Pacific Island Times February 2019 Vol 3 No. 2 | Page 4
FROM THE PUBLISHER’S DESK
A breath of fresh air
T
ransparency,” “honesty” and “accountability”
are common ingredients of the political bal-
lyhoo often heard on the campaign trail. After
the elections, they are stashed back into the drawers of
hollow slogans that will be recycled in the next cam-
paign season. A policy of secrecy takes place in lieu of
the original campaign promise.
Publisher/Editor-in-Chief
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
[email protected]
Associate Editor
Bruce Lloyd
[email protected]
In Yap, by contrast, newly sworn-in Gov. Henry. Falan
and Lt. Gov. Jesse John Salalu surprised their constitu-
ents with their unprecedented acts of openness. Associate Editor (Pacific Note/Palau)
At their Jan. 14 inauguration, our Yap correspondent
Joyce McClure reported, Falan and Salalu received two
sparkling gift bags, one of which when opened revealed
a bottle of Chivas Regal and crisp $100 bills
amounting to $4,000. Salalu only received
the bottle of fancy scotch and 10 100s. Contributing Writers
Raquel Bagnol
Zaldy Dandan
Jayne Flores
Theodore Lewis
Diana Mendoza
Joseph Meyers
Jonathan Perez
Joy Santamarina
Johanna Salinas
“The team was elected on their platform of
transparency, honesty and accountability. Al-
though they expected to be confronted with
the prospect of this type of ‘persuasion’ since
foreign powers that are trying to establish
a foothold on the island are well known for
giving out envelopes of money freely, they
had pledged publicly to not accept outside
influence in any form,” McClure wrote in
an article published in our Jan. 21 online
edition. “Salalu pulled the bottles of liquor
and envelopes out of each one, fanning the bills to show
that they were indeed real. The audience sat mute. They
now had to decide what to do with the money and how
to let their constituents know about the attempt to buy
their influence.”
Falan and Salalu made it known that the Yap govern-
ment is not for sale.
Prior to the inauguration, Falan told the assembled
group of volunteers that a contingent of foreign investors
had been seeking to meet with him. One such group was
proposing to build a 100-room luxury resort in the center
of Colonia, a project which Falan learned had been
approved by the previous administration. No official
announcement has been made about such enormous proj-
ect which, like an urban legend, has been the subject of
public rumors and speculation for a long time.
Finally, Falan outed the Chinese developers. But the
Yap governor shunned the investors’ request for a private
meeting and instead insisted on introducing them to a
roomful of people.
4
Ongerung Kambes Kesolei
[email protected]
In a place where suspicious back-door
deals have been almost accepted as a tradi-
tion, the Falan administration promises to
lend credence and authenticity to the word
“transparency.” And Joyce McClure, our
intrepid correspondent, is there to update Yap
citizens.
* * *
In Guam, transparency, honesty and
accountability are the stuff of a myth. How
many people in government got away with
their public transgressions?
Local reporters who covered the previous
administration encountered many challenges
in doing their job. Phone calls were hardly ever returned.
Emails were never read. Questions posted on whatsapp
were ignored. By maintaining silence, they thought the
story would go away. FOIA is the journalists’ best friend.
Communications officials tried to deal with a PR crisis
by maligning the news organization that reported a story
they did not want anyone to read. Press releases were
centralized. Facts were given the Orwellian treatment,
manipulated as they saw fit. You must be obtuse to bite
every press release that came out of Adelup’s Depart-
ment of Propaganda. Just ask Troy Torres, the repentant
former press secretary.
With ace journalist Janela Carrera, former PNC news
director, now at the helm of Adelup’s communications
office, local reporters expect a better line of communi-
cation and straightforward answers to questions. As a
journalist, she was inquisitive, relentless and skeptical.
She is jumping on the other side of the fence, with her
ethics of truth-telling still fresh, and hopefully, will not
get stale.
Visual Editor
Mar-Vic Cagurangan
Sales and Marketing Executive
Jan SN Furukawa
[email protected]
Account Executive
Anna Marie Alegre
[email protected]
Administraitive Assistant
Lolita Therrel
[email protected]
***
Pacific Independent News Service LLC
Tumon Sands Plaza
1082 Pale San Vitores Rd.
Tumon Guam 96931
Telephone: (671) 929-4210
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.pacificislandtimes.com
The Pacific Island Times is published
monthly and circulated in Guam and
Palau by the Pacific Independent News
Service LLC. Editorial and advertising
submissions become property of the
Pacific Island Times and cannot be lifted
without consent of the publisher. Views
and opinions from contributors do not
necessarily represent the editorial position
of the Pacific Island Times.