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Republic of the Philippines Province of Isabela MILAGROS ALBANO DISTRICT HOSPITAL Ngarag, Cabagan, Isabela Telefax No
Republic of the Philippines Province of Isabela MILAGROS ALBANO DISTRICT HOSPITAL Ngarag, Cabagan, Isabela Telefax No. (078)-325-2069/323-2815 PHILHEALTH ACCREDITED ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORT FOR THE MONTH OF JULY 2019 A. Brief Background The Milagros Albano District Hospital, Cabagan, Isabela (formerly the Northern Isabela Emergency Hospital – NIEH) was established in 1961 under the Hospital Financing Act of 1939. The hospital was then housed at the Cabagan Dispensary (now RHU). As there was a need to expand the hospital services and facilities when people from other neighboring towns come for consultation and admission, hence, a 25 bed capacity hospital building was constructed on a 1.1 hectares donated land located along the Maharlika Highway. (Note: Adjacent land was purchased, present lot area 13,157 sq. meters) In 1974, the hospital was converted into a 50 Bed Capacity General Hospital under R.A. 6566. In compliance to the Local Government Code, in 1993, the hospital was devolved to the Provincial Government of Isabela. A new hospital building was constructed along side of the old building and was inaugurated and became operational on December 8, 2004. To date, Milagros Albano District Hospital, located at Brgy. Ngarag, Cabagan, Isabela, along the Maharlika Highway, is a Level I hospital as granted by the DOH Licensing Department and Center of Safety by Philhealth Accreditation. As a Level I hospital with an authorized 50 – bed capacity, it is the referral hospital for the Isabela North ILHZ which is comprised of the municipalities of Cabagan, San Pablo, Tumauini, Sta. Maria, Delfin Albano, the coastal towns of Maconacon and Divilacan, and Sto. -
The Philippines Hotspot
Ecosystem Profile THE PHILIPPINES HOTSPOT final version December 11, 2001 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 3 The Ecosystem Profile 3 The Corridor Approach to Conservation 3 BACKGROUND 4 BIOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF THE PHILIPPINES HOTSPOT 5 Prioritization of Corridors Within the Hotspot 6 SYNOPSIS OF THREATS 11 Extractive Industries 11 Increased Population Density and Urban Sprawl 11 Conflicting Policies 12 Threats in Sierra Madre Corridor 12 Threats in Palawan Corridor 15 Threats in Eastern Mindanao Corridor 16 SYNOPSIS OF CURRENT INVESTMENTS 18 Multilateral Donors 18 Bilateral Donors 21 Major Nongovernmental Organizations 24 Government and Other Local Research Institutions 26 CEPF NICHE FOR INVESTMENT IN THE REGION 27 CEPF INVESTMENT STRATEGY AND PROGRAM FOCUS 28 Improve linkage between conservation investments to multiply and scale up benefits on a corridor scale in Sierra Madre, Eastern Mindanao and Palawan 29 Build civil society’s awareness of the myriad benefits of conserving corridors of biodiversity 30 Build capacity of civil society to advocate for better corridor and protected area management and against development harmful to conservation 30 Establish an emergency response mechanism to help save Critically Endangered species 31 SUSTAINABILITY 31 CONCLUSION 31 LIST OF ACRONYMS 32 2 INTRODUCTION The Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF) is designed to better safeguard the world's threatened biodiversity hotspots in developing countries. It is a joint initiative of Conservation International (CI), the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the Government of Japan, the MacArthur Foundation and the World Bank. CEPF provides financing to projects in biodiversity hotspots, areas with more than 60 percent of the Earth’s terrestrial species diversity in just 1.4 percent of its land surface. -
(0399912) Establishing Baseline Data for the Conservation of the Critically Endangered Isabela Oriole, Philippines
ORIS Project (0399912) Establishing Baseline Data for the Conservation of the Critically Endangered Isabela Oriole, Philippines Joni T. Acay and Nikki Dyanne C. Realubit In cooperation with: Page | 0 ORIS Project CLP PROJECT ID (0399912) Establishing Baseline Data for the Conservation of the Critically Endangered Isabela Oriole, Philippines PROJECT LOCATION AND DURATION: Luzon Island, Philippines Provinces of Bataan, Quirino, Isabela and Cagayan August 2012-July 2014 PROJECT PARTNERS: ∗ Mabuwaya Foundation Inc., Cabagan, Isabela ∗ Department of Natural Sciences (DNS) and Department of Development Communication and Languages (DDCL), College of Development Communication and Arts & Sciences, ISABELA STATE UNIVERSITY-Cabagan, ∗ Wild Bird Club of the Philippines (WBCP), Manila ∗ Community Environmental and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) Aparri, CENRO Alcala, Provincial Enviroment and Natural Resources Office (PENRO) Cagayan ∗ Protected Area Superintendent (PASu) Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park, CENRO Naguilian, PENRO Isabela ∗ PASu Quirino Protected Landscape, PENRO Quirino ∗ PASu Mariveles Watershed Forest Reserve, PENRO Bataan ∗ Municipalities of Baggao, Gonzaga, San Mariano, Diffun, Limay and Mariveles PROJECT AIM: Generate baseline information for the conservation of the Critically Endangered Isabela Oriole. PROJECT TEAM: Joni Acay, Nikki Dyanne Realubit, Jerwin Baquiran, Machael Acob Volunteers: Vanessa Balacanao, Othniel Cammagay, Reymond Guttierez PROJECT ADDRESS: Mabuwaya Foundation, Inc. Office, CCVPED Building, ISU-Cabagan Campus, -
Over Land and Over Sea: Domestic Trade Frictions in the Philippines – Online Appendix
ONLINE APPENDIX Over Land and Over Sea: Domestic Trade Frictions in the Philippines Eugenia Go 28 February 2020 A.1. DATA 1. Maritime Trade by Origin and Destination The analysis is limited to a set of agricultural commodities corresponding to 101,159 monthly flows. About 5% of these exhibit highly improbable derived unit values suggesting encoding errors. More formally, provincial retail and farm gate prices are used as upper and lower bounds of unit values to check for outliers. In such cases, more weight is given to the volume record as advised by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), and values were adjusted according to the average unit price of the exports from the port of the nearest available month before and after the outlier observation. 2. Interprovince Land Trade Interprovince land trade flows were derived using Marketing Cost Structure Studies prepared by the Bureau of Agricultural Statistics for a number of products in selected years. These studies identify the main supply and destination provinces for certain commodities. The difference between production and consumption of a supply province is assumed to be the amount available for export to demand provinces. The derivation of imports of a demand province is straightforward when an importing province only has one source province. In cases where a demand province sources from multiple suppliers, such as the case of the National Capital Region (NCR), the supplying provinces are weighted according to the sample proportions in the survey. For example, NCR sources onions from Ilocos Norte, Pangasinan, and Nueva Ecija. Following the sample proportion of traders in each supply province, it is assumed that 26% of NCR imports came from Ilocos Norte, 34% from Pangasinan, and 39% from Nueva Ecija. -
Executive Summary Comprehensive Land Use Plan (Clup)
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY COMPREHENSIVE LAND USE PLAN (CLUP) OF DELFIN ALBANO, ISABELA CY 2018-2027 I. Vision A Center of agro-industrial development in Northern Isabela with God-loving and empowered citizens living in a disaster-resilient community and ecologically-sound environment with integrated infrastructure support systems and vibrant economy led by responsive and transparent leadership. Mission To improve the quality of life for all residents of Delfin Albano by maximizing opportunities for social and economic development in order to become the agro-industrial center in Northern Isabela while retaining an attractive, sustainable and secure environment. II. Brief Situationer A. Physical Profile The municipality is composed of twenty-nine (29) barangays and seven sitios. Barangay Ragan Sur is the seat of Government that is centrally located along the Provincial / National Road from Ilagan and Mallig to Delfin Albano to Santo Tomas and Santa Maria this province. Delfin Albano has a total land area of 19,095.hectares. It is located some 35 kilometers, northwest of Ilagan, the capital town of the Province. It is bounded on the north by the municipality of Sto. Tomas, on the east by the municipality of Tumauini, the Cagayan River as the natural boundary, on the west by the municipalities of Quezon and Mallig and on the south by the municipalities of Quirino and Ilagan with Mallig River as natural boundary. Delfin Albano is subdivided into two (02) physiological areas namely the Eastern Area long the Cagayan River which is good for intensive agriculture and high density urban development as the western area along the mountain range which is good for intensive agriculture, pasture and forest purposes. -
Madweng Pottery Tradition in Santa Maria, Isabela Raquel R
IRCHE 2017 4th International Research Conference on Higher Education Volume 2018 Conference Paper Madweng Pottery Tradition in Santa Maria, Isabela Raquel R. Geronimo Philippine Normal University North Luzon Abstract This study investigates the unique indigenous pottery traditions of the Madweng in an Ibanag community in Santa, Maria, Isabela, located in the interior northwestern part of the province of Isabela, Philippines which boasts its huge non -metallic deposit of clay. The Madweng are the Ibanag potters who make, produce such earthenwares. Ethnography as a research design and strategy is utilized to understand indigenous concepts, technology and pottery traditions in manufacturing the dweng. Ethnographic methods like interviews, fieldwork, recording of field notes, direct observation, and Corresponding Author: smartphones were used for photographs, audio recording and analyzing data. Utilizing Raquel R. Geronimo mga katutubong metodo sa Sikolohiyang Pilipino (methods in Filipino Psychology) [email protected] the indigenous method of pakikipagkuwentuhan” (sharing stories), and pagtatanong- Received: 23 April 2018 tanong (asking around), the Ibanag language was employed to draw information Accepted: 8 May 2018 Published: 4 June 2018 in the indigenous idea of pagpapakuwento” (someone is telling the story). Results showed that Ibanag pottery tradition was introduced by the Kalingas, kept and Publishing services provided by Knowledge E used as a significant part of an Ibanag heritage from their ancestors. Manu-mano or hand modelling, maffulang or painting, magabba or firing, were some parts of Raquel R. Geronimo. This article is distributed under the indigenizing methods by the Madweng. Since 1954, no major changes in the method terms of the Creative Commons of manufacture from the teachings of the Kalingas except for a minimal technological Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and advancement in manufacturing pots using the hurmaan, or molder. -
PHILIPPINES 2018 Highlights of Events Page 1 of 5
PHILIPPINES 2018 Highlights of Events Page 1 of 5 TROPICAL CYCLONES SEISMIC ACTIVITIES Twenty-one tropical cyclones entered the The country, which lies along the Pacific Ring of Fire, is constantly Philippine Area of Responsibility in 2018, of which frequented by seismic and volcanic activity each year. In 2018, seismic 21 8 made landfall. Five of these were Tropical monitoring by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology entered the Depressions (TD). Notable was Typhoon (PHIVOLCS) recorded more than 5,800 seismic events. Around 95% of Philippine Area Mangkhut (Ompong) which made landfall in these events were Magnitude 4.0 and below, and therefore barely felt. of Responsibility September. It was the lone Category 4 typhoon Even with over 250 seismic events with Magnitude 4.0 and above, there that left a trail of damages, and displacement was no significant damage or casualties reported throughout the country. 8 made landfall mostly in northern part of Luzon. Majority of the However, the Magnitude 7.2 offshore quake that rocked Davao Oriental Tropical tropical cyclones that made landfall were province on 29 December 2018 created a 5 Depression Magnitude 4.0 LUZON characterized by heavy and prolonged rainfall, scare in the coastal communities in the & above (257) Tropical affecting 38 provinces which suffered repeated region after PHIVOLCS issued a Tsunami 1 Storm displacements topped by Eastern Visayas region Advisory, which was lifted a few hours later 1 Category 2 (4 out of the 6 provinces). 769 Barangays / Villages after only minor sea level disturbance. 5,868 experienced rain-induced flooding, while landslides 1 Category 4 Magnitude 4.0 Manila were also reported. -
2016 Annual Accomplishment Report
MINERAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT DIVISION 1. Processing and Issuance of Permits Commercial Sand and Gravel (CSAG) – this office received and processed Fifty Five (55) CSAG Permit Applications from the different quarry locations within the province with corresponding administrative/processing fees collected by the Provincial Treasurer’s Office amounting to Six Hundred Twenty Three Thousand One Hundred Fifty Pesos (Php623, 150.00). List of CSAG Permit Applications Received: QUARRY LOCATION NAME Barangay Municipality 1 Rosalino U. Urandayan San Ignacio City of Ilagan Jones Chapter Guardians Savings & Credit 2 Barangay 2 Jones Cooperative 3 Arnold S. Ferrer Carpintero Tumauini 4 Western Pinacanauan Development Cooperative Alinguigan 2nd City of Ilagan 5 Edwin P. Uy Furao Gamu 6 Edwin P. Uy Banquero Reina Mercedes 7 Degullacion A. Cabbab Zone II & Zone III San Mariano 8 Carlos Clyde U. Chan Upi Gamu 9 Carlito M. Uy Lenzon Gamu 10 Raul T. Sawit Saranay Cabatuan 11 Flordeliza M. Balisi Baculod City of ilagan 12 Eleodoro D. Bermudez, Jr. Aggassian City Of Ilagan 13 CTR Enterprises Turod Reina Mercedes 14 AC&C builders & Ent. c/o Alvin D. Uy Santiago Reina Mercedes 15 A1 & A2 Multi-purpose Cooperative c/o Jose B. Gangan Alinguigan 1st and 2nd City of Ilagan 16 Christopher B. Uy Sta. Visitacion Tumauini 17 Dutch Anne V. Uy Carpintero Tumauini 18 Allan C. Malayao Annanuman San Pablo Flow of Pari-ir Development Cooperative c/o 19 Saranay Cabatuan Norlando T. Manibog 20 Glenn Moore Angelo E. Caramancion Disimpit Jones Cabisera 8(Sta. 21 Christopher E. Maltu City Of Ilagan Maria) 22 Cinderella M. Gatan Casibarag Sur Cabagan Camarunggayan and 23 Aurora Employees Multi-Purpose Cooperative Aurora Panecien 24 Felino C. -
Typhoon Conson
Philippines: Information bulletin n° 1 GLIDE TC-2010-000131-PHL 14 July 2010 Typhoon Conson This bulletin is being issued for information only and reflects the current situation and details available at this time. The Philippine Red Cross, with the support of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), has determined that external assistance is currently not required, and is therefore not seeking funding or other assistance from donors at this time. <click here to view the map of the affected area, or here for detailed contact information> Typhoon Conson (locally named Basyang) was seen via satellite 660 km east-northeast of Virac, Catanduanes on July 12, 2010 at 4:00 a.m. It intensified and was upgraded to a Tropical Storm at 11:00 p.m. the same day, moving towards the Isabela-Aurora area. The Situation Typhoon Conson (locally known as Basyang) is the second typhoon for the Philippines of a series of some 22 more expected for this year. Conson made landfall early Tuesday night (13 July) as storm warning number 3 was raised in the Aurora province in Northern Quezon, including Polilio Island and Camarines Norte. Public Storm Signal Number 1 was raised in Batangas, Cavite and included Lubang Island, Bataan, Pampanga, Zambales, Tarlac, Pangasinan, Albay, Marinduque, La Union, Benguet, Mt. Province, Ilocos Sur, Kalinga, Apayao, Abra, Cagayan, and Metro Manila. Public Storm Signal Number 2 was raised in Camarines Sur, Southern Quezon, Laguna, Rizal, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino, Ifugao and Isabela. Meanwhile, Public Storm Signal Number 3 was raised in Catanduanes, Camarines Norte, Northern Quezon, Polilio Island, and Aurora. -
SULONG NORTH LUZON PROMO PARTICIPATING SHELL STATIONS As of July 12, 2021
SULONG NORTH LUZON PROMO PARTICIPATING SHELL STATIONS As of July 12, 2021 Fuel up with Shell Fuels to get a chance to win awesome prizes! LIST OF PARTICIPATING SHELL STATIONS SHELL NANGALISAN LAOAG CITY SHELL SEVILLA SFO LA UNION SHELL CARLATAN SN FERNNDO LU SHELL MAGSINGAL ILOCOS SUR SHELL CANDON ILOCOS SUR SHELL STO DOMINGO ILOCOS SUR SHELL VALDEZ BATAC ILOCOS N SHELL SAN FERNANDO LA UNION SHELL TAGUDIN ILOCOS SUR SHELL BANGUED ABRA 2 SHELL STA MARIA ILOCOS SUR SHELL NARVACAN ILOCOS NORTE SHELL SEVILLA SN FERNANDO LU SHELL SAN ILDEFONSO ILCS SUR SHELL BRGY 50 BUTTONG LAOAG SHELL BAUANG LA UNION SHELL BANGAR LA UNION SHELL MCARTHUR AGOO LA UNION SHELL DIV RD LAOAG ILOCOS N SHELL TABUG BATAC ILOCOS N SHELL BACNOTAN LA UNION SHELL BALAOAN LA UNION SHELL BANTAY ILOCOS SHELL SAN NICOLAS ILOCOS NORTE SHELL BATAC PAOAY RD ILO NRT SHELL CAUNAYAN ILOCOS NORTE SHELL LANAO BANGUI ILCS NRTE SHELL CABUGAO ILOCOS SUR 2 SHELL NAGUILIAN1 BAGUIO CITY SHELL ABANAO RD BAGUIO CITY SHELL TANEDO MCARTHUR TARLAC SHELL MCARTHUR VILLASIS PANG SHELL CARMEN ROSALES PANG SHELL FERNANDEZ DAGUPAN PANG SHELL TAPUAC DAGUPAN PANG Page 1 of 6 SULONG NORTH LUZON PROMO PARTICIPATING SHELL STATIONS As of July 12, 2021 SHELL MCARTHUR SBND URDANETA SHELL SAN RAFAEL TARLAC SHELL CAMP ONE ROSARIO LU SHELL SAN MIGUEL CALASIAO SHELL KM4 MARCOS HWAY BAGUIO SHELL ALEXANDER LACHICA PANG SHELL VILLA SOLIMAN TARLAC SHELL MALIWALO TARLAC TARLAC SHELL KM4 BALILI LA TRINIDAD SHELL SN JOSE CONCEPCION TAR SHELL ROSALES PANGASINAN SHELL LEG SAN MANUEL TARLAC SHELL BAYAMBAN PANGASINAN SHELL -
DATE of REGISTRATION Isabela II Electric Cooperative (ISELCO II) Was Organized and Registered As a Non-Stock, Non-Profit Electri
DATE OF REGISTRATION Isabela II Electric Cooperative (ISELCO II) was organized and registered as a non-stock, non-profit electric cooperative with the National Electrification Administration (NEA) on February 25, 1978. Its organization was mandated by Republic Act No. 6038 which was enacted on August 4, 1969 and later amended by Presidential Decree No. 269 (PD 269), also known as the National Electrification ,Administration Charter, promulgated on August 6, 1973. On June 22, 2007, ISELCO II also registered with the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA) by virtue of Republic Act No. 6938 (Cooperative Code) and Republic Act No. 6939 (Cooperative Development Authority Charter). OPERATIONAL MILESTONE ISELCO II officially started its operation with the purchase and take-over of the operations of the now defunct Ilagan Electric Plant on December 1, 1978. By December 12, 1982 eighteen out of twenty two municipalities were energized namely: Ilagan, San Pablo, Cabagan, Sta. Maria, Delfin Albano, Naguilian, Aurora, Roxas, Gamu, Mallig, Tumauini, Benito Soliven, San Mariano, Quirino, Sto.Tomas, San Manuel, Quezon and Burgos. The four coastal municipalities of Palanan, Dinapigue, Divilacan and Maconacon remained unenergized for a long time because they are inaccessible and isolated from the rest of the coverage area by the Sierra Madre Mountain ranges. Palanan was energized on June 20, 1993 through a generator set installed by the National Power Corporation-Small Power Utilities Group (NPC- SPUG) while Divilacan, Maconacon and Dinapigue were energized through solar home systems. Dinapigue is now included in the franchise area of AURELCO. SERVICE AREA ISELCO II is one of the two electric cooperatives providing electric service to the province of Isabela. -
Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population BATANES
2010 Census of Population and Housing Batanes Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population BATANES 16,604 BASCO (Capital) 7,907 Ihubok II (Kayvaluganan) 2,103 Ihubok I (Kaychanarianan) 1,665 San Antonio 1,772 San Joaquin 392 Chanarian 334 Kayhuvokan 1,641 ITBAYAT 2,988 Raele 442 San Rafael (Idiang) 789 Santa Lucia (Kauhauhasan) 478 Santa Maria (Marapuy) 438 Santa Rosa (Kaynatuan) 841 IVANA 1,249 Radiwan 368 Salagao 319 San Vicente (Igang) 230 Tuhel (Pob.) 332 MAHATAO 1,583 Hanib 372 Kaumbakan 483 Panatayan 416 Uvoy (Pob.) 312 SABTANG 1,637 Chavayan 169 Malakdang (Pob.) 245 Nakanmuan 134 Savidug 190 Sinakan (Pob.) 552 Sumnanga 347 National Statistics Office 1 2010 Census of Population and Housing Batanes Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population UYUGAN 1,240 Kayvaluganan (Pob.) 324 Imnajbu 159 Itbud 463 Kayuganan (Pob.) 294 National Statistics Office 2 2010 Census of Population and Housing Cagayan Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 Province, City, Municipality Total and Barangay Population CAGAYAN 1,124,773 ABULUG 30,675 Alinunu 1,269 Bagu 1,774 Banguian 1,778 Calog Norte 934 Calog Sur 2,309 Canayun 1,328 Centro (Pob.) 2,400 Dana-Ili 1,201 Guiddam 3,084 Libertad 3,219 Lucban 2,646 Pinili 683 Santa Filomena 1,053 Santo Tomas 884 Siguiran 1,258 Simayung 1,321 Sirit 792 San Agustin 771 San Julian 627 Santa