(FILES) Local participants of the Department of Social Welfare and Development’s Project LAWA in Barbaza, Antique embody the Bayanihan spirit as they build their small farm reservoir in preparation for the effects of the El Niño in their municipality. Photo from PNA
NATION

Projects LAWA, BINHI beneficiaries build water harvesting system in Quezon town

Jing Villamente

Some 166 residents of Patnanungan, Quezon have started building their water harvesting systems and gardening projects, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) reported on Monday.

The agency said Project LAWA (Local Adaptation to Water Access) and BINHI (Breaking Insufficiency through Nutritious Harvest for the Impoverished) will strengthen the capabilities of families in far flung areas.

“With Project LAWA at BINHI, we want to strengthen the adaptive capabilities of poor and vulnerable families to mitigate the impact of food insecurity and water scarcity brought about by the drought especially this time that we are experiencing scorching heat throughout the country,” DSWD Assistant Secretary for Disaster Response Management Group (DRMG) Irene Dumlao said.

She added that from 17 to 19 April, the project beneficiaries underwent comprehensive training encompassing disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation, and practical skills for water harvesting, gardening, vermicomposting, and hydroponics.

After the training, the participants started the repair and construction of water harvesting systems and community and school-based gardening projects, with a target completion date of 15 May.

Dumlao, who is also the DSWD spokesperson, noted that the project will provide learning and development sessions (LDS) on Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation and Disaster Risk Reduction (CCAM-DRR), and cash-for-work (CFW) and cash-for-training (CFT) to beneficiaries in priority areas exposed to the effects of El Niño.

The DSWD spokesperson explained that the interventions under the CCAM-DRR in the priority areas are based on the Climate Outlook of the Department of Science and Technology - Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (DOST-PAGASA) with the most number of poor families based on Listahanan 3 and not just in areas near major river basins as identified by the Cabinet Cluster on Climate Change.

As part of the design of Projects LAWA and BINHI, the DSWD will provide each partner-beneficiary with the daily minimum regional wage rate of P470 in exchange for their attendance at the training and participation in the implementation of the projects in their respective barangays.