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Department of the Interior and Local Government

Executive department of the Philippine government


Executive department of the Philippine government

FieldValue
agency_nameDepartment of the Interior and Local Government
typeDepartment
nativename*Kagawaran ng Interyor at Pamahalaang Lokal*
logoDepartment of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) Seal - Logo.svg
pictureFile:DILG NAPOLCOM Center in 2013.jpg
picture_captionDILG headquarters
formed
jurisdictionGovernment of the Philippines
headquartersDILG-NAPOLCOM Center, EDSA cor. Quezon Avenue, West Triangle, Quezon City
coordinates
employees4,352 (2024)
budgetbillion (2023)
chief1_nameJuanito "Jonvic" Remulla
chief1_positionSecretary
chief2_nameKevin R. Carpeso
chief2_positionHead Executive Assistant, Office of the Secretary
chief3_nameRhazy Flor B. Fang
chief3_positionSpokesperson and Undersecretary for Plans, Public Affairs and Communications
child1_agencyBureau of Fire Protection
child2_agencyBureau of Jail Management and Penology
child3_agencyLocal Government Academy
child4_agencyNational Commission on Muslim Filipinos
child5_agencyNational Police Commission
child6_agencyNational Youth Commission
child7_agencyPhilippine Commission on Women
child8_agencyPhilippine National Police
child9_agencyPhilippine Public Safety College
website

The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG; ) is the executive department of the Philippine government responsible for promoting peace and order, ensuring public safety and strengthening local government capability aimed towards the effective delivery of basic services to the citizenry.

The department is currently led by the secretary of the interior and local government, nominated by the president of the Philippines and confirmed by the Commission on Appointments. The secretary is a member of the Cabinet. The current secretary of the interior and local government is Jonvic Remulla.

History

The Department of the Interior and Local Government traces its roots to the Tejeros Convention of March 22, 1897. As the Department of the Interior, it was among the first Cabinet positions of the proposed revolutionary Philippine government, wherein Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo was elected president. The leader of Katipunan's Magdiwang faction, Andres Bonifacio, was originally elected director of the interior in the convention, but a controversial objection to his election led to the Magdiwang's walk-out and his refusal to accept the position. Gen. Pascual Alvarez would be appointed as secretary by Aguinaldo on April 17, 1897, during the Naic Assembly.

The Department of the Interior was officially enshrined on November 1, 1897, upon the promulgation of the Biak-na-Bato Republic, with Isabelo Artacho as secretary. Article XV of the Biak-na-Bato Constitution defined the powers and functions of the department that included statistics, roads and bridges, agriculture, public information and posts, and public order.

Following the American occupation in 1901, the Department of the Interior was among the four departments created by virtue of Philippine Commission Act No. 222. Americans headed the department until 1917, when Rafael Palma was appointed by Governor-General Francis Harrison following the passage of the Jones Law. The Interior Department was tasked with various functions ranging from supervision over local units, forest conservation, public instructions, control and supervision over the police, counter-insurgency, rehabilitation, community development and cooperatives development programs.

At the onset of World War II, President Manuel L. Quezon abolished the department via Executive Order 390. It was resurrected as part of the Philippine Executive Commission in 1942 under the Japanese Occupation, but abolished once again the following year, upon the establishment of the Second Philippine Republic. Its secretary before the abolition, Jose P. Laurel, was elected Philippine president by the National Assembly.

The department was reinstated by President Sergio Osmeña months after the country's liberation from Japanese forces in December 1944. It was then merged with the Department of National Defense in July 1945. President Manuel Roxas' Executive Order No. 94 in 1947 split the Department of National Defense and the Interior, and tasked the newly reorganized Interior Department to supervise the administration of the Philippine Constabulary and all local political subdivisions, among others.

A 1950 reorganization via Executive Order No. 383 (in pursuance of Republic Act No. 422) abolished the Interior Department once again. Its functions were transferred to the Office of Local Government (later the Local Government and Civil Affairs Office) under the Office of the President.

On January 6, 1956, under President Ramon Magsaysay, the Presidential Assistant on Community Development (PACD) office was created via Executive Order No. 156, with functions resembling that of the Interior Department sans supervision over the police force. It was renamed the Presidential Arm on Community Development in 1966.

The department was restored on November 7, 1972, with the creation of the Department of Local Government and Community Development (DLGCD). The DLGCD was reorganized as a ministry in the parliamentary Batasang Pambansa in 1978, renamed the Ministry of Local Government in 1982, and became the Department of Local Government (DLG) in 1987.

On December 13, 1990, Republic Act No. 6975 placed the Philippine National Police, Bureau of Fire Protection, Bureau of Jail Management and Penology and the Philippine Public Safety College under the reorganized Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG). The new DILG merged the National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM), and all the bureaus, offices, and operating units of the former DLG under Executive Order No. 262. RA No. 6975 paved the way for the union of the local governments and the police force after nearly four decades of separation.

Powers and functions

On its website, the department provides it powers and functions as:

  • Assist the President in the exercise of general supervision over local governments
  • Advise the President in the promulgation of policies, rules, regulations and other issuances on the general supervision over local governments and on public order and safety
  • Establish and prescribe rules, regulations and other issuances implementing laws on public order and safety, the general supervision over local governments and the promotion of local autonomy and community empowerment and monitor compliance thereof
  • Provide assistance towards legislation regarding local governments, law enforcement and public safety; Establish and prescribe plans, policies, programs and projects to promote peace and order, ensure public safety and further strengthen the administrative, technical and fiscal capabilities of local government offices and personnel
  • Formulate plans, policies and programs which will meet local emergencies arising from natural and man-made disasters; Establish a system of coordination and cooperation among the citizenry, local executives and the Department, to ensure effective and efficient delivery of basic services to the public
  • Organize, train and equip primarily for the performance of police functions, a police force that is national in scope and civilian in character

List of secretaries of the interior and local government

Main article: Secretary of the Interior and Local Government

Former seal.

Organizational structure

At present, the department is headed by the secretary of the interior and local government, with the following undersecretaries and assistant secretaries:

  • Undersecretary for Barangay Affairs
  • Undersecretary for Local Government
  • Undersecretary for Mindanao Affairs and Special Concerns
  • Undersecretary for Operations
  • Undersecretary for Peace and Order
  • Undersecretary for External, Legal and Legislative Affairs
  • Undersecretary for Project Development Management
  • Undersecretary for Plans, Public Affairs and Communications
  • Undersecretary for Public Safety
  • Assistant Secretary for Administration, Finance and Comptrollership
  • Assistant Secretary for Community Participation
  • Assistant Secretary for Human Resources Development
  • Assistant Secretary for International Relations
  • Assistant Secretary for Peace and Order
  • Assistant Secretary for Plans and Programs
  • Assistant Secretary for Public Safety

Under the Office of the Secretary are the following offices and services:

  • Administrative Service
  • Central Office Disaster Information Coordinating Center (CODIX)
  • Emergency 911 National Office
  • Financial and Management Service
  • Information Systems and Technology Management Service
  • Internal Audit Service
  • Legal and Legislative Liaison Service
  • Planning Service
  • Public Affairs and Communication Service
  • Public Assistance and Complaint Center
  • Local Government Academy

A regional director is assigned to each of the 18 regions of the Philippines. A DILG Officer is assigned to every Province, Municipality, City, and Barangay.

Bureaus

The DILG is composed of four bureaus, namely:

  • Bureau of Local Government Development (BLGD)
  • Bureau of Local Government Supervision (BLGS)
  • National Barangay Operations Office (NBOO)
  • Office of Project Development Services (OPDS)

Leagues

Recognized Leagues under the DILG:

  • Barangay Councilors' League of the Philippines
  • Lady Local Legislators' League of the Philippines
  • League of Cities of the Philippines
  • League of Municipalities of the Philippines
  • League of Provinces of the Philippines
  • League of Vice Governors of the Philippines
  • Liga ng mga Barangay sa Pilipinas/Association of Barangay Captains
  • Metro Manila Councilors' League
  • National Movement of Young Legislators
  • Philippine Councilors' League
  • Provincial Board Members' League of the Philippines
  • Sangguniang Kabataan National Federation
  • Union of Local Authorities of the Philippines
  • Vice Mayors' League of the Philippines
  • Philippine League of Secretaries to the Sanggunian

Attached agencies

The following are attached to the DILG:

  • Bureau of Fire Protection
  • Bureau of Jail Management and Penology
  • Local Government Academy
  • National Commission on Muslim Filipinos
  • National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM)
  • Philippine National Police - through National Police Commission
  • National Youth Commission
  • Philippine Commission on Women
  • Philippine Public Safety College

References

References

  1. [[Department of Budget and Management]]. "Staffing Summary Fiscal Year 2024".
  2. "People’s Proposed Budget 2023". Department of Budget and Management.
  3. (December 13, 1990). "Department of the Interior and Local Government Act of 1990". The LAWPHiL Project.
  4. "DILG: Who We Are".
  5. (September 6, 1901). "An Act Providing for the Organization of the Departments of the Interior, of Commerce and Police, of Finance and Justice, and of Public Instruction".
  6. (October 4, 1947). "Reorganizing the Different Executive Departments, Bureaus, Offices, and Agencies of the Government of the Republic of the Philippines, Making Certain Readjustments of Personnel and Reallotments of Funds in Connection Therewith, and for Other Purposes". [[Official Gazette (Philippines).
  7. (1950-12-20). "Abolishing the Department of the Interior, Transferring Its Powers, Duties and Functions to the Office of the President, and For Other Purposes". [[Senate of the Philippines]].
  8. (January 6, 1950). "An Act Authorizing the President of the Philippines to Reorganize within One Year the Different Executive Departments, Bureaus, Offices, Agencies and other Instrumentalities of the Government, Including the Corporations Owned or Controlled by It". [[Senate of the Philippines]].
  9. (1982-02-28). "Reorganizing the Ministry of Local Government and Community Development, Renaming It as Ministry of Local Government and Transferring Its Community Development Function to the Ministry of Human Settlements and for Other Purposes". [[Senate of the Philippines]].
  10. (July 25, 1987). "Reorganizing the Department of Local Government and for Other Purposes". [[Supreme Court of the Philippines.
  11. "Powers & Functions - DILG".
  12. "Key Officials – DILG".
  13. "BFP : Bureau of Fire Protection | To Save Lives and Properties".
  14. [http://www.bjmp.gov.ph bjmp.gov.ph]
  15. "Local Government Academy".
  16. "NAPOLCOM – Home".
  17. "ppsc.gov.ph".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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