Negative projection of Baguio during Typhoon Ompong
>> Tuesday, October 9, 2018
By
Dexter A. See
BAGUIO CITY – Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan
lashed out at a number of individuals and media outfits who projected a
negative perception of Baguio City during the onslaught of Supertyphoon Ompong,
saying that such negative projections caused panic among people based in other
parts of the global village who are concerned about anything happening in the
city.
The city
chief executive said the posted photos of flooding in the city does not reflect
the overall situation in other parts of the Summer Capital as flooding only
happened along some portions of Harrison Road and in the Burnham Lake area, the
latter having overflowed its banks due to the accumulation of water from the
heavy rainfall that prevailed over the city and the whole region when the
weather disturbance passed over the city.
“Our soil was
still saturated because of the continuous monsoon rains that prevailed over the
city last month aggravated by the heavy rains that prevailed over the city at
the height of the tropical cyclone that caused the numerous landslide resulting
to the untimely death of ten persons,” Domogan stressed.
Last month,
the local office of the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical
Services Administration (PAGASA) recorded over 1.600 milliliters of rainfall,
nearly double that of the projected average of 905 milliliters of rainfall for
the month.
From
September 10-16, 2018, the recorded rainfall was 920 milliliters which was way
above the projected 576 milliliters of rainfall. On September 15, 2018 alone
when Supertyphoon Ompong hovered over most parts of Northern Luzon, including
Baguio City, the recorded rainfall was 760 milliliters which was too much for
the holding capacity of the city’s soil and rock formations.
Domogan said
the amount of rainfall that fell on the city at the height of the weather
disturbance was too much and the areas where the landslides occurred were not
actually landslide-prone areas.
He said the
local government implemented pre-emptive evacuation in identified critical
areas of the city but the areas where the landslide transpired were not
previously identified as landslide-prone.
On flooding
along portions of Harrison road and the overflowing of the Burnham lake, he
said floodwaters immediately subsided even if the city’s drainage system can no
longer handle the huge volume of water from the heavy rainfall that day, thus,
it is unfair for certain individuals and media outfits to project a negative
image of the city which does not reflect the overall situation in the different
parts of the city where the situation was actually normal as expected with that
kind of weather disturbance.
Based on
records from the City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, eight of
the 10 fatalities were victims of landslides in the different parts of the city
while one of them was hit by a falling tree and the other was carried away by
the strong water current in a creek near their place.
Domogan said
right after the typhoon left the city, life in the city was back to normal
despite the damages in some parts of the city.
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