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High Gippsland bushfire risk from unmanaged fuel loads by Andrews Labor government
The Andrews government is criticised for allowing dangerously high bushfire fuel loads in central and west Gippsland, with an 84 percent residual bushfire risk, well above the 'Safer Together' policy's levels.
The Andrews government is failing to protect central and west Gippslanders from the threat of summer bushfires by allowing the Latrobe District forest fuel loads to reach alarming levels. Fire Forest Management Victoria's (FFMVic) Joint Fire Management Program (JFMP) identifies an 84 percent residual bushfire risk for the Latrobe District, well in excess of levels stipulated in Labor's 'Safer Together' policy.
Between 2017 and 2022, the Andrew government had planned to reduce fuel across 1,472,000 hectares, but only completed 628,000, including areas affected by East Gippsland bushfires
Risk management critique
FFMVic's Latrobe District includes Latrobe City, Baw Baw Shire, Bass Coast Shire, South Gippsland Shire, and small areas of Wellington Shire. The Nationals Eastern Victoria MP and Shadow Parliamentary Secretary for Public Land Use, Melina Bath labelled the Andrews government's management of fire risk as "utterly irresponsible".
"Under Labor's so-called 'Safer Together' policy statewide target of 70 percent residual risk, entire regions face a summer bushfire season of unacceptable high fire danger," Ms Bath said.
Concerns over fire risk
Under questioning from Ms Bath in State Parliament, Minister for Environment, Ingrid Stitt refused to explain why the residual fire risk in the Latrobe District was so dangerously high. "A risk level of 84 percent is unacceptable, and places thousands of people, property and the environment in harm's way."
Ms Bath said the Minister's response was "woefully inadequate" - she tried dodging the issue by talking about the state's collective risk. "After years of cooler and wetter conditions and Labor inaction, Gippsland now has out of control fuel loads.
"Lower fuel loads in northern Victoria will not control a bushfire in the Latrobe District - it's nonsensical. Furthermore, Minister Stitt refused to commit to any additional fuel reduction activities in the Latrobe District before the bushfire season commenced," Ms Bath said.
Fuel reduction shortfall
Analysis of Labor's 'Safer Together' program reveals only 43 percent of Victoria's planned fuel reduction burn targets have been met in the past six years. Between 2017 - 2022 the Andrew government planned a total of 1,472,000ha for fuel reduction. The actual achieved work was only 628,000ha, and this includes the area burnt in the East Gippsland bushfires.
Ms Bath said Labor is reckless for rolling the dice with regional lives and the environment. "The Labor government must explain why it has been negligent and failed to reduce fuel loads in the Latrobe District, jeopardising a significant area of Gippsland."
Pictures from DEECA Gippsland Facebook page.
Source: http://gippsland.com/
Published by: news@gippsland.com

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