WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FLOOD CONTROL AND FLOOD MANAGEMENT?
WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FLOOD CONTROL AND FLOOD MANAGEMENT?
Flooding is becoming an all-too-familiar nightmare in our country, but it seems our understanding of how to deal with it hasn’t caught up. We keep talking about flood control, but what we truly need—and what we rarely deliver—is flood management.
To put it simply: flood control means building things to stop flooding. Think dams, levees, floodwalls, retention basins—the physical, structural defenses. On the other hand, flood management is smarter. It’s holistic. It combines those very structures with policy, planning, early-warning systems, smart zoning, and community preparedness.
In other words, flood control is just one piece of the puzzle. It’s like elementary school: basic, essential, but limited. Flood management, by contrast, is graduate school—it demands deeper thinking, systems-level solutions, and long-term strategy.
So why has our Congress focused almost exclusively on flood control? Why the obsession with concrete dikes and ditches? Because flood control is tangible, visible. It shows up in the budget, in construction contracts, in ribbon-cutting ceremonies. But that visibility can also be a smokescreen. There have been repeated reports of substandard flood control works, overpriced projects, even “ghost” projects.
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has admitted that we don’t yet have a genuine, integrated master plan for floods. We’re doing piecemeal projects—dikes here, drainage channels there—but no coordinated nationwide strategy. That fragmented approach speaks volumes about how shallow our interventions are.
Meanwhile, politicians like Senator Juan Miguel Zubiri have called out this piecemeal budgeting as a major problem. Rather than a few big, well-designed programs, what we get is scattered funds for projects that may or may not work. And critics argue that many of these projects serve the interests of contractors more than the safety of communities. Senator Panfilo Lacson has long warned of corruption and anomalies in flood control funds.
So yes, it’s time we moved beyond just building dikes. We need flood management—a smarter, broader, more resilient system. Here’s what that would look like:
Integrated planning across agencies — Local governments, national agencies, and communities must coordinate. Flood management isn’t just DPWH’s job.
Land‐use policy and zoning — We should discourage settlements in flood-prone areas. Instead, we should direct growth toward safer zones.
Early-warning systems and community education — Technology matters. Alerts, evacuation routes, flood drills—all of these save lives, not just infrastructure.
Nature-based solutions — Restore wetlands, reforest riverbanks, rehabilitate floodplains. These act as natural sponges when the rains come.
Advanced technological tools — Flood prediction can be strengthened by data analytics, AI, even satellite monitoring. We can also use fluid-dynamics models to understand how water moves through our systems.
Policy reform backed by legislation — Bills being discussed in Congress already reflect this.
We must spread the responsibility, not just leave it to DPWH to drop concrete where water flows. That’s what flood management calls for: a system that is both structural and adaptive. It requires long-term vision, multi-party cooperation, and yes, brighter minds.
If we continue treating flood control as our endgame, we will keep repeating the same mistakes. But if we embrace flood management—real, integrated, people-centered flood management—we just might break the cycle of flood disaster in this country.
“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” It's a reminder that changing outcomes requires changing structures, feedback loops, or mental models—not just repeating actions within the same paradigm.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/06-26-2026
