COMPENSATION--LESS OR MORE DEPENDENCE AND DISRUPTION

In considering the case for compensation for the people of Ronselap
and Utirik, the Committee is aware of a fundamental concern.

This

concern is similar to the one which it entertains with respect to
increased medical attention to the people of Rongelap and Utirik,

Not

only would more frequent and more comprehensive examinations cause
more disruption of the island, but more frequent attention may also

have a negative effect by making the people worry more about their
future health,

In a similar fashion, compensation, while it may have its salutory
affects, may also have its negative influences.

In 1972, Dr. William

Peck, then Director of Health Services, voiced his concern about the
Rongelapese,

-

Dr, Peck had, in 1958, been an observer on Rongelap

during a series of nuclear tests.

Ile had also visited the island 10

years later in 1968, after the people had received compensation,

Ile had

noted that in 1958 the people still used canoes, and appeared to he
pretty much self-sufficient, but in 1968 he saw no more canoes and only
broken down outboard engines which apparently the people had purchased
with their compensation.

While their compensation may have contributed

to this decline in self-reliance (and for th: record, the Committee has
noted that there are many sailing canoes still in use by the people on

Utirik who received no compensation)--the same could also be said for
many islands in Micronesia during the same ten-year period,

It is

obvious that the shift from the use of canoes to outboard motors was a
general one and it is still taking place.

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