The Wairoa Volunteer Fire Brigade is bouncing back after the calamity which saw the homes of five members inundated in the June 26 flood, just as the brigade was about to go on a recruiting drive.
“We’d never had an issue here before last week,” he said on Thursday outside the home where he lives with wife Charlotte, a Gisborne council strategic planning manager who, on Thursday, was back at her job for the first time since the flood.
In the meantime they’ve been staying with friends, not knowing when they’d be able to return to the house, through which water flowed up to 200mm deep from Wairoa River backed up from the river mouth. It was more than half a metre deep in the garage.
The CFO said he’d headed to the fire station about 4.30am, with little inkling of what might happen at home, but after two hours of his crews wading in and out of other homes to effect the rescues his wife was being told she’d have to leave home as well.
“We knew there was heavy raining coming,” he said, but judged by previous experiences his own home should have remained untroubled.
As the day progressed Fire and Emergency crews from other centres were joining the rescues and recovery, Knight saying last week he was amazed by the extent of resources that helped Wairoa, again, in its hours of need.
As well as the recognised emergency and councils services, there was a big effort from contractors lead by council-owned Quality Roading and Services (QRS) and Fulton Hogan, along with Man 4 the Job, B&K Earthmoving, Powdrell Services, Frontline Civil, My Backyard, and Pro Arbore.
Doug Laing is a senior reporter based in Napier with Hawke’s Bay Today, and has 51 years of journalism experience, 40 of them in Hawke’s Bay, in news gathering, including breaking news, sports, local events, issues, and personalities - among them events in Wairoa.