Friday afternoon, February 25, 2022. Matthew Wilson’s working week ended like any other. A wet weekend was forecast, but he wasn’t too worried. As the Delivery Manager at the Australia Post Lismore Delivery Centre, Matthew knew that the Delivery Centre, and all its contents, should be fine—after all, the building was set above the height of the last major flood, which had occurred way back in 1974.
But by Monday, his workplace had become unreachable and unrecognisable. With floodwaters hitting the highest level ever recorded in Lismore—a catastrophic 14.4 metres—the Delivery Centre was well and truly underwater. And it would be over a week before Matthew could get inside again.
“When we finally got back into the building, it was full of mud and everything was scattered. It was like a big washing machine,” said Matthew. “A lot of our parcels were just turned to slush—a mixture of mud, cardboard, paper and whatever else was left.”
Unlike anything they had expected
On a typical day, Matthew and his team spend their days sorting and delivering mail and parcels in and around the Lismore area. After the floods, however, their work took on a new shape.
In the immediate aftermath, there was shock and disbelief. “We hadn’t expected to get any water in here, ever. The 1974 and 1954 floods were the biggest the town had ever seen, and the building was above those levels. But this year’s flood was three metres above that. It was something no-one could have expected.”
Matthew and his team salvaged what mail they could, got it out, and started the task of cleaning the building. “In the meantime, we moved over to a pop-up site to handle deliveries from there,” he said. But they were used to getting the day’s mail and parcels out to customers on time, every day—and they started falling behind.
“As far as mental health goes, we felt like robots. We’d come in, do what we could as safely as we could, but there was just so much mail,” said Matthew.
Just thinking about the impact of the floods on his team took its toll. “Usually, we’re tough buggers in Lismore. It takes a lot to knock us over.”