Addressing calamities
>> Monday, September 24, 2018
EDITORIAL
As of today, around 100 small-scale miners are feared
dead after a landslide buried their bunkhouse in Itogon, Benguet, during the
onslaught of super typhoon “Ompong” in
northern Luzon recently.
Scores of others have been confirmed killed in floods and
landslides, among them two first responders trying to retrieve people trapped
in the mud, also in Itogon. At least 42 landslides have been recorded in the
Cordillera, authorities said as Ompong howled its way like Typhoon Yolanda which
whipped the Philippines leaving some 7,000 dead.
Yolanda has often been described as the strongest storm
on record. Ompong was as destructive.
And while the National Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Council has yet to release validated casualty figures, it reported a
total of 250,036 people in seven regions affected by Ompong.
A total of 133,457 people, or 34,169 families, had to
stay in 1,190 evacuation centers, the NDRRMC said.
Cagayan, which initially bore the brunt of Ompong, had to
be placed under a state of calamity as it sustained P46 million in damaged
infrastructure and P4.6 billion in destroyed crops.
Meanwhile, Central Luzon, known as the catch basin of the
Cordilleras, saw massive flooding, with at least 108 barangays in 18 towns and
cities in Pangasinan under water days after Ompong headed for China.
There were the calls for preemptive evacuation and
preparation of evacuation sites days before Ompong hit the country, with
barangay officials going house to house to urge residents, especially in
high-risk to pack up and leave their homes.
Satellite phones, internet connections, rescue equipment
and boats were also readily available for deployment in many provinces.
But then, in some if not most cases, vulnerable people
refused to evacuate.
Ompong also highlighted areas where immediate
rehabilitation needs to be done, if only to mitigate far more disastrous
consequences from similar typhoons.
Mining activities in Baguio and Benguet have caused
sinkholes and are putting areas at risk of landslides and flash floods from the
mountains during heavy rainfall like what happened to Ucab in Itogon where
bodies are still being unearthed from the huge landslide.
Improvements have been
made in our preparedness for natural hazards. New equipment for Pagasa has
allowed improvements in weather forecasting and modeling climate change. Early
warning systems and communicating climate and disaster-related information to
the public have also seen progress in the past decade.
Some regional DRRM Councils
have even initiated projects to reduce disaster risks in their areas and
increase the resilience of their constituencies.
Nonetheless, glaring
problems in the national and local DRRM remain evident. A lack of sufficient
manpower and financial and technical resources hinder the implementation of
programs throughout the DRRM framework. At the height of Typhoon Ompong for
example, no one was answering the landline phone of the regional office of the
Office of Civil Defense in Baguio and some days later.
Inefficiency and typhoon
awareness in dealing with disasters remain low in some regions, partially
worsened by corruption and bureaucratic inefficiency. Some government agencies
even refuse to provide necessary data for planning against disasters to other
agencies or civil society organizations.
The most significant of
these problems is the focus of governance on responding to disasters instead of
prevention and mitigation. Poor land use planning and ineffective building
codes repeatedly expose the most vulnerable sectors, including the urban poor
and the marginalized, to the worst of such impacts.
The government must
enforce existing policies and implement programs to empower communities to
prepare for, if not avoid, the impacts of extreme natural hazards.
As they are at the
forefront of these impacts, LGUs must explore all available options to build
the capacity in their respective areas to respond to possible disasters.
Proper land use planning
would provide not only DRRM-related benefits such as reducing vulnerability to
immediate hazards, but also long-term economic and environmental benefits that
can never be matched by short-term pursuit of financial gains.
Resilience is no longer
enough. Prevention is and always will be better than cure. Is there really a need to change the system if
the solution is a change in the people in it?
Unless government acts swiftly and compassionately in
preparing for another disaster like a strong typhoon like Ompong, more lives
could be lost.
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