President Says Plan Completed

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

President Says Plan Completed Chief Clerk returns offer missing at sea KOLONIA, Ponape - Congress Chief Isaac of Pingelap which they found tank for a sea anchor while cutting their Clerk Sintaro Ezra, Trust Territory drifting on Oct. 26. motor and drifting. Food Services Coordinator for the FSM They left Sokehs about 10 a.m. Oct. They sighted Ponape about 3 p.m. Nihlis Ernest and local fisherman Ounis 24, in a 19-foot fiberglass boat with a Oct. 30 still drifting with the current Jack returned to Kolonia late Monday, single 35-horse-power outboard motor and wind moving them toward the is- Oct. 31, after being missing seven days on and were reported seen by local fisher- land. The current changed about 4 p.m., a fishing trip in rain storms and rough seas. men about 3:30 p.m. that afternoon so they started their engine and reached They were admitted to the Ponape trolling in a school of fish during a Ohwa Pass on the east side of the island State Hospital for observation and re- heavy rain storm which limited visi- at 5:45 p.m. Oct. 31. leased Nov. 1 in good condition. bility. Ezra said "We had fish and water pro- The trio reported that they survived They said that they last saw local visions enough to last for about a on dried fish and rain water captured hi fishermen John Thomas at 2 p.m. Oct. month," and they never saw the rescue an unmanned boat owned by Sohsi 24, and that they used an empty gas planes and ships searching for them. The National Union £Peace JMni/y ^tfat/u <s & AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION FOR THE PEOPLE AND THE STATES OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA Volume 4 Kolonia, Ponape, October 30, 1983 Number 20 In State of the Nation Message President says plan completed KOLONIA, Ponape - President Tosi- guidelines for funding local projects of the Compact of Free Association with wo Nakayama announced the comple- during his fourth annual State of the the United States by the Federated tion of the National Development Plan Nation Message here Oct. 28. States and the Saipan Accords with the and urged the FSM Congress to follow its The President cited the ratification presidents of Palau and the Marshall Islands to gain acceptance for the Com- pact in the U.S. Congress as steps toward entry into a new era of development and prosperity for the FSM. "The economic prosperity we seek which will be the source of our political self-reliance will be base on the actions we take now to build the foundation for our development and growth," he told the Congress. "As we prepare for this new era of self-government during free association, the most important thing that we can do is to complete the foundation that we began to lay for our economic develop- ment," he said. "Our National Development Plan has Jeen completed," the President said, noting that Volume II dealing with state development programs and national financial investment policy has been forwarded to the Congress. He said that Volume I dealing with STATE OF THE NATION MESSAGE - FSM President Tosiwo Nakayama, upper national characteristics operations ac- left, is delivering his fourth annual State of the Nation Message on Oct. 28 in the counts and fiscal policy will be for- Congress chamber. From left are Floor Leader John Haglelgam of Yap, Nakayama, warded to Congress {vfore the end of Speaker Bethwel Henry and Administrative Assistant Mitchuo Daniel, of Ponpae. its current session whk . is scheduled for (See message text on Pages 4-6 and related stories on Page 2-3.) Nov. 8. (Continued on page 3) en Congress disapproves 4-year ferms for off oe ON KOLONIA, Ponape - The Third FSM for President and Vice President. said he objected to the bill because the o f) Congress disapproved a bill which would Presently, only those members elected FSM President and Vice President are amend the FSM Constitution to provide from each state at-large serve four-year of "broader constituency," and he for four-year terms for all of its members, terms. All other members represent does not want to treat the FSM Cons- Oct. 28, after President Tosiwo Nakaya- specified election districts and serve titution just like any public law that must ma delivered the State of the Nation two-year terms. be amended every time the Congress Z Message. The bill which was submitted for ap- meets. O proval by the Judiciary and Govern- Fritz said that the bill comes from The bill received 8 votes for and 4 mental Operations Committee chaired by many constituents out of a growing against it, with 10 votes required for Senator Jack Fritz of Truk, would concern and that there needs to be more passage. reduce the number of elections and cut selection in the Congress for the highest Measures adopted on the 19th day costs regarding campaigns and the admi- offices in the executive branch. Iof the current regular session include nistration of the voting process, the Com- Speaking hi favor of the proposed Congressional Bill 3-91, changing the mittee report said. bill, Senator Peter Christian of Ponape closing time of polk from 7 p.m. to The report also said that the bill would said he thinks only senators who ran 5 p.m. for national elections, and Con- provide the members of the Congress unopposed should be elected President gressional Resolution 3-85, CD1 com- who presently serve two-year terms with and Vice President. He called the bill mending FSM public safety officers upon more time to establish their programs "an act of bravery!" their graduation from the Micronesian and achieve long-range goals, and would Senator Pedro Harris of Ponape said Police Academy in Sitka, Alaska, and give each member equal standing. "after talking with some people, it recognizing others for organizing and Floor Leader John Haglelgam of Yap (the bill) appears to be self-serving." conducting the training program. C.B. 3-3, CD1, which would amend Article IX, Section 8, of the FSM Cons- President vetoes two measures titution to provide that all member of the Congress serve four-year terms KOLONIA, Ponape - President Tosi- classroom repair and $5,000 for an would also make all members qualified wo Nakayama informed the FSM Cong- Anwachang taro patch wall, were allotted ress that he vetoed two acts, including to the Truk governor and expended, and one to change the allottee for all public could not be allotted, again, as required Settlement reached projects on Tol Island from the Truk by the bill. State Government to the Outer Faichuk In an Oct. 18 letter to the Speaker, KOLONIA, Ponape - President Tosi- Social Economic Development Authority the President said, "If the approval wo Nakayama announced during his board of directors. process suggested hi CB 3-104, CD1, Oct. 28 State of the Nation to Congress The second act to increase the juris- were to take effect, in most cases the a settlement was reached with the owners diction of the Congress over fishing only way to obtain prompt action on an of a Japanese boat caught fishing illegally rights agreements was vetoed, the Presi- agreement would be to call a special in FSM waters who agreed to pay a dent said, because it would mean his session of Congress, a time consuming, $500,000 penalty, plus $21,476.92 in having to call a special session every time expensive and unnecessary requirement, costs. an agreement was being finalized. in my view. The settlement was reached earlier In an Oct. 14 letter to Speaker Beth- "For this reason, I have chosen to Oct. 28 in negotiations here between wel Henry, the President said that he disapprove the bill," he said. FSM Chief Litigator David Nevitt and disapproved C.B. 3-123 which was The President said that the amend- John Moore of the Moore, Lawlor and approved during the first special session ments would change existing law from Hall law firm in Guam, representing of the Third FSM Congress hi August requiring that fisheries agreements with Goyo Marine Products, owner of the because it would take the fiscal 1982- foreign parties be approved by the Con- Goyo Maru No. 2 purse seine fishing ves- funded projects from the chain-of- gress when it is in session, or the Re- sel which was apprehended while fishing command structure of the state govern- sources and Development Committee Aug. 17 near Kapingamarangi Atoll, ment and make its accountability diffi- when it is not in session and approval by Ponape state, a few weeks after the latest cult under the Financial Management by the Micronesian Maritime Adminis- agreement with the Federation of Japan Act. tration when fewer than 10 vessels are Fisheries Cooperative Associations He said that "we have learned from involved. expired. experience that it is difficult to monitor The changes would require congres- The boat was brought to Ponape Is- national appropriations for state public sional approval of all agreements involv- land, and the Attorney General's Office projects when the designated allottee is ing six vessels or more and approval by filed charges in the FSM Supreme Court removed from the chain-of-command the R&D Committee of agreements for seeking $3.6 million in fines and penal- structure of the state government," and fewer than six agreements, he said stat- ties, plus forfeiture of the $6 million that "the intent of the State Public ing that "Such an approach would ef- vessel and its catch. Projects Regulations can be easily frus- fectively eliminate the capacity of the "We must do all that we can to trated as they become difficult, if not im- government to approve foreign fishing enforce our fishing laws in order to reap possible to apply." agreements in a prompt and timely a fair compensation for the use of our Nakayama said that the provision fashion and would throw into dissarray valuable fisheries resource and continue of the bill to consolidate four $10,000 regulation of the 200-mile zone." its conservation," the President told Con- economic improvement projects for Tol The President also cited the recom- gress.
Recommended publications
  • Survey Report on the Present State of Nan Madol, Federated States of Micronesia
    2010 Survey for International Cooperation Japan Consortium for International Cooperarion in Cultual Heritage Survey Report on the Present State of Nan Madol, Federated States of Micronesia March 2012 Japan Consortium for International Cooperation in Cultual Heritage Foreword 1. This is a report on the fiscal 2010 survey conducted by the Japan Consortium for International Cooperation in Cul- tural Heritage in regard to the archaeological site of Nan Madol in the Federated States of Micronesia. 2. The following members were responsible for writing each of the chapters of this report. Writers: Chapters 1, 4, 6 – Tomomi Haramoto Chapters 2, 3 – Osamu Kataoka Chapter 5 – Tomo Ishimura Editor: Tomomi Haramoto, Japan Consortium for International Cooperation in Cultural Heritage i ii Preface The Japan Consortium for International Cooperation in Cultural Heritage (JCIC-Heritage) collects information in various forms to promote Japan’s international cooperation on cultural heritage. Under this scheme of information collection, a cooperation partner country survey was conducted in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) in fiscal 2010, as presented in this report. It was conducted in response to a request from the UNESCO Apia Office, to provide a foundation of information that would facilitate the first steps toward protecting Nan Madol, the largest cultural heritage site in FSM. Cooperation partner country surveys are one of the primary activities of JCIC-Heritage’s initiatives for interna- tional cooperation. They particularly focus on collecting basic information to identify fields of cooperation and their feasibility in a relevant partner country. As of fiscal 2011, cooperation surveys have been conducted in Laos, Mongo- lia, Yemen, Bhutan, Armenia, Bahrain, and Myanmar, and have effectively assisted Japan’s role in international coop- eration.
    [Show full text]
  • FSM Supreme Court Trial Division
    Pohnpei v. 1KSVI No. 3 10 FSM Intrm. 53 (Pon. 2001) FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA SUPREME COURT TRIAL DIVISION Cite as Pohnpei v KSVI No 3, 10 FSM Intrm. 53 (Pon. 2001) STATE OF POHNPEI, Plaintiff, vs. KSVI NO. 3, NATIONAL FISHERIES CORPORATION, and DOES 1-50, Defendants. KITTI MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT, Plaintiff, vs. KSVI NO. 3, NATIONAL FISHERIES CORPORATION, KOSRAE SEA VENTURES, INC., and DOES 2-50, Defendants. CIVIL ACTION NO. 1998-009 CIVIL ACTION NO. 1998-086 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION Andon L. Amaraich Chief Justice Decided: February 16, 2001 APPEARANCES: For the Plaintiff (Pohnpei): Everett Walton, Esq. Assistant Attorney General Pohnpei Department of Justice P.O. Box 1555 Kolonia, Pohnpei FM 96941 For the Plaintiff (Kitti): Ron Moroni, Esq. P.O. Box 1618 Kolonia, Pohnpei FM 96941 For the Defendants: Fredrick L. Ramp, Esq. P.O. Box 1480 Pohnpei v. 2KSVI No. 3 10 FSM Intrm. 53 (Pon. 2001) Kolonia, Pohnpei FM 96941 * * * * HEADNOTES Property - Tidelands The customary and traditional rights of municipalities, clans, families and individuals to engage in subsistence fishing, and to harvest fish and other living marine resources from reef areas are recognized, but a municipality is not directly entitled to compensation when resources in a particular reef area of Pohnpei are damaged. Thus, absent any damage to municipal property besides the reef itself or the living marine resources, the municipality is entitled only to that amount which Pohnpei appropriates to the municipality to compensate it for damage to its traditional subsistence fishing rights. Pohnpei v. KSVI No. 3, 10 FSM Intrm. 53, 60-61 (Pon.
    [Show full text]
  • Ismael Ahead in Kosrae; Killion Wins in Truk; Falcam Leads by 15 Votes
    FSM, China sign economic accord - Page 3 Peace Unity Liberty AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION FOR THE PEOPLE AND STATES OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA^ -Volume IX Kolonia, Pohnpei, March 15, 1987 Number 2 Ismael ahead in Kosrae; Killion wins in Truk; Falcam leads by 15 votes KOLONIA, Pohnpei - Two incum- served as the first FSM President dur- bent FSM Congress at-large members ing the past eight years, will step apparently lost their reelection bids and down when a new chief executive is in- Postmaster General Leo Falcam was augurated in May. winning in Pohnpei by 15 votes over Congress Floor Leader John Haglel- Vice President Bailey Olter in the gam, who ran unopposed in Yap, is March 3 final unofficial vote counts re- the only incumbent at-large senator ported by state election officials. scheduled to retain his seat in the Fifth The next President and Vice Presi- Congress. dent will be elected from among the Former FSM Senator Hiroshi Is- four at-large senators with four-year mael apparently defeated Congress terms by the Fifth FSM Congress aft- Vice Speaker Joab Sigrah in Kosrae in er it convenes here May 11. a rematch of their race in 1983 when Tosiwo Nakayama of Truk, who Ismael gave up a two-year seat to un- successfully challenge the at-large in- cumbent. Ismael received 715 votes; Sigrah, 654; former State Senator Don- ald Jonah, 440, and former State Sen- FALCAM CASTS BALLOT - FSM Post- ator Akira Tosie, 410. master General Leo A. Falcam is cast- FormerStateResources andDevelop- ing his ballot March 3 at the Awak Ele- ment Director Redley Killion was the mentary School, U Municipality.
    [Show full text]
  • Estados Federados De Micronesia
    MICRONESIA Julio 2003 ESTADOS FEDERADOS DE MICRONESIA 165 / 2003 ÍNDICE Pág. I. DATOS BÁSICOS . 1 II. DATOS HISTÓRICOS . 5 III. CONSTITUCIÓN Y GOBIERNO . 9 IV. RELACIONES CON ESPAÑA . 11 V. DATOS DE LA REPRESENTACIÓN ESPAÑOLA . 12 FUENTES DOCUMENTALES . 13 I. DATOS BÁSICOS Características Generales Nombre oficial: Estados Federados de Micronesia (Federated States of Micronesia-FSM). Superficie: 702 km². Población: 133.144 habitantes (2000). Capital: Palikir (en Pohnpei). Lenguas: Inglés (oficial), truqués, pohnpeiano, mortloqués, otras. Religiones: Católicos 50%, protestantes 48%, otras 2%. Sistema de gobierno: República. Moneda: Dólar de EE UU = 100 céntimos Bandera: De proporciones 9 por 10, consiste en cuatro estrellas blancas de cinco puntas, colocadas en círculo, sobre un fondo azul claro. Geografía: Junto con Palau, los Estados de la Micronesia forman el archipiélago de las islas Carolinas, aproximadamente 800 kilómetros al este de las Filipinas. Comprende 607 islas e incluye, de este a oeste: Yap, Chuuk (antes llamada Truk y que cambió su nombre en enero de 1990), Pohnpei (antes Ponape que cambió su nombre en noviembre de 1984), y Kosrae. Distribuido en un área de 2.500 km², el estado abarca una zona efectiva de 700 km², de los cuales más de la mitad correspon- den a la isla de Ponape. El relieve es montañoso. Las islas están sujetas a intensas precipitaciones, aun- que el régimen de lluvias va disminuyendo de este a oeste. Los tres primeros meses del año coinciden con – 1 – la estación más fría, aunque las temperaturas y las llu- vias experimentan pocas variaciones de una estación a otra. La media anual de temperatura es de 27ºC.
    [Show full text]
  • The Status of the Endemic Snails of the Genus Partula (Gastropoda: Partulidae) on Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia
    Micronesica 41(2):253–262, 2011 The status of the endemic snails of the genus Partula (Gastropoda: Partulidae) on Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia. Peltin Olter Pelep and Michael G. Hadfield Kewalo Marine Laboratory Pacific Biosciences Research Center; University of Hawaii at Manoa 41 Ahui Street; Honolulu, Hawaii 96813, USA Abstract—Approximately 21 terrestrial snail species are endemic to Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The only extensive sur- veys for terrestrial snails on the island were carried out by Y. Kondo in 1936. Subsequently, forests have been destroyed and non-native preda- tors have taken their toll on the gastropod fauna, and its current status is unknown. The present study focused on Partula guamensis and P. emersoni, two of approximately 120 species in the family Partulidae dis- persed across the tropical Pacific Islands. Over 40 different localities on Pohnpei were extensively searched between August 2005 and May 2006 and between May and July 2008 to assess the status of the two Partula species. The habitats searched were mixed agro-forest, disturbed forest, rain forest and cloud forest, ranging from sea level to the highest peaks and ridges on the island. No living partulid snails were found, and the only shells collected, those of Partula guamensis, were old and eroded. The absence of living partulid snails, once apparently very abundant, is a warning of the possible extinction of the entire terrestrial snail fauna of Pohnpei. Introduction The snail family Partulidae includes approximately 120 species scattered DFURVV WKH LVODQGV RI WKH WURSLFDO 3DFLILF 2FHDQ 7KH YDVW PDMRULW\ a IDOO within the genus Partula and are distributed from the Northern Mariana Islands and Palau, in the west, to the Society Islands in the eastern tropical Pacific (Cowie 1992).
    [Show full text]
  • Pohnpei FSM, Conservation Enforcement Training of Trainers
    Pohnpei FSM, Conservation Enforcement Training of Trainers And Annual MPA Cross site Gathering Sept. 27- Oct. 10, 2019 ___________________________________________________________________ Background Pohnpei in the Federated States of Micronesia has established a network of protected areas and annually the Conservation Society of Pohnpei (CSP) with other local partners facilitate a gathering of the local communities that manage these protected areas with the aim of sharing lessons learned from each community and developing work plans for the coming year. This year, the annual meeting was held at Nihco Marine Park from Sept. 27-28, 2019 and was hosted by the community of the Palikir Marine Protected Area (MPA). Palikir MPA is the most recent protected area to be legislated and added to the Pohnpei Network and by far the largest and most complex that includes mangroves, sea grass, patch reefs, inner reef, channel complexes and outer reefs. CSP requested follow up assistance from PIMPAC on conservation enforcement to support the community efforts in Pohnpei and Mr. Wayne Andrew was contracted to provide this assistance. This assistance was requested to be conducted after the Pohnpei annual cross site meeting to allow Mr. Andrew the opportunity to participate and share lessons learned in the annual cross site meeting and to work with community leaders to understand challenges in enforcement to guide the development of the enforcement training agenda for the week after the MPA meeting. The goal is to work with a group of community, municipal and state officers to form a team that can is confident and capable of delivering surveillance and enforcement training that can increase their capacity over time.
    [Show full text]
  • Telling Pacific Lives
    TELLING PACIFIC LIVES PRISMS OF PROCESS TELLING PACIFIC LIVES PRISMS OF PROCESS Brij V. Lal & Vicki Luker Editors Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/tpl_citation.html National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Title: Telling Pacific lives : prisms of process / editors, Vicki Luker ; Brij V. Lal. ISBN: 9781921313813 (pbk.) 9781921313820 (pdf) Notes: Includes index. Subjects: Islands of the Pacific--Biography. Islands of the Pacific--Anecdotes. Islands of the Pacific--Civilization. Islands of the Pacific--Social life and customs. Other Authors/Contributors: Luker, Vicki. Lal, Brij. Dewey Number: 990.0099 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design by Teresa Prowse Cover image: Choris, Louis, 1795-1828. Iles Radak [picture] [Paris : s.n., [1827] 1 print : lithograph, hand col.; 20.5 x 26 cm. nla.pic-an10412525 National Library of Australia Printed by University Printing Services, ANU This edition © 2008 ANU E Press Table of Contents Preface vii 1. Telling Pacic Lives: From Archetype to Icon, Niel Gunson 1 2. The Kila Wari Stories: Framing a Life and Preserving a Cosmology, Deborah Van Heekeren 15 3. From ‘My Story’ to ‘The Story of Myself’—Colonial Transformations of Personal Narratives among the Motu-Koita of Papua New Guinea, Michael Goddard 35 4. Mobility, Modernisation and Agency: The Life Story of John Kikang from Papua New Guinea, Wolfgang Kempf 51 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Federated States of Micronesia SBSAP
    Pohnpei State Biodiversity Strategic Action Plan September 2004 r-- Table of contents Acknowledgements 2 Acronyms 4 Introduction 5 Map of Pohnpei State (with Areas of Biodiversity Significance) .9 Mission, Vision, Strategic Goals and Actions 10 Monitoring and Evaluation . 18 Implementation .19 Financing .19 Signatures (state and municipal leaders) 21 Acknowledgements This Action (Implementation) Plan, together with the FSM National Strategic Action Plan (NBSAP), provides the framework for biodiversity conservation, resource, waste, pollution and energy management in Pohnpei State for the next five years and beyond. The plan is the result of numerous consultations over two years with input from national, state, local and resource agency/organization leaders and community representatives. This Plan includes the most relevant strategies goals and actions for Pohnpei State's priority areas in biodiversity conservation. resource. waste, pollution and energy management. The people listed below deserve special recognition for their exceptional dedication and contributions to this plan. With their exceptional knowledge and vast experience in the areas, we feel that this plan contains the state's highest priority and most relevant strategic goals and actions. Finally, this plan and the extensive efforts that went into its development were made possible by the generous financial support of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) through the United Nations Development Program (UNDP). Lt. Governor Jack E. Yakana Chairman, Pohnpei Resource Management Committee (PRMC) Consultant K_ostka, CSP Executive Director Advisory Team Jack E. Vakana, Pohnpei State Lt. Governor Youser Anson, DL&R Director Herson Anson, DL&R — DF Chief Bill Raynor, TNC Micronesia Program Director !limbers Adelino Lorens, SOEA DA Chief Kcnio Frank, Sapvvuahfik Chief Representative Ausen T.
    [Show full text]
  • 006, When I Arrived Jet Lagged and Unprepared for a Field Director Position with a Teaching Non-Profit Called Worldteach
    EATING EMPIRE, GOING LOCAL: FOOD, HEALTH, AND SOVEREIGNTY ON POHNPEI, 1899-1986 BY JOSH LEVY DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2018 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: Professor Frederick Hoxie, Chair Professor Vicente Diaz Professor David Hanlon Professor Kristin Hoganson Associate Professor Martin Manalansan ABSTRACT Eating Empire, Going Local centers the island of Pohnpei, Micronesia in a global story of colonial encounter and dietary change. It follows Pohnpeians and Pohnpei’s outer Islanders in their encounters with Spain, Germany, Japan, and the United States, negotiating, adapting to, and resisting empire through food and food production. In the process, Pohnpei extended food’s traditional role as locus of political influence and used it to navigate deceptively transformative interventions in ecology, consumption, the market, and the body. Food became Pohnpei’s middle ground, one that ultimately fostered a sharp rise in rates of non-communicable diseases like diabetes, heart disease, and hypertension. The chapters draw on global commodity histories that converge on the island, of coconuts, rice, imported foods, and breadfruit. These foods illuminate the local and global forces that have delivered public health impacts and new political entanglements to the island. Eating Empire uses food and the analytic lenses it enables – from ecology and race to domesticity and sovereignty – as a tool to reimagine Pohnpei’s historical inter-imperial and contemporary political relationships from the bottom up. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The first time I saw Pohnpei was in the summer of 2006, when I arrived jet lagged and unprepared for a field director position with a teaching non-profit called WorldTeach.
    [Show full text]
  • Media Release 27-2008
    Embassy of the United States of America Kolonia Public Affairs Section P.O. Box 1286 Kolonia, Pohnpei, FM 96941 Telephone: (691) 320-2187 Fax: (691) 320-2186 Email: [email protected] September 09, 2008 Media Release No. 27-2008 U.S. NAVY MEDICAL PERSONNEL TREAT OVER 3,500 IN POHNPEI During the week of August 18-23, a visiting team of 26 military professionals from the United States Naval Hospital Ship USNS Mercy treated 3,567 patients in Pohnpei. This remarkable number represents over ten percent of the main island’s total population. These patients received primary medical care, optometry, dental, pharmacy and physical therapy services during the clinics. Mercy dental professionals performed a total of 247 tooth extractions, 127 of these on adults and 120 of them on children. Mercy optical professionals treated 903 patients and distributed 759 pair of prescription reading glasses and 345 pair of sunglasses. Mercy pharmacists saw 2,414 patients and filled 4,673 prescriptions. Patients who were screened and found to be in need of more serious health treatment (such as medical, surgical or orthodontic procedures) were referred to the Pohnpei Department of Health Services for treatment. In addition to the health care services delivered, two biotechnicians from the Mercy team also repaired the following medical equipment at the Pohnpei State Hospital: one blood bank refrigerator, one blood unit collector, one x-ray machine, two pulse oxymeters, four dental curing light units, one dental chair, four portable dental units, one dental air compressor and one calposcope (used for cervical checkups). They also diagnosed malfunctions and recommended parts to be ordered to fix the hospital’s embalming machine, dialysis machine and three additional dental curing light units.
    [Show full text]
  • The National Union
    Independence Day Message ............ Page 4. THE NATIONAL UNION PEACE • UNITY • LIBERTY AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE PEOPLE OF FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA Volume 17 Palikir, Pohnpei, October-November 1996 Number 8 FSM Congress designates Vice President Acting President as Acting President of the FSM heads delegation to PALIKIR, Pohnpei (FSM one, was transmitted to Speaker Fritz Summit in Rome INFORMATION SERVICE) - The declaring that President Bailey Olter is Ninth FSM Congress in its Fourth presently unable to discharge the powers PALIKIR, Pohnpei (FSM Regular Session, on November 8,1996, and duties of his office. INFORMATION SERVICE) - Actjgg, adopted Congressional Resolution No. Congress Resolution No. 9-93, was President Jacob Nena, accompanied by 9-93, designating Vice President Jacob premised upon the declaration of no Mrs. Lerina Nena, led a high Jfv$l Nena as Acting President of the less than two-thirds of the Members of delegation from the Federated States of Federated States of Micronesia after a Congress and transmitted to the Speaker Micronesia to the first World Food Declaration signed by all members but (See ACTING PRESIDENT, Page 8) Summit (WFS) held in Rome, Italy, according to a release from the Permanent Mission of the FSM to the United Nations. The Summit-from 13to IVNovember 1996 - brought together Heads of State and Government and other world leaders at the Rome Headquarters of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). The objective of the Summit was to renew high-level commitment around the world to the eradication of hunger and malnutrition and to the achievement of lasting food security for all people.
    [Show full text]
  • Lessons from the Field
    Lessons from the Field The Traditional Monarch of Kitti in Pohnpei Addresses the High Rates of Non-Communicable Diseases through Local Policy Johnny Hadley, Jr. BA and Evonne Sablan MPA Abstract Pohnpeian high school students used cigarettes daily and 50.1% used smokeless tobacco.3 These unhealthy lifestyle practices Almost a quarter of Pohnpei’s population is overweight or obese, a major have led to high non-communicable disease (NCD) morbidity factor influencing a 2010 non-communicable diseases (NCD) emergency and mortality rates. In fact, the life expectancy in the FSM is declaration. The Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health (REACH) ten years less than in the US.5 project in Pohnpei is implementing a culturally tailored policy, systems, and environmental (PSE) intervention to reduce NCDs through healthy nutrition projects. Through collaboration with traditional leaders and using traditional The 2010 US Affiliated Pacific Islands health emergency protocols, REACH succeeded in soliciting formal approval from a Traditional declaration called for regional, national, and local agencies Monarch to serve only healthy beverages during events at all traditional houses to mobilize and respond to reduce the incidences of NCDs in in the municipality. The Governor, in turn, also supported this initiative. This the region.6 Due to the state of emergency, the Pohnpei State project cultivated relationships with traditional and government leaders to Department of Health Services (DHS) has worked on health implement a culturally appropriate healthy nutrition PSE change intervention. interventions that impact the Pohnpeian population. Previously, Pohnpei State DHS implemented public health and behavior Keywords change programs, such as health education campaigns and exercise programs, which targeted individual change and were Micronesia, Pacific Islander, traditional leaders, nutrition non-sustaining.
    [Show full text]