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Detailed Landslide and Flood Hazard Map of 126°15'0"E 126°20'0"E
II NN DD EE XX MM AA PP :: DETAILED LANDSLIDE AND FLOOD HAZARD MAP OF 126°15'0"E 126°20'0"E 4217-IV-20 4217-I-16 4217-I-17 BISLIG CITY AND HINATUAN, SURIGAO DEL SUR; AND ROSARIO ROSARIO AND BUNAWAN, AGUSAN DEL SUR, PHILIPPINES HINATUAN 4217-IV-25 4217-I-21 4217-I-22 BISLIG CITY 4217-I-21 MAHARLIKA QUADRANGLE BUNAWAN 8°15'0"N 126°15'0"E 126°16'0"E 126°17'0"E 126°18'0"E 8°15'0"N 4217-III-5 4217-II-1 4217-II-2 TRENTO 126°15'0"E 126°20'0"E 8°18'0"N 8°18'0"N Purok X Tandawan (Loyola)# μ 0120.5 Kilometers LL E G E N D : Main road POBLACIONP! Barangay center location So. Magaling Secondary road (Poblacion)# Purok/Sitio location (Barangay) Track; trail n School River v® Hospital G San Vicente National High School Municipal boundary Church (San nVicente) Centro Day Care Center 80 Contour (meter) Proposed relocation site Purok III Centro (San Vicente) (San Vicente)# nP SAN VICENTE Purok IV Paclap San Vicente Elementary School Landslide (San Vicente) (San nVicente) # 8°17'0"N 8°17'0"N Very high landslide susceptibility Purok VII Bingcongan Purok II Tandawan (Bigaan)# (San Vicente)# Bingcongan Integrated School Areas usually with steep to very steep slopes and underlain by n (Bigaan) weak materials. Recent landslides, escarpments and tension cracks are present. Human initiated effects could be an aggravating factor. High landslide susceptibility Areas usually with steep to very steep slopes and underlain by weak materials. -
Typhoon Bopha (Pablo)
N MA019v2 ' N 0 ' Silago 3 0 ° 3 0 ° 1 0 Philippines 1 Totally Damaged Houses Partially Damaged Houses Number of houses Number of houses Sogod Loreto Loreto 1-25 2-100 717 376 Loreto Loreto 26-250 101-500 San Juan San Juan 251-1000 501-1000 1001-2000 1001-2000 2001-4000 2001-4000 Cagdianao Cagdianao 1 N ° N San Isidro 0 ° Dinagat 1 0 Dinagat San Isidro Philippines: 1 5 Dinagat (Surigao del Norte) Dinagat (Surigao 5 del Norte) Numancia 280 Typhoon Bopha Numancia Pilar Pilar Pilar Pilar (Pablo) - General 547 Surigao Dapa Surigao Dapa Luna General Totally and Partially Surigao Surigao Luna San San City Francisco City Francisco Dapa Dapa Damaged Housing in 1 208 3 4 6 6 Placer Placer Caraga Placer Placer 10 21 Bacuag Mainit Bacuag (as at 9th Dec 5am) Mainit Mainit 2 N 1 Mainit ' N 0 ' 3 0 ° Map shows totally and partially damaged 3 9 Claver ° 9 Claver housing in Davao region as of 9th Dec. 33 Bohol Sea Kitcharao Source is "NDRRMC sitrep, Effects of Bohol Sea Kitcharao 10 Typhoon "Pablo" (Bopha) 9th Dec 5am". 3 Province Madrid Storm track Madrid Region Lanuza Tubay Cortes ! Tubay Carmen Major settlements Carmen Cortes 513 2 127 21 Lanuza 10 Remedios T. Tandag Tandag City Tandag Remedios T. Tandag City Romualdez 3 Romualdez 15 N ° N 13 9 ° Bayabas 9 Buenavista Sibagat Buenavista Sibagat Bayabas Carmen Carmen Butuan 53 200 Butuan 127 Butuan 21 Butuan 3 City City Cagwait Cagwait 254 Prosperidad 12 17 Gingoog Buenavista 631 Gingoog Buenavista Marihatag Marihatag 43 1 38 19 San Las Nieves San Agustin Las Nieves Agustin 57 Prosperidad 56 2 4 0 10 -
Philippine Case Global Crisis Local Response March 2010 Vers
International Labour Office Policy Integration Department Global Transmission Mechanisms and Local Policy Responses Philippine Cases Jude Esguerra 1 Paper for the Policy Coherence Forum Overcoming the jobs crisis and shaping an inclusive recovery: The Philippines in the Aftermath of the global economic turmoil 11 – 12 March 2010, Makati City, Philippines March 2010 1 The opinions expressed in this paper rests solely with the author 1 Executive Summary The impact of the Global Financial Crisis in the Philippines has been mild overall. This is due to the small size and stagnation of the economy's tradables sector (Medalla 2007, Lim 2009) and its limited exposure to global financial markets. There have been dramatic declines in the export sector in 2008 i; but again, the export sector, especially in the export processing zones, generates limited local value-added -- at twenty percent of export value -- and is largely located in the National Capital Region ii and its environs. Transmission mechanisms Export-related job losses in the capital and in the other urban areas will of course reverberate in the rest of the country because urban and rural economies continue to be linked by the long-term trend of rural-to-urban migration . (Quisumbing and Nieven, 2005, 2007). To the extent that migrants to urban areas remit to rural areas, the urban-rural migration link is one mechanism through which the largely-urban impact of the crisis is getting transmitted to rural areas. International migrants are a transmission mechanism for the crisis but, on the other hand, remittances have also been an important safety net in the past for idiosyncratic as well as locally and nationally correlated income shocks (Yang, D and H Choi 2005). -
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C. AFFECTED POPULATION (TAB C) A total of 173,617 families/830,117 persons were affected in 822 barangays in 103 municipalities in 15 provinces of Regions X, XI, CARAGA and ARMM Out of the total affected, 44,766 families / 206,888 persons were displaced and served inside 569 evacuation centers D. STATUS OF STRANDEES (as of 7:00 PM, 21 January 2014) ROLLING STRANDED PASSENGERS VESSELS MBCA’s CARGOES CGDCV CGS Cebu 6 5 CGDEV CGS Catabalogan 639 3 111 TOTAL 639 9 111 5 E. STATUS OF LIFELINES A total of 50 roads and 25 bridges are still not passable in Regions VIII, X, XI and CARAGA (TAB D) Mate, Bacolod Water System, Brgy. Purakan and Brgy. Bosque Linamon water pipes were damaged in Lanao del Norte The province of Dinagat Islands experienced total blackout on 17 January 2014 due to heavy rains and strong winds but resumed electricity earlier of 18 January 2014 F. STATUS OF MAJOR RIVERS AND DAMS Saug River, Asuncion, Davao del Norte – Overflowed Libuganon River, Kapalong, Davao del Norte – Overflowed Irrigation Dams in Aragon and Brgy Taytayan in Cateel, Davao Oriental were damaged due to flooding G. DAMAGED HOUSES (TAB E) The number of damages houses increased to 2,109 houses (831 totally/1,278 partially). H. COST OF DAMAGES (TAB F) The total cost of damages amounted to PhP383,969,253.22, with PhP128,513,750.00 for infrastructure and PhP255,455,503.22 for agriculture in Regions X, XI and CARAGA. I. SUSPENSION OF CLASSES AND GOVERNMENT OFFICES (as of 21 January 2014) REGION PROVINCE/CITY/MUNICIPALITY REMARKS Preschool, elementary -
Simple Tenses of the Verb in Kamayo Language Erwin R
International Journal of English Literature and Social Sciences (IJELS) Vol-2, Issue-5, Sep - Oct, 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.24001/ijels.2.5.19 ISSN: 2456-7620 Simple Tenses of the Verb in Kamayo Language Erwin R. Bucjan Abstract— Language is vital in daily basis, it is used to eastern part of the province. This is the common language communicate and express ideas and thoughts making each used among the people in daily work, in communication member of the community co-exist harmoniously. Its and even in business ventures in the locality. Hence, the distinctiveness has significance in social aspects such as the study aims to analyze the simple tenses of the verb in value to access power, influences other people and Kamayo language in the province of Surigao del Sur. The expresses the identity of a certain ethnic group. In Surigao study specifically focuses on identifying the affixes and del Sur, Philippines, Kamayo language has been used by how these affixes are used in the simple tenses of the the majority of people living in the mid-eastern part of the Kamayo verb. province. This is the common language used among the Kinamayo is a spoken language without any published people in daily work, in communication and even in materials. The assessment of the status in summary is that business ventures in the locality. the Kinamayo language is one of relatively stable diglossia The study aims to analyze the simple tenses of the verb in with high levels of bilingualism. The Kamayo people have Kamayo language in the province of Surigao del Sur. -
DSWD DROMIC Report #5 on Tropical Depression “VICKY” As of 22 December 2020, 6PM
DSWD DROMIC Report #5 on Tropical Depression “VICKY” as of 22 December 2020, 6PM Situation Overview On 18 December 2020, Tropical Depression “VICKY” entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) and made its first landfall in the municipality of Banganga, Davao Oriental at around 2PM. On 19 December 2020, Tropical Depression “VICKY” made another landfall in Puerto Princesa City, Palawan and remained a tropical depression while exiting the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) on 20 December 2020. Source: DOST-PAGASA Severe Weather Bulletin I. Status of Affected Families / Persons A total of 31,408 families or 130,855 persons were affected in 290 barangays in Regions VII, VIII, XI and Caraga (see Table 1). Table 1. Number of Affected Families / Persons NUMBER OF AFFECTED REGION / PROVINCE / MUNICIPALITY Barangays Families Persons GRAND TOTAL 290 31,408 130,855 REGION VII 32 618 2,510 Bohol 3 15 60 Candijay 3 15 60 Cebu 15 441 1,812 Argao 1 15 45 Boljoon 2 13 44 Compostela 2 54 221 Dalaguete 1 2 8 Danao City 1 150 600 Dumanjug 1 20 140 Lapu-Lapu City (Opon) 4 163 662 Sibonga 3 24 92 Negros Oriental 14 162 638 Bais City 3 33 125 Dumaguete City (capital) 6 92 365 City of Tanjay 5 37 148 REGION VIII 2 12 38 Leyte 2 12 38 MacArthur 1 10 34 Mahaplag 1 2 4 REGION XI 22 608 2,818 Davao de Oro 13 294 1,268 Compostela 2 10 37 Mawab 1 7 20 Monkayo 3 72 360 Montevista 1 13 65 Nabunturan (capital) 4 152 546 Pantukan 2 40 240 Davao del Norte 8 310 1,530 Asuncion (Saug) 6 238 1,180 Kapalong 1 12 50 New Corella 1 60 300 Davao Oriental 1 4 20 Cateel 1 4 20 CARAGA 234 30,170 125,489 Page 1 of 9 | DSWD DROMIC Report #5 on Tropical Depression “VICKY” as of 22 December 2020, 6PM NUMBER OF AFFECTED REGION / PROVINCE / MUNICIPALITY Barangays Families Persons Agusan del Norte 30 1,443 6,525 Butuan City (capital) 16 852 4,066 City of Cabadbaran 9 462 2,007 Jabonga 2 38 119 Las Nieves 1 10 50 Remedios T. -
From the Coastal Areas of Hinatuan, Surigao Del Sur, Philippines Exur M
International Letters of Natural Sciences Submitted: 2020-03-30 ISSN: 2300-9675, Vol. 80, pp 43-49 Revised: 2020-05-13 doi:10.18052/www.scipress.com/ILNS.80.43 Accepted: 2020-05-13 CC BY 4.0. Published by SciPress Ltd, Switzerland, 2020 Online: 2020-12-07 Size Structure and Gonad Characterization of Gari elongata (Lamarck 1818) from the Coastal Areas of Hinatuan, Surigao Del Sur, Philippines Exur M. Buenaflor1,a*, Romell A. Seronay1,2,b and Joycelyn C. Jumawan1,c 1Department of Biology, Caraga State University, Ampayon, Butuan City, Philippines 2Department of Environmental Sciences, Caraga State University, Ampayon, Butuan City, Philippines [email protected]*, [email protected], [email protected] Keywords: Gari elongata, Gonad histology, LWR, Hinatuan Surigao del Sur Abstract. Size-structure analyses and gonad characteristics of the elongate sunset clam Gari elongata from the coastal waters of Hinatuan, Surigao del Sur, Philippines, was determined in this study. An opportunistic sampling approach was applied during the collection of G. elongata from the coastal waters of Brgy. Loyola and Brgy. Aquino. A total of 1437 G. elongata individuals were subjected to length-weight measurements, and gonads from five (5) individuals per sex among size classes were processed for histological characterization. The maximum total length of G. elongata recorded is 5.42 cm, way smaller than its congeners elsewhere, which is at 7.0-9.2 cm. The size- structure analysis shows that G. elongata from Brgy. Loyola exhibited negative allometric growth while those gleaned from Brgy. Aquino exhibited positive allometry indicating variation in growth dynamics. Known as a gleaning source, Barangay Loyola is abundant in G. -
Sitrep No.07 Re Preparedness Measures for Tropical
SITREP NO. 07 TAB A Preparedness Measures and Effects of Tropical Depression "AMANG" AFFECTED POPULATION As of 23 January 2019, 8:00 AM TOTAL SERVED - CURRENT Region/Province/ AFFECTED No. of Evac Inside Evacuation Centers Outside Evacuation Centers (Inside + Outside) Mun/City Centers Brgys Families Persons Families Persons Families Persons Families Persons GRAND TOTAL 44 1,501 5,904 2 269 1,383 0 0 269 1,383 REGION XIII (CARAGA) 44 1,501 5,904 2 269 1,383 0 0 269 1,383 AGUSAN DEL NORTE 4 283 1,442 2 269 1,383 0 0 269 1,383 BUTUAN CITY 2 269 1,383 2 269 1,383 - - 269 1,383 JABONGA 2 14 59 0 0 0 - - 0 0 DINAGAT ISLANDS 9 166 477 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BASILISA (RIZAL) 3 75 266 0 0 0 - - 0 0 SAN JOSE 6 91 211 0 0 0 - - 0 0 SURIGAO DEL NORTE 18 816 3,132 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CLAVER 5 145 532 - - - - - 0 0 GENERAL LUNA 3 29 123 - - - - - 0 0 GIGAQUIT 4 89 313 0 0 0 - - 0 0 MALIMONO 2 251 1,073 - - - - - 0 0 SISON 3 134 490 - - - - - 0 0 SURIGAO CITY 1 168 601 0 0 0 - - 0 0 SURIGAO DEL SUR 13 236 853 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 BAROBO 2 34 131 0 0 0 - - 0 0 BAYABAS 3 62 201 0 0 0 - - 0 0 CARRASCAL 3 74 269 0 0 0 - - 0 0 LANUZA 4 45 188 - - - - - 0 0 TAGBINA 1 21 64 0 0 0 - - 0 0 Source: DSWD Dromic Report No. -
Poder 1-7 (All Sub-Projects Completed)
List of Kalahi-CIDSS sub-projects - Poder 1-7 (all sub-projects completed) Total Project Region Province Municipality Prio Barangay Subproject Name Physical Status Amount Caraga Agusan del Norte Santiago Curva Const. of Health Station 498,074.40 Completed Caraga Agusan del Norte Santiago Jagupit Const. of Community Center 1,116,138.00 Completed Caraga Agusan del Norte Santiago Lapaz Installation of Water System Level II (Gravity) 1,655,877.50 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz Angeles Const. of 1 unit 2 classroom Elem. School Bldg. 1,189,536.21 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz Bataan Const. of Health Station 744,424.17 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz Halapitan Const. of 1 unit 2 classroom Elem. School Bldg. 1,159,536.21 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz Kasapa 2 Const. of Day Care Center 674,119.27 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz Osmeña Sr. Const. of 1 unit of Pre-School Bldg. 664,570.63 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur La Paz San Patricio Const. of 1 unit 2 classroom Elem. School Bldg. 1,174,536.21 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur Sibagat Afga Const. of Concrete Lined-Canal 3,001,984.08 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur Sibagat Afga Const. of 1 unit 2 classroom High School Bldg. 1,002,914.46 Completed Installation of Water System Level II (Pump Caraga Agusan del Sur Sibagat Anahawan 729,161.25 Completed Driven) Caraga Agusan del Sur Sibagat Anahawan Const. of Health Station 714,962.97 Completed Caraga Agusan del Sur Sibagat Banagbanag Const. -
By Region) As of March 31, 2018 Area CADT No
Ancestral Domains Office Recognition Division Master List of Approved CADTs (By Region) As of March 31, 2018 Area CADT No. Date Approved Location CADC No. / Process Tribe IP Right Holders (Hectares) CAR 1 CAR-BAK- 7/18/2002 Bakun, Benguet CADC-120 Bago & Kankana-ey 29,444.3449 17,218 0702-0001 2 CAR-KIB-0204-2/13/2004 Municipality of Kibungan, Province of Benguet CADC-071 Kankana-ey 22,836.8838 15,472 016 3 CAR-ATO- 12/14/2004 Municipality of Atok, Province of Benguet Direct Application Kankan-ey & Ibaloy 20,017.6498 15,634 1204-026 4 CAR-CAL- 10/21/2005 Barangay Eva Garden, Cadaclan (portion), and Tanglagan(portion), Direct Application Isnag 11,268.0254 852 1005-031 Municipality of Calanasan, Province of Apayao 5 CAR-BAG- 2/9/2006 Barangay Happy Hallow, Baguio City Direct Application Ibaloi & Kankanaey 147.4496 2,900 0206-041 6 CAR-KAP- 11/14/2006 Barangays of Balakbak, Belengbelis, Boklaoan, Cayapes, Cuba, Datakan, Direct Application Kankana-ey & Ibaloi 17,127.1491 15,995 1106-050 Gadang, Gasweling, Labueg, Paykek, Poblacion Central, Pudong, Pongayon, Sagubo and Taba-ao, all in the Municipality of Kapangan, Province of Benguet 7 CAR-ASI-0308-3/26/2008 Brgys. Amduntog, Antipolo, Liwon, Namal, Natcak, Nungawa, Panubtuban, Direct Application Kalanguya, Ayangan 26,578.6964 14,355 063 Haliap, Cawayan, Pula, Duli Camandag, all in the Municipality of Asipulo, and Tuwali Province of Ifugao; and portion of the Mun. of Ambaguio in the Province of Nueva Vizcaya 8 CAR-KAB- 3/26/2008 Mun. of Kabayan, Prov. -
PHL-OCHA-TY Bopha 3W Comval 19Feb2013
Philippines: TY Bopha (Pablo) Who does What Where (3W) Compostela Valley (New Bataan, Monkayo, Montevista, Compostela, Laak) as of 19 Feb 2013 UN/INGOs/NGOs/Red Cross 1Aboitiz Foundation Bunawan Cluster 2ACF 3Ateneo de Davao University Food and Agriculture 4BABA'S FOUNDATION, INC 5BALSA 6CARE Nederland Health 7CFSI 8CRS Loreto Protection incl. CP and GBV 9Habitat for Humanity 10HAPNID/ASHRAM Education 11HOPE WW Ph 12HRC-OXFAM WASH 13ICRC Trento Surigao del Sur 14IOM Agusan del Sur Emergency Shelter 15LDS Veruela Baylo 16Lutheran World Relief Monkayo, Compostela Valley 17Mercy Relief AFRIM, Nutrition PBSP-MRC, SILDAP-SE, CFSI, JICA, SCI, 18Nonoy Liberado Development Foundation WFP Lingig 19Petron Foundation UNHCR, USAID, WFP, AFRIM Logistics 20Philippine Red Cross SantaMTB-MERN, Josefa UNHCR, SCI, CFSI, UNICEF, UNICEF 21Plan Plan, UNFPA Emergency Telecom 22Rotary International Awao ACF 23Save the Children UNICEF, UNFPA, Plan, SCI, Rotary, WVI Haguimitan WFP Aboitiz CCCM 24ShelterBox International IOM 25SILDAP-SE WFP 26Spanish Red Cross CFSI, Plan, SCI, UNICEF Livelihood SCI Mt. Diwata 27Swiss Red Cross UNICEF, WFP, ACF, Plan 28TREES/Peacebuilders SCI WFP Early Recovery 29Tulong Kapatid (MVP Consortium) Habitat, Plan, SCI, Shelterbox, LWR 30UNDP Plan UNFPA, Plan, IOM, WHO, ACF SCI Coordination 31UNFPA Poblacion Plan 32UNHCR WFP UNDP, LWR 33UNICEF Plan 34WFP Mercy, SCI, PRC Plan 35WHO SCI 36World Vision Plan, UNICEF IOM LAAK, Compostela Valley SCI, CFSI Pasian UNFPA, ACF Tapia CFSI, Oxfam, WFP IOM Awao WFP CFSI, UNHCR ACF Boston SCI HRC-Oxfam, -
Cbmspovertymaps Vol6 SDN.Pdf
The Many Faces of Poverty Volume 6 The Many Faces of Poverty: Volume 6 Copyright © PEP-CBMS Network Office, 2015 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—whether virtual, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the written permission of the copyright owner. Published by De La Salle University 2401 Taft Avenue, 1004 Manila, Philippines www.dlsu.edu.ph First printing, 2015 Printed in the Philippines Acknowledgments The publication of this volume has been made possible through the PEP- CBMS Network Office of the De La Salle University-Angelo King Institute for Economic and Business Studies with the aid of a grant from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Ottawa, Canada and the Department for International Development of the United Kingdom. CONTENTSCONTENTS i Foreword 1 Introduction 3 Explanatory Text The Many Faces of Poverty 9 Apayao 51 Benguet 91 Camiguin 119 Guimaras 155 Ifugao 195 Kalinga 237 Surigao del Norte FOREWORDFOREWORD The official poverty monitoring system (PMS) in the Philippines relies mainly on family income and expenditure surveys. Information on other aspects of well-being is generally obtained from representative health surveys, national population and housing censuses, and others. However, these surveys and censuses are (i) too costly to be replicated frequently; (ii) conducted at different time periods, making it impossible to get a comprehensive profile of the different socio-demographic groups of interest at a specific point in time; and (iii) have sampling designs that do not usually correspond to the geographical disaggregation needed by local government units (LGUs).