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Cities of the Philippines

A city (Filipino: lungsod/siyudad) is one of the units of local government in the Philippines. All Philippine cities are chartered cities (Filipino: nakakartang lungsod), whose existence as corporate and administrative entities is governed by their own specific municipal charters in addition to the Local Government Code of 1991, which specifies their administrative structure and powers. As of December 17, 2022, there are 148 cities.

A city is entitled to at least one representative in the House of Representatives if its population reaches 250,000. Cities are allowed to use a common seal. As corporate entities, cities have the power to take, purchase, receive, hold, lease, convey, and dispose of real and personal property for its general interests, condemn private property for public use (eminent domain), contract and be contracted with, sue and exercise all the powers conferred to it by Congress. Only an Act of Congress can create or amend a city charter, and with this city charter Congress confers on a city certain powers that regular municipalities or even other cities may not have.

Despite the differences in the powers accorded to each city, all cities regardless of status are given a bigger share of the Internal Revenue Allotment (IRA) compared to regular municipalities, as well as being generally more autonomous than regular municipalities.

Government

A city's local government is headed by a mayor elected by popular vote. The vice mayor serves as the presiding officer of the Sangguniang Panlungsod (city council), which serves as the city's legislative body. Upon receiving their charters, cities also receive a full complement of executive departments to better serve their constituents. Some departments are established on a case-by-case basis, depending on the needs of the city.

Offices and officials common to all cities

Office Head Mandatory / Optional
City Government Mayor Mandatory
Sangguniang Panlungsod
(City Council)
Vice Mayor as presiding officer Mandatory
Office of the Secretary to the Sanggunian Secretary to the Sanggunian Mandatory
Treasury Office Treasurer Mandatory
Assessor's Office Assessor Mandatory
Accounting and Internal Audit Services Accountant Mandatory
Budget Office Budget Officer Mandatory
Planning and Development Office Planning and Development Coordinator Mandatory
Engineering Office Engineer Mandatory
Health Office Health Officer Mandatory
Office of Civil Registry Civil Registrar Mandatory
Office of the Administrator Administrator Mandatory
Office of Legal Services Legal Officer Mandatory
Office on Social Welfare and Development Services Social Welfare and Development Officer Mandatory
Office on General Services General Services Officer Mandatory
Office for Veterinary Services Veterinarian Mandatory
Office on Architectural Planning and Design Architect Optional
Office on Public Information Information Officer Optional
Office for the Development of Cooperatives Cooperative Officer Optional
Office on Population Development Population Officer Optional
Office on Environment and Natural Resources Environment and Natural Resources Office Optional
Office of Agricultural Services Agriculturist Optional

Source: Local Government Code of 1991.[1]

Subdivisions

Cities, like municipalities, are composed of barangays (Brgy), which can range from urban neighborhoods (such as Barangay 9, Santa Angela in Laoag), to rural communities (such as Barangay Iwahig in Puerto Princesa). Barangays are sometimes grouped into officially defined administrative (geographical) districts. Examples of such are the cities of Manila (16 districts), Davao (11 districts), Iloilo (seven districts), and Samal (three districts: Babak, Kaputian and Peñaplata). Some cities such as Caloocan, Manila and Pasay even have an intermediate level between the district and barangay levels, called a zone. However, geographic districts and zones are not political units; there are no elected city government officials in these city-specific administrative levels. Rather they only serve to make city planning, statistics-gathering and other administrative tasks easier and more convenient.

Classification

Income classification

Cities are classified according to average annual income of the city based on the previous four calendar years.[1] Effective July 28, 2008, the thresholds for the income classes for cities are:[2]

Class Average annual income
( million)
First At least 500
Second 320+ but < 500
Third 240+ but < 320
Fourth 160+ but < 240
Fifth 80+ but < 160
Sixth < 80

Legal classification

The Local Government Code of 1991 (Republic Act No. 7160) classifies all cities into one of three legal categories:[1]

  • Highly urbanized cities (HUC): Cities with a minimum population of two hundred thousand (200,000) inhabitants, as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority, and with the latest annual income of at least fifty million pesos (50,000,000 or USD 1,000,000) based on 1991 constant prices, as certified by the city treasurer.
There are currently 33 highly urbanized cities in the Philippines, 16 of which are located in Metro Manila.
  • Independent component cities (ICC): Cities of this type have charters that explicitly prohibit their residents from voting for provincial officials. All five of them are considered independent from the province in which they are geographically located: Cotabato, Dagupan, Naga (Camarines Sur), Ormoc, and Santiago.
  • Component cities (CC): Cities which do not meet the preceding requirements are deemed part of the province in which they are geographically located. If a component city is located along the boundaries of two or more provinces, it shall be considered part of the province of which it used to be a municipality.
All but five of the remaining cities are considered component cities.

Independent cities

There are 38 independent cities in the Philippines, all of which are classified as either "Highly urbanized" or "Independent component" cities. A city classified as such:

  • does not have its Sangguniang Panlungsod legislation subject to review by any province's Sangguniang Panlalawigan;
  • does not share tax revenue with any province; and
  • is directly supervised by the President of the Philippines through the city government (given that the provincial government no longer exercises supervision over city officials), as stated in Section 29 of the Local Government Code.[1]

Currently, there are only four independent cities in two classes that can still participate in the election of provincial officials (governor, vice governor, and Sangguniang Panlalawigan members):

  • Cities declared highly urbanized between 1987 and 1992, whose charters (as amended) explicitly permitted residents to both vote and run for elective positions in the provincial government, and therefore allowed by Section 452-c of the Local Government Code[1] to maintain these rights: Lucena (Quezon), Mandaue (Cebu);
  • Independent component cities whose charters (as amended) only explicitly allow residents to run for provincial offices: Dagupan (Pangasinan) and Naga (Camarines Sur)

Registered voters of the cities of Cotabato, Ormoc, Santiago, as well as all other highly urbanized cities, including those to be converted or created in the future, cannot participate in provincial elections.

In addition to the eligibility of some independent cities to vote in provincial elections, a few other situations become sources of confusion regarding the complete autonomy of independent cities from provinces:

  • Some independent cities still serve as the seat of government for the province in which they are geographically located: Bacolod (Negros Occidental), Cagayan de Oro (Misamis Oriental), Cebu City (Cebu), Iloilo City (Iloilo), Lucena (Quezon), Puerto Princesa (Palawan) and Tacloban (Leyte). In such cases, the provincial government, apart from already financing the maintenance of its properties such as provincial government buildings and offices, may also provide the government of the independent city with an annual budget (determined by the province at its discretion) to aid in relieving incidental costs incurred by the city such as road maintenance due to increased vehicular traffic in the vicinity of the provincial government complex.
  • Some independent cities are still grouped with their former provinces for the purposes of representation in Congress. While 24 independent cities have their own representative(s) in Congress, some remain part of the congressional representation of the province to which they formerly belonged: Butuan, for example, is still part of the 1st Congressional District of Agusan del Norte. In cases like this, independent cities that do not vote for provincial officials are excluded from Sangguniang Panlalawigan (provincial council) districts, and the allotment of SP members is adjusted accordingly by COMELEC with proper consideration of population. For example, Agusan del Norte (being a third income-class province) is entitled to elect eight members to its Sangguniang Panlalawigan, and belongs to two congressional districts. The seats of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan are not evenly distributed (4–4) between the province's first and second congressional districts because its 1st Congressional district contains Butuan, an independent city which does not vote for provincial officials. Rather, the seats are distributed 1–7 to account for the small population of the province's 1st Sangguniang Panlalawigan district (consisting only of Las Nieves) and the bulk of the province's population being in the second district. On the other hand, the city of Lucena, which is eligible to vote for provincial officials, still forms part of the province of Quezon's 2nd Sangguniang Panlalawigan district, which is coterminous with the 2nd congressional district of Quezon.
  • General lack of distinction for independent cities, for practical purposes: Many government agencies, as well as Philippine society in general, still continue to classify many independent cities outside Metro Manila as part of provinces due to historical and cultural ties, especially if these cities were once or currently socio-economic and cultural capitals of the provinces to which they once belonged. Furthermore, most maps of the Philippines showing provincial boundaries almost never separate independent cities from the provinces in which they are geographically located, for cartographic convenience. Despite being first-level administrative divisions (i.e., on the same level as provinces, as stated in Section 25 of the LGC),[1] independent cities are still treated by many to be on the same level as municipalities and component cities (second-level administrative divisions) for educational convenience and simplicity.

A component city, while enjoying relative autonomy on some matters compared to a regular municipality, is still considered part of a province. However, there are several sources of confusion:

  • Some component cities form their own congressional representation, separate from their province. The representation of a city in the House of Representatives (or lack thereof) is not a criterion for independence from a province, as Congress is the national legislative body and is part of the national (central) government. Despite Antipolo, Biñan and San Jose del Monte having their own representatives in Congress, they are still component cities of Rizal, Laguna, and Bulacan, respectively, as their respective charters specifically converted them into component cities and have no provision stating a severance in relations with their respective provincial governments.
  • Being part of an administrative region different from the province: Isabela City functions as a component city of Basilan: its tax revenues are shared with the provincial government, its residents are eligible to both vote and run for provincial offices, and it is served by the provincial government and the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Basilan with regard to provincially devolved services. However, by opting out of joining the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM), Isabela City's residents are ineligible to vote and run for regional offices of the Bangsamoro Parliament, unlike the rest of Basilan. Regional services provided to Isabela City come from offices in Region IX based in Pagadian; the rest of Basilan is serviced by the BARMM based in Cotabato City. Isabela City, while not independent from its province, is this outside the jurisdiction of the BARMM, the region to which the rest of Basilan belongs. Regions are not the primary subnational administrative divisions of the Philippines, but rather the provinces.

Creation of cities

Congress is the lone legislative entity that can incorporate cities. Provincial and municipal councils can pass resolutions indicating a desire to have a certain area (usually an already-existing municipality or a cluster of barangays) declared a city after the requirements for becoming a city are met. As per Republic Act No. 9009, these requirements include:[3]

  • locally generated income of at least 100 million (based on constant prices in the year 2000) for the last two consecutive years, as certified by the Department of Finance, AND
  • a population of at least 150,000, as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA); OR a contiguous territory of 100 square kilometers, as certified by the Land Management Bureau, with contiguity not being a requisite for areas that are on two or more islands.

Members of Congress (usually the involving representative of the congressional district to which the proposed city belongs) then draft the legislation that will convert or create the city. After the bill passes through both the House of Representatives and the Senate and becomes an Act of Congress, the President signs the Act into law. If the Act goes unsigned after 30 days it still becomes law despite the absence of the President's signature.

The creation of cities before 1983 was solely at the discretion of the national legislature; there were no requirements for achieving 'city' status other than an approved city charter. No income, population or land area requirements had to be met in order to incorporate cities before Batas Pambansa Bilang 337 (Local Government Code of 1983) became law. This is what made it possible for several current cities such as Tangub or Canlaon to be conferred such a status despite their small population and locally generated income, which do not meet current standards. The relatively low income standard between 1992 and 2001 (which was 20 million)[1] also allowed several municipalities, such as Sipalay and Muñoz, to become cities despite not being able to meet the current 100 million local income standard.

Before 1987, many cities were created without any plebiscites conducted for the residents to ratify the city charter, most notable of which were cities that were incorporated during the early American colonial period (Manila and Baguio), and during the Commonwealth Era (1935–1946) such as Cavite City, Dansalan (now Marawi), Iloilo City, Bacolod, San Pablo and Zamboanga City. Only since 1987 has it been mandated under the Constitution that any change to the legal status of any local government unit requires the ratification by the residents that would be affected by such changes. Therefore, all cities created after 1987 – after meeting the requirements for cityhood as laid out in the Local Government Code of 1991 and Republic Act No. 9009 of 2001 – only acquired their corporate status after the majority of their voting residents approved their respective charters.

Motivations for cityhood

Although some early cities were given charters because of their advantageous (Baguio, Tagaytay) or strategic (Angeles City and Olongapo, Cotabato, Zamboanga) locations or in order to especially establish new government centers in otherwise sparsely populated areas (Palayan, Trece Martires, Quezon City), most Philippine cities were originally incorporated to provide a form of localized civil government to an area that is primarily urban, which, due to its compact nature and different demography and local economy, cannot be necessarily handled more efficiently by more rural-oriented provincial and municipal governments. However, not all cities are purely areas of dense urban settlement. To date there are still cities with huge expanses of rural or wilderness areas and considerable non-urban populations, such as Calbayog, Davao, Puerto Princesa and Zamboanga as they were deliberately incorporated with increased future resource needs and urban expansion, as well as strategic considerations, in mind.

With the enactment of the 1991 Local Government Code, municipalities and cities have both become more empowered to deal with local issues. Regular municipalities now share many of the same powers and responsibilities as chartered cities, but its citizens and/or leaders may feel that it might be to their best interest to get a larger share of internal revenue allotment (IRA) and acquire additional powers by becoming a city, especially if the population has greatly increased and local economy has become more robust. On the other hand, due to the higher property taxes that would be imposed after cityhood, many citizens have become wary of their town's conversion into a city, even if the municipality had already achieved a high degree of urbanization and has an annual income that already exceeds that of many existing lower-income cities. This has been among the cases made against the cityhood bids of many high-income and populous municipalities surrounding Metro Manila, most notably Bacoor and Dasmariñas (which finally became cities in June 2012 and November 2009 respectively), which for many years have been more qualified to become cities than others.

In response to the rapid increase in the number of municipalities being converted into cities since the enactment of the Local Government Code in 1991, Senator Aquilino Pimentel authored what became Republic Act No. 9009 in June 2001 which sought to establish a more appropriate benchmark by which municipalities that wished to become cities were to be measured.[4] The income requirement was increased sharply from 20 million to 100 million in a bid to curb the spate of conversions into cities of municipalities that were perceived to have not become urbanized or economically developed enough to be able to properly function as a city.

Despite the passage of RA 9009, 16 municipalities not meeting the required locally generated income were converted into cities in 2007 by seeking exemption from the income requirement. This led to vocal opposition from the League of Cities of the Philippines against the cityhood of these municipalities, with the League arguing that by letting these municipalities become cities, Congress will set "a dangerous precedent" that would not prevent others from seeking the same "special treatment".[4] More importantly, the LCP argued that with the recent surge in the conversion of towns that did not meet the requirements set by RA 9009 for becoming cities, the allocation received by existing cities would only drastically decrease because more cities will have to share the amount allotted by the national government, which is equal to 23% of the IRA, which in turn is 40% of all the revenues collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue.[5] The resulting legal battles resulted in the nullification of the city charters of the 16 municipalities by the Supreme Court in August 2010. (See #"League of 16" and legal battles)

Changing city status

Throughout the years there have been instances of changes to the city's status with regard to eligibility for provincial elections, as a result of the passage of laws, both of general effectivity and specific to a city.

Before 1979

Prior to 1979, all cities were just considered chartered cities, without any official category differentiating them aside from income levels. Though chartered cities were considered autonomous from the provinces from which they were created, the eligibility of their residents to vote for provincial officials was determined by their respective charters.[6]

Regarding participation in provincial affairs, there were three types of city charters:

  1. those which explicitly allowed their respective residents to elect provincial officials,
  2. those which explicitly prohibited participation in provincial elections,
  3. and those which are silent regarding voter participation in provincial elections.

The 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves, et al. v. Commission on Elections finally resolved the ambiguity surrounding the third category of cities, by confirming that the residents of cities with such charters (such as Dumaguete and Davao City) are ineligible to participate in provincial elections.[6]

Altering the right of city residents to participate in provincial elections was a power solely determined by the national legislature. Before 1979, this power was exercised in seven cases, affecting a total of six cities:

  • Five Acts of the National Assembly or Congress in which the residents of an existing city were restored the right to vote for officials of the mother province:
    • August 22, 1940: Section 7 of the revised charter of the city of Iloilo (Commonwealth Act No. 158) was amended in 1940 by Commonwealth Act No. 604 to explicitly state: "The voters of said City of Iloilo shall take part in the election of the provincial officers of Iloilo, but the latter shall have no jurisdiction over the City of Iloilo and the officers thereof."[7]
    • June 10, 1950: The original city charter of Dagupan (Republic Act No. 170) was originally silent on the matter of the eligibility of city residents to participate in provincial election,[8] therefore implying that residents were ineligible to participate in provincial elections. Three years later Republic Act No. 448 amended the charter to explicitly empower the city's voters to participate in the election of the governor and provincial board members of Pangasinan.[9]
    • June 14, 1956: The city of Cabanatuan was originally explicitly excluded from electing and being elected into positions in the provincial government of Nueva Ecija[10] until its original city charter (Republic Act No. 526) was amended by Republic Act No. 1445 in 1956, which enabled the city's residents to once more vote for provincial officials.[11]
    • June 16, 1956: The original city charter of Dansalan (Commonwealth Act No. 592) was originally silent on the matter of the eligibility of city residents to participate in provincial election,[12] therefore implying that residents were ineligible to participate in provincial elections. Sixteen years later Republic Act No. 1552, in addition to renaming the city to Marawi, also amended the city charter to explicitly empower the city's voters to participate in the election of Lanao Province officials.[13]
    • June 10, 1964: Cebu City's old charter (Commonwealth Act No. 58)[14] was repealed, and replaced with Republic Act No. 3857 in 1964. The law allowed the city's residents to once more become eligible to vote for officials in the provincial government of Cebu.[15]
    • June 21, 1969: Following the Supreme Court decision on Teves, et al. v. Commission on Elections which upheld Dumaguete's independence from Negros Oriental,[6] Republic Act No. 5797 was enacted on June 21, 1969, by Congress to revise the city's original charter (Republic Act No. 327)[16] to explicitly allow the city's residents to once again vote for provincial officials.[17]
  • One Act of Congress in which the residents of existing cities whose residents were previously explicitly granted the right to participate in provincial elections were deprived such a right:
    • June 19, 1959: By virtue of Section 2 of Republic Act No. 2259, the voters of the cities of Dagupan and Iloilo were deprived of the right to participate in provincial elections.[18]

1979–1983

Batas Pambansa Bilang 51, approved on December 22, 1979, introduced two legal categories of cities: highly urbanized cities (HUCs) and component cities.[19] COMELEC Resolution No. 1421, which was issued to implement the provisions of BP 51 prior to the January 30, 1980, local elections, stated that a total of 20 cities were not allowed to participate in the election of provincial officials:[20] seven of these were "highly urbanized," while the remaining 13 were "component" cities.

  • When Batas Pambansa Bilang 51 came into effect for the January 30, 1980, elections, all cities whose incomes at the time were 40 million or higher were considered highly urbanized cities.[19] Cities that met this income requirement at the time were: Caloocan, Cebu, Davao, Manila, Pasay and Quezon City. Regardless of whether their respective charters allowed them to vote for provincial officials or not, highly urbanized cities were no longer allowed to vote for provincial officials. Among the aforementioned, only the voters of Cebu City lost the right to participate in provincial elections in this manner; the voters of the other five cities have not participated in any provincial election since their respective incorporation as cities. In addition, Section 3 of BP 51 also made Baguio a highly urbanized city irrespective of its income,[19] due to its importance as the host to the official summer residences of the President and the Supreme Court. A Supreme Court case decided two days before election day upheld the legality of BP 51 in depriving the voters of Cebu City the power to elect officials for the province of Cebu.[20]
  • Per Section 3 of BP 51, all other cities were considered "component cities" of the provinces in which they are geographically located, or the provinces of which they were originally a part.[19] Despite considering all other cities as part of their respective provinces, under BP 51 the eligibility of voters to participate in provincial elections were still determined by their cities' respective charters (as amended).[19] The voters of a total of thirteen "component cities" continued to be ineligible to vote for provincial officials for the local elections of 1980.[20] Nine of these were cities with charters (as amended) that expressly prohibited participation in provincial elections: Dagupan, General Santos, Iloilo, Mandaue, Naga, Ormoc, Oroquieta, San Carlos (Pangasinan) and Zamboanga.[20] The remaining four — Bais, Canlaon, Cotabato and Ozamiz — were cities whose charters were silent on participation in provincial elections;[20] BP 51 upheld the 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves, et al. v. Commission on Elections by barring their residents from participating in the election of provincial officials.

1983–1987

Batas Pambansa Bilang 337 (Local Government Code of 1983), approved on February 10, 1983, further refined the criteria by which cities can be classified as highly urbanized cities.[21] Under BP 337 a city that had at least 150,000 inhabitants and an income of at least 30 million was to be declared highly urbanized by the Minister of Local Government within thirty days of the city having met the requirement.[21] The cities of Angeles (October 13, 1986), Bacolod (September 27, 1984), Butuan (February 7, 1985), Cagayan de Oro (November 22, 1983), Iligan (November 22, 1983), Olongapo (December 7, 1983), and Zamboanga (November 22, 1983) became HUCs in this manner. The residents in most of these cities lost their right to participate in provincial elections for the first time. The two exceptions are: Iloilo City, which had already been deprived of the right to vote for provincial officials in 1959 by virtue of Section 2 of RA 2259,[18] and Zamboanga City, which had been autonomously governed since its creation by virtue of Section 47 of its city charter (Commonwealth Act No. 39).[22]

By virtue of Section 30 of Batas Pambansa Bilang 881 (Omnibus Election Code of the Philippines), approved on December 3, 1985, provided that: "unless their respective charters provide otherwise, the electorate of component cities shall be entitled to vote in the election for provincial officials of the province of which it is a part."[23] This provision therefore overrides the 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves, et al. v. Commission on Elections by providing voters in component cities whose charters are silent on the matter of electing provincial officials the right to again participate in provincial elections. BP 881 therefore again enfranchised voters in the cities of Bais and Canlaon (Negros Oriental), and Ozamiz (Misamis Occidental). Despite the charter of the city of Cotabato being silent on the matter of electing provincial officials, the city was not legislated to be part of any of the successor provinces of the old undivided Cotabato province. Voters of the city therefore were still not eligible to vote in the provincial elections of either Maguindanao or North Cotabato and therefore remained independent from any province.

1987–1991

The period between ratification of the new Constitution (February 1987) and the effectivity of the Local Government Code of 1991 (January 1992) was one of transition. During this time, BP 51, BP 337 and BP 881 were still in force: the only legal classes of cities during this period were still "highly urbanized" and "component" cities.

Altering the right of city residents to participate in provincial elections was once again exercised by the newly restored Congress in this period. A total of three cities were affected: Republic Acts No. 6641 (in 1987),[24] 6726 (in 1989)[25] and 6843 (in 1990),[26] once again allowed the residents of Mandaue, Oroquieta and San Carlos to vote for provincial officials of Cebu, Misamis Occidental and Pangasinan respectively. Since BP 51—which only considered cities as being either "highly urbanized" or "component"—was still in force at the time, the changes were not considered as switching between legal categories,[27] but rather a simple change within the "component city" classification that did not require a plebiscite. Note that the "independent component city" legal classification was only introduced through the Local Government Code in 1992.

Under the same criteria set in BP 337 (Local Government Code of 1983), a total of three cities became highly urbanized: General Santos (September 5, 1988), Lucena (July 1, 1991) and Mandaue (February 15, 1991). Lucena and Mandaue were special cases, in that because their re-classification into HUC status took place after the ratification of the Constitution (February 11, 1987) but before the effectivity of the Local Government Code of 1991 (January 1, 1992), their residents were allowed to continue to participate in the election of provincial officials as per their respective charters (as amended), by virtue of Sec. 452-c of the LGC.[1] Residents of General Santos were already excluded from voting for provincial officials of South Cotabato since achieving cityhood in 1968; they were therefore unaffected by this exemption.

1992–present

The Local Government Code of 1991 came into effect on January 1, 1992, and has remained in force ever since, though some amendments have been made.[1] New requirements for creating cities, and upgrading cities to highly urbanized status, were instituted under this Act. The LGC of 1991 was also the first time the independent component city (ICC) category was introduced. These cities are those non-highly urbanized cities whose charters explicitly prohibited city residents to vote in provincial elections. They were finally made completely independent of the province from fiscal, administrative and legal standpoints.

Upgrading

  • Independent municipality to highly urbanized city

The municipalities of Metro Manila, having been severed from the provinces of Bulacan and Rizal and made independent units in 1975, were converted to highly urbanized cities, beginning in 1994 with Mandaluyong. The most recent, Navotas, became an HUC in 2007. Only Pateros, which does not currently meet the population requirement of 200,000 inhabitants, remains the only independent municipality in Metro Manila.

  • Component city to independent component city (CC - ICC)

All that is needed is a congressional amendment to a component city's charter, prohibiting city residents to vote for provincial officials. There is a movement (Independent Calbayog City Movement) in Calbayog City that pushes this and the draft bill is ready to be filed by the representative of the 1st District of Samar, Edgar Mary Sarmiento.[28][29][30]

  • Component/independent component city to highly urbanized city (CC/ICC - HUC)

Since 1992, once a city reaches a population of 200,000 persons as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority and an income of 50 million (based on 1991 constant prices) as certified by the city treasurer, the city government can submit a request to the President to have their city declared as highly urbanized within 30 days. Upon the President's declaration, a plebiscite will be held within a specific timeframe to ratify this conversion. There are no limits as to the number of times a component city can attempt to become a highly urbanized city, should previous tries be unsuccessful.[31]

  • Since 1992 three component cities have been successfully converted into HUCs:
    • Puerto Princesa (2007): Proclamation No. 1264 signed on March 26, 2007, declared the capital city of Palawan an HUC.[32] Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on July 21, 2007, approved the conversion.[33]
    • Lapu-Lapu (2007): Proclamation No. 1222 signed on January 23, 2007, declared the component city of Lapu-Lapu an HUC.[34] Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on July 21, 2007, approved the conversion.[33]
    • Tacloban (2008): Proclamation No. 1637 signed on October 4, 2008, declared the capital city of Leyte an HUC.[35] Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on December 18, 2008, approved the conversion.[36]
  • The following component cities failed to become HUCs, for various reasons:
    • Cabanatuan (1997): Proclamation No. 969 signed on February 13, 1997, declared the former capital of the province of Nueva Ecija an HUC.[37] Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held simultaneously with the barangay elections on May 12, 1997 did not approve the conversion.[38]
    • Tarlac City (2005): Proclamation No. 940 signed on October 27, 2005, declared the capital city of the province of Tarlac an HUC.[39] Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on February 11, 2006, did not approve the conversion.
    • Antipolo (2011): Proclamation No. 124 signed on March 14, 2011, declared the capital city of the province of Rizal an HUC.[40] On April 4, 2011, Antipolo's city mayor announced that the planned June 18, 2011, plebiscite is indefinitely postponed, effectively suspending the bid to convert the city into an HUC.[41]
    • Cabanatuan (2012): Proclamation No. 418 signed on July 4, 2012, once again declared the former capital of the province of Nueva Ecija an HUC.[42] The plebiscite was originally set for December 1, 2012, but, due to preparations for the upcoming 2013 national, ARMM and local elections, was rescheduled by COMELEC for January 25, 2014.[43][44] A week before the rescheduled plebiscite, the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order, which postponed the vote until the case brought by Nueva Ecija governor Aurelio Umali was decided.[44] On April 22, 2014, the Supreme Court ordered COMELEC to include the rest of Nueva Ecija in the plebiscite, given that the province's income will be significantly affected once Cabanatuan attains autonomy as an HUC.[44] COMELEC subsequently rescheduled the expanded plebiscite for November 8, 2014.[43] However, on October 21 COMELEC issued Minute Resolution No. 14-0732, which suspended the voting until the city government of Cabanatuan provides the 101 million needed to administer the expanded plebiscite.[45]

Downgrading

Highly urbanized city to component city

Reclassifying an HUC as a component city likely involves not only amending the concerned city's charter, but also the Local Government Code,[46] as currently there is no provision in the LGC that allows this, nor are there any precedents. Some Cebu City politicians have previously indicated that they wish to bring back the city under the province's control, in order to bring in more votes against the Sugbuak, the proposed partition of Cebu Province.[46]

Independent component city to component city

A congressional amendment to the city charter enabling city residents to vote for provincial officials is required, followed by a plebiscite. Santiago's status as an independent component city was briefly in question after the enactment of Republic Act No. 8528 on February 14, 1998, which sought to make it a regular component city.[47] The Supreme Court on September 16, 1999, however ruled in favor of the city's mayor who contended that such a change in the status of the city required a plebiscite just like any other merger, division, abolition or alteration in boundaries of any political unit. And due to the lack of a plebiscite to affirm such a change, RA 8528 was therefore unconstitutional.[27]

Amendments

On April 10, 2022, the Republic Act No. 11683 lapses into law which seeks to ease conversion of towns into cities but was signed by President Rodrigo Duterte on April 11, 2022.[48] The new cityhood law amends Section 450 of Republic Act 7160 also known as the Local Government Code of 1991 where a municipality will be exempted from the land and population requirements if it generates at least 100 million pesos for two consecutive years.[49]

League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP)

The League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP) is a non-profit organization and is not a government agency and was founded in 1988. As of September 3, 2022, the league has a membership of 147 cities. The organization was formed to help coordinate efforts to improve governance and local autonomy and to tackle issues such as preserving the environment and improving public works.

List of cities

As of December 17, 2022, there are 148 cities in the Philippines. Baliwag in Bulacan is the newest city, after the plebiscite held resulted in approval of ratification on December 17, 2022.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
class=notpageimage|
Location of the 148 cities of the Philippines (as of December 2022)

Largest cities

The ten most populous cities in the Philippines
# City Population
(2020)[50]
Image Description
1 Quezon City 2,960,048   Former capital of the country (1948–1976). Largest city in Metro Manila in population and land area. Hosts the House of Representatives of the Philippines at the Batasang Pambansa Complex and the metropolis' largest source of water, the La Mesa Reservoir.
2 Manila 1,846,513   Capital of the country (1571–1948 and 1976–present). Historically centered on the walled city of Intramuros, by the mouth of the Pasig River. Host to the seat of the chief executive, the Malacañang Palace. By far the most densely populated city in the country, as well as the whole world.
3 Davao City 1,776,949   The largest city in Mindanao by population Popularity nicknamed "The King City of the South". Historically centered near where the Davao River exits into the Davao Gulf, the city also encompasses expanses of wilderness, including part of the Mount Apo Natural Park, making it the largest city in the Philippines by land area. Regional center of the Region XI, and core of the third-largest and last metropolitan area in the country, Metro Davao.
4 Caloocan 1,661,584
 
Historic city where Andrés Bonifacio and the Katipunan held many of its meetings in secrecy. Much of its territory was ceded to form Quezon City, resulting in the formation of two non-contiguous sections under the city's jurisdiction. The city mainly encompasses residential areas, with significant industrial and commercial sections.
5 Zamboanga City 977,234   Nicknamed "City of Flowers" and marketed by its city government as "Asia's Latin City" for its substantial Spanish-derived Creole-speaking population. Former capital of the Moro Province and of the undivided province of Zamboanga. Former regional center of the Zamboanga Peninsula administrative region, but remains the largest city in western Mindanao.
6 Cebu City 964,169
 
Popularly nicknamed "The Queen City of the South". Site of the first Spanish settlement in the country. Capital of the province of Cebu and regional center of Region VII. Most populous city in the Visayas and core of the country's second-largest metropolitan area, Metro Cebu.
7 Antipolo 887,399   Nicknamed "City in the Sky" for its location on the hills immediately east of Metro Manila. Well-known pilgrimage and tourist center, being host to a Marian shrine and the Hinulugang Taktak National Park. Most populous component city in the country, and comprises more than a quarter of the total population of the province of Rizal and the capital of that province.
8 Taguig 886,722[i]   Lying on the western shore of Laguna de Bay, the city encompasses significant industrial, commercial and residential areas, including the disputed area of Fort Bonifacio, a former American military base that has been in development as the country's new premier business district. Was part of Rizal Province until 1975, when it was incorporated into Metro Manila.
9 Pasig 803,159   Hosts most of the Ortigas Center, one of Metro Manila's prime business districts. Located where Laguna de Bay empties into the Pasig River. Part of the province of Rizal until 1975, when it was incorporated into Metro Manila. Formerly hosted the capitol and other government buildings of that province.
10 Cagayan de Oro 728,402   Nicknamed the "City of Golden Friendship" and formerly known as Cagayan de Misamis. Located at the mouth of the swift-flowing Cagayan de Oro River, which has become a tourist draw.[51] Regional center of Northern Mindanao and capital of the province of Misamis Oriental.

Table notes

  1. ^ Population figure for Taguig excludes disputed barangays with Makati.

Metropolitan areas

City facts

  • By population (2020 census figures)
  • By population density (calculated using 2020 census figures):
    • Most densely populated: Manila, with 41,515 people per square kilometer
    • Most sparsely populated: Puerto Princesa, with 130 people per square kilometer
  • By land area:
    • Smallest: San Juan, with an area of 5.94 square kilometres (2.29 sq mi)
    • Largest: Davao City, with an area of 2,433.61 square kilometres (939.62 sq mi).[52] However, some sources claim that Puerto Princesa covers an area of more than 2,500 square kilometres (970 sq mi),[53] its officially recognized land area figure (according to IRA share calculation data)[54] is 2,381.02 square kilometres (919.32 sq mi). Contrary to popular belief within the Philippines,[55] Davao City does not hold the record of being the world's largest city in terms of land area.
  • By elevation:
  • Most extreme points:

Defunct/dissolved cities

  • Legazpi City (1948–1954): Legazpi's cityhood was approved on June 18, 1948. Under Republic Act No. 306, Legazpi became a city after the President of the Philippines proclaimed its cityhood.[58] Comprising the present-day territories of Legazpi City and Daraga, the city was dissolved on June 8, 1954[59] when Legazpi and Daraga were made into separate municipalities. Legazpi eventually became a city on its own on June 12, 1959.
  • Basilan City (1948–1973): Formerly part of the city of Zamboanga until it was made a city on its own in 1948 through Republic Act No. 288.[60] Delimited to only the downtown area of what is now Isabela City upon the creation of the province of Basilan in 1973 through Presidential Decree No. 356 by President Ferdinand Marcos.[61] Finally abolished and its territory annexed to the municipality of Isabela on November 7, 1975, through Presidential Decree No. 840.[62]
  • Rajah Buayan City (1966): Under Republic Act No. 4413,[63] the then-municipality of General Santos in what was then the unified province of Cotabato was to be formally converted into a city named after a historical ruler in Mindanao on January 1, 1966, provided that majority of qualified voters in the municipality vote in favor of cityhood in a plebiscite. In December 1965 the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) proclaimed the cityhood of Rajah Buayan, with 4,422 people voting for and 3,066 voting against. However, two residents of the new city challenged this by arguing in the courts that the number of people who voted in favor of cityhood did not form a majority in light of the fact that there were 15,727 voters in the city. The court issued an injunction on January 4, 1966, restraining city officers from performing any acts authorized by or pursuant to provisions in RA 4413. The Supreme Court unanimously upheld this decision on October 29, 1966, and declared that the city charter was not accepted by majority of voters, thus rendering RA 4413 null and void.[64] The municipality of General Santos would later be converted into a city under the same name in 1968.

"League of 16" and legal battles

The Supreme Court of the Philippines, by a highly divided vote of 6–5, on November 18, 2008, subsequently upheld with finality on May 6, 2009, declared unconstitutional cityhood laws converting 16 municipalities into cities. The 24-page judgment of Justice Antonio T. Carpio, adjudged that the following Cityhood Laws violate secs. 6 and 10, Article X of the Constitution of the Philippines:

The Court held that the foregoing Cityhood Laws, all enacted after RA 9009's effectivity, "explicitly exempt respondent municipalities from the increased income requirement from 20 million to 100 million in Sec. 450 of the Local Government Code (LGC), as amended by RA 9009. Such exemption clearly violates Section 10, Article X of the Constitution and is thus patently unconstitutional. To be valid, such exemption must be written in the Local Government Code and not in any other law, including the Cityhood Laws."[65][66]

However, more than a year later, on December 22, 2009, acting on the appeal of the so-called League of 16 Cities (an informal group consisting of the sixteen local government units whose cityhood status had been reversed), the Supreme Court reversed its earlier ruling as it ruled that "at the end of the day, the passage of the amendatory law (regarding the criteria for cityhood as set by Congress) is no different from the enactment of a law, i.e., the cityhood laws specifically exempting a particular political subdivision from the criteria earlier mentioned. Congress, in enacting the exempting law/s, effectively decreased the already codified indicators."[67] As such, the cityhood status of the said 16 LGUs was effectively restored.

On August 24, 2010, in a 16-page resolution, the Supreme Court reinstated its November 18, 2008, decision striking down the cityhood laws, reducing once more the sixteen LGUs to the status of regular municipalities.[68]

The most recent development in the legal battles surrounding the League of 16 came on February 15, 2011. Voting 7–6, the Supreme Court (SC) ruled that 16 towns that became cities in 2007 can stay as cities. This was the fourth time the SC has ruled on the case, and the third reversal. It said the conversion of the 16 towns into cities met all legal requirements.[69]

Rejected cityhood

Note: This section only lists attempts that reached the stage where a Republic Act was enacted for the purpose of achieving cityhood.

  • Batangas (1965): A majority of the votes cast in the then-municipality of Batangas rejected cityhood in a plebiscite conducted on the same day as the 1965 Philippine general elections, as mandated by Republic Act No. 4586.[70] The city would have been named Laurel City in honor of Jose P. Laurel, the president of the Japanese-sponsored Second Republic. The municipality of Batangas would later be converted into a city under the same name in 1969.
  • Tarlac (1969): The city charter of Tarlac (Republic Act No. 5907) was approved on June 21, 1969.[71] Cityhood was rejected in a plebiscite held on November 11, 1969, by a majority of the ballots cast. Tarlac became a city 29 years after, in 1998.
  • Taguig (1998): Republic Act No. 8487, Taguig was supposed to be converted into a highly urbanized city but it was rejected due to lower income. More than six years later, the cityhood of Taguig was ratified in a plebiscite held on December 8, 2004.[72][73]
  • Ilagan (1999): Republic Act No. 8474, which converted Ilagan to a component city of Isabela, was approved on February 2, 1998.[74] However, majority of votes cast in the plebiscite held on March 14, 1999, rejected cityhood. Ilagan finally became a city after majority of votes cast in the August 11, 2012, plebiscite approved the Republic Act No. 10169.[75]
  • Novaliches (1999): On February 23, 1998, the controversial City Charter of Novaliches (Republic Act No. 8535) was approved, which sought to create a new city out of the 15 northern barangays of Quezon City.[76] Historically a separate town, Novaliches was distributed between Quezon City and northern Caloocan in 1948. In a plebiscite held on October 23, 1999, the majority of ballots cast (which included all voters of Quezon City and not just the 15 barangays) rejected the cityhood of Novaliches.
  • Meycauayan (2001): Cityhood was rejected by majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on March 30, 2001, to ratify Republic Act No. 9021.[77] Meycauayan became a city five years later with the enactment of Republic Act No. 9356[78] and its ratification through a plebiscite on December 10, 2006.[79]

Proposed cities under the 18th Congress

Proposed cities under the 19th Congress

Former names

Note: This section only lists name changes made upon or since cityhood.

  • Cagayan de Oro: The municipality of Cagayan was converted to the city of Cagayan de Oro in June 15, 1950 through Republic Act No. 521.[90] An earlier bill was filed by Misamis Oriental Congressman Pedro S. Baculio for the creation of the City of Cagayan, however the 1st Congress was adjourned before any readings for the bill had done. The final, and enacted, cityhood bill authored by Congressman (and later Vice President) Emmanuel Pelaez gave the city its present name.
  • Lapu-Lapu: The municipality of Opon was converted to a city named after Lapulapu, hero of the Battle of Mactan in 1961 through Republic Act No. 3134.[91]
  • Marawi: Inaugurated as the City of Dansalan in 1950, renamed to Marawi on June 16, 1956, through Republic Act No. 1552.[92]
  • Ozamiz: The municipality of Misamis was converted to a city named after José Ozámiz, the first governor of Misamis Occidental, in 1948 through Republic Act No. 321.[93]
  • Pasay: Inaugurated as Rizal City in 1947, reverted to Pasay on June 7, 1950, through Republic Act No. 437.[94]
  • Roxas: In 1951, the municipality of Capiz was converted to a city named after Manuel Roxas, the first president of the Third Philippine Republic and town native through Republic Act No. 603.[95]

See also

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  85. ^ Frasco, Vincent Franco. "AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF LILOAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF LILOAN" (PDF). House of Representatives. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  86. ^ Dy, Faustino V. "AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF ECHAGUE IN THE PROVINCE OF ISABELA INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF ECHAGUE" (PDF). House of Representatives. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  87. ^ Espina, Gerardo Jr. "AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF NAVAL IN THE PROVINCE OF BILIRAN INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF NAVAL" (PDF). House of Representatives. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  88. ^ Antojado, Le Phyllis (July 2, 2022). "AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF LILOAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF LILOAN". Retrieved July 29, 2022 – via Phil STAR.com - The Freeman.
  89. ^ Vestil, Justin K. (July 5, 2022). "AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF BALAMBAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS BALAMBAN CITY". Retrieved July 29, 2022 – via Yahoo News Philippines.
  90. ^ "Republic Act No. 521 – An Act Creating the City of Cagayan de Oro". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. June 15, 1950. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  91. ^ "Republic Act No. 3134 – An Act Creating the City of Lapu-Lapu". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. June 17, 1961. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  92. ^ "Republic Act No. 1552 – An Act to Amend the Charter of the City of Dansalan So as to Change Its Name to Marawi and Make Elective Its Mayor, Vice Mayor and Councilors, and for Other Purposes". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. June 16, 1956. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  93. ^ "Republic Act No. 321 – An Act Creating the City of Ozamiz". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. June 19, 1948. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  94. ^ "Republic Act No. 437 – An Act Changing the Name of Rizal City to Pasay City". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. June 7, 1950. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  95. ^ "Republic Act No. 603 – An Act Creating the City of Roxas". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. April 11, 1951. Retrieved April 29, 2016.

External links

  • League of Cities of the Philippines (LCP)
  • CityMayors.com article

cities, philippines, city, filipino, lungsod, siyudad, units, local, government, philippines, philippine, cities, chartered, cities, filipino, nakakartang, lungsod, whose, existence, corporate, administrative, entities, governed, their, specific, municipal, ch. A city Filipino lungsod siyudad is one of the units of local government in the Philippines All Philippine cities are chartered cities Filipino nakakartang lungsod whose existence as corporate and administrative entities is governed by their own specific municipal charters in addition to the Local Government Code of 1991 which specifies their administrative structure and powers As of December 17 2022 there are 148 cities A city is entitled to at least one representative in the House of Representatives if its population reaches 250 000 Cities are allowed to use a common seal As corporate entities cities have the power to take purchase receive hold lease convey and dispose of real and personal property for its general interests condemn private property for public use eminent domain contract and be contracted with sue and exercise all the powers conferred to it by Congress Only an Act of Congress can create or amend a city charter and with this city charter Congress confers on a city certain powers that regular municipalities or even other cities may not have Despite the differences in the powers accorded to each city all cities regardless of status are given a bigger share of the Internal Revenue Allotment IRA compared to regular municipalities as well as being generally more autonomous than regular municipalities Contents 1 Government 1 1 Offices and officials common to all cities 2 Subdivisions 3 Classification 3 1 Income classification 3 2 Legal classification 3 3 Independent cities 4 Creation of cities 4 1 Motivations for cityhood 5 Changing city status 5 1 Before 1979 5 2 1979 1983 5 3 1983 1987 5 4 1987 1991 5 5 1992 present 5 5 1 Upgrading 5 5 2 Downgrading 5 5 2 1 Highly urbanized city to component city 5 5 2 2 Independent component city to component city 5 5 3 Amendments 6 League of Cities of the Philippines LCP 7 List of cities 7 1 Largest cities 7 1 1 Table notes 7 2 Metropolitan areas 7 3 City facts 7 4 Defunct dissolved cities 7 4 1 League of 16 and legal battles 7 5 Rejected cityhood 7 6 Proposed cities under the 18th Congress 7 7 Proposed cities under the 19th Congress 7 8 Former names 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGovernment EditMain article Sangguniang Panlungsod A city s local government is headed by a mayor elected by popular vote The vice mayor serves as the presiding officer of the Sangguniang Panlungsod city council which serves as the city s legislative body Upon receiving their charters cities also receive a full complement of executive departments to better serve their constituents Some departments are established on a case by case basis depending on the needs of the city Offices and officials common to all cities Edit Office Head Mandatory OptionalCity Government Mayor MandatorySangguniang Panlungsod City Council Vice Mayor as presiding officer MandatoryOffice of the Secretary to the Sanggunian Secretary to the Sanggunian MandatoryTreasury Office Treasurer MandatoryAssessor s Office Assessor MandatoryAccounting and Internal Audit Services Accountant MandatoryBudget Office Budget Officer MandatoryPlanning and Development Office Planning and Development Coordinator MandatoryEngineering Office Engineer MandatoryHealth Office Health Officer MandatoryOffice of Civil Registry Civil Registrar MandatoryOffice of the Administrator Administrator MandatoryOffice of Legal Services Legal Officer MandatoryOffice on Social Welfare and Development Services Social Welfare and Development Officer MandatoryOffice on General Services General Services Officer MandatoryOffice for Veterinary Services Veterinarian MandatoryOffice on Architectural Planning and Design Architect OptionalOffice on Public Information Information Officer OptionalOffice for the Development of Cooperatives Cooperative Officer OptionalOffice on Population Development Population Officer OptionalOffice on Environment and Natural Resources Environment and Natural Resources Office OptionalOffice of Agricultural Services Agriculturist OptionalSource Local Government Code of 1991 1 Subdivisions EditCities like municipalities are composed of barangays Brgy which can range from urban neighborhoods such as Barangay 9 Santa Angela in Laoag to rural communities such as Barangay Iwahig in Puerto Princesa Barangays are sometimes grouped into officially defined administrative geographical districts Examples of such are the cities of Manila 16 districts Davao 11 districts Iloilo seven districts and Samal three districts Babak Kaputian and Penaplata Some cities such as Caloocan Manila and Pasay even have an intermediate level between the district and barangay levels called a zone However geographic districts and zones are not political units there are no elected city government officials in these city specific administrative levels Rather they only serve to make city planning statistics gathering and other administrative tasks easier and more convenient Classification EditIncome classification Edit Cities are classified according to average annual income of the city based on the previous four calendar years 1 Effective July 28 2008 the thresholds for the income classes for cities are 2 Class Average annual income million First At least 500Second 320 but lt 500Third 240 but lt 320Fourth 160 but lt 240Fifth 80 but lt 160Sixth lt 80Legal classification Edit The Local Government Code of 1991 Republic Act No 7160 classifies all cities into one of three legal categories 1 Highly urbanized cities HUC Cities with a minimum population of two hundred thousand 200 000 inhabitants as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority and with the latest annual income of at least fifty million pesos 50 000 000 or USD 1 000 000 based on 1991 constant prices as certified by the city treasurer There are currently 33 highly urbanized cities in the Philippines 16 of which are located in Metro Manila Independent component cities ICC Cities of this type have charters that explicitly prohibit their residents from voting for provincial officials All five of them are considered independent from the province in which they are geographically located Cotabato Dagupan Naga Camarines Sur Ormoc and Santiago Component cities CC Cities which do not meet the preceding requirements are deemed part of the province in which they are geographically located If a component city is located along the boundaries of two or more provinces it shall be considered part of the province of which it used to be a municipality All but five of the remaining cities are considered component cities Independent cities Edit There are 38 independent cities in the Philippines all of which are classified as either Highly urbanized or Independent component cities A city classified as such does not have its Sangguniang Panlungsod legislation subject to review by any province s Sangguniang Panlalawigan does not share tax revenue with any province and is directly supervised by the President of the Philippines through the city government given that the provincial government no longer exercises supervision over city officials as stated in Section 29 of the Local Government Code 1 Currently there are only four independent cities in two classes that can still participate in the election of provincial officials governor vice governor and Sangguniang Panlalawigan members Cities declared highly urbanized between 1987 and 1992 whose charters as amended explicitly permitted residents to both vote and run for elective positions in the provincial government and therefore allowed by Section 452 c of the Local Government Code 1 to maintain these rights Lucena Quezon Mandaue Cebu Independent component cities whose charters as amended only explicitly allow residents to run for provincial offices Dagupan Pangasinan and Naga Camarines Sur Registered voters of the cities of Cotabato Ormoc Santiago as well as all other highly urbanized cities including those to be converted or created in the future cannot participate in provincial elections In addition to the eligibility of some independent cities to vote in provincial elections a few other situations become sources of confusion regarding the complete autonomy of independent cities from provinces Some independent cities still serve as the seat of government for the province in which they are geographically located Bacolod Negros Occidental Cagayan de Oro Misamis Oriental Cebu City Cebu Iloilo City Iloilo Lucena Quezon Puerto Princesa Palawan and Tacloban Leyte In such cases the provincial government apart from already financing the maintenance of its properties such as provincial government buildings and offices may also provide the government of the independent city with an annual budget determined by the province at its discretion to aid in relieving incidental costs incurred by the city such as road maintenance due to increased vehicular traffic in the vicinity of the provincial government complex Some independent cities are still grouped with their former provinces for the purposes of representation in Congress While 24 independent cities have their own representative s in Congress some remain part of the congressional representation of the province to which they formerly belonged Butuan for example is still part of the 1st Congressional District of Agusan del Norte In cases like this independent cities that do not vote for provincial officials are excluded from Sangguniang Panlalawigan provincial council districts and the allotment of SP members is adjusted accordingly by COMELEC with proper consideration of population For example Agusan del Norte being a third income class province is entitled to elect eight members to its Sangguniang Panlalawigan and belongs to two congressional districts The seats of the Sangguniang Panlalawigan are not evenly distributed 4 4 between the province s first and second congressional districts because its 1st Congressional district contains Butuan an independent city which does not vote for provincial officials Rather the seats are distributed 1 7 to account for the small population of the province s 1st Sangguniang Panlalawigan district consisting only of Las Nieves and the bulk of the province s population being in the second district On the other hand the city of Lucena which is eligible to vote for provincial officials still forms part of the province of Quezon s 2nd Sangguniang Panlalawigan district which is coterminous with the 2nd congressional district of Quezon General lack of distinction for independent cities for practical purposes Many government agencies as well as Philippine society in general still continue to classify many independent cities outside Metro Manila as part of provinces due to historical and cultural ties especially if these cities were once or currently socio economic and cultural capitals of the provinces to which they once belonged Furthermore most maps of the Philippines showing provincial boundaries almost never separate independent cities from the provinces in which they are geographically located for cartographic convenience Despite being first level administrative divisions i e on the same level as provinces as stated in Section 25 of the LGC 1 independent cities are still treated by many to be on the same level as municipalities and component cities second level administrative divisions for educational convenience and simplicity A component city while enjoying relative autonomy on some matters compared to a regular municipality is still considered part of a province However there are several sources of confusion Some component cities form their own congressional representation separate from their province The representation of a city in the House of Representatives or lack thereof is not a criterion for independence from a province as Congress is the national legislative body and is part of the national central government Despite Antipolo Binan and San Jose del Monte having their own representatives in Congress they are still component cities of Rizal Laguna and Bulacan respectively as their respective charters specifically converted them into component cities and have no provision stating a severance in relations with their respective provincial governments Being part of an administrative region different from the province Isabela City functions as a component city of Basilan its tax revenues are shared with the provincial government its residents are eligible to both vote and run for provincial offices and it is served by the provincial government and the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Basilan with regard to provincially devolved services However by opting out of joining the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao BARMM Isabela City s residents are ineligible to vote and run for regional offices of the Bangsamoro Parliament unlike the rest of Basilan Regional services provided to Isabela City come from offices in Region IX based in Pagadian the rest of Basilan is serviced by the BARMM based in Cotabato City Isabela City while not independent from its province is this outside the jurisdiction of the BARMM the region to which the rest of Basilan belongs Regions are not the primary subnational administrative divisions of the Philippines but rather the provinces Creation of cities EditCongress is the lone legislative entity that can incorporate cities Provincial and municipal councils can pass resolutions indicating a desire to have a certain area usually an already existing municipality or a cluster of barangays declared a city after the requirements for becoming a city are met As per Republic Act No 9009 these requirements include 3 locally generated income of at least 100 million based on constant prices in the year 2000 for the last two consecutive years as certified by the Department of Finance AND a population of at least 150 000 as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority PSA OR a contiguous territory of 100 square kilometers as certified by the Land Management Bureau with contiguity not being a requisite for areas that are on two or more islands Members of Congress usually the involving representative of the congressional district to which the proposed city belongs then draft the legislation that will convert or create the city After the bill passes through both the House of Representatives and the Senate and becomes an Act of Congress the President signs the Act into law If the Act goes unsigned after 30 days it still becomes law despite the absence of the President s signature The creation of cities before 1983 was solely at the discretion of the national legislature there were no requirements for achieving city status other than an approved city charter No income population or land area requirements had to be met in order to incorporate cities before Batas Pambansa Bilang 337 Local Government Code of 1983 became law This is what made it possible for several current cities such as Tangub or Canlaon to be conferred such a status despite their small population and locally generated income which do not meet current standards The relatively low income standard between 1992 and 2001 which was 20 million 1 also allowed several municipalities such as Sipalay and Munoz to become cities despite not being able to meet the current 100 million local income standard Before 1987 many cities were created without any plebiscites conducted for the residents to ratify the city charter most notable of which were cities that were incorporated during the early American colonial period Manila and Baguio and during the Commonwealth Era 1935 1946 such as Cavite City Dansalan now Marawi Iloilo City Bacolod San Pablo and Zamboanga City Only since 1987 has it been mandated under the Constitution that any change to the legal status of any local government unit requires the ratification by the residents that would be affected by such changes Therefore all cities created after 1987 after meeting the requirements for cityhood as laid out in the Local Government Code of 1991 and Republic Act No 9009 of 2001 only acquired their corporate status after the majority of their voting residents approved their respective charters Motivations for cityhood Edit Although some early cities were given charters because of their advantageous Baguio Tagaytay or strategic Angeles City and Olongapo Cotabato Zamboanga locations or in order to especially establish new government centers in otherwise sparsely populated areas Palayan Trece Martires Quezon City most Philippine cities were originally incorporated to provide a form of localized civil government to an area that is primarily urban which due to its compact nature and different demography and local economy cannot be necessarily handled more efficiently by more rural oriented provincial and municipal governments However not all cities are purely areas of dense urban settlement To date there are still cities with huge expanses of rural or wilderness areas and considerable non urban populations such as Calbayog Davao Puerto Princesa and Zamboanga as they were deliberately incorporated with increased future resource needs and urban expansion as well as strategic considerations in mind With the enactment of the 1991 Local Government Code municipalities and cities have both become more empowered to deal with local issues Regular municipalities now share many of the same powers and responsibilities as chartered cities but its citizens and or leaders may feel that it might be to their best interest to get a larger share of internal revenue allotment IRA and acquire additional powers by becoming a city especially if the population has greatly increased and local economy has become more robust On the other hand due to the higher property taxes that would be imposed after cityhood many citizens have become wary of their town s conversion into a city even if the municipality had already achieved a high degree of urbanization and has an annual income that already exceeds that of many existing lower income cities This has been among the cases made against the cityhood bids of many high income and populous municipalities surrounding Metro Manila most notably Bacoor and Dasmarinas which finally became cities in June 2012 and November 2009 respectively which for many years have been more qualified to become cities than others In response to the rapid increase in the number of municipalities being converted into cities since the enactment of the Local Government Code in 1991 Senator Aquilino Pimentel authored what became Republic Act No 9009 in June 2001 which sought to establish a more appropriate benchmark by which municipalities that wished to become cities were to be measured 4 The income requirement was increased sharply from 20 million to 100 million in a bid to curb the spate of conversions into cities of municipalities that were perceived to have not become urbanized or economically developed enough to be able to properly function as a city Despite the passage of RA 9009 16 municipalities not meeting the required locally generated income were converted into cities in 2007 by seeking exemption from the income requirement This led to vocal opposition from the League of Cities of the Philippines against the cityhood of these municipalities with the League arguing that by letting these municipalities become cities Congress will set a dangerous precedent that would not prevent others from seeking the same special treatment 4 More importantly the LCP argued that with the recent surge in the conversion of towns that did not meet the requirements set by RA 9009 for becoming cities the allocation received by existing cities would only drastically decrease because more cities will have to share the amount allotted by the national government which is equal to 23 of the IRA which in turn is 40 of all the revenues collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue 5 The resulting legal battles resulted in the nullification of the city charters of the 16 municipalities by the Supreme Court in August 2010 See League of 16 and legal battles Changing city status EditThroughout the years there have been instances of changes to the city s status with regard to eligibility for provincial elections as a result of the passage of laws both of general effectivity and specific to a city Before 1979 Edit Prior to 1979 all cities were just considered chartered cities without any official category differentiating them aside from income levels Though chartered cities were considered autonomous from the provinces from which they were created the eligibility of their residents to vote for provincial officials was determined by their respective charters 6 Regarding participation in provincial affairs there were three types of city charters those which explicitly allowed their respective residents to elect provincial officials those which explicitly prohibited participation in provincial elections and those which are silent regarding voter participation in provincial elections The 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves et al v Commission on Elections finally resolved the ambiguity surrounding the third category of cities by confirming that the residents of cities with such charters such as Dumaguete and Davao City are ineligible to participate in provincial elections 6 Altering the right of city residents to participate in provincial elections was a power solely determined by the national legislature Before 1979 this power was exercised in seven cases affecting a total of six cities Five Acts of the National Assembly or Congress in which the residents of an existing city were restored the right to vote for officials of the mother province August 22 1940 Section 7 of the revised charter of the city of Iloilo Commonwealth Act No 158 was amended in 1940 by Commonwealth Act No 604 to explicitly state The voters of said City of Iloilo shall take part in the election of the provincial officers of Iloilo but the latter shall have no jurisdiction over the City of Iloilo and the officers thereof 7 June 10 1950 The original city charter of Dagupan Republic Act No 170 was originally silent on the matter of the eligibility of city residents to participate in provincial election 8 therefore implying that residents were ineligible to participate in provincial elections Three years later Republic Act No 448 amended the charter to explicitly empower the city s voters to participate in the election of the governor and provincial board members of Pangasinan 9 June 14 1956 The city of Cabanatuan was originally explicitly excluded from electing and being elected into positions in the provincial government of Nueva Ecija 10 until its original city charter Republic Act No 526 was amended by Republic Act No 1445 in 1956 which enabled the city s residents to once more vote for provincial officials 11 June 16 1956 The original city charter of Dansalan Commonwealth Act No 592 was originally silent on the matter of the eligibility of city residents to participate in provincial election 12 therefore implying that residents were ineligible to participate in provincial elections Sixteen years later Republic Act No 1552 in addition to renaming the city to Marawi also amended the city charter to explicitly empower the city s voters to participate in the election of Lanao Province officials 13 June 10 1964 Cebu City s old charter Commonwealth Act No 58 14 was repealed and replaced with Republic Act No 3857 in 1964 The law allowed the city s residents to once more become eligible to vote for officials in the provincial government of Cebu 15 June 21 1969 Following the Supreme Court decision on Teves et al v Commission on Elections which upheld Dumaguete s independence from Negros Oriental 6 Republic Act No 5797 was enacted on June 21 1969 by Congress to revise the city s original charter Republic Act No 327 16 to explicitly allow the city s residents to once again vote for provincial officials 17 One Act of Congress in which the residents of existing cities whose residents were previously explicitly granted the right to participate in provincial elections were deprived such a right June 19 1959 By virtue of Section 2 of Republic Act No 2259 the voters of the cities of Dagupan and Iloilo were deprived of the right to participate in provincial elections 18 1979 1983 Edit Batas Pambansa Bilang 51 approved on December 22 1979 introduced two legal categories of cities highly urbanized cities HUCs and component cities 19 COMELEC Resolution No 1421 which was issued to implement the provisions of BP 51 prior to the January 30 1980 local elections stated that a total of 20 cities were not allowed to participate in the election of provincial officials 20 seven of these were highly urbanized while the remaining 13 were component cities When Batas Pambansa Bilang 51 came into effect for the January 30 1980 elections all cities whose incomes at the time were 40 million or higher were considered highly urbanized cities 19 Cities that met this income requirement at the time were Caloocan Cebu Davao Manila Pasay and Quezon City Regardless of whether their respective charters allowed them to vote for provincial officials or not highly urbanized cities were no longer allowed to vote for provincial officials Among the aforementioned only the voters of Cebu City lost the right to participate in provincial elections in this manner the voters of the other five cities have not participated in any provincial election since their respective incorporation as cities In addition Section 3 of BP 51 also made Baguio a highly urbanized city irrespective of its income 19 due to its importance as the host to the official summer residences of the President and the Supreme Court A Supreme Court case decided two days before election day upheld the legality of BP 51 in depriving the voters of Cebu City the power to elect officials for the province of Cebu 20 Per Section 3 of BP 51 all other cities were considered component cities of the provinces in which they are geographically located or the provinces of which they were originally a part 19 Despite considering all other cities as part of their respective provinces under BP 51 the eligibility of voters to participate in provincial elections were still determined by their cities respective charters as amended 19 The voters of a total of thirteen component cities continued to be ineligible to vote for provincial officials for the local elections of 1980 20 Nine of these were cities with charters as amended that expressly prohibited participation in provincial elections Dagupan General Santos Iloilo Mandaue Naga Ormoc Oroquieta San Carlos Pangasinan and Zamboanga 20 The remaining four Bais Canlaon Cotabato and Ozamiz were cities whose charters were silent on participation in provincial elections 20 BP 51 upheld the 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves et al v Commission on Elections by barring their residents from participating in the election of provincial officials 1983 1987 Edit Batas Pambansa Bilang 337 Local Government Code of 1983 approved on February 10 1983 further refined the criteria by which cities can be classified as highly urbanized cities 21 Under BP 337 a city that had at least 150 000 inhabitants and an income of at least 30 million was to be declared highly urbanized by the Minister of Local Government within thirty days of the city having met the requirement 21 The cities of Angeles October 13 1986 Bacolod September 27 1984 Butuan February 7 1985 Cagayan de Oro November 22 1983 Iligan November 22 1983 Olongapo December 7 1983 and Zamboanga November 22 1983 became HUCs in this manner The residents in most of these cities lost their right to participate in provincial elections for the first time The two exceptions are Iloilo City which had already been deprived of the right to vote for provincial officials in 1959 by virtue of Section 2 of RA 2259 18 and Zamboanga City which had been autonomously governed since its creation by virtue of Section 47 of its city charter Commonwealth Act No 39 22 By virtue of Section 30 of Batas Pambansa Bilang 881 Omnibus Election Code of the Philippines approved on December 3 1985 provided that unless their respective charters provide otherwise the electorate of component cities shall be entitled to vote in the election for provincial officials of the province of which it is a part 23 This provision therefore overrides the 1951 Supreme Court decision on Teves et al v Commission on Elections by providing voters in component cities whose charters are silent on the matter of electing provincial officials the right to again participate in provincial elections BP 881 therefore again enfranchised voters in the cities of Bais and Canlaon Negros Oriental and Ozamiz Misamis Occidental Despite the charter of the city of Cotabato being silent on the matter of electing provincial officials the city was not legislated to be part of any of the successor provinces of the old undivided Cotabato province Voters of the city therefore were still not eligible to vote in the provincial elections of either Maguindanao or North Cotabato and therefore remained independent from any province 1987 1991 Edit The period between ratification of the new Constitution February 1987 and the effectivity of the Local Government Code of 1991 January 1992 was one of transition During this time BP 51 BP 337 and BP 881 were still in force the only legal classes of cities during this period were still highly urbanized and component cities Altering the right of city residents to participate in provincial elections was once again exercised by the newly restored Congress in this period A total of three cities were affected Republic Acts No 6641 in 1987 24 6726 in 1989 25 and 6843 in 1990 26 once again allowed the residents of Mandaue Oroquieta and San Carlos to vote for provincial officials of Cebu Misamis Occidental and Pangasinan respectively Since BP 51 which only considered cities as being either highly urbanized or component was still in force at the time the changes were not considered as switching between legal categories 27 but rather a simple change within the component city classification that did not require a plebiscite Note that the independent component city legal classification was only introduced through the Local Government Code in 1992 Under the same criteria set in BP 337 Local Government Code of 1983 a total of three cities became highly urbanized General Santos September 5 1988 Lucena July 1 1991 and Mandaue February 15 1991 Lucena and Mandaue were special cases in that because their re classification into HUC status took place after the ratification of the Constitution February 11 1987 but before the effectivity of the Local Government Code of 1991 January 1 1992 their residents were allowed to continue to participate in the election of provincial officials as per their respective charters as amended by virtue of Sec 452 c of the LGC 1 Residents of General Santos were already excluded from voting for provincial officials of South Cotabato since achieving cityhood in 1968 they were therefore unaffected by this exemption 1992 present Edit The Local Government Code of 1991 came into effect on January 1 1992 and has remained in force ever since though some amendments have been made 1 New requirements for creating cities and upgrading cities to highly urbanized status were instituted under this Act The LGC of 1991 was also the first time the independent component city ICC category was introduced These cities are those non highly urbanized cities whose charters explicitly prohibited city residents to vote in provincial elections They were finally made completely independent of the province from fiscal administrative and legal standpoints Upgrading Edit Independent municipality to highly urbanized cityThe municipalities of Metro Manila having been severed from the provinces of Bulacan and Rizal and made independent units in 1975 were converted to highly urbanized cities beginning in 1994 with Mandaluyong The most recent Navotas became an HUC in 2007 Only Pateros which does not currently meet the population requirement of 200 000 inhabitants remains the only independent municipality in Metro Manila Component city to independent component city CC ICC All that is needed is a congressional amendment to a component city s charter prohibiting city residents to vote for provincial officials There is a movement Independent Calbayog City Movement in Calbayog City that pushes this and the draft bill is ready to be filed by the representative of the 1st District of Samar Edgar Mary Sarmiento 28 29 30 Component independent component city to highly urbanized city CC ICC HUC Since 1992 once a city reaches a population of 200 000 persons as certified by the Philippine Statistics Authority and an income of 50 million based on 1991 constant prices as certified by the city treasurer the city government can submit a request to the President to have their city declared as highly urbanized within 30 days Upon the President s declaration a plebiscite will be held within a specific timeframe to ratify this conversion There are no limits as to the number of times a component city can attempt to become a highly urbanized city should previous tries be unsuccessful 31 Since 1992 three component cities have been successfully converted into HUCs Puerto Princesa 2007 Proclamation No 1264 signed on March 26 2007 declared the capital city of Palawan an HUC 32 Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on July 21 2007 approved the conversion 33 Lapu Lapu 2007 Proclamation No 1222 signed on January 23 2007 declared the component city of Lapu Lapu an HUC 34 Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on July 21 2007 approved the conversion 33 Tacloban 2008 Proclamation No 1637 signed on October 4 2008 declared the capital city of Leyte an HUC 35 Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on December 18 2008 approved the conversion 36 The following component cities failed to become HUCs for various reasons Cabanatuan 1997 Proclamation No 969 signed on February 13 1997 declared the former capital of the province of Nueva Ecija an HUC 37 Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held simultaneously with the barangay elections on May 12 1997 did not approve the conversion 38 Tarlac City 2005 Proclamation No 940 signed on October 27 2005 declared the capital city of the province of Tarlac an HUC 39 Majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on February 11 2006 did not approve the conversion Antipolo 2011 Proclamation No 124 signed on March 14 2011 declared the capital city of the province of Rizal an HUC 40 On April 4 2011 Antipolo s city mayor announced that the planned June 18 2011 plebiscite is indefinitely postponed effectively suspending the bid to convert the city into an HUC 41 Cabanatuan 2012 Proclamation No 418 signed on July 4 2012 once again declared the former capital of the province of Nueva Ecija an HUC 42 The plebiscite was originally set for December 1 2012 but due to preparations for the upcoming 2013 national ARMM and local elections was rescheduled by COMELEC for January 25 2014 43 44 A week before the rescheduled plebiscite the Supreme Court issued a temporary restraining order which postponed the vote until the case brought by Nueva Ecija governor Aurelio Umali was decided 44 On April 22 2014 the Supreme Court ordered COMELEC to include the rest of Nueva Ecija in the plebiscite given that the province s income will be significantly affected once Cabanatuan attains autonomy as an HUC 44 COMELEC subsequently rescheduled the expanded plebiscite for November 8 2014 43 However on October 21 COMELEC issued Minute Resolution No 14 0732 which suspended the voting until the city government of Cabanatuan provides the 101 million needed to administer the expanded plebiscite 45 Downgrading Edit Highly urbanized city to component city Edit Reclassifying an HUC as a component city likely involves not only amending the concerned city s charter but also the Local Government Code 46 as currently there is no provision in the LGC that allows this nor are there any precedents Some Cebu City politicians have previously indicated that they wish to bring back the city under the province s control in order to bring in more votes against the Sugbuak the proposed partition of Cebu Province 46 Independent component city to component city Edit A congressional amendment to the city charter enabling city residents to vote for provincial officials is required followed by a plebiscite Santiago s status as an independent component city was briefly in question after the enactment of Republic Act No 8528 on February 14 1998 which sought to make it a regular component city 47 The Supreme Court on September 16 1999 however ruled in favor of the city s mayor who contended that such a change in the status of the city required a plebiscite just like any other merger division abolition or alteration in boundaries of any political unit And due to the lack of a plebiscite to affirm such a change RA 8528 was therefore unconstitutional 27 Amendments Edit On April 10 2022 the Republic Act No 11683 lapses into law which seeks to ease conversion of towns into cities but was signed by President Rodrigo Duterte on April 11 2022 48 The new cityhood law amends Section 450 of Republic Act 7160 also known as the Local Government Code of 1991 where a municipality will be exempted from the land and population requirements if it generates at least 100 million pesos for two consecutive years 49 League of Cities of the Philippines LCP EditThe League of Cities of the Philippines LCP is a non profit organization and is not a government agency and was founded in 1988 As of September 3 2022 the league has a membership of 147 cities The organization was formed to help coordinate efforts to improve governance and local autonomy and to tackle issues such as preserving the environment and improving public works List of cities EditFurther information List of cities in the Philippines As of December 17 2022 update there are 148 cities in the Philippines Baliwag in Bulacan is the newest city after the plebiscite held resulted in approval of ratification on December 17 2022 class notpageimage Location of the 148 cities of the Philippines as of December 2022 Largest cities Edit For a more comprehensive list see List of cities and municipalities in the Philippines The ten most populous cities in the Philippines City Population 2020 50 Image Description1 Quezon City 2 960 048 Former capital of the country 1948 1976 Largest city in Metro Manila in population and land area Hosts the House of Representatives of the Philippines at the Batasang Pambansa Complex and the metropolis largest source of water the La Mesa Reservoir 2 Manila 1 846 513 Capital of the country 1571 1948 and 1976 present Historically centered on the walled city of Intramuros by the mouth of the Pasig River Host to the seat of the chief executive the Malacanang Palace By far the most densely populated city in the country as well as the whole world 3 Davao City 1 776 949 The largest city in Mindanao by population Popularity nicknamed The King City of the South Historically centered near where the Davao River exits into the Davao Gulf the city also encompasses expanses of wilderness including part of the Mount Apo Natural Park making it the largest city in the Philippines by land area Regional center of the Region XI and core of the third largest and last metropolitan area in the country Metro Davao 4 Caloocan 1 661 584 Historic city where Andres Bonifacio and the Katipunan held many of its meetings in secrecy Much of its territory was ceded to form Quezon City resulting in the formation of two non contiguous sections under the city s jurisdiction The city mainly encompasses residential areas with significant industrial and commercial sections 5 Zamboanga City 977 234 Nicknamed City of Flowers and marketed by its city government as Asia s Latin City for its substantial Spanish derived Creole speaking population Former capital of the Moro Province and of the undivided province of Zamboanga Former regional center of the Zamboanga Peninsula administrative region but remains the largest city in western Mindanao 6 Cebu City 964 169 Popularly nicknamed The Queen City of the South Site of the first Spanish settlement in the country Capital of the province of Cebu and regional center of Region VII Most populous city in the Visayas and core of the country s second largest metropolitan area Metro Cebu 7 Antipolo 887 399 Nicknamed City in the Sky for its location on the hills immediately east of Metro Manila Well known pilgrimage and tourist center being host to a Marian shrine and the Hinulugang Taktak National Park Most populous component city in the country and comprises more than a quarter of the total population of the province of Rizal and the capital of that province 8 Taguig 886 722 i Lying on the western shore of Laguna de Bay the city encompasses significant industrial commercial and residential areas including the disputed area of Fort Bonifacio a former American military base that has been in development as the country s new premier business district Was part of Rizal Province until 1975 when it was incorporated into Metro Manila 9 Pasig 803 159 Hosts most of the Ortigas Center one of Metro Manila s prime business districts Located where Laguna de Bay empties into the Pasig River Part of the province of Rizal until 1975 when it was incorporated into Metro Manila Formerly hosted the capitol and other government buildings of that province 10 Cagayan de Oro 728 402 Nicknamed the City of Golden Friendship and formerly known as Cagayan de Misamis Located at the mouth of the swift flowing Cagayan de Oro River which has become a tourist draw 51 Regional center of Northern Mindanao and capital of the province of Misamis Oriental Table notes Edit Population figure for Taguig excludes disputed barangays with Makati Metropolitan areas Edit Main article List of metropolitan areas in the Philippines City facts Edit By population 2020 census figures Smallest Palayan 45 383 Largest Quezon City 2 960 048 By population density calculated using 2020 census figures Most densely populated Manila with 41 515 people per square kilometer Most sparsely populated Puerto Princesa with 130 people per square kilometer By land area Smallest San Juan with an area of 5 94 square kilometres 2 29 sq mi Largest Davao City with an area of 2 433 61 square kilometres 939 62 sq mi 52 However some sources claim that Puerto Princesa covers an area of more than 2 500 square kilometres 970 sq mi 53 its officially recognized land area figure according to IRA share calculation data 54 is 2 381 02 square kilometres 919 32 sq mi Contrary to popular belief within the Philippines 55 Davao City does not hold the record of being the world s largest city in terms of land area By elevation Lowest Most Philippine cities are located on sea level However some parts of Navotas South Caloocan and Malabon are below sea level and continue to experience subsidence 56 Highest much of Baguio is situated more than 1 300 metres 4 300 ft above sea level However the peak of Mount Apo the tallest mountain in the Philippines forms part of Davao City s boundary with the municipality of Bansalan Davao del Sur the city of Digos encompasses a section of the Mount Apo Natural Park as well 57 Most extreme points Northernmost Laoag Southernmost General Santos Easternmost Bislig Westernmost Puerto PrincesaDefunct dissolved cities Edit Legazpi City 1948 1954 Legazpi s cityhood was approved on June 18 1948 Under Republic Act No 306 Legazpi became a city after the President of the Philippines proclaimed its cityhood 58 Comprising the present day territories of Legazpi City and Daraga the city was dissolved on June 8 1954 59 when Legazpi and Daraga were made into separate municipalities Legazpi eventually became a city on its own on June 12 1959 Basilan City 1948 1973 Formerly part of the city of Zamboanga until it was made a city on its own in 1948 through Republic Act No 288 60 Delimited to only the downtown area of what is now Isabela City upon the creation of the province of Basilan in 1973 through Presidential Decree No 356 by President Ferdinand Marcos 61 Finally abolished and its territory annexed to the municipality of Isabela on November 7 1975 through Presidential Decree No 840 62 Rajah Buayan City 1966 Under Republic Act No 4413 63 the then municipality of General Santos in what was then the unified province of Cotabato was to be formally converted into a city named after a historical ruler in Mindanao on January 1 1966 provided that majority of qualified voters in the municipality vote in favor of cityhood in a plebiscite In December 1965 the Commission on Elections COMELEC proclaimed the cityhood of Rajah Buayan with 4 422 people voting for and 3 066 voting against However two residents of the new city challenged this by arguing in the courts that the number of people who voted in favor of cityhood did not form a majority in light of the fact that there were 15 727 voters in the city The court issued an injunction on January 4 1966 restraining city officers from performing any acts authorized by or pursuant to provisions in RA 4413 The Supreme Court unanimously upheld this decision on October 29 1966 and declared that the city charter was not accepted by majority of voters thus rendering RA 4413 null and void 64 The municipality of General Santos would later be converted into a city under the same name in 1968 League of 16 and legal battles Edit Main article League of Cities of the Philippines vs COMELECThe Supreme Court of the Philippines by a highly divided vote of 6 5 on November 18 2008 subsequently upheld with finality on May 6 2009 declared unconstitutional cityhood laws converting 16 municipalities into cities The 24 page judgment of Justice Antonio T Carpio adjudged that the following Cityhood Laws violate secs 6 and 10 Article X of the Constitution of the Philippines RA 9389 Baybay in Leyte RA 9390 Bogo in Cebu RA 9391 Catbalogan in Samar RA 9392 Tandag in Surigao del Sur RA 9393 Lamitan in Basilan RA 9394 Borongan in Eastern Samar RA 9398 Tayabas in Quezon RA 9404 Tabuk in Kalinga RA 9405 Bayugan in Agusan del Sur RA 9407 Batac in Ilocos Norte RA 9408 Mati in Davao Oriental RA 9409 Guihulngan in Negros Oriental RA 9434 Cabadbaran in Agusan del Norte RA 9435 El Salvador in Misamis Oriental RA 9436 Carcar in Cebu RA 9491 Naga in Cebu The Court held that the foregoing Cityhood Laws all enacted after RA 9009 s effectivity explicitly exempt respondent municipalities from the increased income requirement from 20 million to 100 million in Sec 450 of theLocal Government Code LGC as amended byRA 9009 Such exemption clearly violatesSection 10 Article Xof the Constitution and is thus patently unconstitutional To be valid such exemption must be written in theLocal Government Codeand not in any other law including the Cityhood Laws 65 66 However more than a year later on December 22 2009 acting on the appeal of the so called League of 16 Cities an informal group consisting of the sixteen local government units whose cityhood status had been reversed the Supreme Court reversed its earlier ruling as it ruled that at the end of the day the passage of the amendatory law regarding the criteria for cityhood as set by Congress is no different from the enactment of a law i e the cityhood laws specifically exempting a particular political subdivision from the criteria earlier mentioned Congress in enacting the exempting law s effectively decreased the already codified indicators 67 As such the cityhood status of the said 16 LGUs was effectively restored On August 24 2010 in a 16 page resolution the Supreme Court reinstated its November 18 2008 decision striking down the cityhood laws reducing once more the sixteen LGUs to the status of regular municipalities 68 The most recent development in the legal battles surrounding the League of 16 came on February 15 2011 Voting 7 6 the Supreme Court SC ruled that 16 towns that became cities in 2007 can stay as cities This was the fourth time the SC has ruled on the case and the third reversal It said the conversion of the 16 towns into cities met all legal requirements 69 Rejected cityhood Edit Note This section only lists attempts that reached the stage where a Republic Act was enacted for the purpose of achieving cityhood Batangas 1965 A majority of the votes cast in the then municipality of Batangas rejected cityhood in a plebiscite conducted on the same day as the 1965 Philippine general elections as mandated by Republic Act No 4586 70 The city would have been named Laurel City in honor of Jose P Laurel the president of the Japanese sponsored Second Republic The municipality of Batangas would later be converted into a city under the same name in 1969 Tarlac 1969 The city charter of Tarlac Republic Act No 5907 was approved on June 21 1969 71 Cityhood was rejected in a plebiscite held on November 11 1969 by a majority of the ballots cast Tarlac became a city 29 years after in 1998 Taguig 1998 Republic Act No 8487 Taguig was supposed to be converted into a highly urbanized city but it was rejected due to lower income More than six years later the cityhood of Taguig was ratified in a plebiscite held on December 8 2004 72 73 Ilagan 1999 Republic Act No 8474 which converted Ilagan to a component city of Isabela was approved on February 2 1998 74 However majority of votes cast in the plebiscite held on March 14 1999 rejected cityhood Ilagan finally became a city after majority of votes cast in the August 11 2012 plebiscite approved the Republic Act No 10169 75 Novaliches 1999 On February 23 1998 the controversial City Charter of Novaliches Republic Act No 8535 was approved which sought to create a new city out of the 15 northern barangays of Quezon City 76 Historically a separate town Novaliches was distributed between Quezon City and northern Caloocan in 1948 In a plebiscite held on October 23 1999 the majority of ballots cast which included all voters of Quezon City and not just the 15 barangays rejected the cityhood of Novaliches Meycauayan 2001 Cityhood was rejected by majority of the votes cast in a plebiscite held on March 30 2001 to ratify Republic Act No 9021 77 Meycauayan became a city five years later with the enactment of Republic Act No 9356 78 and its ratification through a plebiscite on December 10 2006 79 Proposed cities under the 18th Congress Edit Talavera Nueva Ecija House Bill No 194 80 and Senate Bill No 2040 Daraga Albay House Bill No 1528 81 Balamban Cebu House Bill No 1574 82 Alabel Sarangani House Bill No 3494 83 Ubay Bohol House Bill No 4854 84 Liloan Cebu House Bill No 5031 85 and Senate Bill No 2007 Echague Isabela House Bill No 5970 86 and Senate Bill No 2067 Naval Biliran House Bill No 6230 87 Bataraza Palawan House Bill No 6278 La Trinidad Benguet House Bill No 6367 Polomolok South Cotabato House Bill No 6432 Capas Tarlac House Bill No 7861 Capas Tarlac House Bill No 8219 Manolo Fortich Bukidnon House Bill No 8283 and Senate Bill No 2038 Solano Nueva Vizcaya House Bill No 8727 Bayambang Pangasinan House Bill No 8826 Malay Aklan House Bill No 9282Proposed cities under the 19th Congress Edit Liloan Cebu House Bill No 99 by Rep Vincent Franco Frasco 88 Balamban Cebu House Bill No 1018 by Rep Pablo John Garcia 89 Carmona Cavite House Bill No 3968 by Rep Roy Loyola Consolacion Cebu House Bill No 1324 by Rep Daphne Lagon and Sonny SL Lagon Solano Nueva Vizcaya House Bill No 1736 by Rep Luisa Banti Cuaresma Ubay Bohol House Bill No 5203 by Rep Maria Vanessa C Aumentado Malay Aklan House Bill No 6401 by Rep Teodorico Herasco JrFormer names Edit For a more comprehensive list see List of renamed cities and municipalities in the Philippines Note This section only lists name changes made upon or since cityhood Cagayan de Oro The municipality of Cagayan was converted to the city of Cagayan de Oro in June 15 1950 through Republic Act No 521 90 An earlier bill was filed by Misamis Oriental Congressman Pedro S Baculio for the creation of the City of Cagayan however the 1st Congress was adjourned before any readings for the bill had done The final and enacted cityhood bill authored by Congressman and later Vice President Emmanuel Pelaez gave the city its present name Lapu Lapu The municipality of Opon was converted to a city named after Lapulapu hero of the Battle of Mactan in 1961 through Republic Act No 3134 91 Marawi Inaugurated as the City of Dansalan in 1950 renamed to Marawi on June 16 1956 through Republic Act No 1552 92 Ozamiz The municipality of Misamis was converted to a city named after Jose Ozamiz the first governor of Misamis Occidental in 1948 through Republic Act No 321 93 Pasay Inaugurated as Rizal City in 1947 reverted to Pasay on June 7 1950 through Republic Act No 437 94 Roxas In 1951 the municipality of Capiz was converted to a city named after Manuel Roxas the first president of the Third Philippine Republic and town native through Republic Act No 603 95 See also EditSangguniang Panlungsod List of cities in the Philippines List of metropolitan areas in the Philippines List of cities and municipalities in the Philippines List of renamed cities and municipalities in the PhilippinesReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i Republic Act No 7160 An Act Providing for a Local Government Code of 1991 The LawPhil Project Metro Manila Philippines October 10 1991 Retrieved April 30 2016 Department Order No 23 08 PDF Philippine Statistics Authority July 29 2008 Archived from the original PDF on December 18 2014 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 9009 An Act Amending Sec 450 of Republic Act No 7160 Otherwise Known as the Local Government Code of 1991 by Increasing the Average Annual Income Requirement 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CITY OF ALABEL PDF House of Representatives Retrieved July 18 2021 Aumentado Erico Aristotle AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF UBAY IN THE PROVINCE OF BOHOL INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE SCIENCE CITY OF UBAY PDF House of Representatives Retrieved July 18 2021 Frasco Vincent Franco AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF LILOAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF LILOAN PDF House of Representatives Retrieved July 18 2021 Dy Faustino V AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF ECHAGUE IN THE PROVINCE OF ISABELA INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF ECHAGUE PDF House of Representatives Retrieved July 18 2021 Espina Gerardo Jr AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF NAVAL IN THE PROVINCE OF BILIRAN INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF NAVAL PDF House of Representatives Retrieved July 18 2021 Antojado Le Phyllis July 2 2022 AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF LILOAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS THE CITY OF LILOAN Retrieved July 29 2022 via Phil STAR com The Freeman Vestil Justin K July 5 2022 AN ACT CONVERTING THE MUNICIPALITY OF BALAMBAN IN THE PROVINCE OF CEBU INTO A COMPONENT CITY TO BE KNOWN AS BALAMBAN CITY Retrieved July 29 2022 via Yahoo News Philippines Republic Act No 521 An Act Creating the City of Cagayan de Oro Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 15 1950 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 3134 An Act Creating the City of Lapu Lapu Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 17 1961 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 1552 An Act to Amend the Charter of the City of Dansalan So as to Change Its Name to Marawi and Make Elective Its Mayor Vice Mayor and Councilors and for Other Purposes Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 16 1956 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 321 An Act Creating the City of Ozamiz Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 19 1948 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 437 An Act Changing the Name of Rizal City to Pasay City Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 7 1950 Retrieved April 29 2016 Republic Act No 603 An Act Creating the City of Roxas Chan Robles Virtual Law Library April 11 1951 Retrieved April 29 2016 External links EditLeague of Cities of the Philippines LCP Philippine Clean Cities Project CityMayors com article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cities of the Philippines amp oldid 1133163534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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