Ken Pearce says ‘it was not at all professionally managed’ and says water should have been released from the dam earlier. theboltreport
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'Resilient' Townsville residents rally in flood cleanup effort | Sky News AustraliaTownsville residents are rallying together as they look to return to their homes, days after record-breaking floods.\n \nMore than a thousand homes are severely damaged, with at least 250 uninhabitable.\n \nThe extent of the damage is still being assessed, but the insurance bill is likely to total in the hundreds of millions of dollars.\n\nOver 7,000 claims have already been lodged according to the Insurance Council of Australia.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
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Fears insurance companies could refuse to pay Townsville flood victims | Sky News AustraliaQueensland opposition leader Deb Frecklington has called on insurance companies to honour their policies as residents recover from the flood crisis. \n\nMs Frecklington claims many small businesses have been told their claims will likely be rejected over fine print which differentiates storm water from floodwater. \n\nThe Insurance Council of Australia will hold two insurance forums in Townsville to provide claims guidance. \n\n
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Flood affected Townsville residents unable to claim compensation | Sky News AustraliaThere are reports some flood-affected residents across Townsville are unable to claim compensation due to murky policies and misplaced insurance documents. \n\nThe clean-up continues after the area was inundated with more than a year’s worth of rainfall was dumped on parts of north and western Queensland within days. \n\nMore than 13,000 insurance claims equalling $160 million have been lodged by residents and businesses. \n\n\n\n
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Flood-affected farmers to receive upgraded grants from govt | Sky News AustraliaThe Morrison and Palaszczuk governments have upgraded grants for residents affected by ‘devastating’ record-breaking flooding in parts of North Queensland to $75,000, up from $25,000.\n\nSpeaking in Sydney, Scott Morrison says the relief grants will draw from $100 million in Commonwealth funds, with an additional $3 million to supplement the Queensland Government’s mental health services.\n\nMr Morrison says hundreds of thousands of cattle are likely to have been lost in the flooding disaster, threatening locals’ ‘very livelihoods in the complete other direction’ after transitioning from drought to inundation. \n\nAnyone who may be feeling distressed can contact the following organisations for support.\n\nSANE Helpline 1800 18 72 63\n\nLifeline 131 114\n\nBeyond blue 1300 22 4636\n\nImage: News Corp Australia
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Labor’s plan to ‘weaken our border laws’ is a ‘deadly mistake’ | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Andrew Bolt says Labor is going to make a ‘deadly mistake’ with Australia’s border protection, in its ‘plan to weaken’ border laws. \n\nIf the Labor-backed bill is passed to change how medical transfers for asylum seekers in offshore detention are processed, Mr Bolt says the immigration minister cannot stop activist doctors from flying in rapists, killers, thieves, paedophiles.\n\nThe Australian Security Intelligence Organisation has reportedly warned against the proposed changes, claiming it could undermine the nation's border security.
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Every political disaster begins with good intentions, but taxpayers cover the costs | Sky News AustraliaSky News host Peta Credlin says that every political disaster begins with ‘the best of intentions’, but ‘everything has a downside, even if it's only the cost’.\n\nOne example, Ms Credlin says, is former prime minister Kevin Rudd’s renewable energy target of 28 per cent of the power supply, resulting in ‘prices going through the roof’ and electricity blackouts.\n\nMs Credlin says ‘in politics as in life, if looks too good to be true, it probably is’, saying that politicians often promote the positives of their proposals, rather than the negatives.
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Andrew Thorburn and Ken Henry step down from NAB posts | Sky News AustraliaNational Australia Bank CEO Andrew Thorburn and Chairman Ken Henry announced their resignations in the wake of a scathing assessment by the banking royal commission.\n\nMr Thorbun will depart on February 28 while Mr Henry will leave his role once his replacement has been found.\n\nThe bank’s corporate leadership was heavily criticised in the royal commission’s final report, which claimed it did not take ‘necessary responsibility’ for its culture failings.\n\nThe bank has confirmed ex-ANZ Australia boss and current NAB board member Philip Chronican will take over as interim boss from March 1.\n\n\n\n\n
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