![bacolod pic_superimposed Thirty individuals were rescued in barangays Bata and Banago in Bacolod City from Aug. 28 to 29. AMITY FIRE BRIGADE PHOTO](https://www.panaynews.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/bacolod-pic_superimposed-696x365.jpg)
BACOLOD City – This city declared a state of calamity and suspended classes until today following four days of incessant rains that flooded 33 out of its 61 barangays.
“Due to the declaration placing the entire city under a state of calamity and to provide for the clearing and cleaning operations of several schools affected by Typhoon ‘Goring,’ classes are suspended until Sept. 1,” Mayor Alfredo Abelardo Benitez announced on Wednesday night, Aug. 30.
As of yesterday, 14 public schools served as evacuation centers for displaced families.
The Sangguniang Panlungsod (SP) approved the declaration on Wednesday afternoon upon the request of the city mayor based on a resolution passed by the City Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council.
Almost 10,000 residents sought shelter in evacuation centers since Sunday, Aug. 27, due to torrential rains brought by the southwest monsoon or habagat enhanced by Typhoon “Goring.”
The declaration of a state of calamity will allow the city government to utilize its calamity funds and impose a price freeze on basic goods.
In Barangay Pahanocoy, among the hardest-hit villages, the SP headed by village chief Yolanda Noble also declared a state of calamity on its own.
“Almost 95 percent of the puroks have been flooded,” she said, adding that for the first time, a large residential subdivision was even inundated earlier this week.
In a meeting with concerned departments and agencies led by the city mayor on Wednesday, some of the root causes of flooding identified were the obstructions along rivers and creeks, accumulation of sediments in waterways originating from upland areas, and lack of interconnection of inland drainage systems.
Among the potential solutions proposed included the construction of flood walls along vulnerable rivers and creeks, dredging of sediment-clogged waterways, interconnecting the existing drainage systems, upgrading the capacity of current drainage infrastructure and implementing proper management practices to clear obstructions from rivers and creeks. (PNA)/PN