Press Releases
The Office of the Attorney General advised that the importation and presence of Cannibidiol, commonly known as CBD, products is currently illegal and can't be imported or sold on Guam, according to a letter sent Monday from Lt. Gov. Joshua Tenorio to Leevin Camacho, Attorney General of Guam.
The Guam Customs and Quarantine Agency is seizing Cannibidiol, commonly known as CBD, products without due process, Congressman San Nicolas said in a release Sunday.
Congressman Michael San Nicolas wrote to the Director of Customs and Quarantine regarding the Agency’s withholding of Cannibidiol (CBD) products without due process.
Fresh from passage through its House natural resources committee mark-up hearing, H.R. 1365 introduced by Congressman Michael San Nicolas continues to get bi-partisan support, the latest of which comes from the Department of Interior.
Guam Delegate Michael San Nicolas is urging the Legislature to include language in the fiscal 2020 budget that protects health care appropriations.
Congressman Michael San Nicolas said he is working with fellow members of the House of Representatives on a bill that will extend Medicaid funding to 100 percent up to FY 2022, gradually returning to 55 percent in FY 2025.
Big Wall Street banks are on a mission to reverse a section of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill that requires them to post collateral when making internal derivatives transactions among their affiliates and subsidiaries.
Most pressing on the minds of most residents who participated in Del. Michael San Nicolas’ town hall Saturday was the status of war claims.
At 86 years old, World War II survivor Victoria Jugo says she's happy to see Guam prosper to what it is now, despite the horrors of her childhood years during the war.
"Different times. But I'm glad to see Guam then and now," the Mongmong resident said.
The secretary of the U.S. Department of Interior has endorsed passage of Guam Delegate Michael San Nicolas’ war claims correction bill.
On June 18, DOI Secretary Robert Bernhardt sent letters to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, urging both the House and Senate "to expedite its consideration and approval" of H.R. 1365.
