ASF-hit hog raisers in Bacolod City get financial aid

By Nanette Guadalquiver

September 19, 2023, 8:47 pm

<p><strong>HOG DEATHS</strong>. A photo of culled piglets buried in Barangay Tangub, one of the villages in Bacolod City with reported cases of African swine fever, taken in June this year. As of Tuesday (Sept. 19, 2022), several affected backyard raisers have already received financial assistance from the city government.(<em>File photo courtesy of Barangay Tangub, Bacolod City</em>)</p>

HOG DEATHS. A photo of culled piglets buried in Barangay Tangub, one of the villages in Bacolod City with reported cases of African swine fever, taken in June this year. As of Tuesday (Sept. 19, 2022), several affected backyard raisers have already received financial assistance from the city government.(File photo courtesy of Barangay Tangub, Bacolod City)

BACOLOD CITY – The city government here has started to release financial assistance to hog raisers affected by the African swine fever (ASF), which has almost wiped out the backyard swine population in Bacolod.

City Administrator Pacifico Maghari III said on Tuesday that based on records, some 842 hog raisers reported swine deaths to the city government.

So far, some seven backyard raisers from Barangay Taculing have already received financial assistance totaling PHP102,000.

“That’s the initial batch. Others are still processing their documents,” Maghari said.

The aid includes PHP7,000 per head for breeder hogs, PHP5,000 per head for fattening pigs, and PHP3,000 per head for piglets.

Last June, the city government set aside PHP10 million as cash indemnification for ASF-affected backyard raisers.

Councilor Jude Thaddeus Sayson, chairperson of the City Council's committee on agriculture and fisheries and a hog raiser himself, said he could not yet say that Bacolod has recovered from the effects of ASF.

“The best solution is the vaccine, but until now, it is not yet available. It’s very risky to invest in hog production again because the stocks could still die due to the virus,” he added.

Sayson said that for now, Negros Occidental, including this capital city, sources hogs from the neighboring Negros Oriental.

“My personal outlook is, that the price of pork would be higher in December because we don’t have enough stocks. Nothing is left when you go around the city. Except for those in isolated areas, where there were hogs that survived,” he said. (PNA)

 

 

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