2 Metro flood projects done before Aquino steps down—Singson

DANGER IN THE WATER  España Boulevard in Manila during the onslaught of Tropical Storm “Mario” in September 2014. Joan Bondoc

People gamble with their safety in a flooded España Boulevard in Manila in this September 2014 file photo. JOAN BONDOC / PHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER

The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) will finish two major flood control projects in Metro Manila before President Benigno Aquino III steps down next year, Secretary Rogelio Singson said on Wednesday.

During the presentation of the DPWH proposed 2016 budget at the House of Representatives appropriations committee hearing, Singson said the Blumentritt Interceptor Catchment Area and the Mandaluyong Main Drainage Project and would be completed in March and June 2016, respectively.

The P609.12-million Mandaluyong project is 64 percent complete, Singson said. Meanwhile, the P600-million Blumentritt catchment area is 84 percent complete, he added.

Singson said the project incurred traffic in the area because the 3.3-kilometer catchment area was being built under the road from Blumentritt in Manila to the Tondo area.

“In Blumentritt area, it’s a 3.3 kilometer long drainage … In Mandaluyong, the whole of Boni gets flooded with a little rain… These won’t get finished overnight. We’re doing it in existing roads so the water goes out to the Pasig river. We expect two major improvements to be finished April or May next year,” Singson said.

“The projects were undertaking are not easy projects because they pass through major thoroughfares in Metro Manila,” he added.

Singson said the DPWH had to address the flooding in the areas under the Metro Manila flood management plan because it covered 20 million people and a third of the country’s gross domestic product.

He added that some 12,000 informal settler families had been relocated from the waterways to restore the carrying capacity of the waterways.

The DPWH is eyeing a P378.35 billion budget in 2016, a 30 percent increase from its approved P290.5 billion budget in 2015.

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