Monday 7th February will be the second anniversary of the 2009 Black Saturday Bushfires. It has been a busy time since 2009. Much has happened. Many of you will be aware of actions and programs that CFA has been implementing in order to meet the recommendations of the 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission. Our goal is to make CFA a better and stronger organisation.
As we approach the second anniversary of the Victorian bushfires of February 2009 we remember and honour the 173 people who died.
I suppose it had to happen
PART 1
The State Government has now released its response to the final report of the 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission, meaning the Fires Task Force is winding down.
The Premier announced on Monday that the Government supports in principle 59 of the Commission's 67 recommendations. The remaining recommendations are being further considered before a decision is made on their adoption. Premier Brumby has made a commitment to act swiftly and decisively, with a short and targeted consultation period before the Government delivers its final response.
The final report of the 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission will be handed to the Governor this Saturday, 31 July. It should be made public by noon.
The public hearings phase of the 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission has come to an end with the Commissioners retiring to prepare their final report.
The 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission has reached a milestone with the last witness giving evidence.
The 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission heard evidence on issues including insurance and the funding of fire services, mapping, firefighter safety and information sharing during the sixth block of hearings held in March.
Recovery
The 2009 Bushfires Royal Commission shifted its focus to fuel reduction and land use planning during the fifth block of hearings held in February.
The work of the 2009 Fires Task Force is continuing as we enter 2010 and move into the final six months of the Royal Commission process.
While I wasn't with CFA last fire season, like so many other Australians I watched the events unfold with anguish and sorrow, but also with an overwhelming sense of pride in the response.
Throughout each year, and especially in tough times like the bushfire season, we value and respect the enduring effort that you apply to your role.
The Aftermath
I'm a Husband, Father & Grandfather
I listen and read with increasing amazement and incredulity to the proposals for bushfire warnings. The insurmountable problem is to address those in peril and uninformed; the problem is that "the authority" has poor intelligence about the fire-front progress and does not know who is unaware of the danger, nor where they are. Broad-brush approaches like ABC regional radio and telephone network "broadcast" would all appear to be broad-brush with poor targetability.