New Phase in Disaster Recovery: Trees Planted for Wildlife

Disaster recovery tree planting

More than 750 trees have been planted in Coombabah this weekend as a part of recovery efforts following the severe weather events at Christmas and New Year.

The trees were planted on Coombabah Parklands, which was highly impacted by the Christmas disaster event, by City of Gold Coast officers and a team of more than 60 volunteers.

Over 700 hectares of vegetation within City parks and natural areas are estimated to have been destroyed.

"The wild weather destroyed so much of our vegetation and homes for our wildlife and these trees are one of the steps to recover the environment," Acting Mayor Donna Gates said.

"Recovery is about more than the initial clean up – it's also about ensuring the environment, economy, infrastructure, and community's health are built back to a better position than prior to the event, and can take months and years.

"The City is committed to seeing the recovery through and building an even stronger and more resilient Gold Coast. The community can get involved through workshops and community sessions like the tree planting."

"We have already made some huge strides with our recovery plans including restoring all damaged parks and community infrastructure, removing 77,153 truckloads of waste, and injecting cash into the impacted community through grants and vouchers."

The City provided the Currumbin Wildlife Hospital funding, through the Disaster Recovery Grant Program, to provide treatment to wildlife injured during the disaster event which resulted in a surge of admissions. The hospital saw 120 new admissions in one day alone during the event.

The City has events planned as part of the continued recovery, including:

  • Wildcare workshops
  • Bushfire community sessions
  • NaturallyGC Landcare tree plantings, kids holiday programs and citizen science wildlife monitoring
  • Free health workshops including psychological first aid
  • Free wellbeing workshops for volunteers
  • Working with small businesses on disaster insurance issues and future preparedness
  • Community informed community disaster and emergency plans
/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.