Question & AnswerQ&A (EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 353)
The barrios of San Andres, Mangero, Alibijaban, Pansoy, Camplora, and Tala, along with their respective sitios, were segregated from the municipality of San Narciso.
The creation is pursuant to the provisions of section sixty-eight and section twenty-six hundred and thirty, as amended, of the Revised Administrative Code, and upon the recommendation of the Provincial Board of Quezon.
The seat of government is located at the barrio of San Andres.
The boundary lines are defined by the course of Bahay River from its mouth at Ragay Gulf upstream southwesterly to the junction of Milowpitiwan Creek with Bahay River, then southwesterly in a straight line to point or corner No. 44 on the San Narciso-Aurora boundary, according to specified land classification and survey maps.
It begins to exist upon the appointment and qualification of the mayor, vice-mayor, and a majority of the councilors, and upon prior certification by the Secretary of Finance that the district's probable estimated annual income is not less than one thousand pesos.
The municipality of San Narciso retains its present territory minus the portions that are included in the newly created Municipal District of San Andres.
A land classification map (No. 15-B, Block B, Scale 1:20,000, August 25, 1955), a tracing made by Surveyor Augusto Ella (August 15, 1959), and a sketch map of San Narciso (Scale 1:200,000, received August 4, 1959) were used.
The officials can be appointed and qualified only after the Secretary of Finance certifies that the estimated annual income of the municipal district is not less than one thousand pesos.