Sunday, January 17, 2010

5.3 Earthquake with Intensity 4 felt in Davao City


January 15, 8:07 a.m. Did you feel it? How could you not, children and wives screaming, house shaking, lights and curtains swaying back and forth. It was the strongest intensity quake I have felt since coming to Davao. "Haiti, here we come," I thought at first.

I rushed outside and looked up at Shrine Hill's towering 450 foot height. Still there. What a relief! I pushed back visions of twitching fingers, mud and blood encaked arms desperately reaching out from the roiling soils of a landslide, a vision of collapsed walls, high voltage lines sparking 30,000 volts and ruptured septic tanks draining filth along Ma-a road and everywhere the smell of death.

I asked myself, "What if the epicenter had been just a few miles closer or right along the geologic fault line running though Shrine Hills and, reportedly, under the canceled Artica Sports Dome?" "Even if a perfectly built house were not damaged, would it still be sitting on the same lot or one ten lots below?" I asked myself.

I also asked myself, "What if a nearby 5.3 quake comes during a heavy two hour rain or after several days in a row of heavy rains?"

I wondered if uncleaned hillside drainage channels, choked with weeds, plastic bags and silt would break away, overflow and wash out roads and then hillsides.

I wondered if the new 1,700 meters of Shrine Hill roadbeds that were made up, down and across old landslide bodies would be especially weakened and likely to fall. "Surely, they are much less stable, at least Geologists have stated they are," I thought.

I also wondered about the consequences to Hillside Developers if one of their developments should fall. Of course, there would be lawsuits brought. But a lawsuit brought never brings back to life the buried dead, nor do tears and apologies bring back children to parents who trusted too much.

Probably you have heard wise sayings, based on human experience, from individuals of many different religions to the effect of "Trust in God but always count your change" or "Trust in Allah but always tie your camel" or "God helps those who help themselves."

What those wise and sometimes humorous sayings mean to me is that while we cannot choose what disasters may strike, we can influence their frequency, severity, their harsh and grievous effects.

We also like to think of Government, while far lower than God, as responsible for our protection. "It's their job, let them do it." Do we need to break that habit?

We know Government cannot see or do everything. In self defense, we must ask ourselves not what Government can do for us, but what can we do for ourselves and to help the Government do the best job it can by keeping it well-informed.

Consider this: We ourselves are every bit as responsible for the welfare of our family as we hold Government to be. Therefore we must alert and inform our councilors, our vice-mayor, mayor and other Officials of our personal knowledge and concerns.

Our knowledge is experienced based. We have gained it just by living in an area, day in and day out. We must act to reduce the frequency, likelihood and severity of landslides, flooding disasters, loss of oxygen producing and CO2 reducing forests and ground cover. We can do that by not building on dangerous, steeply sloped and forested hillsides.

We can do that by following the existing laws of the land including Presidential Decree 705 that forbids subdivision development on slopes of 18 percent or more.

Does anyone wish to debate that slopes or anticlines of Shrine Hill are not generally 18 percent or more? Does anyone wish to debate whether there has been is a 1,700 meter concrete subdivision road cut through long settled but now disturbed former landslide areas?

Does anyone wish to debate whether there have been human caused killer landslides in Juario Village, Ma-a or that there is not constant slope movement in Nacilla Village due to relocation or interference with its many bugacs or springs?

It is critical to make sure Officials understand the information, that the threats to our life, property and welfare are the highest issue. That Officials themselves can be made to personally imagine and feel its effects and their responsibilities.

There are many interests competing for an Official's time and attention. They will hear the squeakiest wheel. Make noise now.

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