Kennon Road closed after quake
>> Sunday, April 28, 2019
By
Hasreel Sandee Gano
BAGUIO CITY-- Kennon
Road will not be opened to traffic pending the results of the assessment and
inspection of local authorities here, the Office of Civil Defense-Cordillera
Administrative Region said on Thursday.
“Due to
the 6.1 magnitude earthquake that jolted Region 3 (Central Luzon) and intensity
4 in Baguio City on April 22, the opening of Kennon Road during weekends is
hereby suspended effective immediately,” stated the joint OCD and the
Cordillera Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (CDRRMC) Advisory No. 3
issued on April 25.
In the
past weeks since March, Kennon Road has been regularly opened to light vehicles
weighing not more than five tons from 6 p.m. every Friday until 6 a.m. of
Monday to ease the traffic congestion at the other entry points to Baguio.
“A
thorough inspection will be conducted by the joint inter-agency task group
Kennon Road before the temporary opening during weekends will resume,” said OCD
regional director and CDRRMC chairman Albert Mogol in an interview.
Meanwhile
OCD-CAR information officer Cyr Bagayao urged the public to take earthquake
drills seriously.
He said
for the public to be resilient and prepared for an earthquake, they have to
know how to act accordingly.
“We
always tell the public to take the earthquake drill seriously and not just for
compliance sake,” said Bagayao in a separate interview.
He said
the National Disaster Risk Reduction Management Council (NDRRMC) through the
local DRRM councils regularly hold the national simultaneous earthquake drill
(NSED) to prepare the public for emergencies.
“We do
drills because we do not know when an earthquake will happen and familiarizing
the people on what to do during an earthquake will prevent the loss of lives,”
Bagayao said.
“It
takes practice to know the rules and the procedure by heart," he added.
He also
advised the public to be calm, do not panic and keep abreast of any update from
authorities.
Bagayao also
urged the public to avoid spreading fake news or misinformation, which could
cause panic to the public.
He said
everyone should first verify the pieces of information they receive by checking
the official social media account of government offices before sharing them.
He added that
earthquakes are unpredictable and no one can say when it will happen. --
PNA
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