Santa Barbara, Pangasinan
Encyclopedia
Santa Barbara is a 1st class municipality in the province of Pangasinan, Philippines
Philippines
The Philippines , officially known as the Republic of the Philippines , is a country in Southeast Asia in the western Pacific Ocean. To its north across the Luzon Strait lies Taiwan. West across the South China Sea sits Vietnam...

. According to the latest census, it has a population of 73,025 people in 12,111 households.

Geography

The town of Sta. Barbara lies on the northern part of the Agno Valley almost exactly at the center of the biggest province of Luzon. Only a few minutes by car after turning west at the business center of Urdaneta City, centuries-old mango trees flank the national highway, silently announcing one has reached Sta. Barbara. Fifteen kilometers further west is Dagupan City along historic Lingayen Gulf, and to its south is the town of Malasiqui and beyond it the City of San Carlos.

Barangays

Santa Barbara is politically subdivided into 29 barangay
Barangay
A barangay is the smallest administrative division in the Philippines and is the native Filipino term for a village, district or ward...

s.


  • Alibago
  • Balingueo
  • Banaoang
  • Banzal
  • Botao
  • Cablong
  • Carusocan
  • Dalongue
  • Erfe
  • Gueguesangen
  • Leet
  • Malanay
  • Maningding
  • Maronong
  • Maticmatic

  • Minien East
  • Minien West
  • Nilombot
  • Patayac
  • Payas
  • Poblacion Norte
  • Poblacion Sur
  • Sapang
  • Sonquil
  • Tebag East
  • Tebag West
  • Tuliao
  • Ventinilla (Ventinilla East)
  • Primicias (Ventinilla West)



People

Sta. Barbara is populated mainly by Pangasinense natives with a sprinkling of other ethnic groups led by the Ilocanos. They are a warm, religious, fun-loving and industrious people.
It is largely a suburban community with much of its population densely concentrated in 29 barangays. By the year 2008, the town’s population was projected to have reached 86,269, as young couples were proven prolific at making babies at a rate of 3.75 percent a year for the past seven years, faster than the national average.

More than half of the families or roughly 60 percent are farmers who till the northern part of the rich Agno Valley. Average family income as of the 2000 national census, was a low P9,662.67 a year. Maybe because the average farming family does not buy, but produce the bulk of its own food, family expenditures were lower at P7,545.42. The average Sta. Barbaran family has a disposable income of over P2,000 a year despite statistical data that had shown that a family In the Ilocos region needed PhP 14,749.00 in income a year to survive.

A high level of self-sufficiency in food is likewise gleaned in the town’s minimal rate of malnutrition of only .50 percent severely malnourished out of 5.12 percent malnourished -pre-school children. The public school system is also proud of having an unusually low drop-out rate in the elementary grades and high school.

Poverty rate in Sta. Barbara is high as average income is even lower than the regional poverty threshold
Poverty threshold
The poverty threshold, or poverty line, is the minimum level of income deemed necessary to achieve an adequate standard of living in a given country...

. But food self-sufficiency has saved its town folks from sliding to the ranks of the very poor.

Economy

Although a large part of Sta. Barbara is fast getting urbanized, the main economic activity remains farming. Rice remains its main crop with 6,662 hectares or close to all its total tillable lands devoted to rice farming. The second most important crop is mango of which the town is famous as the home of age-old Philippine mango seedling nurseries, a veritable home industry in town.

Rice and mango are the only crops that are raised in all its 29 barangays. The third most important crop are a variety of vegetables followed by corn. Legumes and root crops are grown in small quantities.

Their livestock include cattle, carabao, hogs, goats and dogs. They likewise raise native chickens for their food and some poultry farms commercially produce chicken layers and broilers.

Out of the farm produce, Sta. Barbara has developed its own food processing industry that includes the making of rice cakes like latik and suman, nata-de coco making, and pickles from different fruits.

It likewise has a highly developed clay tiles and pottery industry coupled with non-farm based processing industries like candle and soap making and the making of hollow blocks for construction. The town has one industrial plant, the Ginebra San Miguel gin manufacturing plant in Tebag West barangay along the national highway towards Dagupan.

The town’s business and trading center in and around the public market features a variety of wholesale and retail and other services establishments from farm inputs to construction materials. The market serves as the place where its people buy their needs and sell their produce. Transportation between the commercial center and the many barangays is served by a large fleet of individually owned tricycles.

Sta. Barbara’s close proximity to Urdaneta City, has, however, constrained the growth of its trading sector.

Suburban Housing

Also owing to its suburban location and easy access to three nearby cities, Urdaneta, San Carlos and Dagupan, Sta. Barbara has attracted subdivision developers, both for middle-class and low-cost markets. As of mid-2008, it has attracted to its territory eight different housing projects including subdivisions developed by the company owned by Senate President Manny Villar and a pilot Gawad Kalinga housing project for the very poor embarked by the town government and its private sector partners.

Support Infrastructure

The town has a total of 137.509 linear kilometers of road network classified into national, provincial, municipal and barangay roads. All the national highways passing through town and those under the town government have been paved. The 17 kilometers of provincial roads are about three fourths paved while more than half (67.10%) of 92.5 kilometers of barangay roads otherwise known as farm to market roads, needed concreting.

Unlike paved roads, electricity has reached all of the town’s 29 barangays with about 80 percent of all households served. Power rates are much lower than in Metro Manila for both households, commercial and industrial users.

Two of the biggest landline telephone companies, PLDT and Digitel, plus one wireless company, Smart, serves the communication needs of the town although units to users ratio as of 2007 was still low at one phone for every 93 residents.

The local government-run Rural Health Unit and its 10 satellite barangay health centers, plus seven private medical clinics and one dental clinic serve the basic health needs of Sta. Barbara residents.

School System

Sta. Barbara has an extensive public elementary and high school system. It has a total of 26 elementary schools supervised by two school districts plus seven public high schools. These are manned by 418 teachers and other school personnel with a student of over 15,000 children in any given year.

Their healthy teacher to pupil ratio averaging one to 34 in the elementary grades and one is to 41 in high school and their minimal drop-out rates of two percent in the elementary grades and less than four in every 100 students that enter high school.
This was the state of things in Sta. Barbara when the local leadership changed in mid 2007.

External links

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