In the 12th severe weather bulletin issued by PAGASA on December 2, 2019, reported that prior to its first landfall, the southern
eyewall of Typhoon Kammuri brought violent winds and intense rainfall over the neighboring province of
Northern Samar. Photos and video footage from the towns of
Mapanas and
Gamay, both located on Northern Samar's Pacific side, show severe flooding and high winds from the typhoon. Hours later, Kammuri made its first landfall near
Gubat, Sorsogon with winds equivalent to a
Category 4 hurricane. In
Northern Samar, winds were reported to reach as up to with a total accumulated rainfall of within the course of 24 hours on December 2. The
Bicol Region (Region V) was impacted the most by the typhoon. After the passage of the storm, roads between regions, especially routes from the Bicol Region towards
Manila were not passable due to fallen branches and uproot trees. Several vehicles and passengers were stranded along highways due to this. On December 4, the provinces of
Albay and
Sorsogon, and the city of
Naga were issued a
state of calamity after widespread damages were seen. The region's Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) estimated that an estimated 130,000 children were affected by the storm. In
Camarines Sur, about 293 classrooms suffered from major damages while the province of
Albay had a total of 883 classrooms damaged as of December 5. On December 4, Northern Samar's Province Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (PDRRMC) recommended a
state of calamity, and shortly after, it was raised in two towns:
Catarman and
Gamay. Massive destruction along with widespread flooding, damaged houses, landslides and even weak communication signal prompted their local government to issue the state of calamity in the two towns. On December 6, state of calamity was raised. Severe flooding in 18 areas in the province damaged agriculture and paralyzed transportation. There has been an estimated damages of
₱6.65 billion (US$130 million) across the nation and about ₱95.7 million (US$1.87 million) to relief efforts and assistance. Totals of 2,249 damaged schools and 558,844 damaged houses, of which 63,466 were "totally" damaged, were reported. Ramon Agregado, the organizing committee's head of the
Subic cluster of venues, stated, "The windsurfing has been cancelled until we have a more accurate picture of the weather." == Retirement ==