The Universal Postal Union will help the Philippine Post renovate its Tacloban postal facility, which was severely damaged by Typhoon Haiyan last November on the island of Leyte.
The three-storey postal facility housed both a post office and a distribution centre serving about 40 post offices in towns throughout Leyte, Samar and the Eastern Samar region. Forty-four people worked at the facility.
The facility needs to be completely renovated. The typhoon, known locally as Yolanda, broke windows, slanted walls, ruptured roofs, destroyed equipment and cut off the electrical supply. Renovation costs are estimated at about 100,000 CHF, and work is expected to start in July.
The UPU will use money from its Emergency and Solidarity Fund to help with the reconstruction effort, and work with the United Nations Development Programme in Manilla to hire the necessary suppliers and purchase materials.
The rebuilding effort is part of an emergency assistance plan developed after a joint UPU-United States Postal Service (USPS) mission sent experts to the Philippines in February to assess damages, as part of the UPU’s activities in technical assistance and risk management.
The UPU’s regional project coordinator in Bangkok and four American postal inspectors travelled to Manilla and Tacloban in February to establish an inventory of damages caused to postal buildings and evaluate the provisional delivery network’s security measures. They worked with Filipino postal workers to put in place the logistics to receive equipment some Posts have promised to donate following an appeal by the UPU after the disaster.
Thirty-seven post offices were affected by Yolanda, according to PHLPost, which severely hit the Visayas region, especially the islands of Samar and Leyte. Buildings were damaged or destroyed, and many postal vehicles and equipment were lost. To date, only a dozen of the affected post offices have resumed operations.
Post part of relief efforts
Since the typhoon, PHLPost has made great efforts to re-establish basic postal services where post offices have been secured. It reconfigured its postal network and processed the backlog of postal items stuck following the disaster.
PHLPost also participated in national relief efforts. In January and February, PHLPost partnered with the national Department of Social Welfare and Development through Landbank of the Philippines to bring cash grants to about 18,000 beneficiaries of the United Nations-World Food Programme in Leyte and Samar. PHLPost served those areas where automated teller machines of Landbank were unavailable.
“This is a real government service,” said PHLPost Postmaster General Josephina Dela Cruz in a press release issued by PHLPost. “Leyte and Samar were severely affected by the typhoon and locating beneficiaries is a major problem, but with the dedication of our employees we can bridge the gap to deliver the assistance extended by generous agencies.”
Some 200 postal employees worked in the area ravaged by Yolanda. All have been accounted for, but many are suffering from trauma, says Dela Cruz.
She thanked all countries that offered assistance after the catastrophe and following the UPU’s membership call for help. “We have lived through many storms, but this one was something else. We really appreciated the response from the UPU and its member countries. It pays to be part of the UPU community.”