Which matches Stevensmay's answer. So I don't see what's wrong with using these equations? They've always worked for me.
Hm, "problem" not really. As people have pointed out already, if the question was something along the lines of: an orange cat with massive eyes is launched from a canon on top of a cliff 100m high at speed 1m/s 20
o to the horizontal, find the time taken for the cat to land on the ground below on all fours (it's a cat, 9 lives rmb) then you
can't use that formula because the starting and ending hight are different. I'm assuming you know this already ahat, and I'm just stressing it for everyone else reading this.
Secondly, I think that method-wise this formula is fine, so long as you write it out or equivalent substitution to demonstrate to the examiner you know what you are doing and a little birdy hasn't flown in through the window and told you the answer. It's just that the formula applies for a very limited case... and knowing VCAA I doubt they'll set such questions
And erm, unless I remember wrongly from physics last year, I'm pretty sure that it's

?