Senator Therese Terlaje seeks to expand Chamorro Land Trust program for descendants of those whose ownership or use of land on Guam was unjustly disrupted by land takings

 FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE (October 12, 2020- Hagåtña, Guam) 

On Friday, Senator Therese Terlaje, Chair for the Committee on Land, introduced Bill No. 419-35, an Act relative to preserving the land restoration and justice mission of the CHamoru Land Trust.

The changes to the Chamorro Land Trust Act proposed in the bill are intended to more clearly demonstrate that the Chamorro Land Trust program is a land restoration program meant to rectify the unjust taking of Chamorro homelands by the United States federal government between 1898 and 1968, and would expand the program’s eligible beneficiaries to include individuals and their descendants who owned or who ranched, farmed or otherwise occupied the lands that were taken.

“We have seen firsthand the impact of the massive land takings on Guam’s families, too many who live in poverty over eight decades later, without a stable place to live, and their ability to use the land to provide for their families severely disrupted.  It took years of vision, courage, advocacy, protests, and even lawsuits to get where we are today and in honor of those who preserved these rights for us, we must never stop fighting for, protecting, and expanding the potential of this land and its precious resources to nurture and sustain future generations  It is our duty as lawmakers to safeguard the land restoration mission of the Trust, to protect the Trust from being raided by special interests; to manage the Trust better and make it more conducive to thriving residences, agriculture, and cottage industries; and to carry these homeland programs into perpetuity for future generations, so that we truly remedy the long-term injustice of massive land takings,” said Senator Therese Terlaje.

The Chamorro Land Trust law was authored by then Senator Paul Bordallo and passed by the 12th Guam Legislature in 1975.   No Governor appointed members to the Commission, until protests, a campout, and a lawsuit brought by Attorneys Mike Phillips, Mike Bordallo, and Therese Terlaje on behalf of the Nasion Chamoru, led by Angel Santos and Ed Benavente, ordered Governor Joseph Ada to appoint the first Commission in 1992.  The rules and regulations were authored by then Senator Angel Santos and enacted by the 23rd Guam Legislature.  This bill recognizes the land use history of the people of Guam and will expand residential and agricultural leases to those individuals and their descendants whose use of land on Guam was disrupted due to land takings.