Not Again Vol 9 No. 12 December 2025 | An elusive project

Government Affairs

A ranking military official said Guam needs to build a new hospital that will serve both civilian and military communities, “especially in times of conflict or natural disasters where we need to readily have a structure that can address the challenges of mass casualties.”

“So, there is an agreement about the necessity of a new hospital; the current hospital cannot meet the demands,” Hung Cao, undersecretary of the Navy and senior military official in Guam, said after meeting with Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero during his visit in October.

Cao said financing will be the subject of negotiations and the question is, “Where will the funding come from and so forth?” It is an open-ended question.

On the home front, the governor’s plan to build a new medical campus in Mangilao is riddled with polarizing questions and legal challenges. There is a lingering debate over the hospital site. And there is a policy clash: should Guam build a new medical facility or invest in rehabilitating Guam Memorial Hospital?

Most recently, the proposed project hit a new snag when Superior Court Judge Elyze M. Iriarte struck down the Guam Housing and Urban Renewal Authority’s move to condemn the Mangilao properties designated as a hospital project site.

Iriarte pointed out that the proposal for the target land does not legally justify an exercise of eminent domain. She noted concerns, previously raised by other courts, that a grant of the power of eminent domain is one of the attributes of our law most fraught with the possibility of abuse and injustice.

The court’s decision subsequently prompted the 38th Guam Legislature to reject the governor’s proposed bill authorizing the Guam Power Authority and the Guam Waterworks Authority to spend Guam’s remaining $10 million in American Rescue Act funds to pay the development of utility infrastructure on the marked project site.

“Despite the continuous assertions coming out of Adelup, nothing is preventing the construction of a new hospital at a wide range of potential sites across our island,” Speaker Michael Baks Jr. said. “The narrative that only one site is feasible has now been thoroughly discredited by sworn testimony.”

Bais said the property acquisition “raises serious legal and procedural concerns about the entire effort undertaken by the governor’s office.”

Governor Leon Guerrero maintained that the administration “has done everything required—legally, procedurally, and in good faith. We answered the questions. We revised the bill. We complied with the law. But we cannot simply sit with silence.” She said choosing the best location for a new medical facility must be based on meritorious arguments processed by experts and the medical community—not political pressure.

“I don’t want to be bullied into supporting a bill that is less about life or power for the people of Mangilao and more about power to circumvent the review,” she said.

At Adelup, the governor slammed the legislature’s rejection of her bill. “When leaders refuse to act in a manner that demands action, when the courts delay over duty, when they stand still while the needs of the people grow—that is not oversight. That is abandonment. And that is what happened here,” she said. “Now we must fulfill their plan—their plan to save lives, their plan under federal rules, their plan to build the hospital they say they support.”

(Mar-Vic Cagurangan)