A model in coastal resource mgmt
September 18, 2005 | 12:00am
The first thing that strikes you is the clear and calm sea that immediately acts as a balm to your jaded urban soul. Then, you notice the caring attention lavished on the coastal surroundings by local people.
After a long days journey, Pangangan (pronounced as pan-ga-ngan) Island in the Bohol Peninsula is a real treat for the tired traveler. Finding it is like opening a gift. First, you traverse a causeway lined with lush mangrove stands on each side. Then, you step onto a makeshift boardwalk that leads you to a cluster of native cottages.
From here, you can see the surrounding blue sea and feel the gentle breeze touching your very soul. This is the coastal barangay of Lawis, Pangangan Island, a model project in Coastal Resource Management (CRM) program of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
Pangangan Island is under the administrative jurisdiction of the municipality of Calape. It can be reached through a 45-minute travel by land from Tagbilaran City. Lawis is one of Calapes eight barangays whose inhabitants rely heavily on fishing and agriculture for livelihood.
The DENRs local office in Tagbilaran City had spearheaded Pangangans coastal resource management. It takes pride not only in involving all members of the community in the proper management of marine resources but also for establishing five of the eight marine protected areas in Calape in the island. Marine sanctuaries are established to serve as spawning grounds for fishes and to rehabilitate the degraded marine resources.
From Brgy. San Isidro, one can reach the island through a 3.8-kilometer causeway that connects it to the Calape mainland. This causeway is in itself a living proof of the communitys solidarity, having been constructed by no less than the residents themselves.
The pristine waters of the islands coastal can be seen and felt, upon traversing the boardwalk rented out by the Lawis peoples organization, and relaxing in one of their native cottages you can feel the beauty and serenity of the Bohol Strait. The construction of the cottages and the boardwalk is the organizations first venture into eco-tourism.
Dindo Taganas, a fisherman, is the president of Lawis Farmers and Fishermans Association (LAFFA) with 120 members. He narrated how their local barangay (Lawis) and the people stood up against dynamite fishing activities that threatened their very own source of livelihood.
According to Taganas, some unscrupulous people from as far as Cebu were engaged in dynamite fishing in Pangangan Island before the Coastal Environment Program (CEP) was introduced in 1994 by the DENR. This consequently led to the degradation of their coral reefs and a decline in their fish catch.
Their organization LAFFA was born in 1994. This was after the DENR had launched community organizing efforts aimed at empowering the people to manage their coastal resources. Participatory coastal resource assessment techniques were imparted to them resulting in the peoples recognition of the importance of their coastal resources in their day-to-day undertakings.
The DENR-led program also provided trainings and capacity building on enterprise development, coastal law enforcement, resource assessment and protection, mangrove management, establishment of marine protected areas, and eco-tourism. Some members of LAFFA became actively involved in their barangays efforts in protecting their coastal resources from illegal fishing as members of Bantay Dagat. Bantay Dagat is a collaborative coastal law enforcement arm of the DENR, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, Philippine Coast Guard, Philippine National Police and the local government units.
Lawis barangay captain Mariano Tayabas is also among the staunch supporters of the Bantay Dagat. Aside from being active in the Bantay Dagat activities, he also leads the organization in ensuring the proper protection and maintenance of the cottages and the boardwalk, from where their cooperative derives additional income.
Prior to that, however, the DENR through its Coastal Environment Program had provided some P5,000 to P15,000 seed money to the various peoples organizations in Pangangan to start livelihood programs for their communities. Dindos organization, LAFFA, started with bigasan and livestock raising. The seed money increased to P35,000 after about two years. With good financial standing, the cooperative was able to get a loan of P150,000 from a local NGO, Bohol Integrated Development Foundation or BIDEF.
After sometime, they also ventured into money lending to cooperative members, hog dispersal, seaweed culture, cottage and boardwalk renting. Their latest venture, lobster culture is becoming to be the most promising endeavor of the community, considering the high price lobsters command, which is at least P1,400 per kilo. According to Dindo, an average lobster weighs around 1.5 kilo. In fact, according to him, from their initial harvest of only seven pieces of lobster, the cooperative earned P7,500.
Fish harvest has also increased after the establishment of a 13.5-hectare marine sanctuary in the area. Before the implementation of the coastal resource management program, they get an average of 10 kilos of fish using basing; now, they harvest 15 to 23 kilos.
Aside from fishing and farming, some members of the LAFFA are also into hog fattening, cottage renting, seaweeds culture and lobster farming.
"Para moasenso pa ang among marine resources kinahanglan nga magtinabangay ang mga katauhan sa pag-atiman, pagbabantay o pagproteksyon para molahutay ng mo-asinso ang ekonomiya sa among barangay," (To sustain the marine resources, we, should protect and care for them so we can help the economy of our barangay), remarked Dindo Taganas when asked about their future plans for Brgy. Lawis.
Indeed, Pangangan Island is now, not just a haven of peace and tranquility for its people and its visitors, it is also a refuse for fishes, a place that can give sustainable livelihood opportunities for the poor marginalized fisherfolks living in the coastal areas of Bohol.
After a long days journey, Pangangan (pronounced as pan-ga-ngan) Island in the Bohol Peninsula is a real treat for the tired traveler. Finding it is like opening a gift. First, you traverse a causeway lined with lush mangrove stands on each side. Then, you step onto a makeshift boardwalk that leads you to a cluster of native cottages.
From here, you can see the surrounding blue sea and feel the gentle breeze touching your very soul. This is the coastal barangay of Lawis, Pangangan Island, a model project in Coastal Resource Management (CRM) program of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
Pangangan Island is under the administrative jurisdiction of the municipality of Calape. It can be reached through a 45-minute travel by land from Tagbilaran City. Lawis is one of Calapes eight barangays whose inhabitants rely heavily on fishing and agriculture for livelihood.
From Brgy. San Isidro, one can reach the island through a 3.8-kilometer causeway that connects it to the Calape mainland. This causeway is in itself a living proof of the communitys solidarity, having been constructed by no less than the residents themselves.
The pristine waters of the islands coastal can be seen and felt, upon traversing the boardwalk rented out by the Lawis peoples organization, and relaxing in one of their native cottages you can feel the beauty and serenity of the Bohol Strait. The construction of the cottages and the boardwalk is the organizations first venture into eco-tourism.
Dindo Taganas, a fisherman, is the president of Lawis Farmers and Fishermans Association (LAFFA) with 120 members. He narrated how their local barangay (Lawis) and the people stood up against dynamite fishing activities that threatened their very own source of livelihood.
According to Taganas, some unscrupulous people from as far as Cebu were engaged in dynamite fishing in Pangangan Island before the Coastal Environment Program (CEP) was introduced in 1994 by the DENR. This consequently led to the degradation of their coral reefs and a decline in their fish catch.
Their organization LAFFA was born in 1994. This was after the DENR had launched community organizing efforts aimed at empowering the people to manage their coastal resources. Participatory coastal resource assessment techniques were imparted to them resulting in the peoples recognition of the importance of their coastal resources in their day-to-day undertakings.
The DENR-led program also provided trainings and capacity building on enterprise development, coastal law enforcement, resource assessment and protection, mangrove management, establishment of marine protected areas, and eco-tourism. Some members of LAFFA became actively involved in their barangays efforts in protecting their coastal resources from illegal fishing as members of Bantay Dagat. Bantay Dagat is a collaborative coastal law enforcement arm of the DENR, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, Philippine Coast Guard, Philippine National Police and the local government units.
Prior to that, however, the DENR through its Coastal Environment Program had provided some P5,000 to P15,000 seed money to the various peoples organizations in Pangangan to start livelihood programs for their communities. Dindos organization, LAFFA, started with bigasan and livestock raising. The seed money increased to P35,000 after about two years. With good financial standing, the cooperative was able to get a loan of P150,000 from a local NGO, Bohol Integrated Development Foundation or BIDEF.
After sometime, they also ventured into money lending to cooperative members, hog dispersal, seaweed culture, cottage and boardwalk renting. Their latest venture, lobster culture is becoming to be the most promising endeavor of the community, considering the high price lobsters command, which is at least P1,400 per kilo. According to Dindo, an average lobster weighs around 1.5 kilo. In fact, according to him, from their initial harvest of only seven pieces of lobster, the cooperative earned P7,500.
Fish harvest has also increased after the establishment of a 13.5-hectare marine sanctuary in the area. Before the implementation of the coastal resource management program, they get an average of 10 kilos of fish using basing; now, they harvest 15 to 23 kilos.
Aside from fishing and farming, some members of the LAFFA are also into hog fattening, cottage renting, seaweeds culture and lobster farming.
"Para moasenso pa ang among marine resources kinahanglan nga magtinabangay ang mga katauhan sa pag-atiman, pagbabantay o pagproteksyon para molahutay ng mo-asinso ang ekonomiya sa among barangay," (To sustain the marine resources, we, should protect and care for them so we can help the economy of our barangay), remarked Dindo Taganas when asked about their future plans for Brgy. Lawis.
Indeed, Pangangan Island is now, not just a haven of peace and tranquility for its people and its visitors, it is also a refuse for fishes, a place that can give sustainable livelihood opportunities for the poor marginalized fisherfolks living in the coastal areas of Bohol.
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