Powered By Blogger
Showing posts with label Flood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flood. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2009

3 cities in North Luzon still paralyzed by floods


























A total of 41 areas - 38 towns and three cities - in the Ilocos Region remain flooded as of Sunday night, the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) said Monday.



In its 6 a.m. report, the NDCC said that still flooded are 23 towns and three cities in Pangasinan; nine towns in La Union; one in Ilocos Sur; and five in Ilocos Norte.

The NDCC said tropical cyclone "Pepeng" (Parma), which entered the country as a typhoon and subsequently weakened into a tropical depression, affected at least 521,531 families or 2,414,108 people in 3,929 villages in 351 towns and 34 cities in 27 provinces in Luzon, Western Visayas, Cordillera, and Metro Manila.

On the other hand, the death toll stayed at 199, including 53 from the Ilocos Region, 137 from Cordillera, four from Central Luzon, one from Quezon province, and four from Bicol.

Around 154 were injured while 50 remained missing.

The casualty figures, however, exclude those from tropical storm "Ondoy" (Ketsana).

The NDCC said some 2,968 houses were destroyed while 22,857 were damaged.

Damage to property was estimated at P5.083 billion, including P1.09 billion in infrastructure and P3.991 billion in agriculture.


It also said that 56 road sections and nine bridges in Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, La Union, and Pangasinan remained impassable or hardly passable due to landslides and mudslides.

source

Saturday, October 10, 2009

floods toy with rubber boats, delay rescues

DAGUPAN, Pangasinan – The streets in this province have become turbulent rivers tossing around rescue boats like they were bathtub toys, preventing access to untold numbers waiting to be saved. “Malakas kasi ang alon kaya hirap na hirap sila (The strong currents make it difficult for them)," provincial administrator Rafael Baraan told GMANews.TV, referring to the rescue teams in rubber boats trying to reach flooded communities. Five people have been confirmed dead in Pangasinan, but the number is expected to rise once the rain stops and the floods ebb, leaving victims in their wake. “The total picture will probably start to unfold tomorrow," Baraan said on Friday.The five bodies were retrieved in Sison town, according to Baraan, adding that their identities and causes of death could not yet be determined.Baraan said the hardest-hit areas, which include the towns of Villasis, Rosales, Calasiao, Sta. Barbara and San Fabian, are in dire need of rescue and evacuation. About 60 percent of the province has been reported to be underwater. As of Friday night, nearly 30,000 people in 36 towns and cities have been affected by Pepeng in the whole of the province. The release of water from San Roque Dam has combined with the rainfall to cause the worst floods here in the memory of many old-timners. In Dagupan City, where floodwaters are waist-deep, many residents remain in their homes despite orders to evacuate to higher ground. Among them is 54-year-old Jose Caguia, father of seven, who continues to stay with his wife in their flooded house in Brgy. Lucao.“(‘Yung) mga gamit e, tinitingnan namin (We’re looking after our things)," Jose said when asked why he refuses to be evacuated. Hunger may finally drive him out, since they may be out of food by Saturday. He may not have to go far. Residents have been catching bangus in the flood waters ever since the storm ruined fish pens and released the food fish, one of Pangasinan's leading products, into the rivers running through the streets.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Flooded Area in Luzon

Several villages from other provinces in northern and even central Luzon were flooded too, according to NDCC in its 6 p.m. report.

NDCC said floods also affected at least seven villages in Ilocos Norte and six in La Union.

Likewise flooded were Baliwag and Calumpit towns in Bulacan; Sta. Ana town in Pampanga; and Botolan town in Zambales.

Evacuation centers in the provinces of Apayao, Abra, Kalinga, Baguio City and Benguet were reopened Wednesday night.

Preemptive evacuation is ongoing in Nueva Ecija's Gapan and Cabanatuan cities; Licab, Zaragoza, Rizal, Quezon, Aliaga and San Isidro towns, all of which are near the Pantabangan Dam. Also reported as heavily flooded were Sto. Domingo and Cuyapo towns.

The Pantabangan Dam is only .49 meters short of reaching its spilling level, Gov. Aurelio Umali said in a radio interview. He said 98 out of 849 villages in the province are already submerged in floodwaters.

In Pampanga, evacuation is ongoing in towns near the Pampanga River Basin, including Candaba, Arayat, San Simon, Apalit and Santo Tomas, the NDCC report said.– with Aie Balagtas See and Andreo Calonzo,


Source:
GMANews.TV

Flooding in North Luzon is 'turning from bad to worse'

LINGAYEN, Pangasinan - Up to 30 of Pangasinan province’s 48 towns and cities are now flooded and 30,000 people have been evacuated due to continuous rains and near-overflowing dams brought by Typhoon “Pepeng," Governor Amado Espino said early Friday morning.

The National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) said floods were also reported in Dingras, Nueva Era and Paoay towns in Ilocos Norte; Bangar and Luna in La Union; and at least 10 cities and towns in Nueva Ecija.

Among those areas in Pangasinan so far affected by floods are Asingan, Balungao, Basista, Bautista, Bayambang, Binalonan, Sta. Barbara, Dagupan City, Mangaldan, Natividad, Rosales, San Fabian, San Jacinto, San Manuel, San Quintin, Sta. Maria, Manaoag, Mapandan, Pozorrubio, Sison, Tayug, Umingan, and Villasis.

In an interview over radio dzBB, Gov. Espino said rescue operations have already been launched in some of these areas.

Aside from the nonstop downpour, floods in the province have been aggravated by the opening of six San Roque Dam floodgates to release water and thus prevent the reservoir water from breaching its walls and threatening a catastrophic collapse.

As of 2 a.m. Friday, PAGASA's Dam Status webpage announced that all of San Roque dam's six gates were open at a combined 27 meters height and pouring water into downstream Agno river at the rate of 5,353 cubic meters per second.

Earlier Thursday night, Pangasinan public information officer Butch Velasco told radio dzBB in an interview that San Roque Dam was releasing an “unprecedented" amount of water of 6,000 cubic meters per second from 3000 cubic meters per second at 7 p.m.

‘It’s really unprecedented this kind of volume of water. Ngayon lang nangyayari sa history ng Pangasinan (It's happening only now, in Pangasinan's history)," he said.

A still earlier report from the Pangasinan governor's office put the San Roque water-release figure at 3,150 cubic meters of water per second.

Other dams that have been releasing water in the last few days include Angat, Pantabangan, Ambuklao, Magat, and Binga dams.

Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Edgard Arevalo said in a radio interview with dzBB that he was informed by Commodore Jose Luis Alano, head of the Naval Forces in Northern Luzon, that the flood situation in northern Luzon has begun “turning from bad to worsse."

Popular Posts