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Poverty incidence of Candoni 10 20 30 40 50 2006 45.00 2009 41.88 2012 29.37 2015 25.49 2018 24.78 2021 30.34 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Candoni public market Candoni is a fourth class municipality. It is a hinterland town and heavily dependent on agriculture, its main products are sugarcane, rice, corn and coffee. Candoni posted more than 200% rice sufficiency for 2017 and 2018 ...
Mambukal is administered as a resort township, independent of the Municipality of Murcia by the provincial government, as the putative Township of Mambukal. [6] [7] [8] However, this is disputed in some circles outside the province as townships, as a form of local government, were already abolished in 1919 through Philippine Legislature Act No. 2824. [9]
Escalante City Rotonda. Access to Escalante Port. Calatrava: N708 (Benedicto–Calatrava Road) / Lopez Jaena Street: San Carlos: N69 (Negros Occidental Eco-Tourism Highway) Negros Occidental – Negros Oriental boundary: San Carlos – Vallehermoso boundary: 141: 88: N7 (Dumaguete North Road) Southern terminus: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0 ...
San Enrique, officially the Municipality of San Enrique, is a municipality in the province of Negros Occidental, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 24,177 people. [3] The town's former name is called "Candaguit", named after the Candaguit River that runs through the town.
Magsungay was a former constituent barangay until it was divided between Barangay Singcang, the location of the old airport, and numbered urban Barangays 10–16.Hence, Singcang is also alternatively called as "Magsungay," [3] [4] as the largest barangay occupying the territory of Magsungay, now roughly an informal city district.
Lakawon, also called Llacaon, is a 13-hectare (32-acre), banana-shaped island off the coast of Cadiz in the northern portion of Negros Occidental, a province in Western Visayas of the Philippines. A white sand beach resort on the island, a family-run business, is a popular destination for both local and foreign tourists.
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The Negros Occidental Eco-Tourism Highway, officially known as the Bacolod–San Carlos Road and Bacolod–Murcia–Don Salvador Benedicto–San Carlos Road, is an 81.12-kilometer (50.41 mi) scenic highway that connects the city of Bacolod [1] to the city of San Carlos in Negros Occidental, Philippines. [2]