“Brimming River”
(Usbaw Sa Suba)
Erlea Mae B. Ilisan
Kate A. Rivera
Lean Faye L. Cruda
Kristine Batingal
Gemvirh A. Dumanlag
Kyla Claudette B. Capalar
Aubry P. Gucor
Annabelia Memoracion
Den Karylle B. Magsayo
Introduction
Background of the Study
For many years, due to typhoons people have been experiencing
massive floods in the Philippines. Floods may occur anytime due to
typhoons. Flood is an overflow of a large amount of water beyond
its normal limits. It may differ how strong the typhoon will affect
the country. Floods often happen due to heavy rainfall along with.
Flash floods which can be extremely dangerous. The seriousness of
flood depends on the intensity and duration of precipitation,
surface slope of the region and nature of the surface soil and
covering vegetation.
Floods may cause damages to humans, crops, properties and
others. There are some measures of flood control needed to protect,
reduce or mitigate flood damages. Flash flood will also be the
cause made by people. Many existence living in this community will
suffer including our environment. Flash floods can be rank as one
of the calamities who caused a lot of damage in our cities. During
flash floods, many lives will also be affected.
The deadliest recorded typhoon that hit the Philippines is
the Haiphong in October 8, 1881. Haiphong crossed the Philippines,
killing over 20,000 people in the “Northern” part of the
Philippines. According to James P. Terry’s article, its
frightening number of deaths was considered as the third deadliest
typhoon in the world that only crossed the Philippines.
Magazine writers Jeffrey R. Ambrose and Samuel C. Baxter also
made a statement about a very destructive Typhoon that caused
damage over a million pesos, and killed over 10,000 people in one
city. Typhoon Haiyan left a devastating state.
In Bukidnon, Walter I. Balane of MindaNews! wrote article of
Bukidnon under warning for a Typhoon landfall last year when Vinta
was on its way. He stated that Bukidnon always had problems
whenever there is a Typhoon that will hit the area because the
location is a prone area to floods.
He also stated that the most affected are the residents that
live near the Pulangui River. He also mentioned the area received
the most warnings for flashfloods.
Rise of water landed warnings in the city’s local radios here
in Valencia, Bukidnon. The warnings informed people regarding
evacuate ions. Local radio stations broadcasted how Typhoon Vinta
would commence its landfall and cause floods to Batangan. The news
indicated how the water had reached its peak and almost overlapped
the new bridge of Batangan. Also due to the strong current the
1851 Batangan had fallen and washed out.
Pulangui River is the longest river located in the province of
Bukidnon. It is one of the major tributaries of the Rio Grande de
Mindanao, and it is the extensive river system in Mindanao,
Philippines.
It is therefore necessary to research how flashfloods affect in
our local city particularly at Barangay Batangan.
Methodology
A. Entry Protocol
We will first create a letter for us to send to the
Barangay Captain at Barangay Batangan, Valencia Bukidnon to
ask permission to interview a few people that experienced the
flood.
B. Location of the Study
The study will be conducted at Barangay Valencia City
Bukidnon. For this place is where the people affected by the
flood lines. This will make us gather information.
C. Material and Equipment
The materials needed for this research would be the
following: Phone, to be used as our recording device during
the interview. Next up would be a camera, to film the whole
interview. Next would be our research notebook where we keep
our questions and so that we wouldn’t be of track of our
questions.
D. Collection of Sample
The researchers will conduct the study to the people who
are affected by the floods. The researchers chose Barangay
Batangan Valencia City, Bukidnon. The researchers chosen that
area because they want to know how people survive those trials
and hard worship, and they want to discover why people still
live in there when their place are commonly affected by flood.
Statement of the Problem
This paper investigated the lives of the victims.
Specifically, it aims to answer the following questions.
1. What are the effects of flooding to the affected residents?
2. How do the residents affected by flood cope after the
disaster?
3. What measure/s could be made to avoid their disaster?
Objective of the Study
This paper investigates the objectives of the study for the
researcher to know the following;
1. To distinguish the location and impacts of flood to the
victims.
2. To determine the resident affected by flood cope after the
disaster.
3. To identify the measure that could be made to avoid the
disaster.
Review of Related Literature
Based on the studies of the researchers, typhoons reaching
Philippines have become stronger and more devastating. Two of the
most recent ones, Yolanda (Haiyan) and Pablo (Bopha) were
considered as category 5 storms. Jo Brianne Briones (2014) found
that during the typhoon Yolanda there are 6,201 dead recorded and
not all of them are recognized. While the injured people are 28,626
and the number of people who are still missing is 1,785. Tognasan
and Pancho (2013) found out that in typhoon Pablo there are over
6 million people who were affected and a flash floods that killed
over 400 people while there are 300 that are still missing. NDRRMC
planned to implement the cluster approach coordination mechanism
to immediately address the needs and requirements in the areas in
Mindanao. Typhoon Pablo was the most deadly storm globally in 2012,
and reportedly the most powerful to hit Southern Mindanao in more
than 100 years. According to PAG ASA, the typhoon is expected to
affect Visayas and Mindanao areas. PAGASA weather division chief
Robert Sawi said floods and landslides are possible in Surigao,
Davao, Compostela Valley, Misamis, Bukidnon, Lanao, Zamboanga,
Leyte, Cebu, Bohol, Negros, Panay and Mindoro. It was the time
where the pulangui river had reach into its highest level. It was
also announced by the officials to declare Bukidnon in a state of
calamity. Disasters happens in the Pulangui river every year.
According to Junerey Valero (2017), coordinator of the City
Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (CDRRMO) of
Valencia, told MindaNews over telephone that evacuation in 11
barangays near the Pulangi River, whose water rose to critical
level, began at 9:35 p.m. until past midnight. Among affected
barangays were Poblacion, San Isidro, Catumbalon, Batangan,
Kahaponan, and Maapag.
The Provincial DRRMO, meanwhile, noted that as of 1:30 a.m.
Thursday, they have evacuated residents to covered courts in
Barangay Lumbo, Sitio Kawayanon in Barangay Maapag, Catumbalon,
San Isidro and Puroks 1, 2, 5, 11, 12 and 13 in Barangay Poblacion.
Residents were likewise evacuated in parts of Barangay Batangan,
namely, Sitio Hinawaan, Purok 1, 1a, 3 and 4 Gwaan Compoud.
The PDRRMO could not yet provide data as to number of evacuees
as the Valencia CDRRMO personnel are still conducting evacuations
when contacted before dawn today.
In San Fernando town, an initial report from the Bukidnon
PDRRMC said seven families have been evacuated due to flooding
incident due to the nonstop rains in Barangay Halapitan. As of 11
p.m. Wednesday, 32 persons, including an unidentified number of
children, have been evacuated.
PAG ASA (2017) has continued to warn of possible flooding “in
low lying areas and near river channels and landslides over
mountainous areas” in many parts of Mindanao because of the
“tailend of a cold front.” Included in PAGASA’s “yellow warning
level” in its heavy rainfall advisory released 7 a.m. Thursday are
Surigao del Norte, Surigao del Sur, Agusan del Norte, Agusan del
Sur, Dinagat Islands, Siargao Islands, Bukidnon, Misamis Oriental,
Camiguin, Lanao del Norte, Davao Region, Compostela Valley,
Sarangani, Sultan Kudarat, South Cotbato, Zamboanga Peninsula and
Basilan. This happenings happens last January 19,2017 in Bukidnon.
Javlin Cordova(2013) said that they had been using the
platform to assess danger of flooding from rivers since they
covered typhoon Pablo last year. “So far it had been accurate and
it helped us in our work,” he added.
During the strike of super typhoon “Yolanda” and tropical
depression “Zoraida,” PDRRMC personnel took turns in virtually
monitoring water levels in Bukidnon’s river systems so they could
use it in advisories and alerts. The sharpest increase was observed
in Manuto Bridge in Quezon town from 2.59 meters at around 1:50
p.m. on Nov. 11 to 4.47 meters as of 1:30 p.m. the next day. The
bridge is near Brgy. Salawagan, where about 44 families from nearby
Brgy. Cawayan sought refuge after fleeing their homes to respond
to calls for pre-emptive evacuations. About 360 families from 7 of
Bukidnon’s 464 barangays fled when “Zoraida” made landfall at 55
kilometers per hour. Bukidnon and a number other provinces were
placed under storm signal no. 1. “Zoraida” eventually weakened and
was identified as a low pressure area (LPA) as it brought only
sporadic rains and caused the pre-emptive evacuations and
suspension of classes.
Ma. Leah Barquez and other PDRRMC personnel, nevertheless,
monitored the situation in 20 towns and two cities from reports of
local DRRMC officials and from the NOAH website.
At a section on “weather stations” and “stream gauges” the
monitor screen shows figures for the water levels of key river
systems in the province where the DOST installed reading stations.
In Malaybalay City, there were monitoring points in the
Diversion Bridge in Sumpong for Sawaga River, in Zamboanguita
Bridge in the city’s Upper Pulangi area, and in Manupali Bridge,
which is at Malaybalay’s boundary with Valencia City. In Valencia
City, the reading stations are at the Lumbayao Bridge in Brgy.
Lumbayao and in Valencia Bridge in Batangan. All three measure
water level at the Pulangi River.In northern Bukidnon, there are
water level reading stations in Kilabing Spillway and Arch Bridge
in Malitbog, Kabula and Bubunawan bridges in Baungon, and Mangima
Bridge in Manolo Fortich.
According to the Philippines Atmospheric, Geophysical, and
Astronomical Services Administration (2012), Pablo was 375 miles
in diameter and packed gusts up to 130 mph with torrential rains
on average over one inch per hour. Likewise, when Sendong made
landfall, it dumped more than a month’s worth of average rainfall
in just 12 hours, sparking flash floods in the middle of the night
and trapping hundreds of thousands of residents. In relation to 40
years of meteorological records, Mindanao has not experienced such
storms, heavy rainfall, and landslides since Typhoon Titang hit
back in 1970.
According to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Council (2012), as of December 18, the death toll from
Pablo had reached 1,046 people with 841 still missing, and damages
to agriculture reaching $398 million, infrastructure $190.4
million, and private property $1.2 million.
Some blame the high death toll and Mindanao’s extreme
vulnerability to such strong storms, floods, and landslides on the
unabated illegal logging and mining operations in the area.
However, there isn’t much scientific evidence from past flood
tragedies to confirm this theory. The Society of Filipino Foresters
issued a statement earlier this year referencing past typhoons
Ondoy (2009) and Sendong (2011) and recognizing the fact that
“forests can help minimize but cannot totally prevent the
occurrence of floods” and that massive floods are more a result of
weak infrastructure and the ever increasing amount of moisture in
the atmosphere.
Although deforestation and environmental degradation play a
role in amplifying the destruction that occurs during such extreme
weather events, climate change is more to blame for directly
affecting the severity of flooding endured than the cut logs and
debris that clog waterways and lead to overflowing river banks. In
the same sense, weak disaster preparedness and disaster risk
management plans are also partly to blame for the large number of
lives lost in natural disasters and for continuing to allow
populations to live in geo-hazardous areas.
As The Asia Foundation’s country representative in the
Philippines, Steven Rood, further explains: “The only time I saw
a serious examination of the issue of illegal logging and mining
causing more severe floods was more than a decade ago with respect
to Ormoc City and the Typhoon Uring flooding tragedy that happened
down in the Visayas in 1991 (in a JICA-funded flood mitigation
control study). The data were clear – there was simply too much
rain for any ecosystem to absorb, and too many people living along
the river banks in danger zones. That there were logs washed down
is undeniable, but this had nothing to do with the extent of the
flood and little to do with the damages.”
According to IPCC (2012), as average global temperatures
rise, the warmer atmosphere can also hold more moisture, about 4
percent more per degree Fahrenheit temperature increase. The
atmosphere’s water vapor content has increased by about 0.41
kilograms per square meter (kg/m²) per decade since 1988. A warmer
atmosphere leads to more evaporation of ocean water, meaning that
each tropical storm that forms has more potential water to pull
from and therefore drench in its wake. The citizens of the
communities in Southern Mindanao, especially along the coastal
towns of Compostela Valley and Davao de Sur provinces who were the
first to be hit by Pablo, had never before experienced that kind
of typhoon in their whole lives.
Storms are becoming stronger, weather patterns are changing,
and, frighteningly, this is becoming the “new normal.” Given the
fact that Manila was recently rated the second most vulnerable
city in the world to climate change for 2013 (only behind Dhaka,
Bangladesh), there is great merit given to efforts that can build
the resiliency of communities to withstand such extreme weather
events in the future. In the aftermath of Typhoon Ondoy in 2009,
both local and international NGOs began lobbying for a national
disaster management plan, which was eventually passed the
following year and known as the Philippine Disaster Risk Reduction
Management Act of 2010. The new law illustrates a shift in the
response of local authorities toward disaster risk reduction,
rather than solely relying on response and relief.
Technical assistance is available, such as AusAID’s support
to an aerial survey of metro Manila to generate a three-
dimensional, geo-hazard map of the metropolis. In 2012, USAID/OFDA
provided over $4.1 million for disaster risk reduction activities,
mainly in the areas of food security and to improve local
humanitarian coordination in the Philippines. These sort of
climate change adaptation strategies are working. After Pablo,
engineer Armen A Cuenca, the deputy in charge of Cagayan de Oro’s
disaster risk reduction management office, said that “early
warning alert systems and pre-planned shelters this year were one
of the reasons there were zero casualties in the city, which has
a population of around 700,000.” Preparedness remains the key to
resilience. Extreme weather events, such as typhoons, droughts,
floods, also have influential human capital investment impacts.
Anttila-Hughes & Hsiang (2013) documented the economic impacts of
typhoon Pablo for Filipino households. Income loss a year after
typhoon exposure was matched with a reduction of household
expenditures, which decreased by 7.1% for the average Filipino
household in the average year. This reduction in expenditures
occurred mostly in human capital investments, such as medicine,
education, and high nutrient foods. All of the affected investments
are particularly important for the healthy development of young
children. Household health outcomes were examined using infant
mortality and it was found that typhoons cause infant mortality to
rise one year after a typhoon and that a majority of these infant
deaths are female. These negative household health outcomes,
especially for female infants, coupled with the reductions in human
investments suggests that the negative economic impacts from
typhoons are causing households to allocate human capital
resources differently among children following a typhoon in the
Philippines. Similarly, Baez and Santos (2007) found that natural
disasters have a large and negative effect on children’s
nutritional status. Specifically, children were twice as likely to
be undernourished due to being exposed to a hurricane. On the other
hand, there is some evidence that suggests that families can
maintain a critical level of health investments for children by
shifting spending away from other goods or investments. After
examining evidence from a Super Typhoon that hit the Filipino
island of Cebu, Deuchert and Felfe (2013) found no decline in
objective or subjective health investments for children; affected
human capital investments pertained more towards decreases in
education.
Definition of Terms
Flood
- A rising and overflowing of a body of water especially unto
normally dry land.
Typhoon
- An extremely large hurricane that is powerful and
destructive storm.
River
- A large natural flow of water that crosses an area of land
and goes into an ocean, a lake, etc.
Horrendous
- Very bad or unpleasant
Tributaries
- Paying tribute to another to acknowledge submission to
obtain protection or to purchase peace.
Calamity
- An event that causes great harm and suffering.
Precipitation
- Water that falls to the ground as rain, snow, etc.
- The quality of state of being precipitate.
Mitigate
- To make (something) less severe, harmful, or painful.
- To cause to become less harsh or hostile.
Massive
- Very large and heavy
Vegetation
- Plants that cover a particular area
Significance of the Study
This study would help the residents in disaster preparednes.
To help the resident be more alert in times when the water has
slowly risen. Upon being prepared of what will happen, this will
also help our fellow students avoid absenteeism in school, where
as the families would not be worried. It will also give the idea
how to avoid casualties, or at least lessen them. This will also
give our rescuers, maybe even the victims, a quick emergency
response once a warning has been sent out. In conclusion, it will
be beneficial to the residents living there for it gives more
knowledge on the disasters that will happen again.
Scope and Delimitations of the Study
The researcher will conduct this study in Barangay Batangan,
Valencia City, Bukidnon. Our study will be conducted within a week.
The researcher will start conducting at exactly 9:00 o’clock in
the morning until 5:00 o’clock in the afternoon. The researchers
will interview 5 people only and will focus on one very interesting
story. The study will not go beyond Barangay Batangan. It will be
conducted only in that area. This will help the researchers gather
the information and experiences of the victims living there.