CASIGURAN, Aurora – Some 2,300 households in two municipalities of
northern Aurora are still without electricity almost two months since Typhoon
Labuyo brought destruction in northeast Luzon.
Noel Vedad, general
manager of the Aurora Electric Cooperative, said the households, which are
serviced by the power coop, represent roughly 30% of the 7,938 households which
power was cut when strong winds brought by Labuyo toppled 324 electric posts and
broke 214 others in this town, Dinalungan and Dilasag and in Dinapigue town in
Isabela province.
The damage was
estimated at P10 million.
Vedad said,
however, that they expect power to be restored in Dinalungan and Dilasag by next
week. He said a four-men Aurelco crew
has been working on the damaged lines.
Households in this
town, totaling 4,188 have been enjoying 24-hour electricity since last month,
along with households in Barangay Nipoo
in Dinalungan.
Vedad said the National
Electrification Administration released on Thursday P10.7 million to restore
the remaining damed power lines.
Earlier, rural
electric cooperatives in Central Luzon formed a task force to help Aurelco restore
electricity by rehabilitating the 538 damaged poles in the three northern
towns.
The RECs, which
belong to the Central Luzon Electric Cooperatives Association (CLECA), created “Task Force Labuyo” composed of 60
foremen and linemen equipped with 11 boom trucks who were dispatched to the
northern Aurora
towns of Dinalungan, Casiguran and Dilasag, also known as the Dicadi area.
The Dicadi area was
one of those hardest-hit by Labuyo which left in its wake three persons dead
and over P500 million worth of properties, infrastructure and crops destroyed.
It also affected 12,000 families in the province alone.
For days, the Dicadi towns were isolated due to
landslides, the overflowing of rivers and toppled communication lines.
REC executives, led
by National Association of Geneneral Managers of Electric Cooperatives
(NAGMEC)-Region 3 and Pampanga Electric Cooperative, Inc.-1 (PELCO1) provided
the services for free while Aurelco shouldered the food and shelter to the task
force personnel. – Manny Galvez
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