rr
uch one flight

u, once a week
awa, and three
een Truk and

be increased as
conducting a
ing for eventual

sian employees
tions.

ur Micronesia’s
is tourism. The
hotel in each
ute to tourist

dvertising and

Passenger and
aircraft comnon-scheduled
d Saipan and

Land Transportation

Aviation Administration is now providing engineering assistance in a major
revampment of the Territory’s system.
Economic Opportunity agencies.
The new system, to be completed by
1970, will provide high speed multiRoads
channel radioteletype circuits and.
Roads in the Territory range from
multi-channel radiotelephone service
concrete and macadam in good condifrom Headquarters to outside points
tion to dirt roads whichare little more and from all districts to Headquarters,
than footpaths. Road maintenance is
as well as a commercial radiotelephone
difficult, especially on the highislands
circuit through a Saipan interconnect
where heavy rainfall washes out roadto RCA Guam and worldwide points.
beds. and limited budgets have made
Radioteletype now is available only
dilficult more than token upkeep on
between Truk and Saipan, the
rouds outside district centers. Limited
Marshalls and Saipan, and Saipan and
budgets have also kept road construcGuam; manual Morse code is used to
tion at a minimum, even though the
communicate with the other districts.
Administration considers roads imCommercial radiotelephone service is
portant links to the outlying villages in
available only between Saipan and
the islands where road networks are
Guam.
part in similar programs sponsored in

some districts by the U.S. Office of

Private bus companies operate in
Truk, the Marshalls, Palau, Ponape,
and the Marianas. The Saipan Bus
Company, the largest of these comPanies, operates a fleet of six modern
diesel-powered buses providing scheduled service to all points on the islan
d
and has a contract with the Government to provide a subsidy for student

transportation.

Individual participation in current
economic growth is seen in the
increased number of vehicles
in the
Territory. A breakdown ofth
e number of vehicles in the Terr
itory, by
type, for fiscal years 1965
through
1968 is shown below.

possible.

During the year, three Micronesians
on Government Scholarships
comUlithi, Palau, pleted a 3-month course
in automotive
repair at the East-West Center
in
Hawaii. The number of pers
onnel
coordination
studying automotive repair and rela
ted
1 Administra- fields will be
increased in 1969. Microprogram to
nesian personnel also take
part in
and ground on-the-job training prog
rams. This year
onal aids and SIX young men
studied new vehicle
°s in each assembly in the
central repair section
of Public Works and students
took

A designated road system exists
throughout the Territory. The construction and maintenance of primary
roads are the basic responsibility of
the Territory Government through the
District Administration. District governments are responsible for roads
designated as secondary, and municipal governments for local roads not
designated as either primary or secondary.
Communications

1965

1966

105
312
553
530

94
368
742
507

859
2,359

886
2,597

Number!

Major communications stations in

1967

1968

130
553
832
472

182
772
1,384
623

906
2,893

967
3,928

ed vehicles

cach

district center form a closely

integrated network, communicating
with each other and with outside
potnts

through

common

are

maintained

ters.

Each district station has facilities to
communicate with aircraft, shipping,
outer islands and point-to-point. All
maintain a 24-hour guard on a number
of frequencies including international
distress frequencies. Radio beacons are
a part of each station and furnish
navigational assistance to ships and
aircraft. VHF
transmitter/receiver
units provide interference-free trans-

radio-

missions with landing and departing
aircraft in al] districts.

between

Two-way, single-sideband, 100-watt
radio stations are now on 68 outer
islands throughout the Territory. All
major populated islands have now
been supplied with two-way radio
communications. About 75 shortrange “citizen band” stations are also
in operation. These provide intra-atoll

telegraph and radiotelephone networks. Twenty-four hour communicalions

Direct radiotelephone service is
available between Headquarters, the
Liaison Office in Guam, all district
centers, aircraft and ocean vessels. The
Liaison Office in Guam also has direct
radiotelephone service to district cen-

Headquarters and district centers
through a central receiving and transIttting station in Saipan.

_ Rapid expansion of activities in the
Territory has overtaxed the major
communications system. The Federal]
Fiscal Year 1968

Part VI~Economic Advanc
ement

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