The Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) has disbursed P48.1 million in emergency employment and livelihood assistance to workers in the Bicol Region following the devastation of Severe Tropical Storm Opong.
According to DOLE Region V, the bulk of the funds-P40.3 million-was allotted under the Tulong Panghanapbuhay sa Ating Disadvantaged/Displaced Workers (TUPAD) program.
The allocation covers short-term cash-for-work for 6,455 beneficiaries in 11 municipalities identified as among the hardest hit.
Another P5 million was allocated for profiling under the DOLE Integrated Livelihood Program (DILP), while P2.7 million went to the Government Internship Program (GIP).
The agency said families of the four reported casualties will also be granted livelihood packages through DILP, while affected small businesses may avail of aid under the Adjustment Measures Program (AMP)
Based on DOLE Region V’s situational report, Opong affected 183,926 families, or 693,290 individuals, across Bicol.
Masbate was the most heavily impacted, with over 8,000 families still staying in evacuation centers as of October 1.
Opong entered the Philippine Area of Responsibility on September 23 as a tropical depression and quickly strengthened into a severe tropical storm the next day.
By September 25, all provinces in Bicol were under Signal No. 2, before warnings in Sorsogon and parts of Masbate were raised to Signal No. 4 at the height of the storm on September 26.
The labor department said coordination with local governments is ongoing to ensure the full delivery of assistance and the monitoring of long-term livelihood recovery in affected areas.
‘DOLE’s rapid response underscores its strong commitment to restoring livelihoods in storm-hit communities, with the Department ready to scale up support and ensure no affected worker is left behind,’ it added.
‘Opong’ deaths
Acting Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Lt. Gen. Jose Melencio Nartatez Jr. on Wednesday called on police units to help speed up the validation of casualties related to Opong.
‘The PNP is involved in documenting recoveries on the ground and immediately relaying validated information to local disaster response councils. We coordinate with the Office of Civil Defense and the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council to ensure that casualty reports are verified and cross-checked against missing persons records before they are made official,’ he said.
Nartatez said his order is in line with the directive of President Ferdinand R. Marcos and under the guidance of Department of the Secretary Juanito Victor ‘Jonvic’ Remulla to ensure accuracy in disaster response operations.
Such a move also emphasized coordination among government agencies to provide verified information to the public and to deliver timely support to affected families.
Nartatez also underscored that strict documentation processes are followed to prevent duplication and misinformation.
He also maintained that there are challenges in accessing remote and heavily impacted areas due to damaged infrastructure, as well as in the identification of remains in advanced stages of decomposition.
‘Our operations are still ongoing in the hardest-hit areas, particularly where there are still reports of missing individuals. These will continue until all measures are exhausted to assist all our kababayan,’ Nartatez said.
The police assistance, he said, also extends to continue securing evacuation centers in rebuilding communities damaged by the typhoon, especially in hardest hit areas.
Earlier, the Office of Civil Defense disclosed that 15 more fatalities were being validated in Bicol Region and Eastern Visayas.
As of September 30, the death toll was placed at 27 while 14 persons were reported missing in Bicol Region, Western Visayas, and Eastern Visayas.