More changes at the Red Cross in the Mariana Islands
Following the resignation of Chita A. Blaise, CEO of the American Red Cross in Guam, the organization is now seeking an executive director for the Guam Chapter.
The notice lays out the experience and qualifications required, the wide benefits offered and the salary band, which is between $67,000 and $73,000.
Chita A. Blaise speaks at the Red Ball on Sept. 27. Photo by Maureen N. Maratita
John Hirsh, the executive director for the Northern Mariana Islands chapter in Saipan, has left the NMI chapter.
The NMI chapter hosted its major annual fundraiser — the 35th Annual Walkathon in April last year — but did not do so this year. Previously, the NMI chapter hosted a “Club 200” fundraising dinner also, but the last such event was in November 2023, according to Journal files. Hirsh announced the two events would no longer be held, saying fundraising would “need to be in alignment with our national directives,” according to the Marianas Press, which first reported in February the popular events would no longer be held.
Hirsh said the Chapter would still do outreach and disaster preparedness.
Fundraising is typically part of any Red Cross executive’s job.
The American Red Cross funded about $13.1 million for Typhoon Mawar relief, after the typhoon hit Guam in May 2023. The funding provided 342,000 meals and snacks after Mawar and over 30,000 overnight stays for the 27,000 people who received support from the Red Cross after the disaster, according to Journal files. About $540,078 of the amount was raised in Guam.
The POWER-HDR JV of Hailey, Idaho, was awarded June 5 a $249 million “firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for architect-engineer services.”
West Virginia Attorney General John B. “JB” McCuskey is leading a coalition of 21 state AGs asking the Supreme Court of the United States to protect the right of states to manage their own environmental permitting.
The Guam Solid Waste Authority discontinued its bulky waste self-haul service at the Harmon, Agat, and Malojloj residential transfer stations effective June 1, officially reverting to an appointment-only curbside collection model.
The USS George Washington left its forward-deployed port of Yakuska in Japan on May 30 for its spring deployment on patrol in the Indo-Pacific, according to media reports.