Title: Living with Risk: The need to build partnerships
1INSTITUTIONALIZING DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
Building a Local Government Alliance for
Disaster Risk Reduction - Consultative
Meeting Barcelona, 22-23 May, 2008
CEDRIC D. DAEPAlbay Public Safety Emergency
Management Office Province of Albay, Philippines
2Province of Albay
CONTEXT
Located in the Southern part of Luzon about
500 kilometers SSE Of Manila Philippines.
It is geo-graphically located within the ring of
fire and the typhoon belt region
Bicol Region
Philippines
Mayon Volcano
3Disaster Risk and Vulnerability PROFILE TRENDS
- 19 to 21 occurrences of typhoon per year in the
Philippines of which 3-5 hit the Province of
Albay. - About 198,000 houses threatened by wind
destructions and at least 350,000 people have to
evacuate. - Mayon Volcano Eruption threats 3 cities and 5
municipalities - 127 villages or 11,000 to 12,000 families
threatened by landslides - About 300,000 population out of 1.2M threatened
by tsunami - Eight municipalities and two cities threatened by
floods.
4WHAT has been done so far to address the issue?
- Institutionalized Provincial Disaster Management
Office and the Provincial Disaster Operation
Center - Established Early Warning System, Communication
Protocol and Evacuation Procedures at the
community level. - Organized Local DCCs and redefined the functional
roles and responsibilities of the DCC members and
task unitsEstablished Policy on Operational
Control and Protocol - Hazard awareness through Community-Based
trainings and seminars - DRR integration to the Comprehensive Land Use Plan
5What have been the GOOD PRACTICES
- Institutionalization of the Albay PDMO now APSEMO
- Community-Based Early Warning System,
Communication Protocol and Evacuation Procedures - Good working relationship between APSEMO, Warning
Agencies and the Local Media - Established Disaster Operation Center as the hub
of action and the center of emergency
coordination and communication
6The Guiding Principles
- Institutional not personality oriented
- Permanent Solution not Temporary
- Early evacuation is better than rescue
- Disaster Proofing approach
- -CLUP Disaster Risk Reduction
- -No or selective investment in High Risk Zone
- -Maximum Protection in the low to moderate
risk zone - -Safe zone as the site for the new
development - Investments
7 and the LESSONS LEARNED
- LGU as the first line of defense
- Warning Equipment is vital in saving life
- Without communication support warning and
evacuation fails - Early warning and evacuation system Zero
Casualty - Pre-positioned organic resource capabilityquick
response - Building-back better not building-back-elsewhere
- DRR measures Economic Investments
8 and the LESSONS LEARNED
- Help must be linked to initiative. Protracted
relief could breed mendicancy, stunt local
initiative and suppress native creativity - Demand driven vs. donors driven
- Disaster Risk Reduction Plan must be considered
basic input in the Regional Development Master
Plan - Rehabilitation should be pursued in the context
of development strategy
9What are the CHALLENGES ahead?
- Uncertainty lessons learned
- Short-term thinking multi-hazard approach and
hazard assessment and contingency plan be done
every after a calamity - Complexity data base and information readiness
- Institutional Structure need to promote and
sustain better institution of LGUs - Financing frameworks need to integrate DRR
budget to the regular appropriations
10 and HOW to address them?
- Political leadership not political will
- Multi-stakeholder approach
- Legislative support from the national and local
government - Established implementing guidelines in
integrating DRR to the CLUP - Technical assistance to the Local Government
Units - DRR must be an integral part in planning and
programming of the local authorities.
11CONLUSIONS
DRR is global, Institutionalized and is a
way of life
12Thank You