ITEM NO. AREA (Sq.M.) PROPERTY DESCRIPTION LOCATION

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ITEM NO. AREA (Sq.M.) PROPERTY DESCRIPTION LOCATION ITEM AREA MINIMUM BID PROPERTY DESCRIPTION LOCATION NO. (sq.m.) PRICE (Php) A parcel of agricultural land with improvement 1 5,887 2,266,000.00 covered by TCT No. 032-2018003553 1/ 4/ 7/ 8/ 11/ Brgy. Hacienda Intal, Baggao, Cagayan A parcel of agricultural land with improvements 2 5,031 3,365,000.00 covered by TCT No. 032-2018003554 1/ 4/ 7/ 11/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. Baleva St., Brgy. San Jose, Baggao, 3 139 612,000.00 032-2018003555 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ 12/ Cagayan A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. Herrero St., Brgy. San Jose, Baggao, 4 371 816,000.00 032-2018003556 2/ 4/ 7/ 11/ Cagayan A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 5 42,212 1,688,000.00 T-140916 2/ 5/ Brgy. Nangalasauan, Amulung, Cagayan A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 6 42,212 1,688,000.00 T-140917 2/ 5/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 7 83,340 Brgy. Logung, Amulung, Cagayan 2,500,000.00 T-141699 1/ 4/ 7/ 27/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 8 27,768 Brgy. Adaoag, Baggao, Cagayan 833,000.00 T-143040 1/ 5/ 7/ A parcel of residential land with improvement 9 301 Brgy. Carig, Tuguegarao City, Cagayan 3,886,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-135449 2/ 4/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 10 41,563 Brgy. Annafatan, Amulung, Cagayan 2,909,000.00 T-140920 2/ 14/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. Brgy. Tanaytay, Alaminos City, 11 8,490 509,000.00 027-2012000499 2/ 13/ 14/ 26/ Pangasinan A parcel of residential land with improvements Along National Rd., Poblacion Norte, 12 2,685 8,034,000.00 covered by TCT No. 026-2018004249 2/ 4/ Sta. Barbara, Pangasinan A parcel of residential land with improvements Pico-Lamtang Rd., Puguis, La Trinidad, 13 1,000 5,377,000.00 covered by TCT No. 016-2017000316 1/ 25/ Benguet A parcel of residential land with improvements Purok 5, Brgy. Dumanisi, Diffun, 14 1,137 870,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-18788 1/ 4/ Quirino A parcel of agricultural land with improvement 15 51,872 852,000.00 covered by TCT No. P-(3579) 1681 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 16 23,734 356,000.00 T-1884 2/ 5/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 17 41,762 626,000.00 P-1826 2/ 5/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ Villa Pagaduan, Aglipay, Quirino A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 18 34,475 517,000.00 T-2343 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 19 8,005 120,000.00 T-1879 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ Villa Pagaduan, Aglipay, Quirino A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 20 23,989 348,000.00 P-(3758) 1599 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of agricultural land with improvements 21 24,330 1,058,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-2732 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of residential land with improvement 22 917 419,000.00 covered by TCT No. P-4993 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 23 592 231,000.00 P-7951 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 24 1,757 690,000.00 T-10061 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 9/ Three (3) parcels of residential land with 25 1,881 improvements covered by TCT Nos. T-152135, 6,902,000.00 T-152115 & T-152117 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ 18/ Along Bintawan & Lumabang Streets at Osmeña, Solano, Nueva Vizcaya A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 26 371 1,336,000.00 T-152116 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 8/ Two (2) parcels of residential/commercial land 27 510 covered by TCT Nos. T-196567 & T-196568 2/ 5/ Brgy. Minante I, Cauyan City, Isabela 235,000.00 16/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. Brgy. Sto. Rosario, Delfin Albano, 28 32,000 960,000.00 T-319091-A 2/ 5/ Isabela Two (2) parcels of residential land covered by 29 600 600,000.00 TCT Nos. T-336177 & T-336178 2/ 16/ 17/ Brgy. Marabulig I, Cauayan City, Isabela A residential lot covered by TCT No. T-336199 2/ 30 320 4/ 320,000.00 A parcel of residential land with improvements Brgy. Carmencita, Delfin Albano, 31 1,874 1,016,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-368958 1/ 4/ Isabela A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 32 52,576 Brgy. Sisim Alto, Tumauini, Isabela 2,629,000.00 T-229910 1/ 5/ 7/ 13/ A parcel of residential land with improvement 33 300 150,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-163157 1/ 4/ Along Brgy. Road at Brgy. Arabiat, Echague, Isabela A parcel of residential land with improvement 34 300 145,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-163158 1/ 4/ A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 35 19,824 Brgy. Villa Imelda, Ilagan City, Isabela 991,000.00 T-319090 1/ 5/ Three (3) parcels of industrial land with improvement covered by TCT Nos. 035- 36 3,000 1,833,000.00 2014004532, 035-2014004531 & 035- 2014004529 1/ 4/ 11/ Brgy. Minante II, Cauayan City, Isabela A parcel of industrial land covered by TCT No. 37 1,000 600,000.00 035-2014004530 4/ 11/ 19/ A parcel of land (500 sq. m. - residential & 500 East side of Municipal Rd., Brgy. 38 1,000 sq. m. - commercial) with improvement covered 1,063,000.00 Bayabo, Tumauini, Isabela by TCT No. T-341648 1/ 4/ 11/ 20/ A parcel of residential land with improvements Santiago-Tuguegarao Rd., Brgy. 39 1,496 11,453,000.00 covered by TCT No. 165-2017002645 1/ 4/ 12/ 21/ Bugallon Proper, Ramon, Isabela Two (2) parcels of land with improvements and North side of San Roque Blvd., Brgy. 40 10,193 chattels covered by TCT Nos. 165-2016002075 24,372,000.00 Rizal, Santiago City, Isabela & 165-2016002076 3/ 4/ 7/ 22/ Muñoz-Linglingay cor. Muñoz-Lupao A parcel of residential land with improvements 41 2,587 Roads, Brgy. Rizal, Muñoz City, Nueva 5,297,000.00 covered by TCT No. 050-2017001690 1/ 4/ 8/ 12/ 20/ Ecija Along Road Lot 2, Christianville Subd., A parcel of residential land with improvements 42 240 Brgy. Abar 1st, San Jose City, Nueva 2,569,000.00 covered by TCT No. 21520 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 9/ Ecija A parcel of residential land with improvements 43 240 1,635,000.00 covered by TCT No. 24295 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 9/ Along Road Lot 3, Christianville Subd., Brgy. Abar 1st, San Jose City, Nueva A parcel of residential land with improvements Ecija 44 265 1,044,000.00 covered by TCT No. 30827 2/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 9/ Two (2) contiguous parcels of agricultural land Along Nueva Ecija-Pangasinan Road, 45 16,880 with improvements covered by TCT Nos. 050- Brgy, Sto. Rosario, Sto. Domingo, 13,723,000.00 2018000122 & 050-2018000123 1/ 3/ 4/ 22/ Nueva Ecija A parcel of commercial land with improvements Mulawin St. Brgy. Bitas, Cabanatuan 46 333 16,770,000.00 covered by TCT No. T-137181 1/ 4/ 6/ 7/ 9/ 11/ City, Nueva Ecija Two (2) parcels of land (3,756 sq. m. - residential & 1,260 sq. m. - commercial) with Northwest side of National Rd., Brgy. 47 5,016 13,856,000.00 improvements covered by TCT Nos. 050- Del Pilar, Rizal, Nueva Ecija 2017001688 & 050-2017001689 1/ 4/ 11/ Five (5) parcels of commercial land covered by Within Brgy. Mangan-Vaca, Subic, 48 32,120 TCT Nos. 044-2017000795 to 044-2017000799 32,120,000.00 4/ 23/ Zambales A parcel of residential land with improvements 49 5,000 Brgy. Villa Aglipay, San Jose, Tarlac 3,498,000.00 covered by TCT No. 397838 2/ 17/ 22/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 50 240 Brgy. Pandatung, Hermosa, Bataan 60,000.00 T-229523 2/ 4/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 51 457 Along Jose Abad Santos Avenue 640,000.00 042-2013001029 2/ 4/ (formerly Olongapo-Gapan Road) within Brgy. San Mateo, Arayat, A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 52 334 Pampanga 468,000.00 042-2013001030 2/ 4/ Lot 28, (irrigation canal)/Lot 27 (road) A parcel of agricultural land covered by TCT No. 53 3,085 within Brgy. Pulong Gubat, Candaba, 925,000.00 673749-R 1/ 5/ 7/ 13/ Pampanga A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 54 123 542,000.00 039-2016011304 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 55 126 555,000.00 039-2016011305 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. Capijana Village, Brgy. Capihan, San 56 130 572,000.00 039-2016011306 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ Rafael, Bulacan A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 57 134 590,000.00 039-2016011307 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ A parcel of residential land covered by TCT No. 58 137 603,000.00 039-2016011308 2/ 4/ 7/ 8/ Two (2) parcels of commercial land with MacArthur Highway, Brgy.
Recommended publications
  • POPCEN Report No. 3.Pdf
    CITATION: Philippine Statistics Authority, 2015 Census of Population, Report No. 3 – Population, Land Area, and Population Density ISSN 0117-1453 ISSN 0117-1453 REPORT NO. 3 22001155 CCeennssuuss ooff PPooppuullaattiioonn PPooppuullaattiioonn,, LLaanndd AArreeaa,, aanndd PPooppuullaattiioonn DDeennssiittyy Republic of the Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Quezon City REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES HIS EXCELLENCY PRESIDENT RODRIGO R. DUTERTE PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY BOARD Honorable Ernesto M. Pernia Chairperson PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY Lisa Grace S. Bersales, Ph.D. National Statistician Josie B. Perez Deputy National Statistician Censuses and Technical Coordination Office Minerva Eloisa P. Esquivias Assistant National Statistician National Censuses Service ISSN 0117-1453 FOREWORD The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) conducted the 2015 Census of Population (POPCEN 2015) in August 2015 primarily to update the country’s population and its demographic characteristics, such as the size, composition, and geographic distribution. Report No. 3 – Population, Land Area, and Population Density is among the series of publications that present the results of the POPCEN 2015. This publication provides information on the population size, land area, and population density by region, province, highly urbanized city, and city/municipality based on the data from population census conducted by the PSA in the years 2000, 2010, and 2015; and data on land area by city/municipality as of December 2013 that was provided by the Land Management Bureau (LMB) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). Also presented in this report is the percent change in the population density over the three census years. The population density shows the relationship of the population to the size of land where the population resides.
    [Show full text]
  • WFP Philippines Typhoon Rolly and Typhoon Ulysses Situation Report #3
    WFP Philippines Typhoon Rolly and Typhoon Ulysses Situation Report #3 23 November 2020 Highlights In Numbers • WFP will provide cash assistance to more than 2,400 Over 2.3 million affected people across vulnerable households in Catanduanes. eight regions • WFP contributed to a rapid needs assessment in the Over 23,089 individuals displaced in most affected municipalities in the provinces of evacuation centres Isabela and Cagayan. Over 46,987 individuals displaced outside • WFP continues to provide logistics support to the evacuation centres Government, transporting 74,600 family food packs and 6,225 essential non-food items. WFP Response Typhoon Rolly and Typhoon Ulysses Situation Update Logistics • Just days after the onslaught of Typhoon Rolly (international name: Goni) on 1 November, Typhoon Ulysses (international name: Vamco) roughly crossed the same track and made landfall on 11 November. Rolly and Ulysses both left trails of destruction and affected millions of people in eight regions, hundreds of thousands of which remain displaced. • The death toll from Ulysses has risen to more than 70 and severely damages property and infrastructure. In Isabela and Cagayan provinces in the Cagayan Valley, heavy rains threatened to WFP loaned two generators to the Provincial Capitol of Catanduanes. They overspill Magat Dam, the largest in the country. will power a portable office for warehouse management, and the mobile Authorities released water from the dam to prevent it water filtration system to bring clean drinking water to communities whose water sources were damaged by the typhoon. Photo courtesy of Office of from spilling, but the surge from the opened Civil Defense – Jose Angelo Mangaoang floodgates submerged many houses.
    [Show full text]
  • Province of Nueva Vizcaya Municipality of Aritao
    SUBASTA 2019 RURAL BANK OF BAYOMBONG, INC. BAYOMBONG, NUEVA VIZCAYA TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the Revised Rules and Regulations governing the rural banks, as amended, particularly the last paragraph of Section 22 of the said rules regarding disposition of all assets acquired in settlement of loans, the Rural Bank of Bayombong, Inc., hereby announces that on May 15, 2019, June 19, 2019, July 17, 2019, August 22, 2019, September 18, 2019, October 16, 2019, November 20, 2019, December 18, 2019 between the hours of 8:30 in the morning and 3:00 in the afternoon in the premises of main building of the said Rural Bank of Bayombong, Inc. the following assets acquired will be sold for cash to the highest bidder by way of public auction sale to be conducted by the President/Gen. Manager, Mrs. Martha R. Ramos. All properties not sold during the first date of auction sale aforementioned shall be offered again at subsequent dates until properties shall have been disposed. PROVINCE OF NUEVA VIZCAYA MUNICIPALITY OF ARITAO LOCATION OF PROPERTY STARTING BID T-128359- 796 sq. m.- Residential Lot 645,135.84 Pariir, Comon, Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya T-132217- 925 sq. m.- Residential Lot/Orchard 751,813.16 Pariir, Comon, Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya T-142181- 761 sq. m.- Residential Lot 342,320.27 Pk. Namnama, Bone North, Aritao, NV. T-142521-33,667 sq. m.- Veg. Land 273,049.38 Canabuan, Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya T-147044- 7,949 sq. m.- Riceland 357.934.88 Bayagung, Canarem, Aritao, N.V.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • (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,
    [Show full text]
  • Forest Governance and Institutional Structure: an Ignored Dimension Of
    Forest Governance and Institutional Structure: An Ignored Dimension of Devolution Policy Process in Collective Action: The Case of Community Based Forest Management in the Philippines Ganga Ram Dahal, PhD. Summary This paper identifies strategic weaknesses in the devolution policy process in forest management and analyses the reasons behind them. Further, it establishes the relationship of devolution policy outcomes under collective action with governance and institutional structures. The field research was undertaken in the Philippines, taking six cases of community based forest management (CBFM) sites in the province of Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino and employing a qualitative technique for data collection and interpretation. The study demonstrates that the devolution policy process has two major interrelated strategic weaknesses: one is inadequate policy articulation and the other is a set of differences between policy and the complex reality of implementation. Guided by the legacy of the historical and colonial system of state control over forest resources, formal policy making in forestry in the Philippines is unilateral as two other actors, civil society and the market, are excluded. As a result, policy articulation is inadequate as manifested in three major policies (Local Government Code 1991, Executive Order 263 of 1995 and the Indigenous People’s Right Acts 1997) with limited devolution of authority and power to manage forests by local communities. The research reveals that the centralised control mechanism in the policy has created an upward accountability structure in the devolved forest management approach, as any decisions about managing forests at the local level need prior approval from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR).
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Cepf Final Project Completion Report
    CEPF FINAL PROJECT COMPLETION REPORT I. BASIC DATA Organization Legal Name: Cagayan Valley Partners in People Development Project Title (as stated in the grant agreement): Design and Management of the Northeastern Cagayan Conservation Corridor Implementation Partners for this Project: Project Dates (as stated in the grant agreement): December 1, 2004 – June 30, 2007 Date of Report (month/year): August 2007 II. OPENING REMARKS Provide any opening remarks that may assist in the review of this report. Civil society -non-government organizations and people’s organizations, together with the academe and the church- have long been in the forefront of environmental protection in the Cagayan Valley region since the 1990s. They were and still are very active in the multi-sectoral forest protection committee and community-based forest resource management (CBFM) activities. A shift towards a conservation orientation came as a natural consequence of the Rio Summit and in view of the observation that biodiversity conservation was a neglected component of CBFM. Aside from this, there began to be implemented in region 02 biodiversity conservation projects under the CPPAP- GEF, Dutch assisted conservation and development project all in Isabela and the German assisted CBFM and Conservation project in the province of Quirino. Alongside with this was the push for the corridor approach. The CEPF assisted project is a conservation initiative that has come just at the right time when there was an upswing of interest in Cagayan in biodiversity conservation and environment protection. It came as a conservation felt need for the province of Cagayan in view of the successful pro-active actions in the neighboring province of Isabela which led to the establishment of the Northern Sierra Madre Natural Park.
    [Show full text]
  • Call for Proposals from Ngos
    Call for Proposals from NGOs/CSOs CFP-009-PHL-2021 Implementing Partner for the UNDP’s Resilient Livelihood Restoration and Recovery Project for the Typhoon Vamco/Ulysses - Province of Cagayan INSTRUCTIONS TO PROPOSERS I. BACKGROUND UNDP partners with people at all levels of society to help build nations that can withstand crisis, and drive and sustain the kind of growth that improves the quality of life for everyone. On the ground in 177 countries and territories, we offer global perspective and local insight to help empower lives and build resilient nations. This Call for Proposals (CFP) is specifically related to the Resilient Livelihood Restoration and Recovery Project in Cagayan Province. II. OBJECTIVES AND EXPECTED OUTPUTS/DELIVERABLES Typhoon Vamco (Ulysses) wreaked havoc across Luzon on 11-12 November 2020 with more than three million people from 5,594 barangays in eight regions affected, with 283,656 people seeking refuge in 2,205 evacuation centres while 158,926 people are in home-based setting. The already swollen Cagayan River in northern Luzon rose quickly, inundating low-lying communities when authorities released water from Magat Dam, one of the largest in the country, to prevent the dam from reaching its critical spilling level. At least 1.1 million people were affected by the flooding in the two provinces of Isabela and Cagayan including Tuguegarao City, which local authorities said were the worst in the region in four decades. The UNDP, working with the provincial government and the affected LGUs on livelihood restoration and recovery, shall provide support in addressing the immediate, medium, and long-term interventions towards economic resiliency through the Typhoon Vamco/Ulysses Resilient Livelihood Restoration and Recovery Project for Cagayan Province.
    [Show full text]
  • Sitecode Year Region Penro Cenro Province
    ***Data is based on submitted maps per region as of January 8, 2018. AREA IN SITECODE YEAR REGION PENRO CENRO PROVINCE MUNICIPALITY BARANGAY DISTRICT NAME OF ORGANIZATION SPECIES COMMODITY COMPONENT TENURE HECTARES 11-020900-0001-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Basco Chanarian Lone District 0.05 Tukon Elementary School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Agroforestry Protected Area 11-020900-0002-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Basco Chanarian Lone District 0.08 Chanarian Elementary School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Agroforestry Protected Area 11-020900-0003-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Itbayat Raele Lone District 0.08 Raele Barrio School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Fruit trees Protected Area 11-020900-0004-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Uyugan Itbud Lone District 0.16 Batanes General Comprehensive High School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Fruit trees Protected Area 11-020900-0005-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Sabtang Savidug Lone District 0.19 Savidug Barrio School (lot 2) Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Agroforestry Protected Area 11-020900-0006-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Sabtang Nakanmuan Lone District 0.20 Nakanmuan Barrio School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Agroforestry Protected Area 11-020900-0007-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Basco San Antonio Lone District 0.27 Diptan Elementary School Mango, Guyabano & Calamansi Other Fruit Trees Agroforestry Protected Area 11-020900-0008-0000 2011 II Batanes Batanes Basco San Antonio Lone District 0.27 DepEd
    [Show full text]
  • Mobility and Sedentarization Among the Philippine Agta
    SENRI ETHNOLOGICAL STUDIES 95: 119 –150 ©2017 Sedentarization among Nomadic Peoples in Asia and Africa Edited by Kazunobu Ikeya Mobility and Sedentarization among the Philippine Agta Tessa Minter Leiden University ABSTRACT This article provides an ethnography of Agta mobility, based on fieldwork in the northern Philippines conducted over the past decade. The Agta are a population of about 10,000 people, living in small settlements distributed along the coasts and in the mountainous interior of northeastern Luzon. They follow a hunting-fishing and gathering lifestyle, which includes a relatively mobile settlement pattern. First, this article aims to document Agta mobility by exploring its drivers and by showing how it is both facilitated and limited by kinship relations. How mobility varies regionally and seasonally will also be discussed. Second, the article focuses on Agta mobility in relation to Philippine development policies. This includes a discussion of past and recent efforts at sedentarization, as well as the government’s misconceptions of Agta mobility in relation to the ongoing ancestral land titling processes. Finally, the article explores the ongoing and future developments likely to influence Agta mobility. These concern Agta parents’ recent emphasis on enrolling their children in formal education and the approval of a road construction project that will traverse Agta living areas and the associated claims on coastal land by politically influential outsiders. An underlying question of this article is how anthropological knowledge on mobility could contribute to improving policy. INTRODUCTION Nomadism and sedentarization have long since raised the interest of policy makers, development practitioners and academics. Discussions have, however, focused mostly on pastoralist herders in arid and semi-arid regions of Eurasia and Africa (Khazanov and Wink 2001).
    [Show full text]
  • Consolidated List of Establishments – Conduct of Cles
    CONSOLIDATED LIST OF ESTABLISHMENTS – CONDUCT OF CLES 1. Our Lady of Victories Academy (OLOVA) Amulung, Cagayan 2. Reta Drug Solano, Nueva Vizcaya 3. SCMC/SMCA/SATO SM Cauayan City 4. GQ Barbershop SM Cauayan City 5. Quantum SM Cauayan City 6. McDonald SM Cauayan City 7. Star Appliance Center SM Cauyan City 8. Expressions Martone Cauyan City 9. Watch Central SM Cauayan City 10. Dickies SM Cauayan City 11. Jollibee SM Cauayan City 12. Ideal Vision SM Cauayan City 13. Mendrez SM Cauayan City 14. Plains and prints SM Cauayan City 15. Memo Express SM Cauayan City 16. Sony Experia SM Cauayan City 17. Sports Zone SM Cauayan City 18. KFC Phils. SM Cauayan City 19. Payless Shoe Souref SM Cauyan City 20. Super Value Inc.(SM Supermarket) SM Cauyan City 21. Watson Cauyan City 22. Gadget @ Xtreme SM Cauyan City 23. Game Xtreme SM Cauyan City 24. Lets Face II Cauyan City 25. Cafe Isabela Cauayan City 26. Eye and Optics SM Cauayan City 27. Giordano SM Cauayan City 28. Unisilver Cabatuan, Isabela 29. NAILAHOLICS Cabatuan, Isabela 30. Greenwich Cauayan City 31. Cullbry Cauayan City 32. AHPI Cauyan City 33. LGU Reina Mercedes Reina Mercedes, Isabela 34. EGB Construction Corp. Ilagan City 35. Cauayan United Enterp & Construction Cauayan City 36. CVDC Ilagan City 37. RRJ and MR. LEE Ilagan City 38. Savers Appliance Depot Northstar Mall Ilagan city 39. Jeffmond Shoes Northstar Mall Ilagan city 40. B Club Boutique Northstar Mall Ilagan city 41. Pandayan Bookshop Inc. Northstar Mall Ilagan city 42. Bibbo Shoes Northstar Mall Ilagan city 43.
    [Show full text]