Opinion

Pohnpei’s new “government” website—a work in progress

“Welcome to the Official Website of Pohnpei State Government,” the home page of the website at www.pohnpeimet.fm says. The website was published to the international web community on July 5, 2010, according to Pohnpei State Public Affairs Officer Heinrick Stevenson. At the top of the screen, the words, “Peace, Unity, Transparency” and “Accountability” float by one at a time from left to right before they fade away, superimposed over the word,“Kaselehlie,” the beautiful and meaning filled greeting so often taken for granted by many of us who use it. Though the website has been published for the world to see, it’s obvious that it is a work still in progress. The home page of the new website, along with several others pages doesn’t quite fit horizontally on a computer screen. The drop-down headings don’t fit in their spaces. Neither do the menus below the headings. Additionally, the website isn’t, in the fullest interpretation of what the word “government” means in FSM, the official website of the “Pohnpei State Government” since only the Executive Branch is represented. “The website is designed primarily to inform and to share with the people of Pohnpei and the general public true and realistic information concerning what the government (executive branch) is doing, and at the same time to seek public input and guidance on how best we can improve delivery of public services to those that we serve,” says the message written by Pohnpei State’s Governor John Ehsa which dominates the home page. Under the heading of “Latest News” on the home page are the words, “Welcome Governor Ehsa from your trip from South Korea,” followed by the words writ in blue, “Contact us…” At least in its start up phase the website doesn’t have a great deal to offer yet and though “contact,” as Governor Ehsa said in his message, is the purpose for the site it is also a missing component. While every page has an alluring blue lettered, “Contact Us,” clickable link, the link doesn’t work. I clicked the blue letters, filled in the requested information boxes including my name and email address and wrote a fairly long comment in the box provided for that purpose and clicked submit. The next page that came up said, “The contact form you are testing needs to be setup.” Apparently, the Allwebco template hasn’t actually been finished by the designer of the website so no contact can yet be made by the website without sending an email by other means. I clicked the link that said This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it under the heading “email us” and the email address that popped up in my Outlook Express page showed the address This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Two days after writing to that email address there still has not been a response, which, I suppose is not too surprising given that there currently is little to no Internet access in the new Pohnpei State Government Complex. Indeed, the spreadsheet formatted page that represents the Executive Directory lists the names of some of the people working at the top levels of government but contained absolutely no information as to how to contact them. Though the spread sheet implies that there should be, there are no recorded fax numbers, no home, cell or office phone numbers and, not a single email address. News is currently scant on the new website. At press time one could find out which four bills were signed by Governor Ehsa last month but you can’t read the bills. Some websites carry disclaimers and the new Pohnpei State website is no exception, “Any person who intends to use the information is hereby advised to confirm its accuracy with Pohnpei State Office of the Governor or the party to which the information is related, before acting on that information.” I suppose that this means that whoever the webmaster is has carte blanche to post whatever he or she wants to post without having to worry too terribly much as to whether it’s accurate. It’s probably not what they meant but that was my immediate knee jerk interpretation. Under the heading “Pohnpei Met” are the following words: “Our objective is to provide a better life for our people, to live in a healthy environment and to live a long prosperous lives in Pohnpei.” There is a box devoted to “What's New in Pohnpei,” that takes up a good portion of the left side of the computer screen. The box below it says, “Click on the resources links in this website to find out more about opportunities, programs, projects and much more here in Pohnpei State.” Why not leave those boxes out and save the screen space? Having said all of these things, the Governor’s office is to be congratulated for making the effort to have a new website. It seems like a natural thing to do since so many Pohnpeians rely on the Internet to get news about goings on their homeland. With the arrival of high speed communications in the FSM more and more Pohnpeians who still live here are connecting to the Internet for information. I applaud the Governor’s office for making this effort and look forward to great improvements in the site in days to come. The website is miles better than the non-existent one that was available a few days ago. It’s been a long time since the Pohnpei Governor’s Office has had a website. Former Governor Johnny David had one that can still be found online at www.fm/PohnpeiGov. The date of the last press release on that site was 2006. The Pohnpei Legislature has a website (www.fm/PohnpeiLeg) as well but until today I had no idea that its use had been diverted for use by the now adjourned Second Pohnpei Constitutional Convention that began in 2009. Before that time the last update of the Pohnpei Legislature website had been in 2005 as far as I could see. The Kosrae Legislature has a website (http://www.kosraelegislature.org/) but I didn’t see any updates on that site more recent than 2008. I did see a notice on the site saying that due to staff shortages the Kosrae legislature was behind in its updates of bills and other information. “We expect to have everything back to normal shortly,” the webpage says. Apparently that function is the responsibility of John McKenzie, who as the Attorney for Kosrae’s Legislature must be up to his neck in paperwork and has very little if any support staff. I couldn’t find a website for the Kosrae Governor’s office. I also could find no governmental websites for Chuuk State. By far, the most up to date and best produced State website I found for the FSM was the Yap State Government page (www.yapstategov.org.) It takes a while to load up on a dial up line but the information in it is practically up to the minute. Every link in it works. I was able to sign up for a daily news update from Yap State Government. Immediately after signing up I checked my email and there was a welcome message for the service for which I’d just signed up. Larry Raigetal, who is in charge of Yap’s Department of Youth and Civic Affairs said that the website was started two years ago, using Compact Capacity Building Sector Grant money for the startup. Garrett Johnson serves as the webmaster for the site. Though the Yap webpage has a disclaimer similar to the one on Pohnpei’s website I was able to find out how to apply for a foreign investment permit something that isn’t on the Pohnpei State website. The only mention of Foreign Investment on Pohnpei’s site is an incomplete sentence. It would be petty to overly criticize a startup website because of typos or grammatical errors so I won’t do it. I did, however, find the description of Pohnpei’s economy to be quite informative even if I didn’t really quite understand what was being said despite having lived here for nearly 10 years. “Pohnpei has a typical mixed economy consisting mostly of government, households and businesses. The economy can best be described as a blend of subsistence and economic dependency.” Perhaps in time, the Pohnpei Governor’s site will be just as good as Yap’s. They might have waited to release the site until it was fully functional but they didn’t choose to do so. But then, there is a website and that’s a very good start.

 
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Some State Police Officers say ignorance made their jobs tougher PDF Print E-mail
Written by Bill Jaynes   
Thursday, 21 January 2010
Some members of the Pohnpei State Police department have said that the law passed by the State Legislature to partially lift the ban on alcohol sales during the holidays has made their job tougher.

While interviewing two police officers about the facts of the two murders that occurred over the holiday season I asked if they had noticed any difference between the rate of this year’s holiday alcohol related violence and that of last year’s when there was an alcohol sales ban over the holidays.  Their reaction was emphatic.  “Definitely, this year is much worse,” said Officer Kasner Aldens.  “You’re right.  This is Pohnpei not New York City.  We don’t have murders here but there were two this month.”

Captain Cerley Araceley, Pohnpei State Police’s Captain of the Detectives didn’t show for a 9:00 in the morning appointment with The Kaselehlie Press to discuss those murders.  I was told that he had worked extremely late the night before and was asked to come back in an hour.  When Captain Araceley did arrive he told me that he had been at the hospital with a stabbing victim the night before.  Yet another alcohol related violent act.  It was certainly an excellent excuse for missing the earlier appointment and I bore him no ill will.

On New Year’s Day the day shift commander of the Pohnpei State Police said that overnight there had been a number of incidents of alcohol related fighting and drunken disorderly conduct.  And yes, he agreed, it was probably tougher this year than last.

Three days before deadline I asked the Director of the Department of Public Safety if he could provide statistics on the crime rate during Christmas Eve and Christmas Day this year as compared to last year.  He either forgot or was diverted by other more urgent matters and those statistics never arrived.

Anecdotally however, all of the officers I spoke to agreed that part of the problem was a misunderstanding of the new law by business people in Pohnpei.  Several store owners on island apparently thought that the ban on alcohol sales had been lifted entirely when in fact there was still an island wide ban on the sale of alcohol for off premises consumption.  Even some store owners who previously would never have considered selling alcohol before 10:00 in the morning which, until the law was amended they were prohibited from doing, sold alcohol on Christmas Eve and Christmas day.  At least some of those store owners apparently now know what the law says and put signs up in their stores saying that carryout sales of alcohol are prohibited on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

But other store owners still hadn’t gotten the message.  Maybe it was because they didn’t know what the new law said or they simply chose to ignore it. 

While driving past one major grocery store on that day I saw three people loading three separate cases of beer into three separate vehicles.  It was the second time I had passed the store on that day but the first time I only saw one man loading a case of beer into a taxi and another walking out the door with a six pack.

While it was true that the Legislature did pass the law quite late in the year it also seems that very little was done to educate the business owners about what their amendments meant to the conduct of their holiday business.

However, The Kaselehlie Press ran a page two article about the law in the December 9, 2009 issue but apparently even some of the store owners who sell the newspaper sold alcohol on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.  The headline was in no way misleading.  It said, “Pohnpei lawmakers PARTIALLY lift holiday ban on alcohol sales.”  It then went on to list the details of the law which were really not that hard to understand.

In a nut shell, no one anywhere on the island was authorized on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve, or New Year ’s Day to sell alcohol to anyone for the purposes of carry out consumption.

The law had several other provisions and changes that my article also discussed which might have been a bit harder to understand but the basic fact of the ban of alcohol sales for off premises consumption on holiday ban days was pretty stinkin’ clear.

See, this is where I get to say that I personally think that if alcohol is legal to sell on one day of the year it should probably be available for sale on all days of the year including the days that people most want to make merry.  Of course, that thinking is a bit flawed because while some people do in fact get merry after a few drinks some of them turn into raging lunatics.

I know that the ban this New Year caused me personally to buy more than I ever do at one time just in case; actually, two cases if the truth be known.  I may have been alone in that reaction but I somehow seriously doubt it.  I know that many people in Pohnpei don’t plan ahead in that way so perhaps my reaction was not a system wide reaction and therefore probably doesn’t serve as a good example of why I think the law is basically flawed and actually encourages over consumption.

BUT, it doesn’t matter what I think.  The Pohnpei Legislature amended the alcohol law.  We ran a prominent story about it even if it did take two weeks to get the Legislature to give us a copy of it so that we could do so.  Information was out there even if it was scant and unless I’ve missed my guess, ignorance of the law is not allowable as a defense.  I mean you can’t say, “Honestly, officer I didn’t know that it was illegal to smack John Doe over the head with a bat.”  Would we really expect the law enforcement community to say, “Oh you didn’t?  Well that’s just fine then.  Now you know.  Don’t do it again.” 

Civil disobedience by ignoring the law and doing whatever we darn well please is still punishable under the law and actually is usually the point of civil disobedience

I asked the Pohnpei Detectives if they knew what kind of alcohol Mariano John and Brian Edwin who are charged with the Christmas murder of Erlino Remei were drinking.  They didn’t know.  I asked them if they had discovered which store sold them the alcohol and when they had purchased it.  They didn’t know that either.

I’m only guessing based on nine years of living here but I would almost bet that they bought the alcohol during the alcohol sale ban days because that’s often the way it goes here.  I can’t help but wonder then if the store owner who made that sale, if in fact it was illegal, feels any sense of remorse whatsoever.  I also wonder if the store owner should be held culpable for selling the alcohol that seems to have led to murder; if not criminally so perhaps at least civilly.

We should all be responsible for acts; responsible to ourselves and also responsible to each other.

Well enough of that.  Happy New Year to you all!  I truly hope that yours is a good year!

Bill Jaynes
Managing Editor

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 03 March 2010 )
 
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