I Manmamplaneneha
I was speaking to someone recently about the issues of Pagan. There has been buzz for more than a year now about turning Pagan into a large-scale training area and firing and bombing range. There was an international petition drive to protect it that garnered more than 100,000 signatures. Some families with roots in Pagan have been to stay there again. But while for a time in 2013 it seemed as if Pagan was going to be taken any minute now, that has all changed. Things calmed down and grew quiet. The conversation I had recently was a warning that things may heat up again soon about Pagan. From Pagat to Pagan to Litekyan. If you can remember back far enough you can add even Sella in there if you'd like.
Gi Fino' Chamoru sesso masangan na ti maimaigo' Si Yu'us. Sina ta sangan lokkue' na ti maimaigo' i militat. Ti maimaigo' DOD. Gi fino' un activist giya Hawai'i, i militat Amerikanu kalang un sen dangkolu na gamson. Maestitira huyong i kannai-na siha ya kana' ma papacha' todu i tano' siha. Guaha bases Amerikanu gi todu i lugat. Kalang taya' tano' i' ti pinacha' as Guiya. Put este sina ta sangan lokkue' na ni' ngai'an tumutunok i atdao giya Guiya. Manmamplaneneha todu tiempo sin para, sin maigo'.
It is tough to challenge that sort of power. The military is a massive bureaucracy which invests constant energy into its sustainability and expansion. There are people, analysts, technocrats, advisers, consultants, experts, whatever you want to name them, who are planning these things all the time. The military is not some Borg hive mind and that means that Guam is always on the mind of DOD, but there is always a conversation going on somewhere with Pagat, Litekyan and Pagan being mentioned. There are always plans being discussed and the resources of this part of the world, which are the heritage of the Chamorro people, whether they be land, air, sea, are all invoked as being assets. It is difficult for your average community to match these plans. After the fight to protect Pagat died down, people assumed that the issue was done, and somehow the community had won. When Litekyan was mentioned as a new site, not as many people emerged to defend the site, many perhaps feeling that somehow this fight was already dealt with earlier around Pagat. When Pagan is placed in the crosshairs, we will see if the community can organize and respond effectively.
All of this reminds me of several years ago during that tempestuous DEIS comment period. I came across several articles from that time period, one of which is pasted below.
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Guam Military buildup hearing received mixed reaction
Gi Fino' Chamoru sesso masangan na ti maimaigo' Si Yu'us. Sina ta sangan lokkue' na ti maimaigo' i militat. Ti maimaigo' DOD. Gi fino' un activist giya Hawai'i, i militat Amerikanu kalang un sen dangkolu na gamson. Maestitira huyong i kannai-na siha ya kana' ma papacha' todu i tano' siha. Guaha bases Amerikanu gi todu i lugat. Kalang taya' tano' i' ti pinacha' as Guiya. Put este sina ta sangan lokkue' na ni' ngai'an tumutunok i atdao giya Guiya. Manmamplaneneha todu tiempo sin para, sin maigo'.
It is tough to challenge that sort of power. The military is a massive bureaucracy which invests constant energy into its sustainability and expansion. There are people, analysts, technocrats, advisers, consultants, experts, whatever you want to name them, who are planning these things all the time. The military is not some Borg hive mind and that means that Guam is always on the mind of DOD, but there is always a conversation going on somewhere with Pagat, Litekyan and Pagan being mentioned. There are always plans being discussed and the resources of this part of the world, which are the heritage of the Chamorro people, whether they be land, air, sea, are all invoked as being assets. It is difficult for your average community to match these plans. After the fight to protect Pagat died down, people assumed that the issue was done, and somehow the community had won. When Litekyan was mentioned as a new site, not as many people emerged to defend the site, many perhaps feeling that somehow this fight was already dealt with earlier around Pagat. When Pagan is placed in the crosshairs, we will see if the community can organize and respond effectively.
All of this reminds me of several years ago during that tempestuous DEIS comment period. I came across several articles from that time period, one of which is pasted below.
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Guam Military buildup hearing received mixed reaction
By Haidee V. Eugenio
Saipan Tribune Reporter
Saipan Tribune Reporter
1/18/2010
Residents
weighed the pros and cons of the $15- to $20-billion military buildup
in Guam and Tinian during Friday night's public hearing on Saipan, with
some individuals expressing support to the multi-year project due to
economic benefits and national security issues, while others oppose the
project altogether for its ill social, environmental, and cultural
impacts.
“Our
economy is drying up. The local people are leaving because of lack of
jobs here. We need the military, but we need to work together,” said
former Rep. Manny Tenorio.
Martin Manglona, for his part, said there's no reason to be scared about military training ranges on Tinian.
“All
plans on Tinian are for small ranges, nothing else. We have it in
Kannat Tabla, so there's no problem,” said Manglona, adding that local
people could get jobs and could find other business opportunities such
as supplying fresh produce to the military.
Victoria-Lola
Leon Guerrero of the Guam-based We Are Guahan which is opposed to the
military buildup, said the buildup intends to carry out U.S. Department
of Defense plans, and “does not intend to help residents.”
She
said that CNMI residents should never forget the environmental problems
caused by the U.S. military in Tanapag, referring to the
polychlorinated biphenyl contamination of soil and land crabs on
Saipan's northern village.
Leon
Guerrero also urged people to visit their website, www.WeAreGuahan.com,
to know more about the group's strong opposition to the buildup.
Among
other things, the group said the majority of the 18,000 jobs coming
through the buildup will go to off-island workers and not local
residents, and the buildup's draft Environmental Impact Statement does
not mention military commitment to give Guam the money necessary to
develop infrastructure to support a huge population influx.
They
were among the estimated 30 members of the community, and another
30-plus Navy personnel and military contractors at the Pedro P. Tenorio
Multi-Purpose Center in Susupe on Friday night for the Joint Guam
Program Office's public hearing on the buildup's draft Environmental
Impact Statement.
The
number of people who showed up in both the public hearings on Tinian
and Saipan were far below the numbers on Guam wherein the hearings drew
200 to 400 people.
Delegate
Gregorio Kilili C. Sablan (D-MP) said there are issues not related to
the military buildup that the people of Tinian also want to be
addressed, including the needed repair of the outer seawall and piers.
“It
would be great (if the military funds it) but they won't because it's
not a military wharf. That has to be a Commonwealth project or funded
from a separate funding because it's not a military harbor; it's
commercial. And I've also been telling people that this is a military
buildup in Guam. Tinian is only ancillary of the buildup and if people
think that someone is going to get rich from the Tinian portion of the
buildup, I would like to know how because I haven't seen it,” Sablan
told Saipan Tribune.
'No more comment period extension'
Sixto
Igisomar, speaking as a member of the public, asked for more time to
review and comment on the draft environment impact statement on the
military buildup.
There are some 11,000 pages of documents on the draft EIS/Overseas Environmental Impact Statement on the military buildup.
The draft EIS/OES can be accessed online at www.guambuildupeis.us.
Retired
Maj. Gen. David Bice, executive director of the Joint Guam Program
Office, said JGPO believes that the 90-day comment period ending on Feb.
17 is sufficient.
“We've
had well over 1,600 people come out to our public hearings where they
asked questions and got their questions answered by experts. We've also
gotten a lot of comments online as well as during the hearings,” Bice
told Saipan Tribune.
Bice
said there had been enough public outreach programs on the project,
including public scoping in 2007, as well as partnership sessions with
the local government and the regulators like the Environmental
Protection Agency.
“We
believe that our effort has been really unprecedented because this is a
pretty large realignment and we had an unprecedented approach in terms
of reaching out to the public and the regulators to ensure that our
document is complete,” he said.
Bice
said “every comment is important,” and every comment will be evaluated.
The comments will also be recorded in Volume 10 of the final EIS.
“I
can tell you that we are going to make adjustments to the EIS. We've
heard comments made by people as we go along. I would make a mental note
(when I hear) a solid comment that we need to take a look at either the
plan or the phraseology that's in the EIS that may not be as clear as
it should have been. So I can tell you that we are going to make
adjustments to the EIS based upon the comments we received,” he added.
Townhall meetings
Despite
the end of the six public hearings held in Guam, Tinian, and Saipan,
there are still opportunities for residents to know more about the draft
EIS/OES.
Tom
Linden, coordinator for the CNMI Military Integration Management
Committee, said MIMC, in partnership with the Office of Economic
Adjustment and the Guam Advisory Consulting Team, will be hosting a
public forum on Jan. 27, Wednesday, at the Multi-Purpose Center in
Susupe.
He
said representatives of the OEA and ACT will break down the 11,000-page
EIS and be willing to answer any questions regarding the military
buildup. The public is encouraged to submit questions ahead of time to
the MIMC coordinator by sending e-mails to cnmi.mimc@commerce.gov.mp.
MIMC,
created in June 2009, serves as the planning and policy making entity
for all activities related to the expansion of military training and
other defense transformation initiatives in the CNMI and Guam. It is the
official entity through which the CNMI will interface with the U.S.
Department of the Navy, the U.S. Marine Corps, JGPO, the Department of
Defense, and all other military representatives regarding the military
buildup.
The Tinian plan
Because
Guam cannot accommodate all training for the relocating Marines, the
military looks at Tinian to provide opportunities for training groups of
200 Marines or larger due to greater land availability.
Tinian is only about 100 miles or 160 kilometers away from Guam.
The
northern two-thirds of Tinian are leased to the U.S. Department of
Defense. Company and battalion level non-live fire training areas
already exist and are used on these lease parcels.
“The land, however, could be developed to accommodate live fire ranges,” the draft EIS/OES stated.
The
proposed actions on Tinian include firing ranges for rifle known
distance, automated combat pistol, platoon battle course, and field
firing; and airspace use.
Comments on the draft EIS/OES can be submitted online, or during the public hearings set by the U.S. Navy in Guam and the CNMI.
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