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MOST people will
not be averse to a private-run hospital and thats what the polls
show. But the question that should be asked is what will GMH look like
with a private hospital that has everything going for it?
GMH is the only hospital now and it is severely underfunded and undermanned!
The latest P.R. news out of GMH is a media blitz by the administration
to make the case for a privately-run hospital to show the community that
it is not that bad at GMH.
It is like asking people if they would like to see privately-run schools
besides the GPSS-administered schools? Of course, there is a market for
it when the better off and little-but better off folks will send their
kids there as they perceive it to be safer, cleaner, and therefore a better
end product, i.e., their children will emerge. And what is the state of
GPSS now?
Keep in mind that there is a vast underclass on Guam, some local, some
new immigrants from the outer islands. You can look at the kids that emerge
from the buses in any village and you can immediately see that they are
many of our Micronesian brothers and sisters kids. Dont you
think more will come with the Every Child is ENTITLED to An Adequate
Education Act set to take effect a few months away?
While most of their parents are working, they are working, like many of
their counterparts, in low-paying jobs and therefore pay little to no
taxes. At the same time, if you go to DPHSS, you will see at the welfare
line a good number of Micronesian (and others as well) women living up
to get a benefit. This is the anecdotal experience Chamorros and others
see (especially poorer folks) and it creates angst in the community as
Ben Meno articulates on Newstalk K-57. It might be time to do another
study to see the societal impact cost after 20 years of the Compact of
Free Association that was passed in 86. The Interior has funded
the first of several when they funneled money to the Bureau of Planning
which subcontracted the university and those studies are still there in
the archives. The chief investigator was UOG Psychology Prof. Dr. Kyle
Smith, who is still with UOG.
Is our current hospital going to be like an inner-city hospital in the
States, neglected even more so (and eventually shut down) like what GPSS
looks now?
MATT PHILIPS
Mangilao, Guam
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