A woman is believed to be missing in floodwaters in Lismore as Byron Bay residents share the pain of unprecedented flash flooding
NSW acting premier Paul Toole told parliament water levels in Lismore had reached 11.6 metres breaching the levee bank in the process and were still continuing to rise.
The Wilsons River peaked above 10.65m on Wednesday, with floodwaters and mud spilling into the city centre.
A search is under way after emergency services were told a woman had become trapped in her white Holden station wagon in floodwaters at Monaltrie, south of Lismore, about 9.50pm on Tuesday.
Dozens of people have been rescued in the past 24 hours, many of whom were attempting to drive through floodwaters, NSW SES Acting Commissioner Daniel Austin said on Wednesday.
The service received 902 calls for help and carried out 52 rescues in the past 24 hours.
Some 16,000 people have been told to leave their homes in NSW, with 13 evacuation orders active on Wednesday, seven issued as rain continued to fall during the morning.
Renewed flooding hit Lismore, Ballina, Byron, Coraki and Woodburn.
Byron Bay residents were surprised with the torrential downpour blanketing the town.
"All the streets look weird. There's just palms and debris and rubbish bins thrown over and huge pools of water in people's yards," real-estate agent Travis Lipshus told AAP.
His partner's clothing store was "completely destroyed" with muddy waters submerging valuable stock.
He called on the federal government to provide more assistance.
"How do communities recover from this if it keeps on happening? This is the second time in a month," Mr Lipshus said.
Lawyer Mark Swivel blamed the Bureau of Meteorology and the SES for underestimating the severity of the downpour.
"We woke up to a town centre... that was inundated... There were parts of the town that had never been flooded before," he told AAP.
"In a nutshell the warning systems which failed us a month ago, they failed again.
"To me this is climate change in action. The new conditions we live in are unpredictable and chaotic. We really need to change and it's not negotiable"
Flood Recovery Minister Steph Cooke said the drenching would probably stretch into next month.
"We know this wet weather is likely to continue for quite some time, right throughout April and potentially beyond that.
"It must feel that this flooding emergency will never end, but I can assure you that there is light at the end of the tunnel."
Labor's spokesman for Emergency Services Jihad Dib said emergency services personnel were doing their best but the government needed to step up.
"The mixed messaging about the river level falling while ... it was rising, only highlights the lack of co-ordination and single point of leadership required in an emergency," Mr Dib said.
He said it was not good enough that Byron and Lismore residents were still dealing with faulty water gauges and broken warning sirens a month after initial flooding.
In Lismore, flood fatigue has well and truly set in as the onslaught continues.
"Everyone's exhausted. Evacuation orders started at four o'clock yesterday afternoon and then got cancelled before the phones started ringing again," Lismore Mayor Steve Krieg told AAP on Wednesday.
"(People are) running on no sleep at the moment. It's hard to put into words. You're feeling angry as well because the messaging hasn't been what it should have been.
"The hardest thing for these people is they have spent weeks and weeks cleaning and getting rid of all the flood mud, sanitising and addressing the mould issue.
Communities from Evans Head to Byron Bay were hit with 200mm to 300mm of rain within a few hours, causing significant and destructive flash flooding, BOM meteorologist Dean Narramore said on Wednesday.
Further south, Coffs Harbour, Dorrigo and Bellingen copped up to 300mm on Wednesday morning, while major flooding is occurring on the Bellinger River.
© AAP 2022