RUKI’s President Melanie Bloor and Byrrill Creek CRT Team Leader Natascha Wernick authored a paper in the October 2023 edition of the Australian Journal of Emergency Management.
Co-authored with Dr Mel Taylor, Associate Professor at Macquarie University and partner at Enduring Advantage Consulting, the paper illustrates two case studies of self-organising, community-led emergency response and recovery.
After 12 months funding from Healthy North Coast, ‘The Neighbourhoods Project’ funded activity came to a close at the end of October.
But that doesn’t mean that the ‘neighbourhood groups’ themselves finish up. The whole idea behind the project was to set up a system that allowed us to continuously look after each other, and our community has responded.
Eleven neighbourhoods have a team of people who have stepped up to coordinate activity at the neighbourhood level and at the smaller pod/ street level. These teams will continue to support the neighbourhoods to connect, share information, build capacity and be there for each other, during good times and times of disaster, even when emergency services cannot be.
A big thankyou to those residents who have stepped up into these coordinating roles and will continue to do so. Every community initiative like this needs some leadership to keep it moving.
One of the strengths of the project has been the establishment of social media forums and email groups to support communication within each neighbourhood. There is also a network of UHF radios meaning that no one is further than walking distance from a UHF radio should they need to get urgent messages out when normal communications are down.
The intention with these initiatives, is that everyone feels more connected, supported and safer than before. If you have yet to be connected into these communication networks in your neighbourhood, it’s not too late. Reach out to [email protected] to find out how.
Throughout the 12 months of the project, RUKI has been able to work closely with a range of other agencies and organisations. With initiatives like The Neighbourhoods Project, we need to work together as a wider community to look after each other and to get things done. RUKI would like to acknowledge the support of UKIRA, the CTC, the RFS, and the SES for all they have done to support this important capacity-building work and looks forward to working together in the future.
All in all, it has been an amazing year, with: neighbourhood gatherings; surveying residents; setting up a communications network (including UHF radios); first aid skills training; trauma healing workshops; The Uki Stomp; ‘Get Prepared for floods and storms’ training; development of neighbourhood resources; leadership development; establishing a community gathering kit; chainsaw training; Resilience First Aid; and supporting RFS at their Get Ready for Bushfires event.
On behalf of RUKI I’d like to thank everyone in the community who has supported this initiative and, in doing so, supported each other. We are better together.
By Marlena Basser, Neighbourhoods Project Coordinator
The Uki Stomp on 30th July was a fabulous community celebration, and we are delighted to announce after budget acquittal that we raised just over $18,000.
Big thanks are due to everyone who contributed to this fantastic result. While the event was primarily about connecting and celebrating our resilient community, funds were raised through donations, bar sales, stall fees and sponsorships. 34 local businesses helped to deliver the event, alongside a couple of dozen volunteers.
Funds raised are going towards not-for-profit RUKI initiatives focused on assisting the Greater Uki area to prepare for, respond to, and recover from emergencies, disasters and crises. Projects underway include securing hardware and training in the use of communications systems for a UHF radio network, supporting the village’s off-grid capacity in an emergency, and building a cache of well-positioned community-owned assets for immediate response to flood or fire.
Huge thanks go to Harding’s Earthmoving as Platinum Sponsors, their support was invaluable. Thanks also to Gold Sponsors Bianchetti & Sons, Gary Arnold Water Supplies (who provided a free drinking water station), The Uki Supermarket, Vibrant Imaging Photography and The Vault. Our Bronze Sponsors were UKIRA, Uki CTC, Uki Historical Society, Bastion Lane Espresso, Art Post Uki, Uki Rural Fire Brigade, Happy Herb Company, Gymea Eco Retreat & Spa, Midginbil Eco Resort, The Print Spot and Mount Warning Hotel. We also had support from Husk Distillers, Stone and Wood, and Spangled Drongo brewery.
Big gratitude, too, to all the volunteer agencies and services who joined ‘Resilience Row’, including Uki RFS, SES, Safe Haven, Nimbin Recovery Support Services, the NNSWLHD Local Mental Health team, and Rous County Council weed officers. The event wouldn’t have been possible without being proudly funded by the NSW Government delivered in partnership with Tweed Shire Council.
Special thanks goes to Uki Public School for learning the bush dances (and the Nutbush!). Watching the kids dance together was a joy for all to see.
It was poignant that this was the first village celebration our precious local elder Ida Daly was unable to support. We came together as a community the day before to farewell her, and we celebrated her with joy in our hearts at the Stomp, just as she would have wished. We spoke on the day of Ida being a beacon of inclusivity, resilience, effort, kindness and community spirit. Here’s hoping we can all embody that, so her memory lives on.
A million thanks to all the volunteers and community for supporting this event. It was a beautiful day.