About Us

Mission Statement

The Guam Hydrologic Survey (GHS) and the Comprehensive Water Monitoring Program (CWMP) were created in 1998 by the 24th Guam Legislature under Public Laws No. 24-247 and 24-161, respectively. The Water and Environmental Research Institute (WERI) was charged with administering the annual legislative appropriations to drive these two programs and facilitate, direct, and implement their objectives. Both programs are now an integral component of water resources research, information dissemination, education and training on Guam.

Goals

The Guam Hydrologic Survey consolidates and archives new and historical hydrological data collected by local and federal government agencies and private consultants, and conducts research on water-related issues of local importance. GHS also funds a variety of water resource educational programs, including guest lectures and seminars at UOG and in the community, informational and training workshops for teachers and other professionals, field trips and talks for schoolchildren, and the publication and distribution of educational posters, maps, and fact sheets.

The CWMP was created to collect data on saltwater intrusion and water lens thickness in Guam’s northern aquifer, and stream flow for surface waters in the south. The program builds on studies previously undertaken by the US Geological Survey (USGS) that had been abandoned in the 1990s because of a discontinuance of matching funds from the Government of Guam. The CWMP annual appropriations from the Guam legislature restored the program in 1998 and since then have facilitated the collaborative reinstatement of these studies with USGS under their 50-50 Federal/State-Territory cost-sharing program for water resource monitoring.

The foresight of the Guam Legislature in creating these two very important programs deserves special mention here. With the continued support of the Legislature, we now maintain several vital water resources databases for Guam and collect essential water resource data in collaboration with the USGS. Our understanding of the complex physical, chemical and biological processes that influence Guam’s water resources has broadened considerably and the increase in graduate student research opportunities has substantially added to the number of highly trained water resources professionals in the island’s technical work force.

Funding

WERI’s core funding comes from two sources. The US Geological Survey’s (USGS) national Water Resources Research Act (WRRA) Program provides core federal funding to all 54 of the state and territorial institutes under section 104 of the national Water Resources Research of 1984. The “104b funding” supports program administration; information transfer; education, training, and outreach; and designated research projects for Guam, CNMI, and FSM. 
 
The second source of core funding is the Guam Legislature. In response to the severe stress on Guam’s water supply during the epic El Niño drought of 1998, the 24th Guam Legislature established the Guam Comprehensive Water Monitoring Program (CWMP) and Guam Hydrologic Survey (GHS) Program under Guam Public Laws 24-161 and 247, respectively. The CWMP program retains services of the USGS Pacific Islands Water Science Center (PIWSC) to collect and archive data on Guam’s surface and groundwater supplies under the USGS’s National Streamflow and Groundwater Information Program, which provides additional federal funding for part of the cost of the data collection activities. The GHS program archives the CWMP data in the GHS Database, makes it accessible on the GHS Website, and supports routine analyses and reports, standing research, education, and outreach programs, and annually designated research projects. 
 
In the coming year, which will see the implementation of the One-Guam Water Resources Information Program (OGWRIP) established under the December 6, 2016, JMR/NFM-CCU/GWA Memorandum of Understanding, Guam Waterworks Authority (GWA) and Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command Marianas (NFM) will also share in the core funding of the CWMP and GHS programs.

The Guam Hydrologic Survey and Comprehensive Water Monitoring Program (GHS and CWMP), Guam Public Laws  24-247 and 24-161, respectively, were established to develop an inter-agency cooperation for gathering and publicly providing water and environmental information. The ultimate goal is to support our quest of determining sustainable development and management of our island’s most valuable renewable resource, water. The mandate intent is to form a network that will help us improve our understanding of our water resources through data collection, analysis, interpretation, recommendations, reports, and presentation in all efforts to determine its optimum development for sustainable utility. GHS and CWMP contains the island’s collection of water resource and related hydrologic and environmental information by way of an organized online database system. Read more >>

Get the PDFs

Water and Environmental Research Institute of the Western Pacific (WERI)University of Guam (UOG), is charged with administering the GHS and CWMP. Annual reports are prepared for the years: 

FY1998 Jenson and Jocson (1998) Hydrologic Data Collection on Guam: FY1998 Report, Technical Report No. 83
FY2019 · FY2018 · FY2017 · FY2016 · FY2015 · FY2014 · FY2013 · FY2012 · FY2011 · FY2010 · FY2009 · FY2008 · FY2007 · FY2006 · FY2005 

WERI Publications, Conferences, Products, Presentations, and GHS sponsored research products – annual listing, 2020-1998.

WERI is also a member of the local water resource interagency organization called the Technical Experts Group (TEG) and the Groundwater Resource Development Group (GWRDG) establish by the 16 July 2010 Memorandum of Understanding between the US Navy and Guam Waterworks Authority (Appendix I). The MOU provides an additional venue for meeting the GHS and CWMP mandates to “establish a direct working relationship with each organization collecting hydrologic data important to Guam, and maintain a permanent flow of new data from each organization to keep the data library up to date.”

Local and federal agencies that are party to or affected by the MOU include Guam Waterworks Authority, Guam Environmental Protection Agency, CUC, US Navy (NAVFACMAR), USAF (36 CES), and USGS. Interagency groups also include private consultants: Duenas Camacho and Associates, Allied Pacific Environmental Consultant (APEC), EA Engineering, Brown and Caldwell, and AECOM.

Meetings are organized and held quarterly at Guam Waterworks Authority (Gloria B. Nelson Public Service Building), Fadian. Current discussion is the expansion of monitoring (observation) wells, see details in CWMP Research Projects section. The interagency group organization, formed of three groups: executive, working, working group, and the technical team (See the GHS and GWRDG organization chart).

The inter-agency group meets quarterly to discuss concerns, pool resources, share ideas, provide update, consult, and gain professional acquaintance and partnerships. Here is a list of agencies in attendance:

Government of Guam

US - Federal

Private Sector

Guam Water Resources Technical Experts Operating Charter (near final draft)

The Guam Water Resources Technical Experts plan and cooperate towards the best technical solutions and advice in support of sustainable development and management (See Draft of the GWRTE Operating Charter >>).

The operating charter includes the following agencies:

  • Guam Waterworks Authority
  • Guam Environmental Protection Agency
  • Guam Department of Public Works
  • Water and Environmental Research Institute of the Western Pacific
  • Department of Navy, Naval Facilities Engineering Command Marianas
  • United States Geological Survey

GWA and WERI

GWA and WERI have a great interagency partnership for more than several decades now. We continue to work together and have formed an agreement to expand the Northern Guam Lens Aquifer (NGLA).

GEPA and WERI

WERI and GEPA also have a long history of cooperative partnership through research projects (e.g. GWUDI determination, septic tank survey…), data contribution, water quality lab, scientific advise and recommendations, and field surveys. A memorandum of understanding has been discussed and a document similar to GWA-WERI MOA is in the works and will be done soon.

Meet the Team

Web Development

Modeling

Nitrates

Product Development

Information Management

Water Use

Wastewater Treatment

Chlorides

Water Production

Mapping

Web Development

Modeling

Nitrates

Product Development

Information Management

Water Use

Wastewater Treatment

Chlorides

Water Production

Mapping

Dannika Kate ValerioOnline Information Manager
Mary Clare SnaerDigital Assistant
Sydney QuintanillaDigital Assistant
Dr. Nathan HabanaAdvisor | Operations Manager (2016-2022), Information Manager (2016-2022)
Atasha BautistaResearch Assistant II Groundwater Modeling
Jovic CaasiResearch Assistant II Groundwater Modeling

Past Contributors

Matt Wilson Zapata
Matt Wilson ZapataGHS Information Management Team Member | Digital Assistant | Web Developer
B.S. Computer Science, University of Guam
WERI, University of Guam

Mr. Zapata was a member of the GHS Information Management team as a digital assistant. In his role, he worked with the team to organize and manage hydrologic data online. He was also involved in the development of WERI’s MAppFx projects, a series of web apps that allows users to interact with a map and visualize historical data through graphs of the survey points.
Kaylyn K. Bautista
Kaylyn K. BautistaGHS Product Development & Comprehensive Water Monitoring Program | Monitoring System Expansion Rehabilitation Program (MSERP)
M.S. Environmental Science, University of Guam - Presidential Thesis Award Recipient
WERI, University of Guam

Ms. Bautista worked with the WERI Director to organize information for reports and presentations. She assisted in observation well field data collection and for the preparation of the seven new deep observation wells to be installed in military property, MSERP. She was also involved in the map analysis of the Guam coastal discharge project for NASA.
Glen Aguilar
Glen AguilarGHS Web Developer
B.S. Chemistry, University of Guam WERI, University of Guam
Matt Ziobro
Matt ZiobroGHS Web Developer
WERI, University of Guam
Barry (Yong Sang) Kim, PhD
Barry (Yong Sang) Kim, PhDCo-Operations Manager
PhD, Civil Engineering, Purdue University
Assistant Professor of Water Engineering, WERI, University of Guam

Dr. Kim was the GHS Program’s Research Affiliate at WERI. In transition to WERI Faculty, Dr. Kim continues to advise in the GHS operations. His on-going research projects are the lessons learned in the well rehabilitation, Guam’s Water-Use Data Research (WUDR) Program (USGS), and investigation of PFAS sources.
Ross H. Miller, PhD
Ross H. Miller, PhDWERI Interim Director (2022-2023)
John W. Jenson, PhD
John W. Jenson, PhDWERI Directory (2016-2022)

GHS Information Management Team Member – Digital Assistant – Web Developer 

B.S. Computer Science, University of Guam 

WERI, University of Guam

GHS Product Development & Comprehensive Water Monitoring Program (CWMP) – Monitoring System Expansion Rehabilitation Program (MSERP) 

M.S. Environmental Science – Presidential Thesis Award Recipient, University of Guam 

GHS Web Developer 

B.S. Chemistry, University of Guam 

WERI, University of Guam 

GHS Web Developer 

WERI, University of Guam 

Co-Operations Manager 

PhD, Civil Engineering, Purdue University 

Assistant Professor of Water Engineering, WERI, University of Guam 

Entomologist 

WERI Interim Director: 2022 – 2023 

Hydrogeologist 

WERI Directory: 2016 – 2022

Appreciation & Recognition

More Than 20 Years Ago Today - 1998

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34th Guam Legislature

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University of Guam's Good to Great (G2G)

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GHS UOG Student Success

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Outreach Efforts

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