1.3K E. Samar residents get P9-M cash aid via DSWD food, water project

By Sarwell Meniano

July 23, 2024, 3:49 pm

<p><strong>GOV'T AID</strong>. The payout in Eastern Samar for the beneficiaries of the Project LAWA at BINHI, designed to mitigate the impact of food insecurity and water scarcity. The Department of Social Welfare and Development has paid over PHP9 million to beneficiaries in four Eastern Samar towns for the first regional rollout of the program.<em> (Photo courtesy of DSWD Region 8)</em></p>

GOV'T AID. The payout in Eastern Samar for the beneficiaries of the Project LAWA at BINHI, designed to mitigate the impact of food insecurity and water scarcity. The Department of Social Welfare and Development has paid over PHP9 million to beneficiaries in four Eastern Samar towns for the first regional rollout of the program. (Photo courtesy of DSWD Region 8)

TACLOBAN CITY – The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) has distributed over PHP9 million to beneficiaries in four Eastern Samar towns in a program designed to mitigate the impact of food insecurity and water scarcity.

The amount represents the payment to 1,327 individuals for their participation in a five-day training and 15 days of work in the towns of San Policarpo, Oras, Dolores, and Jipapad in Eastern Samar under the Project LAWA (Local Adaptation to Water Access) at BINHI (Breaking Insufficiency through Nutritious Harvest for the Impoverished).

Each got PHP7,500 during the payout activities from July 17 to 19.

“These beneficiaries have finally completed all three stages of Project LAWA and BINHI implementation. These stages include a three-day learning and development session, 15 days of actual work, and two days of sustainability training. In the last two days of implementation, partner-beneficiaries underwent a workshop to ensure the sustainability of the projects,” the DSWD regional office here said in a statement Tuesday.

In the region, the project covers 20 towns in four provinces.

The DSWD has been holding comprehensive training encompassing disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation, rehabilitation of water systems, communal gardening, vermicomposting, and hydroponics.

The covered areas include Almagro, Matuguinao, and Sta. Margarita, Catbalogan City, and San Jose de Buan in Samar province; Catubig, Gamay, Lapinig, Silvino Lubos, and Lope de Vega in Northern Samar; Oras, Dolores, Jipapad, San Policarpo, and Maslog in Eastern Samar; and San Ricardo, Bontoc, Silago, Sogod, and Libagon in Southern Leyte.

As part of the design of Project LAWA at BINHI, the DSWD provides each partner-beneficiary with the daily minimum regional wage rate of PHP405 for their attendance at the training and participation in the implementation of the projects in their respective communities.

Under Project LAWA, the DSWD focuses on enhancing water access and management in communities prone to drought and water shortages by constructing small farm reservoirs, repairing or rehabilitating water harvesting facilities, and diversifying water supplies, among others.

On the other hand, Project BINHI aims to promote food security and nutrition in communities by facilitating the adoption of climate-resilient and sustainable agricultural practices such as communal and urban gardening, vermicomposting, and the planting of disaster-resilient crops, fruit-bearing trees, and mangroves, among others.

Priority areas are those near river basins as identified by the Cabinet Cluster on Climate Change, vulnerable areas based on the climate outlook of the Department of Science and Technology—Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration, and those with the highest number of poor families based on the DSWD database. (PNA)

 

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