₱ 155.8 million (2020), 71.04 million (2012), 77.6 million (2013), 87.47 million (2014), 98.6 million (2015), 107.4 million (2016), 117.6 million (2017), 126.3 million (2018), 101.6 million (2019), 167.1 million (2021), 218.2 million (2022)
₱ 401.7 million (2020), 118.8 million (2012), 136.2 million (2013), 153.9 million (2014), 217.6 million (2015), 277.4 million (2016), 322.9 million (2017), 350.5 million (2018), 150.9 million (2019), 586 million (2021), 611.8 million (2022)
₱ 189.8 million (2020), 59.23 million (2012), 64.77 million (2013), 62.12 million (2014), 88.3 million (2015), 98.67 million (2016), 101.7 million (2017), 116.5 million (2018), 138.2 million (2019), 121.2 million (2021), 210.1 million (2022)
₱ 65.27 million (2020), 39.3 million (2012), 43.7 million (2013), 44.06 million (2014), 66.81 million (2015), 86.21 million (2016), 85.91 million (2017), 91.56 million (2018), 387.4 million (2019), 205 million (2021), 175.4 million (2022)
Bindoy (formerly Payabon), officially the Municipality of Bindoy (Cebuano: Lungsod sa Bindoy; Tagalog: Bayan ng Bindoy), is a municipality in the province of Negros Oriental, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 40,308 people.[3]
History
Negros Oriental's lone municipality named after a native of distinction, Bindoy started out as barrio Payabon of Manjuyod. In 1949, President Elpidio Quirino separated it as the Municipality of Bindoy. Hermenegildo “Bindoy” Teves Villanueva (1876-1941) was, at various times, governor of Negros Oriental, congressman of the First District, Labor Secretary of the Quezon cabinet, and senator of the Republic.
70 kilometres (43 mi) from Dumaguete, Bindoy is known as the hub of the Negros Oriental I Electric Cooperative, which energizes the northern towns. Its principal produce are copra, rice and corn, sugar cane, mangoes; and quantities of bamboo, pandan and romblon, tikog, buri, maguey and abaca to support cottage industries.
Bindoy's Bulod flatstones are weighty export items, their quarrying makes for an interesting sight. Bindoy's mangroves salute nature conservationists, as do dainty Mantahaw Falls and limpid Mantahaw Lake.
The annual Libod-Sayaw sa Bindoy, with streetdancing based on folk dances, is a colorful highlight of the town fiesta.[5]
Geography
Bindoy encompasses 173.7 square kilometers (67.07 square miles) of area. It is bounded with the municipalities of Ayungon in the north, Mabinay to the west, and Manjuyod to the south. It also shares a coastline with Tañon Strait.
Barangays
Bindoy is politically subdivided into 22 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.