Service
On Jun 13, 2023

Marine Rescue NSW RESCA finalists named

Marine Rescue Jervis Bay member Leona Curran has been named a finalist in the Marine Rescue NSW agency category for the 2023 Rotary Districts of NSW Emergency Services Community Awards (RESCA) less than a week after being crowned the Marine Rescue NSW winner at the Shoalhaven Emergency Services Community Awards.

Ms Curran joins Northern Rivers pair, Brunswick Unit Commander Jonathan Wilcock and long-serving Ballina volunteer Phillip Causley and Marine Rescue Merimbula member Edwin Dietrich as finalists for this year’s agency award.

Marine Rescue NSW Commissioner Alex Barrell said all four members are deserving finalists.

“Marine Rescue NSW is proud of all its volunteers and it is wonderful to see this group recognised as RESCA finalists.

“Their dedication to their local community, the boaters of NSW and Marine Rescue NSW is greatly appreciated.

“I wish them all the best at the awards ceremony,” Commissioner Barrell said.

The winner of the Marine Rescue NSW agency award will be announced at the RESCA ceremony at Bankstown Sports Club on August 12.

Leona Curran – Marine Rescue Jervis Bay

During her nine years at Marine Rescue Jervis Bay, Leona Curran has helped raise more than $500,000 for the unit.

Classified as Grants Officer, she has organised grants and coordinated fundraising activities including Bunnings barbecues, the Huskisson Monthly Markets, raffles and Marine Rescue’s Australia Day Jervis Bay Duck Derby where Ms Curran has also strengthened relationships with the Gadhungal Murring organisation.

Ms Curran’s work on the Duck Derby has helped the unit set new fundraising records for the event and she was also awarded second place with photos of the derby in a National Australia Day Council competition where she secured $2,000 for the unit.

Jonathan Wilcock – Marine Rescue Brunswick

Starting as a sailor in Victoria at the age of seven, Jonathan Wilcock became involved in competitive sailing and supporting boat operators as a child.

In his late teens he joined the SES to help with rescues in road accidents, swift water emergencies and floods.

After moving to the NSW Northern Rivers, he joined Marine Rescue Brunswick in 2017 and became Unit Commander in July 2019.

During the 2022 Northern Rivers flooding event Mr Wilcock worked alongside the NSW SES, NSW Police and Surf Lifesaving volunteers assisting with rescues and at one point extracting a severely ill person trapped in a flooded house. With neither an ambulance or helicopter able to access the area, he borrowed a vehicle with a snorkel fitted, allowing it go into deeper water, and got the patient out.

Mr Wilcock worked closely with the Mullumbimby SES, assisting people affected by flooding in the Mullumbimby and Upper Brunswick Valleys, delivering fuel, food and other necessities.

He also assisted in the Emergency Operations Centre and when the waters receded was active in the clean-up.

Phillip Causley – Marine Rescue Ballina

There was little doubt Phillip Causley would end up in a helping profession. From his last years in high school he was out helping, first with Kidz Kamp for the St Vincent de Paul Society, then the NSW SES, followed by service with the Westpac Helicopter and the Ballina Hospital Auxiliary.

In 2011, Mr Causley joined Marine Rescue Ballina and has held the positions of Crew, Leading Crew, Coxswain and Deputy Unit Commander.

His skills were put the to the test in June 2020 when a vessel sank off Patch’s Beach in South Ballina in the early hours of the morning. Mr Causley went out with crew, battling a treacherous bar and ferocious seas to rescue two people in the water.

During the 2022 floods, Mr Causley spent three days in Lismore rescuing flood victims. Notwithstanding his own home in Ballina being flooded, he assisted others for the next five days.

When floods hit the far west last November, he went to Walgett to assist with evacuations, helping small indigenous settlements and restocking supplies. He then went on to assist at Condobolin repairing and stabilising flood levies.

Edwin (Stewart) Dietrich – Marine Rescue Merimbula

After retiring from service with the Royal Australian Navy, Edwin Dietrich joined Marine Rescue Merimbula in 2015.

Based at Merimbula, he has trained other members of Marine Rescue NSW in navigation and boat handling, held executive positions, raised funds, monitored the marine radio network and participated in sea rescues.

When the 2019-20 bushfires threatened Merimbula, he worked tirelessly at evacuation centres, providing help and comfort. After the fires passed, he went back to the evacuation centres to assist with the clean-up and return to business.

Mr Dietrich was awarded the National Emergency Medal for his service during the 2019-20 bushfires.

As a member of Marine Rescue NSW he was seconded to the NSW SES Incident Control Centre at Bankstown during the 2021 floods.

In 2022, he was deployed to the Riverina as part of the flood response where he skippered various vessels and assisted isolated people and livestock.

Marine Rescue NSW is a volunteer based not-for-profit professional organisation dedicated to keeping boaters safe on the water and supporting local communities.

Latest News

Service
On Apr 30, 2025

Marine Rescue Newcastle crew complete late-night assist in challenging offshore conditions

A volunteer crew from Marine Rescue Newcastle navigated darkness and a fast-flowing run-out tide overnight to rescue a stranded sailor four nautical miles (7.4 km) south of Nobbys Head. Marine Rescue...

Service
On Apr 29, 2025

Marine Rescue NSW volunteers to hone skills in major South Coast training exercise

More than 80 Marine Rescue NSW volunteers from the South Coast will take part in a simulated live activation, real-time, multi-agency search and rescue exercise (SAREX) this Saturday (3 May). Seven...