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Flood Management Advisory Committee Meeting
4 March 2026 |
Minutes of the Flood Risk Management Advisory Committee Meeting 4 March 2026
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Directorate Name |
Infrastructure |
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Date / Time |
4 March 2026 – 3:30pm |
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Venue |
Microsoft Teams |
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Chairperson |
Councillor Andrew Blake |
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Voting Attendees |
Clr Mat Howard * (joined 4:07pm) |
Clr Andrew Blake |
Michael Carney (SES) |
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David Chick |
Matthew Murphy |
Jaan Ranniko |
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Bowen Hicks |
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Non – Voting Technical Advisory Attendees |
Peter Shields (IWC) |
David Paton (IWC) |
Rafaah Georges (IWC) |
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James Ogg (IWC) |
Hans Meijer (IWC) |
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Observers |
Tiffanie Ong (IWC) |
Martin Griffin (Stantec) |
Amir Montakhab (Stantec) |
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David Grasby (Sydney Water) |
Robert Baker (SES) |
Richard Murphy (DCCEEW) |
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Apologies |
Tim Harnett |
Emily McGrath |
Pilar Lorenzo |
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Simon Myall |
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1. 2. Acknowledgement Of Country – Clr Blake |
I acknowledge that we are meeting on the land of the Gadigal and Wangal people of the Eora Nation and pay my respects to the elders past and present and I extend that respect and acknowledgement to any Aboriginal people who are here with us today.
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3. Disclosures of Interest |
Nil.
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4. Confirmation of Minutes of 26 November 2026 Flood Management Advisory Committee |
Minutes confirmed by Clr Andrew Blake, seconded by Michael Carney.
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FMACC0326(1) Item 1 ; FLOOD MANAGEMENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE TERMS OF REFERENCE AMENDMENT |
SUMMARY
In November 2025 the Flood Management Advisory Committee resolved to have the Committee terms of reference further amended to enable members of the public to address the Committee on any agenda item. The terms of reference have been further amended to incorporate arrangements that detail how members of the public may speak to an agenda item at the start of any Flood Management Advisory Committee meeting. This report recommends that the Flood Management Advisory Committee endorse changes to the Committee Terms of Reference.
OFFICERS RECOMMENDATION
The Flood Management Advisory Committee receive and note the report
DISCUSSION
In the November 2025 Flood Advisory Meeting, it was resolved to have the Committee Terms of Reference amended, resulting in wording amendment of section 7.4. Peter confirms the edit was made to the first sentence of the first two lines of the previous Terms of Reference only.
COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
Councillor Blake moves amended terms of reference be adopted, seconded by Michael Carney.
For Motion: Unanimous
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FMACC0326(1) Item 2 ; SOUTH MARRICKVILLE FLOOD STUDY - STATUS UPDATE |
SUMMARY
The South Marrickville Flood Study is the final primary catchment within the Local Government Area requiring a flood study. It covers areas within southern Dulwich Hill and south-west Marrickville, generally bound by New Canterbury Road and Garnet Avenue, draining to the Cooks River. Work to prepare the flood study commenced in December 2025 and it is being delivered over 18 months. The project is currently on track, with data review substantially progressed and the data collection phase now underway. Council commenced the first planned community consultation period on 9 February, with a closing date of 15 March 2026. Consultation and engagement activities include letters to residents, information updates, a survey and face to face public meetings. This report provides a status update on progress to date for the South Marrickville Flood Study and confirms further details relating to forthcoming activities.
OFFICERS RECOMMENDATION
The Flood Management Advisory Committee receive and note the report
DISCUSSION
The South Marrickville Flood Study has commenced, and consultation has begun, Council has sent out letters to approximately 6500 residents and business owners within the catchment to provide feedback regarding experience with flooding within the area. The flood study will be carried out over a year and a half in line with DCCEEW guidelines. To date approximately 20 emails and 8 phone calls have been received, Council has an online ‘have your say’ page for feedback, videos and photos which will be collected to contribute to the flood study being undertaken.
The South Marrickville Flood Study is anticipated to be carried out over 8 stages, and anticipated to have 3 community engagement sessions. The first community engagement stage has commenced between stages 1 & 2 and runs for 28 days with possibility of extension to accommodate for in-person sessions. There are 2 in person sessions for the first community engagement commencing Thursday 5 March in the afternoon and another on Tuesday 10 March in the evening. Council will have staff and consultants present to assist with answering questions raised by members of the community. It is advised in terms of anticipated future consultations, as per the diagram, at stage 4, once modelling has been undertaken, Council will go back to the community for further feedback and present the mapping and modelling thus far. This will provide an opportunity for community to engage with Council and the consultants. The final stage of consultation will occur around Stage 6; Council will have a public exhibition in relation to the draft document that has been created.
Amir from Stantec notes the South Marrickville Flood Study examines flooding within the areas as being driven by a combination of mechanisms. Stantec advises Council is updating the flood information to support community safety and awareness, emergency response and evacuation planning, land use planning and development assessment and to identify for future flood risk and reduction opportunities where practical. Stantec is seeking to represent the current conditions as accurately as practical through use of updated trend information and current asset conditions to ensure the results are fit for the purpose of today’s planning and emergency management needs.
The study area being covered is approximately 200 hectares surrounded with low lying areas near the Cooks River. The flood study carried out by Stantec will provide a clear understanding of flood behaviour across the catchment; where the water goes, how deep it gets, what are the hazards, where the key flow paths and key problem areas are. Along with delivering flood maps for a range of storm events, and documented in the technical flood study report to support council decision making, community information and future planning.
Stantec will undertake a site inspection to confirm key feature, risk and flow path control in the catchment. Finalisation and review of the community consultation matter for engagement to proceed and commencement to build the initial hydrological and hydraulic model within the scope that Stantec have.
COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATION
The Flood Management Advisory Committee receive and note the report.
For Motion: Unanimous
David Paton raised information regarding flooding from the previous week. Multiple main arterial roads were affected, many of these being state roads. Flooding was observed on the City West Link in Haberfield, Parramatta Road in Summer Hill, Sloane Street and along Sydenham Road where multiple locations of flooding were recorded. Local roads included Riverside Crescent, Hawthorne Parade and Ramsay Street Haberfield, Fraser Street Marrickville and Marrickville Road. Council did not receive many complaints or requests as a result, but it is noted there was a fair bit of localised flooding.
Michael Carney raised that significant flooding occurred along Illawarra Road, David advises Council was not made aware of this. Robert Baker notes significant flooding occurred at Riverside Crescent and two flood rescues were carried out. Photos and videos will be supplied at the consultation meeting. Clr Blake notes Liberty Street Stanmore where flooding occurred and water running uphill.
James Ogg advises Council carried out substantial works at Dibble Avenue water hole a few years ago to rectify erosion and subsidence that occurred at the location to restore it and provide stabilisation to the buildings. Railway Parade is a State Road and Council continues to advocate for upgrades at this location, and James Ogg advised this will be followed up. The Department of Planning is currently putting on exhibition a proposed new planning policy to bring together climate change and natural hazards into a current state environmental planning policy; this is currently being worked through with the strategic planners and its impacts to make a submission on Council’s behalf.
James notes, for members of the committee, to view what is being proposed and a link will be supplied for feedback to be provided. As part of wider state flood management, a current project by DCCEEW looks at large catchments that Council’s sub catchments fall within. Richard Murphy encourages Council to document the recent flood event, as the information is relevant for subsequent flood studies. The NSW Government has acquired funding, and a number of key projects are being undertaken, one of which being the Valley Level Flood Risk Management Assessments. The National Flood Warning Infrastructure Network program is another initiative currently being worked on with the BOM, funding has been provided seeking to upgrade flood warning systems across Australia. Richard also speaks of the Climate Change and Natural Hazards SEPP currently on exhibition, from a flooding perspective, is the importance this takes on climate change. The new SEPP recommends picking a climate change scenario fit for purpose.
Richard advises the next round of flood plain management program grants are set to open within the next 2 weeks and will be open for 6 weeks. Should Council have anything they wish to apply for, Richard is available to assist with putting a grant together.
Martin Griffin recommends Council organise with SES representative to compile flood photos and flood records from the flooding event last week to calibrate a model to. James will organise a meeting next week with Michael Carney and the local area commanders.
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Meeting Closed 4:22pm |