🟡 Kempsey is a flood zone. Why stay?

Including: What it's like living and working on a flood zone – and what's happening with the Great Koala National Park.

⏱️ The 111th edition of our newsletter is a seven-minute read.

✋ Hey there, it's Ellie – your Mid North Coaster reporter.

📢 Today’s call out: If you have a business on the MNC that was impacted by the May floods last year and want to share your experience, including how you bounced back, hit reply here to make a time to chat.

Last week I visited Kempsey to cover the Festival of Rugby. While in the CBD, I dropped into some businesses that were impacted by the May 2025 floods to see how they’re tracking as the one year anniversary approaches.

I spoke to Joel Connors, part-owner of Hot ‘N’ Tasty Bakehouse, as well as Vivian and Faye, two longterm residents who own shops in the Smith Street arcade and who live close to the Macleay River and Belmore River. All three were impacted by the floods.

In today’s newsletter, I’ll shares their stories about what it’s like living through disasters, the lessons learned and why they choose to stay.

Plus, a Great Koala National Park update, including refined boundaries and a carbon credit method under consideration.

Let’s dive in…

📢 COMMUNITY NOTICEBOARD

Here are some local happenings for the calendar, sent in by the readers.

✍️ The Inaugural Camden Haven Words & Music Festival is coming up in June, 5th - 8th, and is being hosted across venues in Laurieton and Kendall.

🎶 Touring artists Amy Vee and Anna Weatherup are coming to the MNC including a show at 5 Church Street in Bellingen on Friday 1 May. 

🤣 Comedian Pete Helliar and country-music duo Brooke McClymont & Adam Eckersley are joining forces for a night of laughs and tunes at South West Rocks Country Club on Sunday April 26.

🎤 The Three SeasAustralian composer and saxophonist Matt Keeganis performing at Got Ya Back Productions in Port Macquarie on Sunday, 26 April, 2:30pm - 5pm

A quick reminder: we’re hiring for someone to take over at the Mid North Coaster. If you’re a journalist or reporter looking for a gig that’ll take you to the next level, apply at the link below. 👇

TOP TWO STORIES

🟡 This Kempsey bakery was in waist-deep water a year ago. How has it bounced back?

When major floods hit the Mid North Coast last year, the Macleay River overflowed.  Floodwaters inundated Kempsey’s CBD, entering shopfronts and businesses. Five people were killed, farmers lost livestock and infrastructure and hundreds of homes were deemed uninhabitable. 

As the one year anniversary of the May 2025 flood approaches, the Mid North Coaster is visiting local businesses to see how they have bounced back.

Hot ‘N’ Tasty Bakehouse, on Clyde Street, was one such business.

Waist-deep in water: Part-owner of Hot ‘N’ Tasty Bakehouse and Kempsey resident, Joel Connors, told the Mid North Coaster the water level reached a metre high throughout the shop during the flood.

Connors, who has been at the Clyde Street location for 13 years, said last year’s flood was the biggest he’d experienced. The damage meant the bakery was out of action for over a week.

Back on their feet: In the aftermath of the flood, it was the Kempsey community that came together to help Connors and his colleagues get the business up and running again.

  • “Everyone pitched in and helped us back on our feet,” Connors said. “Electricians and [other tradespeople] came in and gave us a hand, too, and made sure we could get up and going to supply the community again.” 

    The bakehouse supplies various local venues, including Central IGA in Kempsey, South West Rocks IGA and the Shire’s schools.

    Why stay? When asked what keeps him running a business in a flood-prone town, Connors said it’s due to a lack of options.

  • “There’s not much opportunity for other shops elsewhere,“ he said.

    Lessons learned: With future flooding inevitable, Connors said he will better prepare for the next event by organising assistance ahead of time to help move and lift the heavy machinery to higher ground.

  • “We’ve got locations where we can take stuff here, it’s just trying to get trucks in and out ‘cause everyone’s using trucks at the time so it makes it hard,” Connors said.

🟡 Living and working on flood zone: How two Kempsey Shire locals survived decades of disasters and why they have no plans to leave

L-R: Kempsey business owners Faye Eakin and Vivian Kyle.

Long-term Kempsey Shire resident Vivian Kyle says she’d have to pay $30,000 a year to insure her home against floods – so she goes without. 

The Smithtown local and her fellow business owner, Faye Eakin, both run shops in a Kempsey arcade that also regularly floods, and last filled up with water in May 2025.

For many residents across Kempsey Shire, the prospect of rising water is just another one of life’s challenges.

Decades of disaster: Kyle and Eakin live in Smithtown and Belmore River respectively – two of the Shire’s most notorious floodzones. They have both lived and worked through decades of disasters without insurance coverage of their homes and businesses. The pair told the Mid North Coaster they know more floods will come as extreme weather events increase in frequency and intensity, but leaving is not an option.

A lifetime of rivers rising: 66-year-old Kyle has lived in Smithtown her entire life. She says the nearby Macleay River is “renowned” for flooding.

  • “I think these last 10 to 20 years have been the most floods we've ever had,” Kyle told the Mid North Coaster. “They're getting more often.”

According to the NSW Government's natural disaster declarations, there has been flooding on the Mid North Coast for the last six consecutive years. 

The Australian Government’s first National Climate Risk Assessment warns that concurrent events and reduced time between severe events will become more common as a result of human-induced climate change.

Part of the job: This month, Kyle’s business “Just Lingerie” is celebrating 31 years of operation on one of the town’s main streets, two blocks back from the Macleay River.

The 2001 and 2025 floods are two major events that stand out to Kyle, who says preparation is key.

When faced with impending floods, the arcade’s businesses built a sandbag at the back and front door and moved stock to higher ground.

  • “We can't work, we can't operate, and we have to get all our stock up [off the floor],” Kyle said. “And the whole town is trying to look after their own stuff anyway, so business just stops completely.”

At the other end of the arcade is K&A Boutique, which Eakin has owned for 24 years. 

While she didn’t own the shop during the major floods in 2001, she was working at the boutique at the time. Eakin also owns the workwear shop next door and has done so for 14 years. During her time at the helm, the recent May floods was the biggest.

A difficult decision: As the Macleay and Belmore Rivers rise during heavy rainfall, residents are forced to make the difficult decision of choosing to stay and protect the business or leave to protect the home.

In May, Eakin decided to go home and was stuck for four days not knowing if the business had flooded.

Both owners say they know more floods will come, but refuse to pack up.

  • “I think if I've survived this many now, I should be right. I suppose we think more about it when we're going through it, and then when things settle down, you sort of put that aside,” Kyle said. 

Eakin continues operating because it’s what she knows – and what she’s always done.

  • “Probably, if I was new to the area and I had two floods in a short period of time, I'd say, ‘I'm getting out of this’.”

Why stay?: Despite living through numerous floods, noticing the increase in the disasters, and knowing more are inevitable, Kyle and Eakin say they stay for the beauty, community and the climate.

  • “It's a lovely place. It's got just about everything you'd want,” Eakin said. “It's a friendly place… I have no desire to live anywhere else.”

Kyle agrees the area is too good to give up. It’s “the people and the beautiful place” that keep her here.

  • “I could never see myself living anywhere else. Such a beautiful place to live. We've been to a lot of places all around Australia and I just think the beaches here are just the best,” Kyle said. “I think we've got the best of both worlds living here.”

📹 VIDEO OF THE DAY

Vivian Kyle lives and works on flood-prone land in Kempsey Shire without flood cover. It’s simply unaffordable.

The 66-year-old has lived in Smithtown her whole life, surrounded by the Macleay River which she says is “renowned” for flooding. For the past 31 years, she has owned a business on Smith Street in Kempsey’s CBD, two blocks back from the same river.

During a major flood she can get stuck at home for up to five days.

Here’s how she prepares for disaster and why she chooses to stay despite knowing future floods will come.

Instagram Post

You can also watch the video on TikTok or YouTube

🐨 What’s happening with the Great Koala National Park? Here’s what we know

The NSW Government has refined the proposed boundaries for the Great Koala National Park (GKNP), which it says will strengthen protection of native and threatened species.

What happened: The state government has updated the proposed park map to include areas of native forest, isolated plantations and existing conservation areas.

  • The government has kept  “small buffers” of native state forest outside the proposed boundary for “safe plantation access and operations”. 

  • It says these buffers will be permanently placed in non-harvest zones, ensuring they will not be harvested in the future.

Proposed GKNP boundaries, September 2025

Proposed GKNP boundaries, February 2026

Quick refresh: Once formally established, the GKNP would see the end of native forest logging within its boundaries to conserve and protect the state’s endangered koala population, as well as many other threatened species in the region.

  • Without action, koalas are on track to be extinct in the wild in NSW by 2050.

Halt on timber harvesting: In 2025, the government announced a temporary moratorium on timber harvesting in state forests identified to become part of the GKNP. 

  • Since September 8, all harvesting operations have ceased and no new operations can commence.

The moratorium is in place while the NSW government waits for a carbon credit method to be approved, which would allow the formal establishment of the park.

Thanks for reading, I hope you enjoyed this edition. I’ll be back again on Friday morning, with my final newsie on Wednesday next week.

What next: The independent Emissions Reduction Assurance Committee (ERAC) is currently considering the submission feedback and will determine next steps.

  • ERAC will advise the Assistant Climate Change Minister whether to approve the INFM method or not.

  • There is no official timeline on when the Federal Government will announce whether it has registered the GKNP for the INFM method.

  • The NSW Government may need to make further minor refinements to the boundary before the park is finalised.

Thanks for reading! I hope you enjoyed this edition. I’ll be back on Friday with another newsie.

In the meantime, make sure you’re following along on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook and our website to keep up to date with local news throughout the week.

Cheers,
👋 Ellie