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Chalan-Pago-Ordot, Guam

Chalan Pago-Ordot
Chalan Pågu-Otdot
Village
Location of Chalan Pago-Ordot within the Territory of Guam.
Location of Chalan Pago-Ordot within the Territory of Guam.
Country United States
Territory Guam
Government
 • Mayor Jessy "Jess" Cruz Gogue (D)
Population (2010)
 • Total 6,822
 • Ethnic groups (as of 2,000) 90% Chamorro, Micronesian
Time zone ChST
Village Flower Pink Catharanthus roseus / Chichirica
Hibiscus tiliaceus / Pago

Chalan Pago-Ordot (Chamorro: Chalan Pågu-Otdot) is a municipality in the United States territory of Guam, containing the villages of Chalan-Pago and Ordot. It is located in the eastern-central part of the island and is part of the Kattan (Eastern) District. The village's population has increased slightly following the island's 2000 census.

Pågu is the Chamorro word for the wild tree Hibiscus tiliaceus, while "chalan"' means "road". The name Chalan Pago is named after the path from Hagåtña to the Spanish village at Pago Bay. Ordot comes from the word otdot, or ant.

In World War II, the Japanese used the area as a supply depot during their occupation of the island. Ordot is also the site of the controversial Ordot Landfill, first constructed by the U.S. Navy, but now full and in violation of United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations.

The Guam Public School System serves the island.

Ordot/Chalan Pago Elementary School and Agueda Johnston Middle School are located in Chalan-Pago-Ordot. Johnston is located in Ordot; originally it was named George Washington Junior High School.George Washington High School in Mangilao serves the village as a secondary school.

St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic High School also serves residents of the area.

Agueda Johnston Middle School

Lt. Lisa Braun of U.S. Naval Hospital Guam, hands a toy to a Chalan Pago-Ordot child displaced following Super Typhoon Pongsona during a Christmas holiday event held for the children


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