Residents in WA's north continue repairs after cyclone season
Residents across Western Australia's Dampier Peninsula continue recovery efforts six months after two cyclones struck the region in December and January. Cyclone Hayley and Cyclone Luana caused extensive damage to homes, infrastructure and businesses, with pearl farm operator James Brown estimating repairs could cost up to one million dollars. Communities hope to complete repairs before the next wet season begins.
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 17 Jul 2026, 00:02 UTC · Updated 17 Jul 2026, 00:10 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: ABC News – Australia. Editorial policy · Corrections
Trending
- NDIS fails individuals needing substantial support, raising concerns over its effectiveness
- Australia's highest-paid chief executives revealed
- Fair Work Commission alters Sophie Mirabella’s caseload after police charges
- Queensland Tribunal rules police watch house conditions violate children's rights
- NSW government approves first pumped hydro project since Snowy 2.0
- Police fear ‘worst day care paedophile’ targeted remote Indigenous community



