10/14/2009

Estrada: ‘Yes, I will run’




Agence France-Presse
First Posted 13:50:00 10/14/2009
source: Inquirer.net

MANILA, Philippines—Former president Joseph Estrada, ousted in a popular uprising in 2001 and later convicted of graft, said on Wednesday he would run again for president in next year's elections.

"Yes, I will run," Estrada, 72, told Agence France-Presse, when asked to confirm press reports of his decision.

The former movie action star said he had chosen Makati Mayor Jejomar Binay as his vice presidential candidate.

Estrada said he would make a formal announcement of his decision at the Sto. Nino church in the impoverished Manila district of Tondo on Wednesday next week.

Tondo was the setting of many of his past movies, in which he gained massive national popularity by playing tough guy roles as defenders of the poor and downtrodden.

Estrada represents the United Opposition, a coalition of two influential parties that have been critical of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's rule. Binay is UNO’s chairman.

However there are two strong opposition contenders representing other parties in next year's elections: Senator Benigno Aquino III, the son of the late democracy icon Corazon Aquino, and billionaire property developer Senator Manuel Villar.

Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro will represent Arroyo's ruling Lakas-Kampi-CMD coalition.

Estrada said he was confident of victory in the May 2010 polls.

"I will not run for the presidency if I'm not sure I'll win," he said.

Estrada said his edge would be his experience, having climbed the political ladder first as a town mayor, a senator and a vice president before a landslide victory as the country's 13th president in 1998.

Estrada's term, however, was cut short by a military-backed popular revolt in 2001, amid accusations he amassed wealth from illegal gambling kickbacks and shady deals amounting to about 80 million dollars.

He was convicted of large-scale graft and sentenced to life in jail in 2007.

But Arroyo, who played a key role in deposing him when she served as his vice president, pardoned him six weeks later.

Estrada: ‘Yes, I will run’




Agence France-Presse
First Posted 13:50:00 10/14/2009
source: Inquirer.net

MANILA, Philippines—Former president Joseph Estrada, ousted in a popular uprising in 2001 and later convicted of graft, said on Wednesday he would run again for president in next year's elections.

"Yes, I will run," Estrada, 72, told Agence France-Presse, when asked to confirm press reports of his decision.

The former movie action star said he had chosen Makati Mayor Jejomar Binay as his vice presidential candidate.

Estrada said he would make a formal announcement of his decision at the Sto. Nino church in the impoverished Manila district of Tondo on Wednesday next week.

Tondo was the setting of many of his past movies, in which he gained massive national popularity by playing tough guy roles as defenders of the poor and downtrodden.

Estrada represents the United Opposition, a coalition of two influential parties that have been critical of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's rule. Binay is UNO’s chairman.

However there are two strong opposition contenders representing other parties in next year's elections: Senator Benigno Aquino III, the son of the late democracy icon Corazon Aquino, and billionaire property developer Senator Manuel Villar.

Defense Secretary Gilberto Teodoro will represent Arroyo's ruling Lakas-Kampi-CMD coalition.

Estrada said he was confident of victory in the May 2010 polls.

"I will not run for the presidency if I'm not sure I'll win," he said.

Estrada said his edge would be his experience, having climbed the political ladder first as a town mayor, a senator and a vice president before a landslide victory as the country's 13th president in 1998.

Estrada's term, however, was cut short by a military-backed popular revolt in 2001, amid accusations he amassed wealth from illegal gambling kickbacks and shady deals amounting to about 80 million dollars.

He was convicted of large-scale graft and sentenced to life in jail in 2007.

But Arroyo, who played a key role in deposing him when she served as his vice president, pardoned him six weeks later.

Ignoring peril puts RP economy at risk—UNDP

Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 07:08:00 10/14/2009

PARO, BHUTAN — The Philippines will immediately lose the economic gains it has made if it ignores disaster preparedness and management, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) said Tuesday.

“Climate change is going to be a huge issue as well as the frequency of disasters in the Philippines,” said Ajay Chhibber, director of UNDP Asia and the Pacific, as he expressed concern about the devastation that “Ondoy” and “Pepeng” brought to the country.

“More resilience need to be built” in the Philippines, he said.

Chhibber said the country “has made very good economic progress” despite the global economic crisis.

But with the recent calamities, he cautioned that “many people have just escaped poverty and one disaster could throw them back. This is where I think more should be done.”

The UNDP official addressed a four-day conference on democracy organized by the UNDP and the Bhutan government which gathered some 200 delegates from all over Asia.

Bhutan, the landlocked Himalayan kingdom wedged between the politically dominant countries of China and India, has entered a new era of democracy, starting with its first national parliamentary elections which was completed in March 2008. King Jigme Singye Wangchuck ratified Bhutan’s first Constitution in July 2008.

Though it is still taking baby steps toward democracy, Bhutan can serve as a “role model” even for older democracies like the Philippines, especially in how the small nation is preserving nature. Edson C. Tandoc Jr

10/13/2009

Mindanao ships 75 tons of bananas to Luzon for typhoon victims
By Riza T. Olchondra
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 18:26:00 10/13/2009


MANILA, Philippines—Members of the Pilipino Banana Growers and Exporters Association based in Mindanao shipped 75 tons of bananas as food relief for typhoon victims in Metro Manila and nearby provinces.

PBGEA member Betty Francia said in a phone interview that 7,500 boxes of bananas (at 10 kilos per box) were shipped to Luzon in two batches.

PBGEA earlier said in a statement that members Tagum Agricultural Development Company, Inc., Sumifru, Lapanday Foods, F.S. Dizon and Sons, AM Soriano group, Marsman-Drysdale and Unifrutti donated the bananas.

A total of eight 20-footer container vans and 14 10-footer vans had arrived in Manila as of the weekend with the help of Solid Shipping Lines Corp. and Aboitiz Transport System Corp.

The shipments were endorsed to the Department of Social Welfare and Development, which will repack and distribute the fruit to typhoon victims.

PBGEA said its members decided to ship export-quality bananas in response to reports that evacuation centers lack fresh food for ready eating.

Reports have said the centers are so saturated with instant noodles that evacuees say it's "coming out of their ears."

Fruits and vegetables may also be harder to come by in wet markets supplying evacuation centers as high value crops from Central and Northern Luzon were lost to floods or cannot be immediately delivered due to landslides in major roads.

"Even relief workers can benefit from the energy-boosting fruit. Athletes are known to consume bananas when they are competing to boost their energy levels. Bananas consist mainly of sugars and fiber, which makes them ideal for an immediate and slightly prolonged source of energy," PBGEA said.

UN exec to RP: Build, plan for disasters

Standing water in Pasig worries UN official

By Veronica Uy
INQUIRER.net
First Posted 12:54:00 10/13/2009

MANILA, Philippines – Countries vulnerable to the harsh effects of climate change like the Philippines need to build and plan for disasters as the weather events become “more extreme” and “more intense,” United Nations Undersecretary General John Holmes said Tuesday.

But in Pasig City, which he visited Monday, Holmes said he was most struck by the standing water that was expected to remain there in the next two months or more. He expressed concern for the people who have stayed on in their houses trying to go on with their lives, wading in these waters and being exposed to various diseases.

The government, he said, “should look for ways to get rid of the standing water.”

At a press conference Tuesday, Holmes said “chronic vulnerability [in many parts of the world] has not gone away,” and the consequences of climate change in the coming years were expected to worsen that vulnerability. And with the global economic meltdown, international humanitarian aid may not be as generous in the coming years.

That’s why, he said, countries vulnerable to climate change effects needed to adopt measures, allocate funding, and initiate technology transfers to reduce the risks of disasters that were the sure effects of climate change.

“We cannot stop disasters, but we can reduce the impact if we take measures in advance like not build on flood-prone areas, implement the right kind of water management, build houses and schools that can withstand floods and earthquakes,” he said.

“Governments can make good investments. These do not cost much compared to responses after disasters that are more expensive,” he added.

Holmes said that $12 billion were spent globally every year in response to disasters, and he expected the amount to increase because of global warming.

The UN official, who is in the country to see for himself the effects of the storm “Ondoy” (international name: Ketsana) and typhoon “Pepeng” (international name: Parma), said the UN was likely to revise its flash appeal to the international community for the Philippines in the next two to three weeks after finishing the assessment of the destruction in northern Luzon caused by Pepeng.

At the same time, Holmes also said he was impressed by the Philippine government’s response to the twin disasters, particularly its “speed” and “effectiveness.”

He said the UN system adopted precautions against possible corruption in the distribution of relief goods and aid, including working with UN agencies and other non-government organizations in the country.

“The help goes straight to the people. They either survive or not. The effects are very visible. The risk of diversion or corruption is lower in relief operations than in other kinds of aid. It’s not usually a major problem. The concern is always there but the effects of the relief are immediately seen,” he said.

Of the $74 million targeted for Ondoy operations, the UN has received $19 million worth of commitments from the international community. Outside the UN flash appeal, $25 million more were given directly either to the government or non-government organizations.

10/12/2009

Morning Banana Diet Rules

Every diet has rules. If a diet works for you, it’s simply because the rules have had the effect of making you eat less food (nothwithstanding whatever magical claims a diet may make). Diet rules generally do this by making eating a little harder or less convenient, through restricting when or what you can eat. Throw in a little “scientific theory” for motivation, and you have a diet. And remember, no diet works for everybody. So what are the Morning Banana Diet rules? Here’s a synopsis collected from various sources:

If you are a health reporter, dietitian or blogger intending to write about the diet, please read this page carefully and also check out this blog post before you write a kneejerk “just another fad diet” article. Thanks!

Eat a banana for breakfast

  • You can eat more than one, and in fact the inventor of the diet often ate four (smallish Philippines) bananas in the morning, but don’t stuff yourself to the point of fullness or discomfort.
  • Eat only raw, uncooked, unfrozen bananas.
  • Other fruit may be substituted.
  • If other fruit is substituted, some variants require it be restricted to one type of fruit per meal.
  • If you are still hungry 15 or 30 minutes after your banana, you can eat other food (the Japanese inventor of the original Asa Banana Diet sometimes ate a rice ball two and a half hours later, about 200 calories worth; Morning Banana forum members have suggested oatmeal, although it’s not as portable as a rice ball).

Eat normally for lunch and dinner

  • Dinner must be eaten by 8 p.m. at the latest (6 p.m. is better).
  • There are no explicit limits on the types of food you can eat for lunch and dinner, or the amount. But in practice dieters report on Mixi that they try to cut the amount of rice they eat and find substitutions for fried foods. As with many diets, the mere fact you have decided to go on a diet tends to make you more aware of what and how much you are are eating and how healthy it is. The diet avoids strict food rules to prevent a sense of deprivation.
  • However, you should not eat a dessert with dinner or any of your meals; you’ll need to satisfy your sweet tooth during a snack, but we’ll get to that later.
  • At all meals you should eat only until you’re satisfied but not full or stuffed. The Japanese have a proverb, Hara hachibu ni isha irazu, “A stomach eight-tenths full needs no doctor.” American dietitians define this level of fullness or satiety as a 7 on a 1-to-10 “hunger scale,” and they teach their clients to recognize this feeling.

Drink only water

  • The only beverage allowed at most meals is water, preferably mineral or filtered.
  • The water must be at room temperature, not chilled or hot.
  • The water should be drunk in small sips and not used to wash down food.
  • There is no quota of water to drink, and you should not drink it in excess.
  • Outside of meals non-caloric beverages like tea, coffee, and diet soda are generally allowed but somewhat frowned upon, and in general water is encouraged as much as possible; frequent consumption of milk products is discouraged.
  • On social occasions you may drink beer or wine.

Eat your food mindfully

  • Chew your banana and other food thorouoghly and be mindful of its taste.

You may eat an afternoon snack

  • A sweet snack of chocolate, cookies, or the like is allowed at about 3 p.m.
  • Ice cream, a donut, or potato chips are not recommended.
  • Some substitute fresh fruit for their snack, but if you want sweets you should not deny yourself.
  • Some Japanese who like salty snacks eat salted konbu (seaweed) snacks and some Japanese who are very hungry in the afternoon substitute a filling, fist-sized rice ball for sweets.
  • A good alternative if a salty or more filling snack is needed is popcorn according to Morning Banana forum members, but watch out for excessive fat content.
  • If you are hungry after dinner, you may have a second snack of fresh fruit, but this should not be a habit.

Early to bed

  • Go to bed by midnight. If you can manage to go to bed earlier, all the better.
  • Try to aim for a four-hour period between your last meal or snack and bedtime (which is why 8:00 p.m. is the latest you should eat dinner).

Exercise only if you want to

  • Put no pressure on yourself to exercise.
  • If you want to exercise, go ahead: the test is to do what puts the least stress on you.
  • But try to get some walking in every day if possible (but again, don’t force yourself if it stresses you out).
  • If you want a traditional Japanese light workout, consider taking up the kendama.

Keep a diet journal

  • Because the original Japanese banana diet was developed on the internet, many successful Japanese dieters naturally documented their daily food intake and progress online via blogs, forums, or social networking services, and they felt this gave them extra support (we have prepared a Morning Banana Diet Forum with individual food blogs for your use).
  • Because of the diet’s emphasis on digestive processes, some Morning Banana Diet journalers record a bit “too much information” — so remaining anonymous may be advisable.
Source: Morning Banana

10/09/2009

"The Ugly Truth"

Lets put an end on pointing fingers, Who's fault it is? As Filipinos endure the unwanted flooding inside their house doors brought by Typhoon Ondy & Pepeng. My countrymen, admit or not. It is our fault. lahat tayo, mapa artista, politika, negosyante, empleyado, walang trabaho, mga taong umaasa lang sa gobyerno ang may kasalanan. Ngayon natukoy na naten kung sino ang may kasalanan, tama na ang turuan. mentras na gawan na lang ng solusyon eh kanya kanyang hugas kamay at turuan.

What we need right now is to create possible solutions to eventually prevent another of this disaster to happen ever again in the Philippines. We all need to collaborate. We will never know when this kind of disaster will struck us again. (How I wish it will wont)
‘An inconvenient truth: Time to elect green president’
By Philip Tubeza
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 05:52:00 10/09/2009

MANILA, Philippines — Wanted: a green president who will address an inconvenient truth.

Filipinos should learn their lesson from the recent disastrous flooding and vote for someone who is “truly in favor of environmental protection” in the May 2010 presidential election, former President Fidel Ramos said Thursday.

Warning that the country faced far worse effects of climate change, Ramos told an eco-tourism conference in Makati City that voters should choose someone knowledgeable about sustainable development—or economic development that does not destroy the environment.

“Who are we going to vote for in 2010? Don’t ask me. It’s too early. But certainly, we should vote for someone, from the top to the local positions, who is truly, and indeed truly, in favor of environmental protection and sustainable development,” Ramos said.

“That is the challenge for all of us Filipinos,” he told the audience that included diplomats, former Cabinet secretaries and business leaders.

With the ravages of Tropical Storm “Ondoy” (international codename: Ketsana) and Typhoon “Pepeng” (Parma), Ramos said he expected “sustainable development” to be one of the key issues in the coming elections.

“The world has gained so much insight about global warming, the environment’s limited carrying capacity, and our own people’s unpreparedness even as our country gears up for elections in 2010, when sustainable development will be a key issue,” Ramos said.
To emphasize his zeal for the environment, the former President urged Filipinos to “wear something green” every day. He then pulled up his barong Tagalog to show a green golf shirt underneath.

Nation at crossroads

“The task at hand is urgent and imperative. We stand at the crossroads where as a nation we have to make important choices in order to create a better future for the next generation of Filipinos,” Ramos said.

“We all have stories to tell about how Tropical Storm ‘Ondoy’ and Typhoon ‘Pepeng’ affected our lives and our properties. We all know someone who was caught in the flood and we also know someone else who heroically helped strangers survive and overcome,” he said.

“While we speak, massive rehab operations continue to be undertaken in Metro Manila and northern Luzon to return hundreds of thousands of victims back to normalcy,” Ramos added.

Environmentalist Jose Ma. Lorenzo “Lori” Tan of the World Wide Fund for Nature-Philippines repeated warnings former US Vice President Al Gore outlined in his documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” and ticked off the possible effects of global warming in the Philippines.

‘Bora will split in 2’

“Tropical cyclones are expected to become more intense (and) we’re seeing this already. Climate changes are happening faster than ever before. They have begun and will continue,” Tan said.

He showed a simulation of what would happen to areas in the Philippines if sea water levels rise by 12 meters due to the melting of the polar ice caps.

It shows cities like Laoag, Davao, Aparri, Pagadian, Zamboanga, Cebu, Tacloban hit by flooding if sea water levels rise by 12 meters along with more than half of Metro Manila with Manila Bay spilling into Central Luzon.

“Central Luzon is a floodplain and the waters could hit up to Gapan ... Boracay will be split in two and we’re also going to lose Caticlan,” Tan said, referring to the resort’s airport.

Around one billion people around the world in the next 40 to 50 years will be forced to migrate if climate change worsens, he said. Of this number, 400 million will be from Asia, with 15 million coming from the Philippines.

“Forced migration suddenly becomes very real. Globally, a billion people internally displaced by climate change,” Tan said, adding that the government should prepare for all of these.

Review land use plans

At a similar forum at the Ateneo School of Government on Tuesday by the Philippine Institute of Environmental Planners, green activists said that the next president should review land use plans of Metro Manila.

Liza Pulumbarit, the institute president, said that these plans include recommendations for flooding in the Marikina Valley, decongestion of the metropolis and regional development.

“The plans are already there dating to 20 to 30 years back. There would be a need for the new leadership to look at this plans again and see what we can pick up,” Pulumbarit told the Inquirer. “For all we know, they might have been overtaken by certain events.”

Urban planner Nathaniel Von Einsiedel said that a 10-year master plan was drawn in 1975 to mitigate the floods in the Marikina Valley. Einsiedel said that some recommendations, like the construction of the Manggahan floodway and the Napindan station, were followed.

But other items like the construction of a Marikina Dam and the ParaƱaque spillway were shelved for being “too expensive.” With a report from Alcuin Papa

10/06/2009

And more of pointing fingers:

Muntinlupa mayor hits Atienza for flood blame
By Marlon Ramos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 09:29:00 10/06/2009

MANILA, Philippines—Muntinlupa City Mayor Aldrin San Pedro on Monday assailed Secretary Lito Atienza of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) for blaming fish cages in Laguna de Bay for the massive flooding in Metro Manila.

San Pedro said the government should instead look into the mushrooming of private subdivisions authorized by Atienza’s department.

“What agency gave the ECC (environmental compliance certificates) to these real estate companies to develop subdivisions? It’s the DENR,” San Pedro said.

“Many of our fishermen already lost their livelihood because of the swelling of the lake. Blaming them for the floods is just adding insult to injury,” he added.

“If you noticed, the water which came down from Marikina and Rizal towns were muddy. That’s because the trees in upland areas were cut down and the roads were cemented,” he said.

Santiago asks: Where’s Secretary Puno?
By Tarra Quismundo, Christine AvendaƱo
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 08:58:00 10/06/2009

MANILA, Philippines—Where is Interior Secretary Ronaldo Puno?

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago wants to know since, she said, Puno was noticeably absent during the height of Tropical Storm “Ondoy’s” onslaught of the metropolis the other week.

“I want to know where he was during the flood,” said Santiago yesterday, adding that she heard he was abroad “ostensibly because his wife is ill.”

In a text message to the Inquirer, Interior Assistant Secretary Brian Yamsuan said Puno was in Virginia in the United States because his wife Pinky was undergoing major surgery.

Puno will be back in the country on Oct. 12, Yamsuan said.

Santiago made the remark when she was asked if she thought Puno should be held liable along with some mayors for the poor response to the calamity caused by the successive storms to hit Metro Manila.

Santiago said Puno apparently did not get President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s permission to leave the country since the latter herself had asked during a televised briefing last week who had given the DILG secretary the authority to travel abroad at a time of calamity.

10/05/2009

FOR CONTRIBUTING TO ONDOY FLOODS
Jail mayors violating waste laws—DENR chief

INQUIRER.net
First Posted 11:53:00 10/05/2009

MANILA, Philippines — Local officials who do not comply with proper solid waste management laws should be imprisoned for the devastation their neglect caused in the flooding last week, Environment Secretary Lito Atienza said at a hearing in the Senate on Monday.

“We have to put some mayors in jail,” Atienza told the Senate committee on climate change as he expressed dismay over the low compliance of local officials to the ecological solid waste management law which he said contributed to the destruction caused by storm “Ondoy.”

Technically and legally, Atienza said, no local government unit should be allowed to operate an open dump site.

But today, he said, there are still 700 open dumpsites operating in the country, including one very near Laguna de Bay.

“So all of these are contributory to the calamity that we have experienced and we just have to be filing cases and putting some people to jail if you ask me,” Atienza said.

He said there has been low compliance with the law since its implementation in January 2001.

“We started from a measly 5.7 percent compliance. Now, we are on a 13.1-percent compliance. Legally, as you have prescribed it in the law, each barangay (village) must have an MRF—materials reduction facility,” he said.

“Right now, only about 13 percent of them have this kind of facility put up. So we have just been overtaken by the calamity. The process started but as I said, sadly and tragically, we’ve been overtaken by what has been impending all these time,” he said.

Senator Loren Legarda, who chairs the committee, said there should be a shame list of those who cannot even manage their garbage.

Maila Ager
Read on, This is quite alarming. All the while we thought Dams release water at the time Typhoon is hitting on Central Luzon.
===========================

SAYS WEATHER BUREAU EXEC

No water release from dams in Ondoy floods


INQUIRER.net
First Posted 10:58:00 10/05/2009

Filed Under: Congress, Disasters (general), Flood, Ondoy

MANILA, Philippines—The flooding in low-lying areas in Metro Manila and nearby provinces at the height of tropical storm Ondoy was caused by excessive rainfall and not by the release of water from the Angat and Ipo dams, the chief of the state-owned weather bureau said.

Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) Administrator Nilo Prisco, told the Senate committee on climate change: “In as far as the flooding in Metro Manila is concerned, there’s no contribution from Ipo or Angat dam.”

Aside from excessive rainfall, Prisco said the heavy flooding was caused by “waterways that do not have the capacity to carry such volume of water.”

Even if the waterways were not clogged, he said, the city would still experience flooding because there was just too much water.

“But if the waterways are not clogged or have not been reduced in terms of capacity to carry water, the water would have subsided much faster,” he further said.

Prisco also said the country does not yet have Doppler radars to measure the volume of the rainfall although it has weather satellite information which can describe whether the rain is going to be heavy, moderate, or light.

He told the Senate committee that the agency has already purchased five Doppler radars but they were still being manufactured. He is asking for additional funding to purchase two more.

Also present at the hearing by the Senate committee on climate change headed by Senator Loren Legarda were Defense Undersecretary Ernesto Carolina, Office of Civil Defense chief Brigadier General Glenn Rabonza, Environment Secretary Lito Atienza, and other experts.
Maila Ager

10/03/2009

DepEd reiterates resumption of classes on Monday
By Vernadette Joven (philstar.com) Updated October 03, 2009 12:03 PM

MANILA, Philippines – The Department of Education (DepEd) reiterated today during the national disaster meeting today led by President Arroyo that classes will resume on Monday (Oct. 5) as evacuees staying in various public schools will be transferred to gymnasiums and bigger venues.

“Those that can be consolidated into other buildings will be done so that classes can be started. Also, we will utilize all covered courts and any available space for classroom instruction in the meantime,” said Education Secretary Jesli Lapus.

“In general classes will resume on Monday but there will be several exceptions, those being used as evacuation centers and are still inaccessible. Of course local government could still continue suspension if they feel localized suspension is necessary,” he clarified.

The education secretary also reported that the department will be implementing emergency measures to address the reduction in the number of classrooms. “We need to observe two shifts, conduct Saturday classes, do away with the semester break that is scheduled for the last week of this month and adapt modular instructions for home studies,” Lapus noted.


No photo Lessons from the deluge
CITY SENSE By Paulo Alcazaren (The Philippine Star) Updated October 03, 2009 12:00 AM

Photo is loading...
There are key factors that led to the Ondoy disaster: the blockage of the storm lines leading to the floodways, the uncontrolled and uncoordinated urban development, and the presence of informal settlers.
| Zoom

One day it’s bright and sunny, the next day torrential rains inundate districts east and northeast of the city center. The 24-hour rainfall recorded reached 366 mm. There was some low flooding, but by the next day, the city was back to normal. Traffic flowed regularly and public works teams were clearing debris from localized areas. The flooding that remained in a few areas totally subsided within another day. No fatalities were reported

Obviously this was not Metro Manila. The city was Singapore, in an event that happened in December 2006. That was not their highest rainfall record and the city is hit with high rainfall a few times a year in fact. I should know, since I lived there for 12 years. Their highest recorded rainfall beats ours at 467 mm. in 1969. When that happened, central Singapore, in the Bukit Timak area, and even parts of Orchard Road were flooded.

Singapore Success

Immediately after, the Singapore government set out to rationalize its drainage and flood control system to make sure that the problem was addressed. Their main river was cleaned within a decade and a citywide drainage system was completed a little after that. It must be noted that in the late ’60s and early ’70s, the Philippines was economically ahead of Singapore, which had just separated from Malaya and was hit also by the setback of the withdrawal of the British’s military base. Yet, they saw the importance of comprehensive planning and infrastructure development.

One of the things I noted when I first started working on land development projects in Singapore (and to a great extent, too, in Malaysia, which is also subject to torrential monsoon rains) was their paranoia of storm water; hence, the preponderance of drains, open canals, culverts all around. What I noticed, too, was all the large green open spaces, parks and plating verges along major thoroughfares filled with vegetation — all, I found later — functioned also to absorb rainwater aside from keeping the city cool and green.

The Singaporean concern for flooding extended much into the ’80s as their drainage infrastructure system was finally set in place (and designed for future urban expansion decades in advance). I remember that on Orchard Road, we had to design building entrances with thresholds that had floor finish elevations centimeters higher than that 1969 historical record (their highest in a hundred years). The world-famous 12-meter-wide pedestrian paradise of Orchard Walk parallel to the road is actually a humongous drainage canal underneath. It is regularly cleaned and accessible by small service vehicles.

The success of Singapore’s flood and drainage system is attributable to proper urban and engineering planning, as well as to the fact that the entire citystate, which is as large as Metro Manila, is governed by one authority and government. There are no overlapping jurisdictions or political conflicts to compromise initiatives. The concept of imminent domain, which allows the state to consolidate needed land for public purposes like flood and drainage lines right-of-ways, is well established.

Another factor is that all development, private or public, is coordinated in terms of drainage elevations to ensure proper flows of storm water. All utility lines are documented and today, completely digitally recorded and accessible in a GIS system, so their public works and well-trained (and equipped) civil defense force can monitor any anomaly.

Metro Manila’s And NCR’S Failure

It is not as if we had not previously planned for metro expansion and needed infrastructure. Architect and planner Jun Palafox, on TV recently, highlighted the fact that there was a plan prepared by government in the late ’70s to address flooding. He did not have the time, however, to elaborate fully on that plan and why it failed (aside from the implication that it was never fully implemented). More complete information can be had from the e-groups and Internet chatter of the Philippine Institute of Environmental Planners, the United Architects of the Philippines, and the Philippine Association of Landscape Architects.

UAP stalwart and environmental planner Armando Alli, along with a number of his colleagues in allied professions, has noted several key factors that led to the Ondoy disaster. They pointed to the fact that most of the flooding occurred east of the Manggahan floodway. Factors that led to this was, as many saw firsthand, included the blockage of storm drain lines leading to the floodways, the uncontrolled and uncoordinated urban development of the basin all the way and up into Antipolo and the rest of Rizal province. They noted as well the presence of informal settlements in all these areas and on both sides of the floodway.

This sprawl, Alli and his colleagues and the landscape architects’ group led by landscape architect Frederick Altavas pointed out, has reduced forest and vegetative cover and the ability of the region to absorb rainfall. Storm water management is an aspect of proper planning that environmental planners and landscape architects address in developed countries. There the importance of rainwater harvesting, watershed management, wetland conservation, and phyto-mediation (using landscapes to mitigate storms and floods) is well entrenched in governance, public planning, and private development. We have Filipino professionals here well-versed in these areas, but no one listens to them or engages them in planning; much less in implementing any of these interventions (save for a few isolated private developers).

A History Of Forgotten Plans, Shortsightedness And Unmapped Failure

Alli, Altavas, and others have also pointed out what was mentioned earlier, — that governance and political turf conflicts may also have partly to do with the problem. Pasig, on the west, is a part of Metro Manila, while Cainta and Taytay is on the west part of Rizal province. Controls on either side may not be the same or even coordinated, the presence of a Regional Development Council notwithstanding. Disaster councils at city, provincial, and national levels do not seem to be well coordinated, or even communicate with each other. Disaster councils kick in only after, the fact and evaluation and physical infrastructural correctives after disasters seem not to be a priority for them or anyone else for that matter. The DPWH seems nowhere to be found nowadays nor does anyone seem to want to get them accountable for anything at all. Our collective memories for disasters, scandals, and political plunder are notoriously short, forgotten, as some point out, when the next one strikes or holiday season comes around.

Alli, et. al, also point out that a key element in that 1970s plan was the ParaƱaque Spillway. This was to relieve the Laguna de Bai of excess water. The government could not or would not get the right of way, or the money and plan disappeared. The lack of implementation and non-use of imminent domain has led to imminent and actual disasters on a seasonal basis. Alli points out that with the eventual moving of the airport to Clark or elsewhere, the opportunity to build this spillway lies in the re-purposing of the land parallel to the existing runway.

The environmental planners point to another shortness, too — that of planning outlooks. Twenty- to 30-year outlooks are too short, they say. The 1970s flood alleviation plan is in fact obsolete as the assumptions in terms of extent of urban sprawl have changed drastically and need to be reworked for any solution to be viable. The Laguna de Bai, too, has changed in its further degradation and silting. It reportedly has a depth of only three meters when in the ’70s it was twice that and at the turn of the century was over nine meters deep — allowing large ferries to ply from old Manila to lakeshore towns as well as absorb storm water.

It must be pointed out, too, that urban growth management and land use controls were with us as early as the late 1940s when the master plan for Quezon City and environs was set up by a group of Filipino and American, architects, planners, and landscape architects. The basin from Laguna to Marikina all the way up to Montalban was already identified as a greenbelt that was to be consolidated and conserved for functional as well as aesthetic purposes. The importance of maintaining these areas as agricultural and open land was further reinforced by the knowledge, as early as 1949, that a fault runs through the area all the way to Muntipula.

This leads to the last issue we have left with the space we have in this article — that of vulnerability and hazard mapping. Our Manila Metropolitan growth has to be planned and directed within a context of highest, best and, most importantly, safest use. Mapping is a key tool. I had wanted to see a map in any of the media and government reports that showed the effects of Ondoy. No such map seems to be forthcoming as no one seems to want to take responsibility.

Mapping what happened, and documenting complete technical details will lead to identifying critical areas as well as to defining possible steps to correct problems in a geographical, rational, and scientific context, free from the conflicts of local political boundaries, private developer greed, informal settler desperation, the general inutility of government and its dysfunctional leadership.

* * *

Feedback is welcome. Please e-mail the writer at paulo.alcazaren@gmail.com.

10/02/2009

Not an act of God but a sin...
By Alcuin Papa
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 03:19:00 10/02/2009

MANILA, Philippines — The flood disaster that struck Metro Manila over the weekend was not an act of God but a sin of omission by government and private real estate developers, according to urban planner Felino “Jun” Palafox.

The green architect said that a land use plan that took floods into consideration was drawn up as far back as 1977, titled “Metro Manila Transport, Land Use and Development Planning Project,” sponsored by the World Bank.

Palafox said that the study had already noted the possibility of heavy flooding in at least three sites of urban growth in the Philippine capital—the Marikina Valley and its northern and southern parts.

“When I saw the damage caused by the floods recently, I realized that these were the same areas that had already been identified,” he told the Inquirer.

“Urban development is spreading into areas which are, in their present state, unsuitable for development—either because they are low-lying and liable to flooding, or because development is without adequate facilities for the treatment and disposal of sewage (the norm in Manila) and so will continue to contribute to the severe pollution of areas such as Laguna de Bay,” the study said.

But what did government do to mitigate the flooding and other problems identified by the 1977 study?

Nothing, according to Palafox.

Need for spillway

“This is not an act of God, as what people have already said. This is a sin of omission on the part of government and leadership. Practically all the measures outlined in the study could have addressed the flooding we are seeing these days,” he said.

For one, there was little infrastructure to prevent flooding. Palafox cited the need to construct a spillway in ParaƱaque to drain excess water from Laguna Lake to Manila Bay.

“The Manggahan floodway was constructed to drain floodwater from the mountains flowing through the Marikina River into the Laguna Lake. But what happens when the Laguna Lake is overflowing? That is why there was a need for the ParaƱaque spillway to direct excess water from the lake into the Manila Bay,” he said.

But he said the government never constructed the spillway. “I don’t know why,” said Palafox, who earned a degree on urban planning from Harvard. “But you don’t need an engineer to understand this.”

Palafox also said that the study proposed desilting the Pasig and Marikina Rivers to accommodate more water. “What should have been done was to use the silt and mud collected from the river to construct ‘green islands’ just like in Holland.”

The green islands should have been constructed at the mouths of the rivers and could be used for “recreational purposes” like parks, arboretums and sports arenas. “You let these islands settle, say after 15 years. Then you can use them for industrial purposes like oil depots.”

Erase parts of capital

If he were to redesign Metro Manila, Palafox said he would take a “big eraser” and wipe out parts of Metro Manila in the east, north and south, where development did not conform to standards, particularly the construction of housing below the flood lines.
“Government knows what the flood lines are. Why did developers of subdivisions allow construction of housing projects below the flood lines?” he asked.

Palafox said corruption might have come into play because it would take the approval of 32 agencies to sign papers for land development and 12 agencies just to do one building.

He recalled that he did some development in the portion of the Nile near Khartoum in Sudan where the construction was done well above the flood lines.

Also, there is a chronic lack of foresight in the land development with developers looking only beyond 25 years of flood history.

“The international standard is to look at the flood history of the past 500 years, like the Khartoum project,” he said.

If he had his way, Palafox said he would have planned out Metro Manila according to plans by American architect Daniel Burnham in 1905.

According to Palafox, Burnham envisioned a Manila designed the same way as Paris, built near the Seine River, and Venice with its waterways.

“In Venice, you work on the first floor and live on the second floor,” he said.

Other recommendations in the plan included the construction of catch basins under buildings that could collect rainwater for recycling or for flowing into rivers.

Also, Palafox recommended the building of houses on stilts to go above the flood lines, just like the Badjaos.

In addition to the lack of foresight, there was also a chronic oversight by government over the years on the issue of garbage and illegal logging.

“The pressures for development in areas unsuitable for development exist and will continue to exist, and without action, high and unnecessary environmental, social and economic costs will be incurred,” the study said.


Source: Inquirer

10/01/2009

Gov't, private developers liable for flood damage'

'Gov't, private developers liable for flood damage'

Urban planner and architect Felino Palafox Jr.

MANILA - Government agencies and private developers are jointly liable for the massive loss of life and property in several Metro Manila cities for practicing poor urban planning and allowing commercial and residential structures to be built in flood-prone areas, according to "green" architect and urban planner Felino Palafox Jr.

Palafox said a 1977 World Bank-funded study identified Marikina Valley, the western shores of Laguna de Bay, and the Manila Bay coastal area as among development areas that should prepare for flooding, earthquakes and possible changes in topography.

The Metro Manila Transport, Land Use and Development Planning Project (Metroplan), which was finalized by Hong Kong-based consulting firm Freeman Fox and Associates, has been used as a blueprint by urban planning developers and various government agencies and urban planners. Unfortunately, he said corruption and lack of planning has led to the shelving of some of the plan's recommendations.

"You see the irony here. National government agencies are aware that there is a flooding level of so many meters, then another national government agency would approve subdivision plans for only nine-meter high houses. There are about 32 signatures to obtain just to do a development project. It's like an obstacle course," he said in an ANC interview last Tuesday.

Proposed ParaƱaque spillway (in red) to flush out the excess water to the Laguna Bay and South China Sea

He said the Metroplan addressed flood-mapping in Metro Manila, specifically after the massive typhoon in 1970. He said the Metroplan included the construction of the Manggahan Floodway, which would divert floodwaters from reaching Metro Manila by diverting the water to the Laguna Lake.

"There was supposed to be a ParaƱaque spillway to flush out the excess water to the Laguna Bay and South China Sea, but this was never done. It was part of the recommendation," he said.

Palafox said the study recommended the monitoring of the Marikina Riverbank so that the water would not reach 90 meters. Likewise, no structure should have been allowed within 9 meters from the riverbank, he added.

The architect said he is currently working with Marikina Mayor Marides Fernando on several development projects in the city. He said that in Marikina, structures should be built above 17 meters which is above the maximum flood level of the city.

This is the reason why SM Marikina, which he helped design, was built on stilts, with the lower level of the mall used only for parking and all the shops on higher levels.

"In Marikina, instead of nine-meter high buildings you go upward and build a boulevard with dikes. All subdivisions should go medium-rise or high-rise and there should no longer be individual houses. It should be mixed use. You live upstairs, you work in the middle and you shop downstairs, just like Paris," he said.

Manila like Paris

1970's study already showed low-lying areas in Metro Manila are prone to flooding - Palafox

Palafox said that in 1905, American architect Daniel Burnham envisioned building Manila like the city of Paris. "He said it should be designed like Paris beside the River Seine, like Manila beside Pasig River. He said the esteros of Manila could be like the canals of Venice. We were alright until the 1940s when the Americans left and then we adopted wrong models of urban planning," he said.

As an architect, he said he often tells potential clients that they should practice due diligence and look at the 100-year flood history of a potential development area before starting construction. He lamented, however, that some short-sighted clients would only look at the 25-year flood history of an area since the planned structures are not built to last.

"We are always reacting to crisis. It bothered me when I saw these reports and pictures and people are saying it's an act of God. It's not. It's us not following the plans and proposals. If you are an urban planner, an environmental planner, these have been planned as early as 1905," he said.

He said that to address the problem of flooding, the government should consider "vertical urbanism" and build more high-rises instead of "horizontal urbanism."

He criticized the lack of coordination among government agencies and cited the EDSA corridor as a prime example of how urban planning has failed in the Philippines.

"I did a study in Harvard on the EDSA corridor on how not to do a city. You have high-transit stations surrounded by low-gated communities and low-density military camps. How do you make people walk to it?" he said.

He said that to address the problem of climate change and future flooding in the Philippines, urban planners should start redesigning cities in the country by looking at the lessons of the past and seeing what other countries are doing.

"In a crisis like this, it's an opportunity to be creative and learn. Technology can address these problems," he said. With a report from Ron Gagalac, ABS-CBN News


Source: Yahoo News

My Running Meter