Showing posts with label Sagada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sagada. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2020

Dap-ay Malingeb’s anahaw roofing and 8 mandalas



By Gina Dizon

SAGADA MOUNTAIN PROVINCE- Host dap-ay Malingeb  has a new look witnessed on the conduct of the annual Tangeb di Babayas (closing of wedding celebrations) or Begnas di Tangeb di Ogas  (closing of the rice harvest season) last July 22 by dumap-ay (members) of the 12 dap-ay of central Sagada.
A roofing made of insulated anahaw, two giant statues by the front side, painted walls and an extended mosaic designed dance floor with eight mandalas that intrigued the Sagada public.
A different look from what it was before it got remodeled recently this second quarter of the year, the dap-ay was then made of GI roofing, unpainted cement walls and no giant statues at the front side.
The GI roofed dap-ay in the ‘90s replaced the older dap-ay made of ‘gu-un’ (cogon) roofing and wooden plank walling. Said replacement was then a project of the then Office of National Cultural Communities (ONCC) before it was nationally called National Commission of Indigenous Peoples (NCIP).
             Sagada which must have been of cogonal terrain before the American Period, ‘gu-un’(cogon) was the material used for the construction of dwellings before as noted in old pictures.  ‘Gu-un’ must have been the material used in the making of dap-ay Malingeb the first dap-ay by Biag, the legendary founder of Sagada. And/or it may have been other indigenous material then at that time.
And, the first dap-ay must have been a much smaller hut than its size now but as years went by and changes of replacing the ‘gu-un’ went by must have increased a little bit bigger till it reached its size now, surmised Irenius Tauli, elder of dap-ay Malingeb, in an interview.
And so it was told that Biag came from Bika, from the hinterlands of eastern Abra then went to the Ilocos to avoid invasion of headhunters. Not wanting to be Christianized, Biag found his way to Sagada and established the first dap-ay in Malingeb followed by dap-ay Bilig and Pikong in Demang built by his two children Bandowa and Konyap and eight others in the old settlements of Dagdag and Demang and eventually one in barangay Patay. 
And so other dap-ay were built by others as Biag found three men- Ganga, Peng-as and Puse-  when he first came to Sagada before the Spanish period said elders Jaime Timpac , Jesse Pelayo from dap-ay Maballay  and Joseph Guitilen Capuyan from dap-ay Lukong of Demang.  
             And so it was noted that the climate then was cold  and so was built a low lying hut for sleeping quarters called ‘abong’ built near the ‘amlangan’ section where the stone-seats and  ‘padao’ (totem poles) were firmly planted. The ‘padao’ signified that heads of invading buso (headhunters) from other places were cut off by ‘dumap-ay’ warriors and these hung on the poles to signify victory.
The sleeping quarters called ‘abong ‘ and the ‘amlangan’ compose the dap-ay. And men would come together from time to time to commune and talk about important ili concerns while warming themselves around a bonfire.
The dap-ay embeds the cultural  fabric of economic, social, political and educational activities done in the  immediate ili (community). For one, when the begnas, an agricultural feast  is decided  when it shall happen among other  activities.
The young boys learned values of respect to elders, honesty, industry, and ‘inayan’ or ‘lawa’ are inculcated to them while they do chores such as gathering firewood to keep the fire burning at night or massage the feet of older men using sticks in a foot massage called ‘kolkolis’.     
‘Inayan’ is the indigenous interpretation of the universal saying/teaching of Jesus Christ to “do unto others what you like others do unto you”. For it is ‘inayan’ not to do harm to another lest harm shall befall any member of the family when harm is done to another. 

Sukyab
From time to time the weathered roofing of the dap-ay got replaced with fresh ‘gu-un’ as done in a practice called ‘sukyab’ or ‘sekyab’ for the new ‘gu-un’ to prevent rain from seeping inside the sleeping quarters. 
              A practice that got ignored or not anymore practiced as the dap-ay roofing was changed to GI sheets by ONCC in the ‘90s.
Elders Guitilen Capuyan of dap-ay Lukong of Demang, Jesse Pelayo and Jaime Timpac of dap-ay Maballay of Dagdag said many of the dap-ay of central Sagada then had been burned by matchstick- playing children before these were changed to GI sheets and wooden walls to concrete.
Other dap-ay in other parts of Sagada had also been changed to GI sheet roofing and cemented walls.
So for quite some time, the practice to ‘mensukyab’ got ignored with already installed GI sheet roofing of the 12 dap-ay of central Sagada.  And must be so with other dap-ay of the whole town where the roofing had been changed to GI sheets.
The dap-ay of the old settlement of Fidelisan of northern Sagada has also been changed to GI sheet roofing. 
What more, ‘gu-un’ is ‘manmanu’ (not so much to find) much as cows graze the mountains and these burned with the occurrence of forest fires, elder Archie Sumedca of dap-ay Matuba of Dagdag said.
             With the equally persistent burning of mountains and the changing of flora into other plants and trees, cogon has been not so visible in the mountainsides not only in Sagada but in other mountainous areas as well.
Though Forester Christopher Bosaing of the Community Environment Natural Resources Office(CENRO) said there is still cogon but these do not grow long due to the burning of mountains.  
Comes now Malingeb having opted to change the GI roofing to anahaw sourced from warm weathered Pagudpud, Ilocos Norte and Quezon province.
Anahaw is more durable with a 20-year life span as compared to a 5-year durability of ‘gu-un’ before it shall be changed again said Aldwin Ayban a dumap-ay of Malingeb and who supervised the replacement to anahaw roofing.
And to prevent the anahaw from fire threats, the material was covered with insulated net, Ayban added.
A much commented issue in social media, changing of the roof to anahaw stirred the question of what ‘heritage’ means with some sending the question of why not use ‘gu-un’.
            Anahaw is ‘ananga’ in our dialect, that material which people in our place then used to cover their heads and back from the rain, Tauli added.  
Anahaw gets ‘closer to what heritage means”, he added.

Heritage
With the advocacy of and legislative enactions passed in national laws and local ordinances on heritage, a conscious query on what is heritage prompts people to know what the ‘old’ is to be preserved.
            The question on what was the traditional material of the dap-ay roofing came in time with the recent passing of the heritage ordinance on man-made structures by the Sangguniang Bayan of the municipality of Sagada as approved by the Sangguniang Panlalawigan and transmitted to the SB on June 25 this year.
The SB defined ‘heritage’ as the “traditions, achievements, beliefs, culture and the like that are part of the history of a group, community or nation”; and man-made structures to strictly refer “to any building or edifice either made of stone, wood, grass or materials or any combination thereof intended either as family or public shelter, community congregation, and or gathering coupled with the noble intentions of its use and purpose.”
As broad as it is defined, heritage includes the intangible aspect of the culture of a people distinguished from the tangible physical structure which is the material form.
Purist- critic netizens from Sagada say the cogon or gu-un roofing of the dap-ay has to be preserved.               And that there should be no changes in the roofing, walling, and everything of it. For that structure shall tell what heritage of what it was before. For indeed, what is a story to tell if there is no historical structure to see.
Former Sagada vice mayor Richard Yodong suggests that one structure be restored to have the look of the old ‘gu-un’ roofed dap-ay so to refer to what materially was the historical structure before the dap-ay now were replaced to GI sheet roofing and anahaw.
Yodong exhorts on the responsibility of the dumap-ay to look after the upkeep of their respective dap-ay. 
Among the 12 dap-ay of central Sagada, some are dilapidated while others are maintained. Some are visited most of the time while others obviously are abandoned by the look of the  dilapidated abong itself or some celllophane wrappers strewn at the dap-ay's pantew (frontyard). One needs physical relocation for the dap-ay to be moved away from a curve at the roadside as it shows hazardous location as noticed elder Guitilen of dap-ay Lukong of Demang.    
The Heritage Act of 2009 or RA 10066 differentiated tangible from intangible culture.
Said Act referred “tangible cultural property” to cultural property with historical, archival, anthropological, archaeological, artistic and architectural value, and with exceptional or traditional production, whether of Philippine origin or not, including antiques and natural history specimens with significant value.
Tangible cultural property includes ‘built heritage” to refer to "architectural and engineering structures such as, but not limited to, bridges, government buildings, houses of ancestry, traditional dwellings, quartels, train stations, lighthouses, small ports, educational, technological and industrial complexes, and their settings, and landscapes with notable historical and cultural significance."
Much commented issue in social media heavily participated by netizens from Sagada and other members in three Facebook group accounts- Save Sagada, Sagada Dap-ayan and Sagada Reports- was the use of anahaw vs the use of traditional cogon as the roofing, and the stone flooring of the extended section to remain rather than a flooring with a designed mosaic.
Here, the intangible cannot be separate from what is tangible considering the nature of what is being questioned- that of the dap-ay or abong which houses the sleeping quarters and educational space for young boys which as obviously seen is integral in the overall meaning of dap-ay.
With the change of  ‘gu-un’ to anahaw has raised spirited questions of “ay waday dap-ay di Ilocano” (is there a dap-ay of Ilocanos) overheard from young boys who were heavily discussing in a store.
Restoration being a vital part of ‘conservation” refer to “all the processes and measures of maintaining the cultural significance of a cultural property including, but not limited to, preservation, restoration, reconstruction, protection, adaptation or any combination thereof by the Heritage Act of 2009.”
Where an old material has weathered and where that old material may not be available anymore goes into practical remedies such as the availability of  GI sheet or anahaw bringing up the question of what is the extent of restoration.
Throughout varied periods in time, availability and practicality of materials had been demonstrated in the restoration of the dap-ay roofing from ‘gu-un’ to GI sheets to anahaw.
             Should there have been GI sheets in the olden times, such may have been used as roofing of the dap-ay, elder Bisogong  Badongen of dapay Maballay said.
Sagada elder and writer Benjamin Longid says ‘depending on how it is rendered, the dap-ay can be not too far a departure from the past while providing space for its present functions. A table miniature of an old dap-ay can be made to educate the younger generation and visitors so they can have an idea of that simple institution that has helped shape our values.”
Nethertheless, Malingeb elder and former Sagada mayor Thomas Killip emphasize the strengthening by the community of the “intangible role or function of the dap-ay referring to values system, traditional rituals, practices, social gatherings even if the physical look of the dap-ay is changed’  
             “Intangible cultural heritage” as defined by the Heritage Act refers to the practices, representations, expressions, knowledge and skills, as well as the instruments, objects and artifacts associated therewith, that communities, groups and individuals recognize as part of their cultural heritage, such as oral traditions, languages and expressions; performing arts; social practices, rituals and festive events; knowledge and practices concerning nature and the universe; and traditional craftsmanship.”
            To this differentiate from “intangible cultural property” to refer to the peoples’ learned processes along with the knowledge, skills and creativity that inform and are developed by them, the products they create and the resources, spaces and other aspects of social and natural context necessary for their sustainability.
And so the people of Sagada practice their cultural ways since then passed down by elders who actually performed these. One of which is the begnas, an agricultural feast capped with playing of gongs and dancing. 
Though for this July begnas called Begnas di Tangeb di Babayas does not customarily observe dancing as done in the other begnas celebrations.
In the pursuit of cultural preservation, “the nation’s cultural heritage, its property and histories, and the ethnicity of local communities shall likewise endeavor to create a balanced atmosphere where the historic past coexists in harmony with modern society. It shall approach the problem of conservation in an integrated and holistic manner, cutting across all relevant disciplines and technologies."
“Artistic imagination can be given free rein but within the framework of conservation for posterity, shouldn’t that be of primary consideration?” exhorts  Benjamin Longid, a descendant of Ganga yas Labanet (AGL) one of the old family- ancestries of Sagada.  
            And with a relatively new heritage ordinance of the municipality considering the issues raised in the innovations done by dap-ay Malingeb, raises queries on implementing rules of the code or ammending the heritage code itself for one, on what alteration means or who is the ‘proper authority’ in deciding what restoration or improvement of a cultural structure is.

The Umbon
The ‘dumap-ay’ per dap-ay are obligated to take care of their own dap-ay either when to ‘sukyab’ their roofing or come together and decide on issues that affect them.
This including where to get support from projects they want to do with their dap-ay and other activities they want conducted.
And so upon request by the Malingeb ‘umbon’ to businessman Alfonso ‘Boy’ Yuchengco Jr, long-time friend of Sagada, the ‘umbon’ asked for support for the installation of the anahaw roofing of the abong and the enhancement of the extended dance floor.
Commonly called Boyu, Boy Yuchengco Jr is the son of philanthropist - businessman Alfonso Yuchengco who supported the building of the new St Mary’s School in 1979 after the old pine wood-made school was razed in1975. 
How the restoration came about emphasized the role of the ‘umbon’ or the ‘pangbon’ referring to the ‘dumap-ay’ or members of the dap-ay.
Aptly, as Demang elder and tourist guide Aklayan Aben said “ay daida baw” (its up to them) or elder Badongen of dap-ay Maballay of Dagdag said, “sha met nan ikkan da” referring to the umbon of Malingeb's consensual agreement when asked on their comment on the replacement of the roof material to anahaw.
The ‘umbon’ for three consecutive times since the early months of the second quarter of the year had to come together and discuss the changes that happened, Tauli recalled.
Consultation being a prime and fundamental requirement on what happens in the dap-ay is a conscious practice to follow for the dap-ay is a collective composition of the ‘dumap-ay’.
Changing the roofing,the look of the frontage and the walling, and working on the floor mosaic was left to the decision of the ‘umbon’ to decide following the consensus method of coming up with a collective decision.
‘Nu ngan nan kanan nan tapina et sha nan maikkan’ ( what others say shall it be), said elder Jaime Capuyan, thereby placing great emphasis on what others say rather than what only one says.
For indeed, a dap-ay member from another dap-ay in Sagada or from another place to dictate or interfere in the affairs of a dap-ay not their own is frowned upon to follow cultural sovereignty and respect to another.
Where, as the colors and designs of tapis or wanes have their separate distinction from another culture or tribe so are decisions of one tribe as to their sovereign own.
And shall the municipality’s heritage ordinance qualify criteria of what heritage means? Tauli who is himself the secretary of Sangguniang Bayan of Sagada said, let ‘heritage’ stay as how it is worded and to be particularly qualified by respective members of the dap-ay.
So does that include the changing of the low lying one storey dap-ay structure now to a two- story building in the future for example to mean heritage?
“That would be a different building then”, Tauli said.
And what about those two big statues at the front side of the dap-ay?
Demang elder Joseph Guitilen Capuyan frowned on the sculptured human forms at the front side saying he has never seen ‘tinagtago’ (sculptured human forms) at the front side of a dap-ay.  And for wall paintings?  “kigad das sa” (that’s up to them”), he quipped.  
Malingeb elder Jaime Capuyan has a different opinion on the placing of the statue  at the front side of the dap-ay, saying in dialect,  ‘dati tako ay buso” (we are former headhunters).
The human form statues symbolically guard the dap-ay and the ili (community) from invaders.
And so history and the present says, the dap-ay locates the ‘padao’ placed in a circular arrangement where the cut-off heads of invading headhunters from other places were hung. 
The heads cut off by warriors and placed in totem poles was the practice during the head hunting days in Sagada, Bontoc, other places of Mountain Province, Abra, Kalinga and Ifugao. The cut-off heads placed in totem poles meant victory and that the ili shall be protected from invaders.
“The elders told us that the dap-ay itself where the ‘padao’ and the stone-seats are located should remain as is”, local artist James Wandag said.
And so the sacred part of the dap-ay remained as is, the padao and stone-seats intact as how these originally looked like.
The not so sacred part of the dap-ay referring to the extended dance floor was left to the imagination of artists who worked on the mosaic designed flooring.
Said flooring was a former pigsty eventually backfilled with river stones and levelled to become the dance floor.
Malingeb elder Jaime Capuyan sees there is nothing wrong with the mosaic saying “baken dakes’ (not bad) except that the carabao horns installed on the wall of the dance floor be taken down as there was no babayas (wedding celebration) that ever happened in dap-ay Malingeb.
Though other members of the dap-ay look at it differently.  Elder and barangay captain Edward Ayban said there was a time that lakay Omaweng, elder of Mallingeb dap-ay butchered two carabaos in the 1960s and hung these in one part of the dap-ay in observance of the ‘goliweng’.
Asked what ‘goliweng’ is Lakay Guitilen from nearby Demang recalled a star-like object which went on circular motions with a clanging sound installed high above one section of the dap-ay and for what purpose he did not know.

The Mosaic
The extended dance floor with designs of earth elements- sun, moon, plants, sky, waters, cultural artifacts and man- incorporated tiles and paint on the mosaic worked on a cemented flooring June this year.
Surrounded by eight mandalas in a circular pattern surrounding the shape of a lizard enclosed a ‘wising’-shaped geometric pattern enclosing a blue shaped circle signifying the earth and sky.
Called collaborative art by artist Bong Sanchez from Bauko and married to one from Ambasing, Sagada the work was done with other members of dap-ay Malingeb namely local artists James Wandag who co-conceptualized the mosaic. Other local artists and members of Malingeb came in to help namely Aspil Capuyan, Puclis Guitilen, with the two children of  Eril Bistoguey helped in grouting the mosaic with tiles and Sanchez and Wandag in painting the designs.
Curves and lines make up the mosaic with meanings etched in motifs mostly of which are earth elements, cultural artifacts and man.  
Around the central mandala is a wider shape showing the cultural ‘wising’ the sign for fertility. And so man and woman was created after the heaven and earth were made by God. Wising  was commonly used as an earring used by elders in the past.
Malingeb known to be a dap-ay for the ‘mamaleng-ag’ or the ‘mamakedse’ is commonly referred to as the dap-ay of businessmen and perfectly, as the wising is traditionally made of gold which means wealth.
Around the wising is the form of a lizard which symbolizes longevity.
Etched around the lizard form are eight mandalas signifying one set of gongs culturally played by men during occasions as begnas.  
Local artist James Wandag said the eight gong mandalas speak of harmony and resounding impact when all played as a collective team. In popular numerology, eight speaks of dynamism and balance.  
The traditional gong instruments are played during occasions mostly during joyful events- begnas, weddings, dangtey, and in contemporary times when there are graduations, conferences, meetings.
The ‘balbeg’ (spear) with its pointed arrow to the blue form in the middle of mosaic refers to direction- to earth and sky with the base of the arrow at the back of the head of a person with outstretched arms praising a higher being. Sagada culture worships Kabunian, local term for God. 
Sanchez said the person is reclining on the pole of a spear which finds below the figure of two persons in two separate round geometric shapes colored blue aquatic waters and green agriculture. Elements which naturally compose the spiritual and economic life of the Sagada Igorot.  
On the same handle of the spear towards the base of the motif is a ‘kalasag’ (shield) showing man and his cultural ways with linear motiffs of earth elements, cultural patterns such as weaves, and man all intertwined in what makes a community. Kalasag signifies defense and aptly, the upright practise and defense on community and culture.   
Sanchez and Wandag said some mandalas need pronounced enhancement pending ceramic art works by local potters Siegrid Angway- Rogers and Tessie Baldo.
The subject ‘understanding culture society and politics’ in senior high school makes this mosaic a perfect summarized art work of what the subject means, the beginning of creation, the intertwining weaves of nature with that of man and culture and valuing the earth.
Another part of the dance floor is a waiting space where a bench was installed with sculptured faces on the window part and where other mandalas are found on the flooring including the popular universal yin-yang symbol.  Sculptured art works were done by local artist and carpenter Jessie  Gaongen.
Though “one of my favorite images in my personal reflections, the Yin-Yang figure is misplaced and contributes nothing to affirm the dap-ay's identity”, Longid commented.
The mosaic in a wider meaning tells the material culture of Sagada. The land is worked on, waters are crucial in farming, and pigs, chickens and even dogs are offered to  Kabunian for bountiful harvest, fertility, longevity, prosperity, security and banning of disease.
Like what elder Jaime Capuyan popularly called Lakay Saime prayed during the Begnas id Malingeb  that the dreaded Covid virus shall not enter Sagada.

Begnas di Tangeb di Babayas
Begnas di Tangeb di Babayas (wedding celebrations) annually happens July after the Begnas di Ani (rice harvest in June.
The July begnas then closes the wedding celebrations done in May and the rice harvest in June.
Tangeb di Babayas is an annual event which caps the wedding season culturally held in May. Though there were no wedding celebrations due to the Covid pandemic, the begnas event went on as observed along with the Tangeb di Ogas or the closing of rice harvest.
Begnas di Tangeb di Babayas comes with Begnas di Latab or Begnas di Ogas (closing of harvest).
There are five regular begnas events done the whole  year round. The first called Begnas di Yabyab is done in November to signify the start of the rice planting season with the legendary ‘Bangan’ doing the first rice planting.
Rice seedlings were planted in December and eventually the ripened palay harvested June to July.
Begnas in Sagada is an agricultural feast held five times a year.
Begnas di Yabyab is followed by the second begnas in March to signify the construction of houses and milling of sugarcane thus Begnas di Lebek followed in May to signify Begnas di Tiyagew (dry season) and wedding celebrations.
And the cycle repeats again in November’s Begnas di Yabyab depending on the phase of the moon.
During the Begnas, the men clad in their G- strings and each holding a spear walk the pathway from river Tudey to the host dap-ay loudly chanting the ‘wawe’, shouts of men having began their walk from the river to the host dap-ay. Waters compose an integral essence of the agricultural feast.
The giving of wine, ‘tupig’ or sticky rice wrapped in sugarcane leaves, bread from women follow and these materially collected for the dap-ay. From the earth, earth’s products are offered and the ritual begins. 
The ritual implores Kabunian for health, procreation, longevity, prosperity, and good harvest for the people of the ili (community).

Malingeb’s new intros
The replacement of  ‘gu-un’ to anahaw roofing is not new on what dap-ay Malingeb has done in the past on its innovations to cite the "goliweng' and now the anahaw roofing and  mosaic designed dance floor. What is more to see in the near future?
James Wandag envisions the dance floor to serve as an educational workshop site where children can come together and learn what the culture of Sagada is. He also envisions the newly enhanced extension to serve as a venue where art works of Sagada artists- both children and adults can display their arts and crafts. And this to accommodate other dumap-ay of Sagada.
And so goes the song ‘It’s a new world’ by The Moody Blues.

Monday, April 13, 2020

Leaflets dropped from choppers gather mixed reactions from Sagada folks



By Gina Dizon

SAGADA, MOUNTAIN PROVINCE – “Waay sha san ited presidente ay sag P5,000.00” (Maybe that is the P5,000 the President (Duterte) shall distribute to the people.”)  
“Reinforcement ngen di Army sa.” (Maybe that’s reinforcement by the Armed Forces of the Philippines)
“Ay relief goods ngen iyali da?” (Are they bringing relief goods?)
These are some of the reactions of residents here from this tourist town on the dropping of anti- new people’s army (NPA)- communist party of the Philippines (CPP)- national democratic front (NDF) propaganda material folded in plastic with a candy weight from two helicopters on April 12.
Contents of said leaflet assured people of assistance that government provides at this time of enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) for affected and poor families due Covid-19.
Believed to be flown by elements from the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP)/Philippine National Police (PNP), two helicopters hovered over this town here late morning of Easter Sunday disturbing the residents with repeated whirrs and leaving cellophane-wrapped flyers on yards, rooftops, trees, mountains, rivers and streets.
Whirrs of helicopters bring mixed reactions among residents here in this small town ever since it was visited by choppers in the ‘70s till now.
Choppers coming here in the ‘70s are a joy and an excitement among children who rushed on grounds where the helicopter has landed. 
In different periods of the previous years though, scared residents of the ‘80s and 90’s are witness to the dropping of bombs along with the hovering of AFP choppers in their anti-insurgency drives that led to the establishment of a peace zone in 1993.
Choppers also meant the coming of former president Gloria Arroyo in the early years of 2000. Arroyo was often a visitor of Sagada which led to the making of the state of the nation (SONA) projects in the north including the rehabilitation of the Dantay-Sagada Road.     
Choppers in the recent tourism years when tourism boomed in the 2010 upwards meant rich people from Manila as the Ayalas’ coming here as tourists.
Choppers in the recent Easter Day are a propaganda thing. 
The militant Cordillera Peoples Alliance (CPA) in their statement considers the incident a “waste of peoples’ money amid lack of economic assistance during the pandemic.”
In this period of enhanced community quarantine (ECQ), government assistance comes in a P200 billion cash and non-cash social amelioration program (SAP) for 18 million Filipinos out of the country’s 104 million population.
Government assistance programs are Covid adjustment measures program (CAMP) for  affected formal employees  and Tulong pangkabuhayan sa ating displaced and disadvantaged (TUPAD) workers administered by the department of labor and employment (DOLE); P5,000 financial aid and P25,000 loan for  farmers in the Department of Agriculture’s  Survival and Recovery Assistance (SURE) program; loans to entrepreneurs by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)’s Enterprise Rehabilitation Financing facility under the Pondo sa Pagbabago at Pag-asenso;  and P5,000-P8,000 cash assistance and food relief by  the department of social welfare and development (DSWD).
The DSWD  is currently distributing the P5,000 to P8,000 amelioration subsidy to affected and poor families at this ECQ period while others have not yet availed of the amount with others complaining of not being qualified as beneficiary. 
In some parts of the country, the distribution of food relief has also received complaints of some not having reached them while others were given.
             Netizens in their Facebook posts also expressed their disgust on the helicopters dropping the leaflets as a waste of public funds. 
Sagada resident Gwen Gaongen said, “wishful thinking ay relief ya PPE nan inyali da wenno at least informative sheets tet ew isnan ikkan di ipugaw ay maka avail sinan government support idwani ay quarantine. Expensive propaganda moves when many have nothing to eat” (wishful thinking that relief and protective equipment (PPE) are what they have brought or at least informative sheets on how to avail of government support during this quarantine period).
Sagada resident Botbotanmel Abad said, “... Kanan mi pay no kaisagutan nan inbaban da tosa. Aneyna..... ado kasapulan id waniy panawen. Baken papel ay para ilo. (...We thought it’s something helpful that they have brought us. Unfortunately, there’s much needed these days. Not that sheet of paper good for toilet paper.)
CPA chairperson Windel Bolinget who also comes from Sagada asked, “among other expenses, how much was spent for the aviation fuel consumed by two helicopters for more than an hour?”
            “These should have been useful if used for relief operations urgently needed by the people in this time of lockdown and difficulty” Bolinget added.
Beverly Longid who comes from Sagada and currently works with the International Indigenous Peoples Movement for Self Determination and Liberation  said, “….At this time of the pandemic, funds should prioritize public health, purchase of much-needed PPEs for frontlines, relief and economic aid for those in need. Accordingly, HUEY UH1J Utility choppers as seen here would spend PhP110k per hour airborne. The government wasted at least PhP200K exclusive the printing of the black propaganda, the plastic wrapping and candies used as package weight. The amount could also be used to augment the SAP funds.”
The AFP has a budget of P192 billion for 2020 and the “PNP of P187 billion to include in its budget items anti-insurgency operations. 
Others are apprehensive of the leaflets dropped from the choppers.
Sagada resident  Carmen Gayyad in her Facebook post said “Ay ta sat pai infected is covid 19 nan flyers ya candies ay sana da?.... Ay xa et sa, maawawni daida nan mangidateng c covid 19 cna community tako. (what if those flyers and candies were infected with covid-19?... Its dreadful to think that they might be the ones to bring covid-19 in our community.)
While others demand that those responsible be made accountable. 
Netizen Felipe Mendoza de Leon said,” the officers and soldiers responsible for this illegal activity should be investigated and prosecuted for the terrible waste of resources and act of terrorizing the peaceful communities of Sagada.”
This writer comments violation of free prior and informed consent (FPIC) with the helicopters having entered the areal territory of Sagada without prior consent; and a violation of one’s rights and invasion to personal property having dropped candies on private yards and rooftops.
Said flyers warned the people not to receive relief goods and donations from groups that they allege to be members of the CPP-NPA.
Earlier, the CPA a militant organization composed of a number of people’s organizations wit other activist groups and individuals distributed relief goods in some communities of Baguio, La Trinidad and Benguet some days ago. 
Sagada resident Steven Edward Rogers said in his Facebook post, “What's being prevented? All this does is antagonize people. Why spend all that money flying helicopters when local police could easily distribute flyers? The timing is really poor. I don't think they are winning any hearts and minds with that. More the opposite. If they want to get people to trust the government they need performance, not propaganda.”
Meantime, Sagada resident  Dom-an Macagne  was emphatic about "not dropping propaganda materials from the sky on Easter Sunday." 

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Why Sus-uwa?


SAGADA - Sus-uwa is a ritual in Sagada done on the conduct of a Senga, a thanksgiving cultural practise of an undertaking whether on some stages of the construction of a house or the graduation of a child. Sus-uwa is also observed by a parent or a sibling to a member of the family who died.
        The ritual is a prayer and the setting is solemn, with no one talking, sneezing, coughing, talking, walking and even a fart is prevented from breaking out so not to break the flow of the prayers.
        A cooked part of a chicken or a pig with a bit of rice on a plate and a bowl or cup of soup is placed on the floor. The door is guarded so no one will come in while the ‘amam-a’ (elders) do a monotonous prayerful incantation of good health and good luck among members of the family who did the Senga and that Kabunyan take care of the household members.
        The sus-uwa could last for 10 minutes to 30 minutes depending on the incantation of the elders. 
        The setting is solemn and prayerful.
        Now comes the subject of the Sos-owa to be done in reference to the re-imagination, repainting, re-touching of a mural originally done by artist Santiago Bose at the wall frontage of St Mary School in the 1980s.
        The Sos-owa as it is titled on a poster shall be held on March 8, 2020. With the many years that passed, the paint and the sketches of the figures weathered, withered and urecognizable with some figures still visible at the frontage wall of St Mary School.
        The original painting then showed figures of persons closely huddled together and each holding a ‘kalasag’ (shield) and standing in front of rice terraces. There is also the picture of a woman holding a ‘labba’ (basket) and in another section of the mural, a  figure of a ‘tinagtago’ (carved form of a human being) among other features.
         Whatever story the mural told, other features are not so clear to see with the passing of time and the weathering of the paint. Though the message of the mural must have depicted the beliefs and cultural practises of the iSagada who nurtures and guards the ricefields, the waters and the forests, one with the waters and the earth, fire and wind, plants and animals and the spirits guarding these.
         So we come to know that the painting was and the repainting now is supported by Boy Yuchengco, son of  philanthropist-businessman Alfonso Yuchengco who donated the construction of the now St Mary School building after the earlier school building made of pine wood was burned in May 1975.  
          Bose died in 2002. His artist friends from Baguio and other Cordillera artists now do the repainting with some added features including a rainbow in the current 2020 project.  
          After the Sos-owa in the morning to be ceremonized by some elders of Sagada I come to know, is a concert at the ballground with Lolita Carbon known for her environmental and social concern songs.
          The softball ground was then the site where the Asin folk band once played their most nostalgic concert one happy  night in the ‘80s and people of Sagada were treated to a groovy and euphoric moment of all sorts with Asin’s  popular Kapaligiran, Balita, Cotabato, Tuldok among other hits.
          That was in the 1980s. Fast forward. Its now 2020.  Some 40 years ago and with less other members of Asin band. Now only with Lolita and her husky voice. Must still be husky and beautiful now with the mellowing of time. Lolita comes with a reggae band called Weather the Roots and another group called Aman Sinaya.
          This time, it’s a concert in the afternoon that comes after a prayer ritual to be held in the morning of March 8. Yes, March 8 not really in celebration of International Women’s Day but a day maybe because it’s a Sunday for people to rest and give thanks to the Lord.
          The concert comes with an event titled Sos-owa. Any Sagada-Igorot who knows his or her culture shall ask why ‘sus-uwa’ when the setting is a folk-reggae- concert with drums, guitar and percussion and the mood likely to be is lively, danceable and groovy. Quite ironical to the solemn, prayerful, still and monotonous incantations of elders in a cultural ritual termed sus-uwa.
          A Facebook chatbox among some iSagada kailyan are hesitant of the title of the concert  ‘Sos-uwa’. And they suggest it better be called ‘liwliwa’ as it is more lively. Though others say a ‘liwliwa’ does not come with drums and gongs as the instruments are played during a feast. And better that it be titled ‘day-eng’ meaning music.  While another  said,  it better be called ‘sapsapit’ as it shall tell the story of a subject.  
          And so the issue went on about using a cultural term inappropriate to an event, the concert. Though ‘sos-owa’ is alright for the conduct of the unveiling of the mural ritual. Obviously, the program held in Sagada was not conceptualized and titled by an iSagada sus-uwa pronounced with U's said with puckered lips and not sos-owa with rounded O's.
          Nevertheless, its one's option to be in a prayerful mood to watch the concert publicly held in the afternoon at the soft ball ground separate from the venue of the unveiling of the mural ritual done in the morning at the SMS quadrangle at the same day. An event the many alumni of Saint Mary School will know what the event is all about.  
   

Friday, May 10, 2019

Sagada folks ask in synchronized rallies “where’s the 36M Boasaw waters”

323% delayed

By Gina Dizon

SAGADA, MOUNTAIN PROVINCE – “Where’s the Boasaw waters” is a much questioned issue during Sagada’s synchronized political rallies especially here at the Poblacion area.

As it is since 2012 when the P36 million waterworks was implemented by then mayor Engr Eduardo Latawan, the money was used up by the contractor Cotabato based- FFJJ Construction and sub- contractors from northern Sagada, there is yet no water that reached the intended barangay- beneficiaries of Poblacion Sagada.
Distribution tank at Palidan, Bangaan, 2014

And as it is Boasaw water pipes then seen along the road from Bangaan to Kiltepan are now disconnected even as the pipes coming from Boasaw that supposedly should reach the distribution tank at Palidan, Bangaan now evades the tank and the pipes directly lead to Tanulong rice fields.     
                   
This, as an earlier complaint regarding the Boasaw waterworks project was refiled by complainant Grace Bandoy against Latawan before the Office of the Ombudsman for  abuse of authority, dishonesty, unethical conduct and graft and corruption on the basis of  Republic Act No. 6713  known as the Code of Conduct and Ethical Standards for public officials and employees and Republic Act No. 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act as to commitment to public interest, professionalism, justness and sincerity, and responsiveness to the public

The complaint earlier filed in 2014 is refiled at the Ombudsman office with updated allegations of a 323% slippage and liquidated total P2.4 million damages as Commission on Audit reports say. You will wonder how it ever ended up this way and still there is no P36 million gone P38 million water that reaches the people of Poblacion Sagada. 

The P36 million Boasao waterworks was taken from two sources. One from the P18 million priority development assistance funds (PDAF) of then Senator Teofisto Guingona 111 from the initiative of then Mayor Eduardo Latawan and an P18 million counterpart sourced from the Cordillera Highland Agricultural Resource Management Project (CHARMP) from the initiative of then Vice Mayor Richard Yodong with the Sangguniang Bayan of Sagada then in 2010.  


The Boasaw waterworks project called Improvement of Buasao Irrigation System and Construction of Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association Water Services with beneficiary Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association was meant to provide irrigation to Tanulong rice fields and domestic water supply for the 15 barangays of Sagada.

The feasibility study of the project identified the water sourced at Boasaw located within the tri boundaries of Agawa Besao, Tubo Abra and Aguid Sagada because there is a water crisis in Sagada. Until now.


Now,broken pipe stands. 
And now, the pipes installed from Boasaw dam were directly led to the rice fields of Tanulong making the constructed distribution tank at Palidan, Bangaan beautifully useless.
In said rally here at the Poblacion, re-electionist Councilor Jerry Ticag who is also the president of the Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association answered back:  what happened to the agreement to have 5 inches of the 6-inch pipe connected from the main source at the Boasaw dam go to Tanulong and a 1 inch of the 6-inch pipe to the domestic waterworks of Sagada Poblacion?

Whatever happened to the agreement.

THE AGREEMENT .
Members of the Tanulong tribe represented by Vincent Bacdayan representing the Bacdayan family who owns the water rights of the Boasaw waters in Tanulong; Tanulong barangay captain Manuel Boto-og; then president of the Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association John Baguiwet; thenMadongo Barangay Captain Joseph Aclopen; and local leader Jerry Ticag of Tanulong,  agreed among themselves that the Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association shall manage a domestic water system planned to be built by the LGU of Sagada with waters sourced from Boasaw. Said Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in 2011 was witnessed by four elders of Madongo and Tanulong; 12 kagawad of barangays Tanulong and Madongo; secretaries, treasurers, and SK chairmen of both barangays, and Sagada Mayor Eduardo Latawan Jr.

Said MOU also identified a 5-inch opening to be connected from upstream waters of Boasaw with waters leading to the ricefields in barangay Tanulong and excess waters to domestic consumption; that waters shall be directed to a domestic water system when rice fields don’t need irrigation; and that all waters to be diverted to the 5 inch opening going to Tanulong’s irrigation should there be lack of water, with only one hour flow every three days of the week for domestic waters  leading to Poblacion Sagada.

The agreement further said a pipe 6 inches in diameter shall be connected upstream Boasaw dam with a 5 inch opening going to Tanulong ricefields and 1 inch for domestic waters. It shall be recalled that an earlier agreement between Besao and Tanulong identified a 6-inch diameter pipe maximum to be connected in the Boasaw dam for Tanulong water purposes.

Excess waters as noted in an earlier 2011 agreement among Tanulong folks referred to situations when rice fields are in fallow during rainy months so water is directed for domestic water supply. That is, when the rice plants are not in need of waters after harvest time and before the planting season.
The once connected pipe to the distribution tank at Palidan now evades the tank and the pipe leading straight away to Tanulong irrigation.

In times when rice fields need water only one hour is allowed every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday of the week to be released for domestic consumption. 

The Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association has “exclusive authority to manage the domestic water system and install water meters” leading to households. Aclopen clarified that water fees shall be just enough to pay salaries for maintenance.

As it is however eight years after the water works was done, there is no water reaching the 
Poblacion to even talk about managing a domestic water system. This even as Puclis Bawaan a resident of water-needy Dagdag asked during the rally at Dagdag where the plan for the creation of barangay waters works associations has gone.

The memorandum "imposes" the installation of a water meter in every distribution tank and that water fees shall be collected through automatic deduction from the Internal Revenue Allotment of each barangay of Sagada availing of the water.

Water fees were identified to be on a “fair cost or just enough” to pay salaries of four maintenance men.

The acceptance or non-acceptance of projected water-user barangays on fees directly charged against their IRA as an imposition and to the sole management of the Tanulong Irrigators Association remains a question without the inclusion of  intended water-user barangays as to the domestic water system’s management. As it was, there was no consultation done with the intended beneficiaries of Sagada Poblacion when the waterworks proceeded. 

Nevertheless, the supply of water is an illusion considering conditions stipulated in the said Tanulong peoples’ MOU when during summer time waters get depleted.
The waterworks project which obviously is made for Tanulong’ irrigation for its rice fields and how the past years say of the water’s movement say that the domestic waterworks for Sagada is then a dream still stuck in Boasaw.   

Engr Richard Yodong, former vice mayor of Sagada and candidate for the same position says it would be good to review the MOU and renegotiate with the people from Tanulong.
A project that was desperately pursued to implement a P36 million-peso fund by the former administration of then Mayor Engr Edward Latawan.

Latawan is now a gubernatorial candidate for Mountain Province.

Candidate for councilor and former councilor Kapon Gomgom-o during the rally at barangay Dagdag said the Boasaw waters remain to be the biggest source for water at Poblacion and “we have to get it”.    

WHERE IS THE WATER
Despite rainy days, water is still scarce in this tourist town as pipes bringing the precious liquid here from a watershed along the boundary of Abra and Sagada have not yet reached households of this town.

Those in south central Ambasing where a water tank is installed say Boasaw waters have not yet reached the village. And so with the eastern barangays where folks here only tasted the waters for two months in the summer of 2014 then disappeared till now.

Disappeared. Even as the Boasaw pipes were disconnected along the Kiltepan hills and along the road going to Antadao and the pipes now piled beside a house in front of the barangay hall of Antadao.

A barangay kagawad from Aguid said the pipes were disconnected for safe keeping as there is no water coming from Boasaw. Pipes along Madongo and Bangaan were also disconnected.   

Exasperation was noted with publicized reports that the Boasaw waters reached town during the visit of Guingona January 7 in 2015 where he was named Gatan by the LGU with the conduct of ‘apoy’ thanksgiving ceremonial services that waters arrived.
Indeed, gurgling waters were seen spouting from the four-inch pipe near the ceremonial site at site Anga-ang with waters not seen spouting anymore a few days after the ceremony was over.

Contrary to reports however say Boasaw waters for domestic use have not yet reached the town’s desired beneficiaries except to the irrigation canal leading to the Tanulong rice fields.   
Until now. And its May 2019 when the rains have come and for the past 8 years of the rainy season, there is yet no water from Boasaw.  

What’s wrong.

BAD ENGINEERING
Bad engineering design is obviously the reason why the waters of Boasaw are not reaching Poblacion supposedly brought by the P36 million project Boasaw Irrigation System and Construction of Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association Water Services.
This was made known in two previous inspections Jan. 21 and June 23 of 2015 attended by the implementor Local Government Unit of this town and the Cordillera Highland Agricultural Resource Management Project (CHARMP).

And with the project not yet turned over to the Tanulong Tribe Irrigators Association is a matter of public interest needing attention. CHARMP should be overly concerned what to report to the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) as the source of the money with a long overdue 323% slippage.     

And with the rains continuously pouring and Boasaw waters not yet in town, something is definitely perceived to be wrong with the design of said waterworks that started mid year of 2012.

Additional 230 pipes, 4 inch in diameter were installed in 2015 along a 1.5 kilometer waterline towards the distribution tank at Palidan, Bangaan hoping to bring this whooping million-peso project to desired 15 beneficiary barangays in town. The 230 pipes shall continue a two lane 4-inch diameter pipes earlier installed on a two- kilometer pipeline.

For an “experimental” project as former Mayor Engr Eduardo Latawan himself claimed during the January 21 inspection, this P36 million waterworks with a 320-day project duration tells the assumption that the project went on a costly tryout of a water joy ride which in the end is left to the locals to figure out for themselves what the problem is why the waters are not reaching their faucets.

With waters that don’t reach town, sources here say there is need to add pressure so water shall move faster to maximum capacity from a 6-inch pipe connected from the main source flowing to a concreted open canal on to an 8-inch diameter pipe T-split in two 4-inch 
diameter tubes.

Thus the need for breaker tanks as CHARMP engineer Filemon Salvador said during the Jan. 21, 2015 inspection.

Two breaker tanks however were not installed Salvador said as LGU authorities informed him that a ‘water drum’ to test the desired breaker tank did not do any much better to bring pressure for water to flow to the distribution tank.

So the installation of 230 pipes perceived to add more pressure for water to reach the Palidan water tank. Then Tanulong barangay captain Ben Ayawan is hopeful installation of the two lane 4-inch diameter pipes shall bring more waters to the distribution tank.
Asked what if the 230 pipes shall still not bring the desired 13.5 seconds per liter to the Palidan tank, Salvador said the desired breaker tanks shall be installed. 

The breaker tank solution and the two lines of four inch pipes has not been that successful with waters not yet here. The two lines of 4 inch pipes though reached some distance above the Palidan tank. And it is being forwarded that the two pipelines should be continued. As it is however, the two pipelines were joined and directly led to the rice fields of Tanulong evading the distribution tank at Palidan.

As it is, a P1.3 million fund from the National Irrigation Authority (NIA) was sourced by the Tanulong Irrigators Association to pursue the Boasaw waterworks to their fields. The project is currently being implemented.     

DESIGN
The pipes laid out started from a 6- inch pipe that went to an open canal measuring some distance of 200 meters and an 8 - inch pipe connected from here with some distance of 300 meters. Waters from the 8-inch pipe was distributed in two 4 - inch pipes with a distance of some three kilometers till it reached a section where the 4-inch pipes were lacking and tied in a T to let the waters flow down a sloping area to the distribution tank at Palidan Bangaan.
In the distribution tank are two compartments. The first tank leads to the ricefields of Tanulong which when filled shall drop to the second tank for the domestic waters of Poblacion. But reports surface that excess waters don’t flow to the next compartment but through an opening just above the floor line of the tank. 

A 400-meter tunnel of the waterworks project lets a 6- inch pipe pass through.

Sagada resident and trekker Philippe Aklay who most often hikes to Boasaw said the waters are moving around at the exit of the tunnel. Whether these waters are all successfully flowing down or not needs an inspection. Aklay suggests a pipe check.

Engr Richard Yodong now running for the same electoral position in the May 2019 elections suspects that there might be some sloping elevation construction issues at the tunnel why the waters are not coming down.     

So it was known that the waters when it shall overflow shall go to the next compartment of the distribution tank at Palidan and the overflow to go to Sagada Poblacion.  

At least 38 liters per second Boasaw water discharge was registered at the peak of summer time then as noted by Montanosa Research and Development Center  What more during the rainy season.

But times have proven that the waters don’t overflow.  Even during the rainy season.
Even if the desired water level of 13.6 liters per second was reached following installation of 225 pipes along the Boasaw pipelines to the Palidan Bangaan distribution tank which is around 7 km from the town center.

Consistent complaints of folks from Tanulong and nearby northern barangays of water getting wasted along the pipelines finally led to 225 pieces of the 4 inch pipes laid out early months of 2016 alongside a stretch of 4-inch pipes earlier installed. The rest is history with a 6-inch pipe connected from the Boasaw source in consonance to an agreement with Besao and Tanulong folks.

From whatever happened, waters supposedly should each the Palidan distribution tank.But not that successful enough.

Prior inspection recommended the need to continue the pipeline that was supposed to reach the distribution tank at Palidan supposed to bring waters to the Tanulong irrigation and to the domestic waters of Sagada Poblacion and Kiltepan.

But the problem now is that there is no more pipe line leading to the distribution tank. A 4- inch pipe that comes from a welded two 4- inch pipes directly goes to the rice fields of Tanulong evading the tank. While the welded 4-inch pipe could siphon what it can get directly led to the irrigation waters of Tanulong, a big volume of the waters is stuck at the tunnel area.

Now is a big question what is that distribution tank for. Anyway, waters at the tunnel are gurgling and a-plenty at Boasaw..  

This is complicated by disconnected pipes used to be laid out from Bangaan to Madongo to Kiltepan to Antadao are now not evident.

This writer talked to a kagawad from Aguid and he/she said these are kept for keeping “ta adi kaakew”. “Adi kaakew” indeed because there is no water!  A pile of pipes also is piled in the yard of a house in front of the barangay hall at Antadao. 

REDESIGN
When the Boasaw waterworks has been conceptualized, it was questioned because the project only reached site Capinitan so it needed more funds so that it shall reach the intended 15 barangay beneficiaries including that of Poblacion Sagada and Kiltepan barangays.  

This led to an additional P2 million sourced by then mayor Latawan from the Bottoms Up Budgeting (BuB) funds in 2013 to finance the purchase of pipes to reach eastern and Poblacion barangay after the Sangguniang Bayan in 2012 chaired by then vice Mayor Richard Yodong asked for the redesign of the project considering technical issues including the ending of the pipeline only at sitio Kapinitan some two kilometers from the main town.
Latawan then said during SB meeting two 4- inch pipes shall be connected from the 6- inch pipe connected from the Boasaw water dam. This however was not pursued but instead a one 4-inch pipe was installed until waters were not reaching the desired level at the Palidan tank that the original design was recalled.

BOASAW WATERS
Boasaw Creek sources its waters from the thick communal tri-watersheds of Mengmeng, Ominney and Mabullibo located within the common environs of Aguid and nearby Agawa of Besao, is eyed as a potential water source for the 2500 households of Sagada. 

The Boasaw waters locates two dams- the Tanulong dam at the upper stream and the Agawa dam at the lower stream. Affirming Suyon’s statement, Tanulong Kagawad Michael Depidep of Tanulong during the recent CHARM meeting said that the lower stream below the Agawa dam would be a most feasible source. Hesitance of the Tanulong and Madongo tribes to release the Boasaw waters apparently traces from earlier accords with the adjoining Agawa tribe.

An agreement in 1972 reveal that the Agawa people will not claim for their use or for anybody’s use any water springing above and flowing into the dam of the Tanulong irrigation works. The Tanulong people also will not claim water below their dam.

Another source of hesitation springs from a 2002 agreement that “should there be anyone allowed to connect from the dam of Tanulong, the umili of Agawa, Tanulong and Madongo has the right to cut off the pipes” installed. The agreement further noted that, if somebody is allowed to tap at the upper stream, Agawa people shall also be allowed.

The 6-inch pipe limitation is based at an earlier 2002 agreement between and among tribes of Gueday, Agawa and Lacmaan of Besao and Madongo and Tanulong of Sagada. The agreement stated that only a 6-inch pipe in diameter is allowed to be connected to the Tanulong dam with reference to the irrigation project of CHARMP then in 2002.

The 2002 agreement further noted that only the 6-inch pipe shall remain along the Buasaw creek leading to the dam of Tanulong and Madongo and all other connections cut off.
Currently, Central Zone with poblacion barangays Patay, Dagdag and Demang have 28 water sources; south central barangay Ambasing has 6 water sources while nearby
barangay Balugan has luxuriant water sources; eastern zone with barangays Tetep-an Norte and Sur, Kilong, Antadao have 27 water sources; the southern zone of barangays Suyo, Ankileng, Nacagang, having 21 water sources; and the water-rich northern zone barangays Bangaan, Madongo, Aguid, Tanulong and Fidelisan have 23 water sources.

Vice mayoral candidate Richard Yodong in his platform suggests a centralized water system sourcing waters from these many spring waters even as comebacking councilor candidate Eduardo Umaming Jr said a study then noted that the many springs of Sagada can supply its residents.



Video by Aklay Philippe 
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