Bustos, Bulacan
Bustos, Bulacan
Bustos | |
---|---|
Municipality | |
Municipality of Bustos | |
(From top, left to right): Bustos Municipal Hall • Bantayog ng Sentenaryo • Torch of Freedom • El Reloj del Centenario de Bustos • Bulacan Military Area Park • Sto. Niño de
Bustos Parish Church • Bustos Dam panoramic view • Letras y Figuras de Bustos | |
Motto(s): Minasa ng kaunlaran! | |
Anthem: Bayang Dakila (Himno ng Bustos) | |
Map of Bulacan with Bustos highlighted | |
Coordinates:14°57′N 120°55′E [27] | |
Country | Philippines |
Region | Central Luzon(Region III) |
Province | Bulacan |
District | 2nd District |
Founded | January 1, 1917 |
Named for | Jose Pedro Pérez de Busto[s] |
Barangays | ****14 (see Barangays) |
Government | |
• Type | Sangguniang Bayan |
• Mayor | Francis Albert "Iskul" G. Juan (PDP-Laban) |
• Vice Mayor | Arnel F. Mendoza (NUP) |
• Congressman | Gavini C. Pancho |
• Electorate | **Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil).** voters (2019) |
Area | |
• Total | <strong4">Lua18n6:1 km2(Formatting error: invalid input when rounding sq mi) |
Population (2015 census)[3] | |
• Total | **Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil).** |
Demonym(s) | Bustosenyo (male) Bustosenya (female) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (PST) |
ZIP code | 3007 |
PSGC [28] | 031406000 [29] |
IDD:area code | +63 (0)44 |
Climate type | tropical monsoon climate |
Income class | 2nd municipal income class |
Poverty rate | 5.9% |
• Revenue (2017) | PHP 167.14 million (14%)[4] |
• Expenses (2017) | PHP 152.37 million (11%) |
• Total Assets (2017) | PHP 134.82 million (8%) |
Electricity | Manila Electric Company |
• Consumption | 19.66 million kWh (2003) |
Native languages | Tagalog |
With the continuous expansion of Metro Manila, Bustos is now included in the Greater Manila's built-up conurbation area which reaches San Ildefonso, Bulacan at its northernmost part.
Bustos | |
---|---|
Municipality | |
Municipality of Bustos | |
(From top, left to right): Bustos Municipal Hall • Bantayog ng Sentenaryo • Torch of Freedom • El Reloj del Centenario de Bustos • Bulacan Military Area Park • Sto. Niño de
Bustos Parish Church • Bustos Dam panoramic view • Letras y Figuras de Bustos | |
Motto(s): Minasa ng kaunlaran! | |
Anthem: Bayang Dakila (Himno ng Bustos) | |
Map of Bulacan with Bustos highlighted | |
Coordinates:14°57′N 120°55′E [27] | |
Country | Philippines |
Region | Central Luzon(Region III) |
Province | Bulacan |
District | 2nd District |
Founded | January 1, 1917 |
Named for | Jose Pedro Pérez de Busto[s] |
Barangays | ****14 (see Barangays) |
Government | |
• Type | Sangguniang Bayan |
• Mayor | Francis Albert "Iskul" G. Juan (PDP-Laban) |
• Vice Mayor | Arnel F. Mendoza (NUP) |
• Congressman | Gavini C. Pancho |
• Electorate | **Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil).** voters (2019) |
Area | |
• Total | <strong4">Lua18n6:1 km2(Formatting error: invalid input when rounding sq mi) |
Population (2015 census)[3] | |
• Total | **Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil).** |
Demonym(s) | Bustosenyo (male) Bustosenya (female) |
Time zone | UTC+8 (PST) |
ZIP code | 3007 |
PSGC [28] | 031406000 [29] |
IDD:area code | +63 (0)44 |
Climate type | tropical monsoon climate |
Income class | 2nd municipal income class |
Poverty rate | 5.9% |
• Revenue (2017) | PHP 167.14 million (14%)[4] |
• Expenses (2017) | PHP 152.37 million (11%) |
• Total Assets (2017) | PHP 134.82 million (8%) |
Electricity | Manila Electric Company |
• Consumption | 19.66 million kWh (2003) |
Native languages | Tagalog |
History
Bulacan Military Area - Gen. Alejo Santos Shrine and Museum
Bustos was a part of the town of Baliuag as its barrio during the Spanish Period. The town was separated from Baliuag by a tragic incident when around 1860, during a rainy Sunday, a group of natives from Bustos with babies in their arms were on their way to St. Augustine Parish Church of Baliuag for baptismal when they drowned after the planceta or raft they were riding accidentally capsized while crossing the wild river of Angat due to the strong water current. This fateful event led the people of Bustos to request and build their own parish church to avoid the crossings in the wild river for community safety. The locals chose Holy Child Jesus (Sto. Niño) as their patron saint in honor of those infants that died in the river.[5]
Bustos also gained its independence from Baliuag in April 29, 1867 through the painstaking efforts and sacrifices of its inhabitants with the integration of barrios Bonga Mayor and Bonga Menor.
The town got its name from Jose Pedro Perez de Busto[s], a mining engineer from Villaviciosa, Asturias, Spain, served as the right-hand of Simón de Anda y Salazar, and was appointed teniente general alcalde (Provincial Governor) of Bulacan.[6]
Bustos became a distinct municipality on January 1, 1916 during the Philippine Assembly through 4th Philippine Legislature Assemblyman Ricardo Lloret Gonzalez. A year after, the town inaugurated its municipal hall on January 1, 1917. Leon Prado became its first Municipal Mayor and served from 1917 to 1919. Padre Gabriel Alvarez served as the first parish priest of the institutionalized Sto. Niño de Bustos Parish Church.
The town became a part of Baliuag again during the American period. At the time, Bustos also became a part of the historical World War II in the Philippines and served as the military headquarters of soldiers in the province of Bulacan during the war in 1945 being led by Bustosenyo then Capt. Alejo Santos.[7]
With the theme "Bustos Sentenaryo : Isang Daan tungo sa Ikasandaan", Bustos celebrated its 100th year founding anniversary in 2017 in the same time with the Sto. Niño de Bustos Parish Church's 150th year founding anniversary as an independent parish church of the municipality. The Philippine Postal Corporation made a special commemorative stamp for the centennial anniversary celebration of the town.[8]
Geography
Bustos is located at the center of five adjoining towns of Bulacan Province: San Rafael on the north; Pandi and Plaridel on the south; Baliuag on the west; and Angat on the east.
The land areas are mostly rice fields devoted for planting crops and agricultural products. Some farmlands of the town are covered by irrigation systems of National Irrigation Administration coming from Bustos Dam and Angat Dam on the Angat River.
Barangays
PSGC | Barangay | Population | ±% p.a. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015[3] | 2010[9] | |||||
031406001 | Bonga Mayor | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 3,792 | 4,407 | ▾ | −2.82% |
031406002 | Bonga Menor | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 4,619 | 4,742 | ▾ | −0.50% |
031406003 | Buisan | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 1,869 | 1,783 | ▴ | 0.90% |
031406004 | Camachilihan | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 2,552 | 2,289 | ▴ | 2.09% |
031406005 | Cambaog | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 6,242 | 5,592 | ▴ | 2.12% |
031406006 | Catacte | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 7,990 | 2,367 | ▴ | 26.07% |
031406007 | Liciada | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 5,017 | 4,702 | ▴ | 1.24% |
031406008 | Malamig | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 5,633 | 5,313 | ▴ | 1.12% |
031406009 | Malawak | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 2,789 | 2,383 | ▴ | 3.04% |
031406010 | Poblacion | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 7,153 | 9,641 | ▾ | −5.52% |
031406011 | San Pedro | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 6,994 | 6,506 | ▴ | 1.39% |
031406012 | Talampas | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 3,325 | 3,660 | ▾ | −1.81% |
031406013 | Tanawan | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 2,862 | 2,946 | ▾ | −0.55% |
031406014 | Tibagan | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% | 6,202 | 6,084 | ▴ | 0.37% |
Total | **Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil).** | 62,415 | Expression error: Unexpected < operator | Formatting error: invalid input when rounding% |
Demographics
Population census of Bustos | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
1903 | 7,072 | — |
1918 | 6,855 | −0.21% |
1939 | 8,692 | +1.14% |
1948 | 10,493 | +2.11% |
1960 | 13,412 | +2.07% |
1970 | 19,254 | +3.68% |
1975 | 22,622 | +3.29% |
1980 | 25,739 | +2.61% |
1990 | 34,965 | +3.11% |
1995 | 41,372 | +3.20% |
2000 | 47,091 | +2.81% |
2007 | 60,681 | +3.56% |
2010 | 62,415 | +1.03% |
2015 | 67,039 | +1.37% |
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[3][9][10][11] |
In the 2015 census, the population of Bustos, Bulacan, was Lua error in Module:I18n at line 6: bad argument #1 to 'pairs' (table expected, got nil). people,[3] with a density of .
Religion
Façade of Sto. Niño Parish
Bustos has two parishes under the administration of the Diocese of Malolos, Sto. Niño de Bustos Parish Church and San Isidro Labrador Parish Church.
Other christian religious groups, such as Iglesia Ni Cristo, Seventh-day Adventist Church, Jesus is Lord Church, Ang Dating Daan, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses and other Protestant groups can be found in the municipality.
People in Bustos celebrate a number of Catholic holidays throughout the year. The first church in Bustos has been dedicated to Santo Niño, the Holy Child Jesus, and there is a feast that is held in memory every third Sunday of January, where the townspeople celebrate it with music and dance while holding images of Santo Niño decorated with flowers and lights with parade of floats with images of the saint (locally known as Tugyaw).[12]
Culture
2016 Minasa Festival street dance demonstration at SM City Baliwag Event Center
Minasa Festival is the official festival of Bustos observed every January where street dances, dance showdowns, cooking contests, singing contests, running events, beauty pageants, live band concerts and other variety shows are commonly done. It features the cookie minasa, a locally-made delicacy as well as other items such as the dry-like wafer crispy barquillos. The festival was first celebrated in 2011 and since then, the activity is televised yearly.
Manok-Manok (Chicken) Festival in Brgy. San Pedro every June and Hito (Catfish) Festival in Brgy. Camachilihan every August are also observed.
Economy
Bustos Wet and Dry Public Market
Minasa information poster
The Rural Bank of Bustos under Producers Savings Bank Corporation
Bustos is an agricultural town in majority. In fact, it is hailed as one of the largest rice producers of the country and the Central Luzon Region, the Rice Granary of the Philippines, and received the Rice Achiever Award as Outstanding Municipality in Region III and Hall of Fame award at Agri-Pinoy Rice Achievers Award of 2014 conferred by the Department of Agriculture.[13]
The Bustos commercial center in the town proper is still expanding with the influx of more business investors willing to venture in this small but flourishing town. In the present, the town has its public and few small private markets, business shops, banks, convenience stores, restaurants, cafeterias, and grocery stores.
Bustos has their own trademark product, the finger food 'Minasa'.
Minasa refers to "cassava cookies", made from cassava flour, egg yolk, yeast, butter, and coco milk. It is somehow compared to Uraro, another local delicacy. It is one of the famous treats from the province of Bulacan which is traded in local and global market of Filipino pasalubong products. Way back Spanish colonization era here in the Philippines, these Minasa cookies were made of sago (arrowroot) starch and not cassava. The main ingredient was changed because of the long production time of sago starch and cassava starch is cheaper and easier to produce. Also, these were exclusively produced and eaten by the elite Bulakeños for they are the only ones who can afford the ingredients and had the equipment for the production of it. The word minasa in English is "molded". The process of preparing Minasa is like making and baking cookies. The only thing special about Minasa is its shape which is molded on specially-made wooden molders with intricate designs, commonly floral designs, and it is baked in a hurno or a brick stone oven which adds to the yumminess of the cookie. Minasa is said to be a part of history and culture of Bulacan because of those egg yolks that were left in building old stone houses that were made of egg whites. Currently, there are stalls all around Bustos selling this very delicious local delicacy making the municipality hailed as the "Home of Minasa".
Bustos has a rural bank, the Rural Bank of Bustos, which is located at Gen. Alejo Santos Highway, Brgy. Bonga Menor, beside the Bustos by-pass road going to Cabanatuan City, Nueva Ecija. It has a branch in Brgy. Poblacion in front of Sto. Niño Hospital. The bank is currently under the management of Producers Savings Bank Corporation.
Other products, industries, & services:
Rice and other agricultural products
Poultry & swine raising and other dairy products
Bags and handicrafts making
Pastry making
Food processing and retail selling
Garments and embroidery
Metal-crafting
Furniture making
Fishpond raising
Recreational facilities and services
Resorts and hotels
Local government
The Old Bustos Municipal Hall painting, circa 1930
Bustos is a recipient of the 2017 Seal of Good Local Governance given by the Department of Interior and Local Government. Based on the 2019 Philippine general election, here are the following elected local officials of the Municipality of Bustos for the term 2019 - 2022.
Position | Name | Party | |
---|---|---|---|
Mayor | Francis Albert "Iskul" G. Juan | PDP-Laban | |
Vice Mayor | Arnel F. Mendoza | NUP | |
Councilors | Juliet DJ. dela Cruz | PDP-Laban | |
Jonalyn O. Santos | NUP | ||
Toni Flor "Tonet" H. De Guzman | NUP | ||
Rosette "Puset" N. Pangilinan | NUP | ||
John Erick "Tangkol" L. Perez | NUP | ||
Aljhaneal "Anel" E. Quiñones | Independent | ||
Melvin "Mel" H. Melencio | NUP | ||
Gemar Aldrich "Jetjet" M. Cruz | NUP | ||
Ex Officio Municipal Council Members | |||
ABC President | Martin SJ. Angeles (Liciada) | Nonpartisan | |
SK Federation President | Hetty de Leon (San Pedro) | Nonpartisan |
Transportation
Bustos By-Pass Road
North Luzon Expressway has a by-pass road that passes through the municipality of Bustos that shortens the transportation of goods and passengers from some areas in Bulacan going to Metro Manila and Nueva Ecija. The Bustos by-pass road passes through Gen. Alejo Santos Highway at Brgy. Bonga Menor, Bustos, Bulacan and travels to NLEx Balagtas Exit Toll Plaza leading to Balintawak Cloverleaf, Quezon City on the one side and San Rafael, Bulacan leading to Cabanatuan City, Nueva Ecija on the other side.
Education
Gate of Bulacan State University - Bustos Campus
There are eight secondary schools in Bustos, four of which are public while every barangay has its own public pre-elementary and elementary school.
Bulacan State University - Bustos Campus (BulSU-Bustos) is the largest satellite campus of the university. It was established in 1976 and it offers degrees in education, industrial technology, information technology, engineering, and business administration. [15]
Notable people
Alejo Santos - popularly known as "Manong"; a survivor of Bataan Death March; a World War II hero; leader of the Bulacan Military Area; former Secretary of National Defense of the Philippines under then President Carlos P. Garcia; former Military Governor of Bulacan province; ran in the Philippine Presidential Elections before but lost to then President Ferdinand E. Marcos.
Katy de la Cruz - also known as "Mommy Kate"; "Queen of Philippine Vaudeville/ Bodabil", "Queen of Filipino Jazz" and awarded as FAMAS Best Supporting Actress.
Luzviminda Tancangco - also known as "Baby"; first non-lawyer and woman commissioner of the Philippine Commission on Elections. She was also its first female acting chairman (1998–1999).
Gen. Carlito Galvez Jr. - Former Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines; former commander of the 6th Infantry Division (Philippines); former chairman of Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities; and former commander of AFP Western Mindanao Command and known for his leadership in the Battle of Marawi.[16]
Rear Admiral Hilario Ruiz - former Flag Officer in Command of the Philippine Navy (PN); one of Rolex 12 advisers of President Ferdinand Marcos during his martial law period;[17] BRP Hilario Ruiz (PG-378), a coastal patrol boat of the Philippine Navy, is named after him.
Conrado Mercado, Sr. - locally known as "Mr. Irrigation"; first National Irrigation Administration (NIA) Assistant Administrator; Original owner of the Mercado Ancestral House in Brgy. Bonga Menor; the government created a statue for him to serve as a memorabilia for him and his contributions.
Conrado Mercado, Jr. - most successful Bustosenyo in the aspect of arts; famous metal-sculptor and painter; one of the greatest artists produced by the University of Santo Tomas; enlisted as one of UST's Alumni Permanent Roll of Honor; gained the Outstanding Thomasian Award in the field of arts; honored by the City of Manila with the Patnubay ng Sining Award; founded the Philippine Association of Figure Artists and became the president of Society of Philippine Sculptors; his artworks are placed in the Paraiso ng mga Bata in front of the Aklatang Bayan ng Bustos being part of the Bustos Heritage Park.[18]
Minister Jesus Hipolito - former Minister of Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) from 1980-1986.[19]
Gen. Romeo Maganto - retired and decorated police general of the Philippine National Police having awarded with 45 medals in service; former chief of Western Police District; former traffic czar during the administration of President Fidel V. Ramos and is known as the first to implement the color coding traffic scheme in 1995; featured in the films Tomagan: Story of Gen. Romeo Maganto and Leon ng Maynila, Lt. Col. Romeo Maganto.[20]