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Dad of 2 livestreams himself drowning after getting caught in New Zealand floods

A man who died after falling into a manhole and drownin✤g in the New Zea💜land floods had been livestreaming to social media at the time.

Daniel Mark𓆉 Miller, a 34-year-old father of two, had been filming himse🃏lf walking through a submerged street in Wairau Valley, Auckland, in January.

Thꦆe region was being battered by heavy storms and a summer‘s worth of rainfall that would lead to widespread destruction and the deaths of four people.

Miller‘s father, Stev🔯e, was watching his son’s livestream when the footage cut out, leading him to believe that his son had simply dropped his phone in the water.

Daniel Mark Miller, 34, was a father of two.

He ꦯlater learned the 34-year-old had actually fallen into a manhole and drowned after the cover came off during the storm.

Daniel had been attempting to help those in the neighborhood throughout the♛ flood.

“This is all ౠbad … something’s telling me to go up and checꩵk on the people in this house, so I’m going to,” he can be heard saying.

“He was always the guy who wants to give help,” Steve told the New Zealand Herald on Sunday.

Steve spent the entire night anxiously attempting to contact his son and tried to contact his flatmates when he could not 🐷reach him.

Police arrived at🌠 hiꦕs house the next morning to notify him that his son‘s body had been recovered in a culvert on Target Road in Wairau Valley.

Flood water leaving an isolated road sign on May 09, 2023 in Auckland, New Zealand. Getty Images

“I was in disbe🌠lief, as on the livestream, you could see people only a few meters away from him,” Steve said.

“It (the livestream) was on his Facebook page but I’v𓄧e deleted it. 𝄹I watched it too many times and it kept looping over in my head for days.”

Steve has since ventured to the manhole where hisꩲ son perished, where flowers and a cross now lay as a memorial.

Daniel’s f💮riend Tony Hudson told 1News that he had seen numerous manhole covers that had become detached during the flooding.

He has urged local authorities to provide more safety features to manholes so further accidents don‘t occurꦕ.

“We n𝓀eed to have more awareness, like signs, especially around where it floods, they shouldn’t be able to just unlock and float away like that,” Hudson said.

Daniel Mark Miller livestreamed his own death. Getty Images/iStockphoto

Executive Director of Auckland Council’s Watercare, Andrew Chin, said the council has used manhol🍰es to gain access to stormwater channels, but some manhole covers can come off during severe storms when water systems become backlogged.

However, some manhole covers in flood-prone areas are fit♋ted with ꩲhinges or safety nets to help prevent accidents.

“We’re also looking to improve the capacity of the stormwater system in some 💖places to reduce the likelihood, but the whole design approach that we take is one of progressively reduce the risk to the community,” Chin told 1News.