Not only Marikina and Rizal: Isabela submerged, too; appeals for aid

Floodwaters in Isabela engulf houses, revealing only the backboard of a basketball court in Sta. Maria town. Photo from Rodentor Mallannao Tagueg

MANILA, Philippines — Residents of Sta. Maria town in Isabela province have called on the government for assistance as they also experienced massive floods due to Typhoon Ulysses.

Photos sent to INQUIRER.net by Ronald Gatan, a resident of Barangay Quinagabian in Sta. Maria showed waters already reaching up to the second floor of their house, forcing them over the rooftop where they might spend their Friday night.

Gatan, however, said he actually thinks his family is doing better because they can stay on the rooftop; he thought of neighbors whose single-story houses were completely inundated by the flood.

Photo taken on Thursday, November 12, 2020, by Sta. Maria, Isabela, resident Ronald Gatan shows floodwaters reaching the second floor of their house. Residents say that water released from the Magat Dam may be the reason for the flood. Photo from Ronald Gatan

Photo taken on Friday, November 13, 2020, by Sta. Maria, Isabela, resident Ronald Gatan shows floodwaters even getting higher despite Typhoon Ulysses already leaving the Philippine Area of Responsibility. Residents say that water released from the Magat Dam may be the reason for the flood. Photo from Ronald Gatan

 

Still, he is worried because their food supply is running thin.

“As of now, paubos na wala ng stock wala pang nagbibigay ng relief goods,” Gatan told INQUIRER.net.

(As of now, we are running out of stock, they haven’t given any relief goods.)

He said the local government advised them that flooding might occur, but they did not expect such immense flooding — especially that water never reached as high as it did now than in the previous storms.

“As of now, ok na kami dito sa rooftop kasi mataas [naman] dito.  Then ‘yung ibang tao nai-rescue na sila nasa evacuation area na sila,” Gatan explained.

(As of now, we are doing better than others because we are on the rooftop and this is quite high. Other residents were rescued and brought to evacuation areas.)

“Pero ‘yung mga mababa ang bahay lahat ng gamit lubog na sa baha. May abiso naman sila kaso hindi expected ganito kalaki ang tubig,” he added.

(But for other low houses, all of their things were submerged. The government issued a warning but they didn’t expect that the flood would be this huge.)

Photo taken on Friday, November 13, 2020, by Sta. Maria, Isabela, resident Ronald Gatan shows floodwaters even getting higher despite Typhoon Ulysses already leaving the Philippine Area of Responsibility. Residents say that water released from the Magat Dam may be the reason for the flood. Photo from Ronald Gatan

Reports of flooding in Cagayan Valley, particularly in Isabela, comes amid reports that flood has started to recede in other areas like Southern Luzon, Central Luzon, and Metro Manila, including Marikina and some parts of Rizal province – all of which received Ulysses’ violent winds and torrential rains.

Some residents believe that the flooding was caused by the release of water from the Magat Dam, which was forced to the spilling level due to rains brought by Ulysses.

Magat Dam is situated on the Magat River, a major tributary of the Cagayan River.

Data from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa) showed that seven of Magat Dam’s floodgates have been opened to discharge water.  Pagasa said Magat Dam’s outflow was the highest among the country’s dams at 5,073 centimeters.

Floodwaters engulf houses in Sta. Maria town in Isabela province. Photo from Rodentor Mallannao Tagueg

Despite the large amounts of water released from Magat Dam — from just 989 centimeters on Thursday to 5,073 centimeters on Friday — the dam’s water level only receded to 192.7 meters.

This is only 0.30 meters shy of the dam’s normal high level.

While Ulysses’ wrath covered almost the entire Luzon region, much of the aid appeared to have been focused on Marikina and Rizal as some of its areas are densely populated.

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