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MANAGEMENT AND
DEVELOPMENT PLANNING
(Romblon)
Consultation-Workshop with Stakeholders
August 15, 2018 | PENRO Romblon| Haliwood Hotel, Odiongan, Romblon
Project Technical Consultants
Ramon
Villanueva
Drone Operator/Photographer
Foreshore Management and 2
Development Plan
CONSULTATION’S ACTIVITY DESIGN
Managing the Foreshore – 30 mins
Development Nodes
Ports and Marinas
Recreation (Tourism)
Conservation Nodes
Strict Protection
Rehabilitation
Promote conservation of Improve the condition of Provide community Provide policy guidelines
the ecological features of the existing degraded recreation opportunities for future management of
the foreshore areas areas within the foreshore in an environmentally the foreshore areas
areas sustainable manner
Mapping
Stakeholders’ consultation
Department of Environment and Survey and management of alienable and disposable public
land, issuances of lease and permits & over maters of forestry,
CA 141
Natural Resource (DENR)
Regulatory bodies and
Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Designation of foreshore lands as reservations for fish
sanctuaries and as mangrove cultivation areas
RA 8550
Resources (BFAR)
Department of Public Works and Cases involving construction and development along CA 141
their mandates
foreshore areas
Highways (DPWH)
sec 66
Tourism Infrastructure and designate, regulate and supervise the TEZs established, as
well as develop, manage and supervise tourism infrastructure
RA 9593
Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) projects in the country
Local Government Units Construction and building activities covered by ordinance LGC 51, RA
7161
Housing and Land Use Approves and exercises supervisory authority over land use
plans and zoning ordinances of LGUs
RA 7161
Regulatory Board (HLURB) Foreshore Development and 12
Management Plan
Common Challenges
in Foreshore Area
Management
Classification 1
Access 2
Resource Use 3
Public Safety 4
Riparian rights 5
Shoreline Management 6
Regulation of the
activities of the adjacent
or riparian owners
e.g. gain possession/control
of the area adjacent to their
property
• Lack of awareness on
foreshore laws, roles of
agencies/parties involved
• foreshore “privatization”
• Private reclamation
Romblon Foreshore
Development
Nodes
Conservation
Nodes
Management and
Development
Principles
Framework
Objectives
Action Plans
❑ Legally permissible
❑ Ecologically viable
❑ Economically valuable
❑ Socially acceptable
❑ Compatible with
adjacent land uses
• Limit sprawl
• Protect natural areas
• Reduce and/or disconnect impervious
area
• Protect environmentally sensitive areas
Conservation Nodes
Strict Protection –
Rehabilitation –
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
1. Lawn Extension
2. Unauthorized
Planting
3. Informal Access
tracks
4. Placement/Stora
ge of Items
5. Buildings
6. Unauthorized
Foreshore
Protection Works
• areas of moderate ecological (regionally significant vegetation Emphasis on education and Voluntary removal and
B MEDIUM
communities and / or regionally / locally significant flora and fauna negotiating voluntary compliance rehabilitation
species)
• social values of those using the foreshore
Encroachments impacting:
Written notification and education
Documentation and
materials sent and voluntary
C LOW • areas of limited ecological (e.g. heavily impacted by weed species, areas promotion of voluntary
compliance only upon resident
formally maintained by the LGU/DENR removal.
initiation
• basic social values
• Energetic wave conditions — often associated with quite dramatic loss on beaches
during single storm events.
• Increased mean water level — causes an upwards migration of the active hydraulic zone.
• Decreased mean water level — causes a downwards migration of the active hydraulic
zone.
• Vegetation loss — tends to provide a bank that is less resistant to hydraulic action.
• Sediment sink/sources — locations experience net erosion or accretion where there is an
imbalance of sediment transport.
• Sediment deficit — change that alters the prevailing sediment transport conditions, removing
a quantity of sediment from active forces before normal transport patterns return.
• Strong currents — located principally where there are restrictions in cross-sectional area.
• Seasonality — the intensity of prevailing conditions and their persistence may affect the net
sediment transport rate.
• Drainage structures — erosion associated with drainage outfalls may extend beyond the
immediate vicinity of the flow path.
• Flow over banks — erosion, often gully erosion, associated with water flowing directly over
the banks due to overtopped water draining or as a result of storm water runoff.
• Sedimentation — decreases the channel cross-sectional area, thereby increasing the potential
for channel planform migration and inundation through flooding.
• Trampling — loss of vegetation and sediment can occur due to uncontrolled access, worm
digging, boat launching and animal trampling.
Foreshore Development and 36
Management Plan
Protect Natural Areas Inundation
Foreshore
inundation
occurs when
water levels and
waves are high
enough to flood
normally dry
land. This can
impact on
foreshore
vegetation or
structures and
curtails amenity.
In the estuarine summation of tides, surges and wave excursion over land.
reaches, the Wave action is strongly influenced by the profile grade and the permeability
inundation level of the surface over which waves run. In the fluvial reaches, the inundation
is determined level is dependent on topography and flood levels.
largely by the Foreshore Development and 37
Management Plan
Protect Natural Areas Shore stabilization approaches and techniques
Direct
Techniques
Approaches
Sedges
Revegetation Trees and shrubs
Ground covers
Coir logs
Bioengineering Jute matting
Brushing/bundling
(with Soil replacement
revegetation) (gravel/sand) mix
Brush mattressing
Baskets (stepped)
Gabions Mattress
Direct
Techniques
Approaches
Sedges
Revegetation Trees and shrubs
Ground covers
Coir logs
Jute matting
Bioengineering Brushing/bundling
(w/ revegetation) Soil replacement
(gravel/sand) mix
Brush mattressing
Baskets (stepped)
Gabions Mattress
Direct
Techniques
Approaches
Sedges
Revegetation Trees and shrubs
Ground covers
Coir logs
Jute matting
Bioengineering Brushing/bundling
(w/ revegetation) Soil replacement
(gravel/sand) mix
Brush mattressing
Baskets (stepped)
Gabions Mattress
Combining
Techniques
Combining
Techniques
Flow Modification
Bioengineering
Renourishment
Revegetation
Revetments
Groynes
Gabions
Walling
Combining
Techniques
Revegetation Y Y o Y Y o Y
Bioengineering Y o o o Y Y Y
Gabions Y o o Y o o o
Revetments o o o Y o o o
Walling Y o Y Y o o o
Renourishment Y Y o o o Y o
Groynes o Y o o o Y o
Flow Modification Y Y o o o o o
Rating: Y= Good, o = Fair/Neutral Foreshore Development and 49
Management Plan
Protect Natural Areas Flowchart for managing foreshore erosion
Report of Erosion
Consider possible
approaches
Low Risk Medium Risk High Risk
Unlike a master plan, a community visioning process does not lock a project
into a prescribed solution. It is a citizen-driven initiative that outlines a set of
goals--ideals to strive for--that set the stage for people to think boldly, make
breakthroughs, and achieve new possibilities for their waterfront.
POWER OF TEN
How Cities Transform Through Placemaking
•Healthy
2. Qualities of the people (men and women) •?
•Vibrant
3. Nature of the local economy •?
•Progressive
6. Capacity and qualities of the local
leadership •?
Foreshore Management and 65
Development Plan
Draft Vision Statement
English
Odionganon