 Good morning. I'm Ian Stewart, the Deputy Commissioner and State Disaster Coordinator for the Queensland Police Service. Today our focus is on the Condomine and Deer and Bandy areas. The trigger point for return of the Condomine community was reached at about 6 a.m. this morning when the 13-meter mark was passed on the dropping flood levels surrounding Condomine Township. Today we will start to repatriate emergency service personnel into the town. We will certainly start the cleanup and the checking mechanism for all of the housing and businesses in that area. Within the next 48 hours, we hope to be able to start the return of the of the community of Condomine to some sort of normality. We're also keeping a careful eye on the towns of St George and Deer and Bandy. As you know, Deer and Bandy remains isolated and resupply issues are being obviously considered on a daily basis. The other area of focus for the Queensland Police Service at the moment is still the Locky Valley, where at Grantham and Murphy's Creek, considerable effort is being made by large contingents of police, Australian military personnel and other emergency services personnel, including SES volunteers, to undertake the very significant and gruesome task of searching in the areas surrounding the town. We are also looking at the waterways, but the task of looking into every bit of debris that has been located in the search area and in the disaster area between those two towns is absolutely significant and will take probably some weeks to complete. Thankfully, the death toll has not risen overnight and it still remains at 20 persons since the start of this event at Twomba on the 10th of January. However, some good news is that we have located alive and well one of the persons listed as missing and that occurred yesterday and we have also been able to confirm that one of the missing persons was a body we located in the last few days. That has dropped the number of missing persons now to 10. On a more positive note, the Queensland Police Service and other agencies have been able to successfully locate or identify 473 other persons listed as missing since the Twomba event started on the 10th of January. In total, since the 30th of November 2010, 33 people are confirmed dead from flood of related events in Queensland. And whilst this is a high toll, certainly we are thankful that the toll was not much higher. In terms of our communication strategies, we are working hard to investigate any rumour that comes to our notice to either validate that information on behalf of the community or to identify that it is false. This is very, very important in terms of retaining the confidence of the Queensland public in the information and investigative processes that we undertake. The transition to recovery is certainly in its final stages with owning a few districts throughout the state still considered in response mode. Hopefully by the end of this week we will be able to return full command to local areas and hand to local disaster management groups the responsibility to move into full recovery mode throughout the state. Unfortunately, we are still at the early stages of the wet season in Queensland and whilst we are moving to recovery mode in all of the currently affected areas, we are also preparing to move back into response mode should that be necessary in any further rain events. Thank you.