Brief History
The present Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG)
traces its roots from the Philippine Revolution of 1897. On March 22,
1897, the Katipunan Government established the first Department of
Interior at the Tejeros Convention.
A revolutionary government was also established at that time and the
new government elected General Emilio Aguinaldo as President and Andres
Bonifacio as Director of Interior, although Bonifacio did not assume
the post. At the Naic Assembly held on April 17, 1897,
President Aguinaldo appointed General Pascual Alvarez as Secretary of
the Interior.
The Department of Interior was enshrined in the Biak-na-Bato
Constitution signed on November 1, 1897. Article XV of the said
Constitution defined the powers and functions of the Department that
included statistics, roads and bridges, agriculture, public information
and posts, and public order.
As the years of struggle for independence and self-government
continued, the Interior Department became the premier office of the
government 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.
In 1950, the Department was abolished and its functions were
transferred to the Office of Local Government (later renamed Local
Government and Civil Affairs Office) under the Office of the President.
On January 6, 1956, President Ramon Magsaysay created the Presidential
Assistant on Community Development (PACD)
to implement the Philippine Community Development Program that will
coordinate and integrate on a national scale the efforts of various
governmental and civic agencies to improve the living conditions in the
barrio residents nationwide and make them self-reliant.
In 1972, Presidential Decree No. 1 created the Department of Local Government and Community Development (DLGCD) through Letter of Implementation No. 7 on November 1, 1972. Ten years later or in 1982, the
DLGCD was reorganized and renamed Ministry of Local Government (MLG)
by virtue of Executive Order No. 777; and in 1987, it was
further reorganized and this time, renamed Department of Local
Government (DLG) by virtue of Executive Order No. 262.
Again, on December 13, 1990, the DLG underwent reorganization into what is now known as the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) by virtue of Republic Act No. 6975. The law also created the Philippine National Police (PNP) out of the Philippine Constabulary-Integrated National Police (PC-INP), which, together with the National Police Commission, was integrated under the new DILG,
the Bureau of Fire Protection, Bureau of Jail Management and Penology
and the Philippine Public Safety College; and absorbed the
National Action Committee on Anti-Hijacking from the Department of
National Defense (DND).
The passage of RA 6975 paved the way for the union of the local
governments and the police force after more than 40 years of
separation.
Today, the Department faces a new era of meeting the challenges of local autonomy, peace and order, and public safety.
Contact
Department of the Interior and Local Government Regional Office IAguila Road,
Barangay Sevilla
San Fernando City,
La Union
(072) 888-21-08
(072) 700-27-01
dilg_r1@yahoo.com