Saturday 25 August 2012

Emergency response to Cyclone Tracy





Hey everyone back again with another post about Cyclone Tracy. First response came from the Northern Territory police who, being among the few who heeded the warnings of Cyclone Tracy and had already made emergency preparations at Darwin and Casuarina police stations. As soon as the first damage reports came in, the police were seeing to road blockages, attending medical emergencies and directing people away from fallen power lines. 150 people were taken to shelter at the police station in this first wave of damage, but they then needed to organise the use of school for shelter, because so many people had lost their homes. When many more ended up sheltering at the schools, police organised other people to help with cooking, medical help, logistics of hygiene (such as digging latrines), collecting clothing and bedding donations, etc.
Late on Christmas night Major-General Stretton arrived at Darwin to coordinate evacuations. He was Director of the newly formed National Disasters Organisation. A team of surgeons and nurses arrived with him. The police and volunteers were still important during this, and the army also came to assist. There were unpleasant tasks such as searching for bodies, cleaning out refrigerators which were filled with (by now) rotting food, and having to shoot packs of starving dogs that posed a threat to the survivors. The Army and Navy were brought in to deal with these sometimes dangerous cleanup tasks.



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