b) A recommendation that a referendum election be held on a given date, which date shall not be less than one year from the date on which the report is submitted "to enable the voters of the Virgin Islands to choose between the proposed [Compact of Federal Relations], statehood, independence, status quo or [other.] The referendum ballot shall be drafted in such manner that individual voters will be allowed to reject specific sections) of the proposed Compact while approving the basic document; and c) An outline of a program of public information and education to be undertaken by the Select Committee should its recommendations be approved by the Legislature of the Virgin Islands. In adopting Resolution No. 1132 the Fifteenth Legislature recognized that: The Virgin Islands, by the terms of the Revised Organic Act of 1954, as amended, are an unincorporated territory of the United States. In 1976 Congress authorized the people of the Virgin Islands to adopt their own constitution for local self-government but specified that any such constitution must be drafted "within the existing territorial-federal relationship." Two constitutions drafted in accordance with the 1976 congressional enabling act were rejected by Virgin Islands voters in 1979 and 1981, respectively. In 1982 the voters of the Virgin Islands determined by referendum that status and federal relations issues should be determined before another attempt is made to adopt a Virgin Islands constitution. The United States, as a charter member of the United Nations, is required to foster greater self-government and self- determination for the people of the Virgin Islands. The only real status choices under the U.S. Constitution are statehood, independence and territory (incorporated and unincorporated with varying degrees of internal self- government and economic benefits), and unless the Virgin Islands become a state of the United States or an independent nation, they will continue to be a territory of the United States.