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The roots of the present Department of
the Interior and Local Government (DILG) may be traced to the old
Department of Interior (DI) during the Philippine Revolution of 1897.
On March 22, 1897, leaders of the Katipunan led by Andres Bonifacio met
at Tejeros, Cavite
in what is known in the Philippine history as the Acla de Tejeros of
the Tejeros Convention.
A revolutionary government was
established at that time and the new government elected Gen. Emilio
Aguinaldo as President and Andres Bonifacio as Secretary of Interior.
However, Bonifacio did not assume the post. President Aguinaldo then
appointed Pascual Alvarez as the Interior Director.
As the years of struggle for
independence and self-government continued, the interior department
became the premier office of the government tasked with various
functions raging from supervision over local units, forest
conservation, public instructions, control and supervision over the
police, counter-insurgency, rehabilitation, community development and
cooperatives development programs.
In 1950, the department was abolished
and its functions were transferred to the Civil Affairs Office under
the Office of the President. On January 6, 1956, the Presidential
Assistant on Community Development (PACD) WAS CREATED. The Department
was restored on November 7, 1972 with the creation of the Department of
Local Government and Community Development (DLGCD). Few years later,
the DLGCD was reorganized and renamed Ministry of Local Government
(MLG) and later as the Department of Local Government (DLG).
On December 13, 1990, Republic Act
6975 was signed into Law creating the Philippine National Police,
Bureau of Fire Protection, Bureau of Jail and Penology and the
Philippine Public Safety College under the reorganized Department of
the Interior and Local Government (DILG).
The new DILG merged the National
Police Commission (NAPOLCOM), and all the bureaus, offices, and
operating units of the former DILG under Executive Order No.262. The
passage of RA6975 paved the way for the union of the local governments
and the police force after more than 40 years of separation.

The Department shall promote peace and
order, ensure public safety, strengthen capability of local government
units through active people participation and a professionalized corps
of civil servants.

The Department is primary catalyst for
excellence in local governance that nurtures self-reliant, progressive,
orderly, safe and globally competitive communities sustained by
God-centered and empowered citizenry.

Assist the President in his general
supervision over local government units, oversee and monitor the
implementation of the Local Government Code of 1991, enhance the
capabilities of the LGU's for self-governance, and implement plans and
programs on local autonomy;
Enforce laws and regulations, prevent, suppress and solve crimes,
assist in the successful prosecution of criminal cases;
Undertake relevant measures regarding fire protection and jail
management and penology, ensure humane treatment and rehabilitation of
inmates; assist in disaster preparedness plans and programs, and assist
the LGU's in formulating and implementing their public safety programs,
and; Undertake a human resource development program; produce a
well-trained and morally upright cadre of police, fire and jail
personnel, improve internal systems and procedures for effective
delivery of services; and conduct periodic structural and functional
reviews.

- Ensuring and sustaining DILG relevance in the
light of local autonomy.
- Building the capability of LGUs to govern.
- Maximizing the opportunities made available
to the LGUs by the Local Government Code.
- The direction of local governments towards
demands for essential services, multi-sectoral representation and
people's participation in local development.
- Speeding up the shift from reactive to
proactive or anticipatory decision making and governance.
- Fight against criminality and lawlessness.
- Ensuring the responsiveness of the police and
public safety services towards community partnership in promoting
peace and public safety.
- Enhancing the professionalization of the
organization and its men and the modernization of tools for peace
and public safety services.

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


The DILG is divided into two major
functional sectors, namely: The Interior Sector and Local Sector.
The Interior Sector is composed of the
National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM); Philippine National Police(PNP);
Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP); Bureau of Jail Management and Penology
(BJMP) and Philippine Public Safety College (PPSC).
The NAPOLCOM has branch offices at the
regional level, while the PNP and BFP also have their respective
regional offices and a network of provincial, city and municipal police
offices and fire stations. The BJMP has also its regional offices and
it supervises the city, municipal and district jails.
On the other hand, the PPSC operates
the Philippine National Police Academy (PNPA), the Police National
Training Institute, the Fire National Training Institute, the National Police College,
and the Jail National Training Institute.
The Local Government Sector is
composed of the following bureaus, offices and support services:
- Bureau of Local Government Development (BLGD)
- Bureau of Local Government Supervision (BLGS)
- National Barangay Operations Office (NBOO)
- Office of Project Development Service (OPDS)
- Office of Public Affairs (OPA)
- Local Government Academy (LGA)
- Planning Service (PS)
- Financial Management Service (FMS)
- Legal Service (LS)
- Electronic Data Processing Service (EDPS)
- Administrative Service (AS)
The LG Sector has also offices at the
regional, provincial, city and municipal levels.
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