islamic State.

Almost 200 day care centres have been shut down in NSW alone as police investigate links to Islamic State,
motorcycle gangs and large-scale fraud 

Hussain Dandachi, 28, was arrested in relation to a police investigation into a $27 million fraud syndicate and the funnelling of funds into Islamic State. 

He pleaded guilty to supplying fake invoices worth more than $100,000 for children who were not in his care, and was sentenced to a minimum jail term of 10 months. 

He is, apparently, a jihadist, and he gets a minimum sentence. Why?

Another family day care was supposedly running in a house with no electricity, while a third address led investigators to an abandoned garage, The Daily Telegraph reported.

The closures have seen the number of NSW Family Day Care services slashed by more than half since 2016, from 420 to 197.

Australia's daycare system is supported by the government which, if I am correct, pays the daycares directly nearly $10AU per child per day. 

Alee Farmann was charged with knowingly directing the activities of a criminal group - in the form of his alleged
Red Roses Day Care scam, which pocketed government subsidies 

Handcuffed: Farmann was taken away by police after being arrested at his home

One source described a licence to run a day care centre in NSW as a virtual 'licence to print money'.  

The federal government is expected to save more than $674 million annually as a result of the investigation.

They will avoid paying out fraudulent applications for children who were not even students at the facilities applying for funding.  

Last month, coordinated raids throughout the south-west led to the arrest of more than 20 people believed to be involved in running or facilitating fraudulent day care centres. 

Red Roses Family Day Care director Alee Farmann and two other females were charged for their involvement

Some 150 parents are now also being investigated in relation to that case after it was determined parents had sold or provided their child's information to the accused. 

The NSW government has now implemented a similar process to approving applications for new facilities to Queensland.

Rather than the old online application and cross-checking process, potential applicants are now required to pass a mandatory face-to-face interview.