Saturday, September 29, 2012
Friday, September 28, 2012
Musings: Politics of Pesticides
A
moon, full tomorrow, struggled to be seen through rain that fell all
night and was still falling faint as mist this morning when the dogs
and I went walking beneath a sky that was all charcoal and hot pink,
like the smoldering remnants of a celestial campfire.
A
long-smoldering political issue is beginning to flare, and that's the
island-wide use of pesticides, particularly in the genetically
modified (GM) crops now being grown from Lihue to Mana. The topics
are linked, because most, if not all, of the GM crops grown here are
designed to withstand direct applications of herbicides manufactured
by chemical companies like Dupont, Dow, Syngenta, Monsanto, Bayer
and BASF, which have bought up most of the seed companies around the
world.
Gary
Hooser, the former state Senator who is seeking a return to the
County Council, is putting the pesticide issue at the forefront of
his campaign. He'll be on my favorite KKCR radio show, “Pets,
People and Paradise,” from 9 to 10 a.m. tomorrow (Saturday). You
can listen live here.
Dr.
Ihor Basko, the holistic veterinarian who hosts the show, has been
researching pesticides and their effects on human and animal health
for decades. He's come up with a lot of good questions for Gary:
We
know that GM crops require more herbicides and pesticides; how many
gallons per acre? Which ones specifically? Who is checking the water
pollution from GM farms? Run off into the ocean? What are the
results? What’s happening with GM farming impacts on our Island:
air, water, soil quality? What
happens to the stalks and leaves of the GM corn when it’s
harvested? What evidence do we have that what they are growing on
Kauai is not harmful to our population or its livestock ……in the
long run? How will GM growers keep their pollen from infecting
organic crops? Why is tampering with GM crops a felony? How much is
Syngenta paying to lease the land? Folks may not realize that a lot
of state land — actually, Hawaiian crown lands — is being leased
to the seed companies.
And
here's the million-dollar question:
How
does eating GM food affect future generations? Epigenics and
Nutrigenomics are terms referring to eating food that will change
your DNA and potentially……future generations.
Gary
likely won't be able to answer all these questions, since some are
still the subject of hot debate among scientists, such as a French study suggesting a link between Monsanto's Roundup Ready corn and
breast cancer, liver and kidney damage.
The study, published in the peer-reviewed
journal “Food and Chemical Toxicology,”
prompted Russia to suspend the import and use of that product.
We're
also still learning about some of the longterm effects from GM ag:
A
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientist visiting Australia has
warned that, "After 16 years of Roundup Ready crops,
particularly corn and soybeans, researchers
are now detecting glyphosate in the soil and run off water in the
Midwest of the US," USDA
microbiologist Bob Kremer said. Dr Kremer said researchers had
detected an increase in the fungus fusarium on the roots of plants
that had been recently sprayed with glyphosate. "So far we
haven't seen that develop into a plant disease but the potential is
there," he said.
Of
course, the GM seed companies aren't the only ones applying Roundup. The
state and county spray it along roadsides and in parks, and it's
ubiquitous in the manicured resorts and and golf courses of our
number one industry. Lots of homeowners use it, too. In short,
little Kauai is getting heavy doses daily.
There's
a lot that can be done to control and monitor pesticide use on the local level if we elect a receptive
County Council. Then perhaps they can help influence our state
legislators, who are presently pretty much controlled by the biotech
seed/chemical companies.
It's especially crucial now as Dow is seeking approval for a GM corn seed that can handle heavy sprayings of 2,4-D, an ingredient in Agent Orange. It seems they keep having to up the ante with more toxic chemicals because “super weeds and insects” have developed tolerance to Roundup.
And since Kauai is a major test site, it's not far-fetched to think one of the tests is just how much you can dose the plants with these proprietary chemical cocktails before they croak.
So
where do the Council candidates stand on GMOs, and their associated
pesticide use? As The Garden Island reported from Monday
night's forum in Waimea:
Council
Vice Chair JoAnn Yukimura said she supports labeling products that
contain Genetically Modified Organisms. She called for neutral
research and controlled use of pesticides and herbicides. She also
said the state should not give priority to GMO companies to lease
state lands.
Councilman
Mel Rapozo said GMO is responsible for saving many countries from
starvation. The GMO companies have provided economic stimulation, and
no studies have convinced him whether such products are unsafe, he
said.
Candidate
Ross Kagawa said the GMO industry created a lot of jobs when the
sugar industry went down. But he also said more research is needed,
and when it comes to making a decision, the people’s safety comes
before providing jobs.
Councilman
Dickie Chang suggested a forum with experts from both sides of the
issue.
Candidate
Gary Hooser said he supports labeling GMOs, an issue raised in every
community. You can argue about GMOs, he said, but you can’t argue
about pesticides going into the soil and water.
Councilman
KipuKai Kuali‘i said it’s the government’s job to protect the
people, who have a right to know what is in their food.
Council
Chair Jay Furfaro said he is looking for some state leadership on the
issue. He said he voted “no” on genetically modifying kalo,
because it’s an important part of Polynesian culture.
Councilwoman
Nadine Nakamura said the government needs to identify areas where GMO
industry is impacting children.
Councilman
Tim Bynum said it’s very clear GMOs should be labeled, but those
are state and federal issues. The right to know is really important,
he said.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Musings: Terrible Words
“Look, Sheila, get one rice cooker,”
county planning inspector Patrick Henriques said as he peered through
a gap in the drapes that covered a sliding glass door at Councilman
Tim Bynum's house.
His boss, planning supervisor Sheila
Miyake, looked, too, and saw a refrigerator: “That, to me, is an
installed appliance.” Patrick pressed his camera up to the glass
and took pictures of the room. Then, spotting a broken window, “I
tried to peek through that thing.”
The two county workers were describing
their unannounced “exterior inspection” after receiving an
“anonymous” complaint that Tim had converted his Wailua
Homesteads house into a multi-family dwelling. Their words were
caught on tape by First Deputy Prosecutor Jake Delaplane, who was
secretly recording their Nov. 30, 2010 conversation.
The two-hour recording — evidence
improperly withheld from Tim's defense attorney — was later turned
over to Special Attorney General Richard Minatoya, who conducted an
independent investigation after Judge Watanabe removed the
county prosecutor's office from the case. In May, Minatoya dismissed
the misdemeanor charges against Tim and gave the tape to his
attorney.
County Prosecutor Shaylene
Iseri-Carvalho released the tape yesterday, falsely claiming it
“surfaced last week” when Tim sued her, Sheila and the county.
Shay also issued a press release claiming the tape showed county
attorneys had barred planning inspectors from taking actions against
Tim so as to “influence Bynum's vote on Mayor Bernard
Carvalho Jr's. TVR [transient vacation rental] bill.”
The tape fails to support that
allegation because, in fact, no special treatment was needed to gain
Tim's vote on the bill, which he introduced and championed.
The tape also fails to help Sheila
achieve her stated goal: “I want to be lily white. I want people to
say, 'there she goes, Miss Perfect.'”
But it does raise questions about the
role of former Council Chair Kaipo Asing, who is bitter enemies with
Tim. The tape ends with Sheila endorsing efforts to prosecute Tim,
saying, “And poor Kaipo needs justice on this, I think.”
The tape also offers a disturbing look
into the planning department under the reign of Director Ian Costa
and Deputy Director Imai Aiu, both of whom were
due to be replaced the next day by Deputy County Attorney Mike
Dahilig and former Planning Director Dee Crowell, respectively.
Sheila describes a planning department
where “there's no policies. There's no directives. I make my own
directives.” She also bemoans the arrival of “two new bosses
tomorrow,” saying, “I only can do, I only have until tomorrow, 12
noon. That's all you have of me. That's all the powers I have. And
after 12:01 I lost all powers. The diva is gone.” Near the end of
the tape, Sheila characterizes the TVR inspectors as “lazy” and
at several points, she talks stink about Dee.
The recording, which begins like a
cheesy detective film with the rustle of Jake's pants as walks,
already wired, to his meeting with Sheila and Patrick, lays out the dispute
between county attorneys and planners over the case.
Sheila repeatedly asserts that she and
Patrick had the right to walk around Tim's house, look in his windows
and take photographs — Patrick says they “called out,” but
didn't knock upon arriving at the residence — because Tim had
gotten a use permit to build an addition onto his house. But Sheila
also tells Jake “the issue of trespassing came up” — a concern
raised by Imai and county attorneys.
Sheila then goes on to describe how
county attorneys told her that a rice cooker and refrigerator did not
meet the definition of a kitchen under the county zoning ordinance.
“They look at it differently and to today it's hard to change our
mind...because our director Ian believes in that
code that preparation of food is a rice cooker. The planning attorney Ian does not believe that.”
“And neither does Mike,” Jake says,
to which Sheila replies, “right.”
Jake repeatedly asks Sheila and Patrick
whether county attorneys ever said, “Let's just make it go away.”
Sheila replies, “No, not make it go away. They know they can't ask
that from me.” Jake then asks whether they were directed to deviate
at all from standard procedure, to which Sheila replies she was
questioned about why they served Tim with the zoning violation notice
at the Council Chambers. She defended her actions, saying, “That's
his normal place of employment.”
Sheila and Patrick also say that Tim
refused to allow an inspection, claiming he'd done nothing wrong, and
instead met with Imai.
As Jake presses for details on whether
Sheila believes politics played any part, Sheila claims that Mike
“made a comment that stays here and I'm gonna forget it if you ever
ask me again. It had to do with politics and that's why Imai had to
take it over. I'm never on the stand gonna say that because he is
gonna be my boss, and he would never say that on Shaylene, too, yeah,
you understand... because our lives...” At that point, Jake, Shay
and Patrick all start laughing.
Sheila then chides Patrick for relying
on his memory of conversations with Bynum, rather than taking notes.
“I should just tape his conversation, illegally,” Patrick says.
“And then write it all down,” Sheila adds. Jake, who is secretly
taping them, laughs.
Sheila also repeats a conversation with
Ian Costa, in which he reportedly says, “I don't care. I'm going to
send it to [unintelligble] because Kaipo Asing was asking. Kaipo
Asing needs to know. And I gotta answer at that time to the Council
Chair. That's what happened.”
“Was it something the Council was
asking about?” Jake asks.
“Only Kaipo Asing, as a private
citizen,” she replies.
At about the 1:43:00 mark on the tape,
Jake begins pressing Sheila for more details — “Was there
anything going on, besides the election, that ...coincided with some
of the timing of this stuff? Not just general political stuff, but
was there something specific going on at that time?”
“It's political,” she replies.
“Everything is political.”
“But was there anything with planning
going on, any votes?” Jake asks.
“Yes, I said it's political. Yes,
yes.”
“So
you think that directly influenced...”
“Yes," she says. "I’m never going to say it (unintelligible) because it will be my
demise. Not yours, because you weren't there. It will be my demise.
Do you need to know about all that?”
Sheila then sends Patrick out of the
room and tells Jake, “When Imai took it over, there had to be a
delay. … Dahilig said hold it up until after the vote. We need his
vote for the TVR. I said, oh, you mean, the TVRs you guys screwed up
on? No problem. You saw what happened. My bosses got fired because my
new bosses screwed up. This is all off the record. They kind of
catered to him because it was their screw up on the TVR.”
At the end, as Sheila and Jake are
chatting, she brings up Patrick's assertion that Tim had said, “let
make it go away.” (Actually, Patrick had said he heard Tim tell
Imai, “let's settle this.”)
“Make it go away. Those are terrible
words,” she says. “They can be misconstrued, but that man will
never forget those words.”
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Musings: Political Paraphernalia
Invoices obtained under a public records request contradict a special counsel's opinion on the POHAKU program and raise new questions about Prosecutor Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho's use of county funds.
The documents show the Office of Prosecuting
Attorney (OPA) spent some $9,500 on thousands of tote bags, shopping
bags, super-sized clips, wristbands, banners, rally fans, decals,
pens, brochures and other promotional paraphernalia for the POHAKU
program, which had just 50 participants.
Many
of the items are orange and black — the color theme of
Iseri-Carvalho's campaign — and some bear her photo. Others carry
the OPA seal. The items have been distributed at the
county fair and various public events.
Though
most of the purchases were made in 2011, when Iseri-Carvalho launched
the POHAKU program, some $3,022 was spent on “500 swanky pen
designer tie clips, 500 whistle key lights and 700 foldaway shoppers” that were ordered on May 29, 2012.
On May 15, however, the prosecutor sent an email to her staff stopping all referrals to diversionary programs. The County Council was told later that same day, at its budget meeting, that the OPA had suspended POHAKU.
On May 15, however, the prosecutor sent an email to her staff stopping all referrals to diversionary programs. The County Council was told later that same day, at its budget meeting, that the OPA had suspended POHAKU.
At
the same meeting, with Councilwoman JoAnn Yukimura trying to cut
$10,000 for POHAKU from the prosecutor's budget, Iseri-Carvalho told
the Council: “We have not spent on any
funds on the operation of POHAKU.” She did not mention the
promotional expenditures.
On
Aug. 1, Iseri-Carvalho issued a news release that bore the headline,
“P.O.H.A.K.U. Cleared: Declared Legal and Valuable.” To support
that assertion, the release cited an opinion by special counsel Gary Slovin,
who was hired to represent the OPA after concerns were raised about POHAKU procurement irregularities.
The release also included a statement from Slovin: “It is
the conclusion of the Special Counsel that the implementation of the
program did not violate the State Procurement Code,” he said.
On
page 4 of his opinion, Slovin offers the rationale for his conclusion, noting that the
state procurement code does not apply if no public funds are
expended. He then goes on to state: “No public funds were
expended.”
But
as the invoices show, public funds were indeed expended to implement
POHAKU.
Slovin
was hired under an initial $15,000 Council allocation. The Council
tomorrow will consider a request for an additional $10,000 on special counsel, again to represent the OPA in civil matters related to POHAKU. It's unclear
whether Slovin would be retained if the new funding is approved.
Btw, I
have been trying to get these documents since July 27, when I made a
public records request to the OPA. But first deputy prosecutor Jake
Delaplane failed to respond, despite prodding from the state Office
of Information Practices. I then requested the invoices from the
county Finance Department, which complied within the 10 business days specified by law.
Musings: Points of View, Part II
I like
the night, especially the last part of it, when the world is so still
and silent, Venus and Jupiter glowing like celestial lighthouses in a
sea comprising Triangle, Makalii, Orion and other assorted stars and
constellations. It feels like a time when the world is ruled by
forces other than humans, who all too soon will get up, though not
necessarily rise, and resume their “civilizing” influences upon
the planet.
In
yesterday's post, I discussed some of the disheartened
points of view that have been expressed about both the governor's meeting and the myriad civil legal
troubles facing the county prosecutor. The latter prompted one reader to comment, in part:
The
people filing the complaints (both EEOC and civil) had the courage to
stand up to intimidation, and to take a step to force compliance....
Shooting the messenger is not the solution, and sticking one's head
in the sand isn't, either. It's possible that the offenders really do
not see the problem with their thinking or behavior...and that's
scary. This isn't about "preserving the local culture."
It's about being civilized.
And
I was struck, because I've been hearing similar words uttered by
folks who were greatly disturbed by the way some people behaved at
last week's heated meeting with the Governor and his Cabinet.
“The
loss of civility really upset me,” said one man who walked out when
people started shouting from the audience. “There was a complete
disregard for those of us who wanted to hear what the Governor and
his representatives were saying.”
“They
might as well send in the brownshirts,” was another observation.
“It's a form of violence to shout like that. It's intimidation,
pure and simple.”
“It
was the haoles, and that doesn't help racial relations,” I was
told. “Don't they have any idea how they're coming across? Local
people just do not feel comfortable with that kind of behavior.”
“They
were yelling at people who are bureaucrats, not decision-makers,” someone else said. “Why shoot the
messenger?”
“I
felt sorry for our local elected officials,” remarked another.
“They lose face with the governor when this happens, and he might
not come back again.”
“I
was trying to see, and they kept holding up these little pink signs
in front of my face. It was really annoying. If they want to hold
sign, why can't they stand on the side of the room, instead of
blocking your view?”
“Where
do we go from here?” asked one man. “Is this the end of civil
discourse?”
Folks weren't split on the key issue — opposition to the Public Land Development Corp. — but on tactics, behavior. This observation
pretty much summed it up: “It seems like people at that meeting
fell into one of two camps: 'I guess we showed them,' and 'I was
embarrassed for Kauai.'”
So
what is the best way to convey the frustration and dismay that many
feel over the PLDC, aptly dubbed “grand theft aina” in one
Facebook graphic? It's an issue that has tapped many of the same
sentiments that helped derail the Superferry: fears of environmental
degradation, loss of home rule, excluding public participation,
privatizing public resources for profit. All of which is pretty much
SOP for “civilized” homo sapiens in industrialized societies,
when you stop and think about it......
Councilmen
KipuKai Kualii and Mel Rapazo, perhaps sensing a way to improve
images tarnished by their close affiliation with Prosecutor Shaylene
Iseri-Carvalho, perhaps motivated by a desire to do the right thing,
have moved quickly to the political forefront of this issue.
Mel
spoke forcefully at the governor's meeting, first expressing his
support for the PLDC, then his concerns that its powers could be
misused to develop timeshares and hotels, to the detriment of the
island. Using the governor's example of building a hotel at Kokee as
the kind of far-fetched scenario that wouldn't happen – though it
was previously proposed when the DLNR was managed by Laura Thielen,
now an outspoken opponent of the PLDC — Mel noted that while
neither he nor the governor would be around forever, the law would
continue on.
“It
takes away the county's oversight in zoning and planning,” Mel
said. “The zoning and permitting is circumvented.”
Damn
straight. If anybody's gonna be circumventing the county's zoning and
permitting, it's gonna be our own guys. Cause ya know, they're expert
at it.... And why should all those juicy political plums be doled out
by a five-member board on Oahu when our own Council and Planning
Commission could benefit?
Sorry,
cynicism got a hold of me for a minute. I actually do think it's
great that Mel has a proposal on tomorrow's Council agenda, which
calls for adopting a bill that amends Act 55 to ensure that PLDC
projects do comply with County land use plans, policies and
ordinances. The bill would be included in the Hawaii State
Association of Counties legislative packet for the 2013 session.
I
also commend KipuKai, who is taking a different approach. He's
introduced a resolution that urges the state Legislature to repeal
Act 55 in its entirety, because it could lead to “uncontrolled
development in violation of” county codes and ordinances, and it
favors for-profit development of public lands over uses like parks,
which do not generate any revenues.
The
Hawaii County Council's planning committee last week unanimously approved a similar resolution.
Regardless
of which approach is taken by the Kauai County Council, any final action lies with our
legislators — Dee Morikawa, Jimmy Tokioka, Derek Kawakami and Ron
Kouchi — all of whom voted for the bill that became Act 55. Unless
they're prepared to reverse their votes, and lobby other lawmakers to
go along, ain't gonna be no changes in the PLDC, no matter how much
testimony the Council receives, or how many boos the governor gets.
Which
brings me to something else I heard, that Derek was feeling hurt
because of the opposition to the PLDC, and the underlying sentiment
that he would vote for something that could harm Kauai. Derek, buddy,
you need to buck up. I and others like you personally, but let's not
forget that you were literally handed Rep. Mina Morita's seat when
she stepped down. Some of us can still remember how Mina was a voice
in the wilderness, decrying the dirty politics that led to the
legislature circumventing environmental laws to let the Superferry
run. You shouldn't be too surprised to learn that we're disappointed
to see her replacement choose to go with the legislative flow on an
issue of this magntitude.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Musings: Points of View, Part I
A smear
of orangey-gold clung to the eastern horizon, and the cloud curtain
was just lifting from the mountains when the dogs and I went walking
this morning. Apricot-colored puff balls began to float overhead,
joined, as we neared the river, by two ducks that flew silently,
their dark shapes outlined against the pale yellow sky.
I've
been hearing from people who don't leave comments, but instead call
or email or chat with me in person, sharing their point of view on
some of the happenings covered by this blog. Most recently, it's been
the governor's meeting and the rash of suits and settlements
involving Prosecutor Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho.
Is it
possible, I've been asked, that County Attorney Al Castillo and
Shay's enemies in the Administration really are cooking this
stuff up to "get her," that folks are piling on when they see other
people getting money?
I
understand the incredulity. It is tough to imagine that one person
could generate four EEOC complaints and two lawsuits, with so much occurring this close to the election. But it's important
to remember that some of these actions have been in the works for a
while.
There
may well have been some politics involved in the timing of the EEOC
settlements involving Erin Wilson and Shannon Weigel, though that doesn't undermine the validity of their complaints. Shannon told me
her complaint, filed two years ago, languished for a while until she
recently heard the EEOC had issued a finding, prompting her to wonder
if someone had recently come forth with information. And some time
did lapse between the negotiated resolution of Erin's complaint and
its final settlement, as in check in hand, allowing her to publicly
speak.
It's
hard to know whether any of that was intentional, or due to the
typically glacial (as in pre-global warming) movement of government.
However,
I am convinced, after communicating with both women, that they filed
their complaints because they felt genuinely aggrieved. And they
insisted on non-confidentiality clauses not as a political stunt, but
because they sincerely wanted to ensure that others were not
similarly harmed. It's pretty clear that Erin, a victim-witness
counselor fired for lack of work even as Shay has claimed an
unrelenting rise in crime, was mistreated. It's also a stretch to
claim conspiracy when the EEOC, a federal agency not likely in the
pocket of either Al or the mayor, found cause, after conducting its
own investigation, to believe that Shannon was the victim of racial
harassment.
Was Al
trying to burn Shay by settling these cases, rather than duking it
out in court? Is the county "an easy touch?" It's possible. But it's equally possible he was trying
to chose an option that would cost the county the least amount of
money. Trials can be expensive, especially if you lose. In any
case, a plaintiff armed with an EEOC finding has a pretty strong
claim. And we have seen the county go to great lengths when it believes it has a strong case. Witness the protracted proceedings against Mike Sheehan's boatyard.
My
understanding of Rebecca Vogt's suit is she wanted to deal with the issue ASAP.
Was she inspired by the settlements given to Shannon and Erin? I don't know. But that was their intention — to give other county
workers the courage to speak up against discriminatory behavior, especially
in the prosecutor's office, which is charged with upholding the law
and securing justice for victims.
Aren't
these complaints kind of manini? several people have asked. Perhaps.
Unless it's happening to you — and unless the perp is the
county prosecutor, who more than anyone is expected to know and
follow the law. Andy Parx, in an entertaining and detailed political analysis of Councilman Tim Bynum's lawsuit, paints a vivid
description of why the prosecutor's actions are important:
The
letter read like the rantings of a lunatic. The only problem is that
the lunatic in this case had- and still has, until at least December
1- the discretionary power to imprison people.
Which
brings us to Tim, and his very detailed legal complaint.
“A
Councilman suing the county. It's unheard of,” one longtime
political observer noted.
This is
true. But then, I haven't heard of a prosecutor filing criminal
charges against a Councilman, either, especially after two deputy
county attorneys advised that there was no violation. And it's
definitely a new twist — if the allegations are true — if the
charges were filed because former Council Chair Kaipo Asing wanted to "get Tim."
“Local
people don't like this suing stuff,” one man told me. “They don't
like the idea that someone's trying to get money out of the county,
especially when he's representing the county.”
Of
course, Tim's suit isn't the only one. We've also got the police
commission suing the mayor, and from what I hear, EEOC complaints may
also be in the works against the mayor and KPD. We'll never hear about these, though, unless the victims decide to speak up, because the information is otherwise confidential.
Shay's troubles apparently aren't over yet, either. The County
Attorney's office is back on the Council agenda this Wednesday,
asking for another $10,000 for “special counsel's continued
representation of the Office of Prosecuting Attorney for POHAKU and
related matters.”
"Did Tim file because Becky filed?" someone asked, noting that the actions happened on subsequent days. To my knowledge, the timing was not coordinated.
"How
can Tim continue to serve on the Council when he's suing the county?”
another person asked. “Isn't that a conflict of interest?”
That's an interesting point, and I don't know the answer. I know
some people were advising Tim to hold off on filing until after the
election, for fear that it would work against him with the voters.
Others thought it was important to get the word out about Shay's
shenanigans, even if it meant harming his own re-election bid.
Ultimately,
it was Tim who wanted to press ahead. This has been hanging over him
for a long time now, and I think he just wanted to move toward some
sort of closure.
“Maybe
Tim and Shay will end up destroying each other,” one person
observed. “Or who knows, maybe they'll end up together again on the Council.”
Yes, in
Kauai County government, it seems anything could happen.
But
mostly what I hear from people is dismay and disgust. They tell me they're depressed, discouraged, disappointed.
Though fascinated by the political intrigue, the twists and turns, they're turned off by the dirty dealings, the dirty tricks.
If
there's agreement about anything, it's this: If county officials
spent more time focusing on their jobs, and less time figuring out how to set up or get back at their enemies, they might just make some progress in resolving the critical issues that face this island. Not to mention saving the taxpayers a sizable chunk of change.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Musings: Common Complaint
It's
the fall equinox, and it feels like it, with an inch of rain falling
overnight, the day coolish, grayish, subdued. Not that I'm
complaining, because it's been quite a week, what with Shay getting sued — twice — the Guv getting booed more than twice, statewide
Occupy Monsanto protests and the first confirmation that Japanese
tsunami debris has arrived in Hawaii, though I've been seeing an
inordinate amount of styrofoam and plastic bottles with kanji
lettering washing up for a couple of weeks.
I've
been thinking a lot about the governor's meeting — you can listen here, thanks to KKCR — and what it really meant. Though Civil Beat portrayed the Kauai crowd as a bunch of ungrateful, rude
hicks fixated on the Public Lands Development Corp. (Act 55), the
discontent is a lot deeper and broader than that.
Yes,
opposition to the PLDC is strong and growing — some are calling it
the new Superferry — but fishermen and ocean users who are
worried about plans to expand the humpback whale sanctuary had an
equally strong presence, as did the anti-GMO contingent.
There's
a common complaint in all of these concerns, and it's about centralized decision-making, centralized control of land, water, resources, food. Centralization
works to disenfranchise local communities, make people feel like they
aren't being heard.
So it
really didn't help when the guv kept deflecting criticism by telling
people to take their complaints about GMOs and the PLDC to the
Legislators, because they make the laws.
Yeah,
technically, but we all know the guv not only helps set the Legislature's agenda — the PLDC is a key component of Abercrombie's “New Day in Hawaii” — but holds veto power
over any bill.
And
though DLNR Director William Aila patiently explained that the state
is partnering with the feds in many of the controversial ocean
initiatives, I'm not sure too many of us believe that relationship is equal – not with the feds holding the purse strings, not to
mention the guns.
The
Administration showed it was particularly out of touch when the issue
of GMOs arose, as it did right off the bat, when Councilwoman JoAnn
Yukimura asked the first question: how come no organic farmers in the
Kekaha ag park? Why, they're welcome, of course, replied the Dept. of
Ag's Scott Enright, who talked about how tough
it was to make a profit with small farms. “But we can
accommodate them if they come forward,” he said.
“Not
in the GMO fields,” someone yelled from the crowd. “The air and
water is all contaminated over there.” And off it went. The guv,
trying to regain control, fumbled badly, telling folks the
“philosophy of agriculture” is something they needed to take up
with the Lege, because “we're trying to encourage agriculture any
way we can.”
Scott inadvertently threw more fuel on the
fire. “I realize there's a passion when it comes to GMOs, but the
biotech industry is legal.”
“That's
the problem,” someone yelled.
“We're
talking about government, and you're part of it,” another person called
out.
There you have it, the crux of the issue. It seems people are increasingly inclined to look at all the many factions of government as a single entity that isn't going to fix anything,
because it's part of the problem, in bed with special interests, rather than serving the public good.
"We don't trust you," was a common refrain. And that's hard to hear when you're in government because you truly believe in public service, as many public workers doubtless do.
Though I'm not sure the guv and his Cabinet got it, there was a take-away message, and it's this: It's
not enough anymore to give a community money — in this case, $71.6 million of the state's $469
million capital improvement budget, which one man later characterized as “a little crumb.” People also want a direct say in what
happens in their community — hence the uproar over the PLDC, with
its omnipotent, Honolulu-based, five-member board of bureaucrats and
developers.
They
also want to feel like government shares their concerns, and is
looking out for them. So the biggest gaffe of the night
came when a woman who identified herself as a healthcare worker came
to the microphone and spoke of “seeing people every day who are
really ill from the effects of Pioneer, Syngenta, the GMO spraying.”
She then said a Kauai oncologist had told her the westside has the
state's highest incidence of colon, breast and cervical cancer.” Is
anybody looking into this? she wanted know.
The
guv's press secretary, Donalyn Dela Cruz (whose brother Donovan, a
state senator, co-sponsored the PLDC bill),
tried to dismiss her with with a trite, “Thank you for
bringing the issue to the table.” That's when the crowd started taking on the
stirrings of an angry mob and a man yelled out, incredulously, “Somebody has to
address it!”
An
awkward silence followed and finally state Health Director Loretta
Fuddy said no GMO-human health studies were under way in Hawaii. “I know that
nationally and internationally there is a concern and they are
looking at it... but we don't have the science yet.”
Which
leads quite naturally to the question: since Hawaiii is ground zero,
the world capital of open-air experimental testing of genetically
modified crops, and a major producer of GM seed, why aren't there any
health or environmental studies going on?
I recently did a short piece on the Department of Water's decision to settle a class action
lawsuit with Syngenta, in part because they don't believe the
pesticide is currently in wide use. So I called Syngenta to ask if they are still using atrazine on their westside corn crops.
But they
never called back, because they don't have to. They're not required to answer to the public, to be held accountable for agricultural and business practices that greatly affect our community.
And that's exactly what folks rightly fear will happen with the PLDC, and the ocean sanctuary. More layers between them and the decision-makers, no local accountability. Because as we've seen over and over again, it's so easy to blow off the citizenry when you can do so with impunity.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Iseri-Carvalho Sued Twice In One Week
Kauai Prosecutor Shaylene
Iseri-Carvalho has been hit with a second lawsuit in a week, this time from a deputy who says she was the victim of retaliation because she
didn't support the prosecutor's re-election campaign.
The complaint, filed Tuesday in Kauai Circuit
Court on behalf of deputy Rebecca Vogt, raises concerns about equal
pay, gender discrimination, free speech rights and county ethics
violations. It names both the county and Iseri-Carvalho, who was sued by Councilman Tim Bynum yesterday.
Vogt alleges she was pressured to
support Iseri-Carvalho, who rewarded employees she considered loyal.
When Vogt did not actively campaign, she claims she was passed over
for a raise, while five less-experienced male deputies who supported
the prosecutor got hefty pay hikes.
As you may recall, I wrote a post on that very topic last week.
She says Iseri-Carvalho handed out the pay raises even though in March — following “sparse attendance at her major fundraiser” — she had told staff that she would be cutting salaries due to “budget cuts.”
When Vogt complained about the
arbitrary nature of the raises, and their apparent unethical link to
campaign support, she says Iseri-Carvalho retaliated against her,
giving her more work, denying her comp time and stripping her of the
authority to independently approve plea offers.
Vogt maintains Iseri-Carvalho violated
the county Code of Ethics, which prohibits county employees from
using their positions to secure unwarranted privileges, advantages and
treatment for themselves or others. She also says her right to free speech was violated when the prosecutor punished her for speaking up.
The complaint alleges Iseri-Carvalho's
actions were “willful, wanton, outrageous and oppressive,” and
that Vogt suffered job insecurity, income loss, humiliation, and
emotional and physical anguish as a result. The extent of the
retaliation forced her to take a medical leave of absence, she
alleges.
Vogt, who began working for the Office
of Prosecuting Attorney in August 2010, says she had always received
favorable work reviews.
Note: Sorry I can't post the complaint, but the file is too big for my upload facility. However, if you would like a copy — it's interesting reading — email me at eastsidegrrrl at yahoo.com.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Tim Sues Shay and Sheila: Claims Constitutional Rights Violated
Kauai
Councilman Tim Bynum today filed a federal civil rights lawsuit
against Prosecutor Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho, planning inspector
Sheila Miyake and the county, claiming his constitutional rights were
violated by their abuse of power and malicious prosecution.
"False
and malicious criminal prosecution of political enemies is something
you expect to see in the Third World, not in Hawaii,” said his
attorney, former state Attorney General Margery Bronster, in a press
release.
The
suit alleges that Iseri-Carvalho targeted Bynum for prosecution of
zoning violations, both as political payback and to keep him from
questioning financial practices in the Office of Prosecuting
Attorney.
Both
Miyake and Iseri-Carvalho committed acts “that amounted to an
indifference to or purposeful deprivation” of Bynum's
constitutional rights, the complaint alleges. As a result, he suffered severe emotional and physical distress.
It also claims that Bynum suffered significant financial hardship when a county planning employee falsely told buyers that the alleged zoning violations would transfer to the new owners, prompting them to cancel escrow. No dollar amount is specified as damages.
The
complaint, which you can read in full here, also implicates former
Council Chair Kaipo Asing as orchestrating events, though he is not
presently named as a defendant.
The
lawsuit is partly based on a secret tape recording that first deputy
Jake Delaplane made of a two-tour conversation he had with Miyake.
“Incredibly,
they made tape recordings discussing their plans and they joked on
those tapes about committing perjury if ever caught,” Bronster said
in the press release. “Councilmember Bynum’s rights were severely
injured and we plan to bring everyone
involved to justice.”
According
to the complaint, Miyake was recorded saying, “It's all political,
but I will never say on stand that it is political. It will be my
demise.”
Miyake
also reportedly was taped saying she and former Planning Director Ian
Costa pursued
the zoning violation, against advice from deputy county attorneys,
“because Kaipo wanted it. Kaipo was asking. And I gotta answer to
the Council Chair.”
Iseri-Carvalho
then waited a year — “until the next election cycle,” the
complaint states — to file four criminal charges against Bynum.
Bynum's
lawsuit stems from the criminal prosecution, which the complaint says
was based on no probable cause, and Iseri-Carvalho's subsequent
efforts to stifle his freedom of speech. Earlier this year,
Iseri-Carvalho released a letter demanding Bynum be recused from
Council discussions about the Prosecutor's office while he was facing
criminal charges.
Bynum,
“fearful of the Prosecutor's unprincipled ire,” sought an opinion
from the county Board of Ethics, which later concluded he did not
have a conflict of interest.
The
misdemeanor charges were dropped earlier this year after Judge
Kathleen Watanabe recused Iseri-Carvalho’s office from the case and
appointed special deputy attorney general Richard Minatoya to
investigate the matter. He determined the case was unprovable.
Iseri-Carvalho
and Miyake are being sued as individuals, and in their official
capacity. Other defendants could be added as the lawsuit progresses.
“Through
the civil action being taken, I look forward to demonstrating how
baseless and without merit the actions against me were,” Bynum said
in a personal statement released tonight. “More importantly, my
hope is that holding these individuals responsible will help prevent
abuse of others and ensure that this kind of deliberate mistreatment
does not happen again. I look forward to putting these issues behind
me so I can focus fully on my family and my responsibilities as a
Councilmember.
Bynum
is alleging that Iseri-Carvalho and Miyake harbor longstanding
personal animosity against him that was heightened by his 2008 vote
on the vacation rental bill.
As
has previously been reported in this blog, in 2010, Bynum allowed a
family friend, Victory Yokotake, to reside at his house, where five
years prior he had built a county-permitted addition that included a
counter top/bar and sink. Yokotake was assaulted by one of her
friends, and the police officer responding to the call “incorrectly
characterized the addition … as a separate apartment,” the
complaint states.
An
unknown person with access to the police report allegedly informed
Miyake and Iseri-Carvalho that Bynum was illegally “renting out a
portion of his house.” Though Miyake allegedly knew the identity of
the person, she treated it as an anonymous complaint. Miyake
allegedly stated she pursued the complaint because “Kaipo Asing was
asking.”
Bynum's
complaint goes on to include an email correspondence between
Iseri-Carvalho and former Planning Director Ian Costa, in which she
asks if its illegal for Bynum to rent out a portion of his home and
is told no — the violation would lie in whether he had installed a
second kitchen, which would make it a multi-familly unit rather than
a single-family residence.
While
Bynum was attending a Council meeting, Miyake and inspector Patrick
Henriques allegedly walked through a gate and looked through the
windows of his house, where they reportedly saw a rice cooker and
refrigerator in the addition.
Miyake
told deputy county attorneys Mike Dahilig and Ian Jung what she had
done and seen, and they advised her she had engaged in trespassing
and a warrantless search, and that the presence of a rice cooker did
not constitute a kitchen.
Despite
their advice, Miyake went ahead and had Henriques issue a notice of
zoning violation to Bynum, the complaint states. She emailed a copy
to former County Clerk Peter Nakamura, who reported directly to
Asing, with the subject line reading “4 your eyes only.” Bynum
did not receive a copy of the notice until a month later.
The
complaint alleges that Miyake sent Nakamura the email with the intent
that it would be made public and used against Bynum in the election.
The
complaint also maintains the planning department failed to properly
train its inspectors in search laws and the county zoning ordinance,
with Miyake stating that “each inspector has his own kingdom,”
and that such determinations are made ad hoc, arbitrarily and in this
case, capriciously and maliciously.
It
details as well Delaplane's attempt to enlist another deputy
prosecutor to surreptitiously solicit information from Yokotake that
could be used against Bynum. The action ultimately led to the OPA's
office being recused from the case, which opened it up to
investigation by an outside source.
Though
Bronster , in the press release, stated “I have spoken with Kauai
County Attorney, Al Castillo, and he seems to understand the gravity
of the situation,” Castillo said he had not seen the complaint and
had no comment.
In
his written statement, Bynum, who is serving his third term on the
Council, said, “I also knew that politics
could be tough and at times even ugly. But I had no idea that I
would be the target of major abuses of power planed and perpetrated
by County officials for purely political reasons. This blatant
abuse of power has led to the difficult decision to take legal action
by filing a civil rights complaint in Federal Court. These
actions by a small group of powerful people led by Prosecutor
Shaylene Iseri-Carvalho have had a huge impact on my home, my family
and myself.
"Many
people on Kauai are coming to the realization that serious wrongdoing
by our Prosecutor in a number of areas is truly hurting people,
programs, institutions and our community," he continued. " It needs to stop.
Being wrongly charged and labeled a criminal required me to hire
attorneys to defend myself. In the process of clearing my name
we have discovered overwhelming evidence of misconduct by Ms.
Iseri-Carvalho and her allies. The complaint we are filing
speaks for itself and highlights just some of the evidence of abuse.”
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Musings: Troubling Signs
Late afternoon's golden light giving
way to the pinks of a gentle sunset, clouds piling up behind
Makaleha, crescent moon slung low in the western sky, beginning a new
cycle toward full. It's the time of day, the kind of time, in which
all seems right with the world.
So long as you don't do any digging....
So long as you don't do any digging....
Got an email from a friend in the
Midwest, corn country, that read:
Was at the grocery store and a
little old lady was questioning her bill. She said, I think there is
a mistake, I was charged $1.99 for 1 apple. the manager was very nice
and explained it was a Honey Crisp and $3 something a pound, so the
price was correct. She said, I just wanted an apple, things are so
expensive. For some reason it was poignant, the frustration, fear,
not having any control, a little old lady just wanting an apple. Then
there were murmurs among the people in the checkout line agreeing how
much food has gone up. I thought to myself, things like that apple
are what could set people off if the economic strain continues. I
felt for the lady, obviously on a restricted income and often notice
how many are on food assistance. I frequently hear Moms saying, put
that back, we can't afford it. We seem to have food pantries and
access for the very poor, but not for those slipping in the cracks.……
It made me think of other troubling economic signs of the times that have filtered into my
awareness lately....
A third of Americans today say they are lower-class, compared to a quarter just four years ago,
according to a Pew Research Center poll.
In 1962, the top 1 percent had 125
times the net worth of the median U.S. household; by 2010, they had
288 times more, reports CNNMoney.com. It seems the trend has two
causes: Not only are the rich getting richer, but the middle class is
getting poorer.
Locally, county officials were almost slavering over the construction jobs to be provided by the next phase
of The Path — jobs that will last just six months, and aren't
likely to be numerous. Because aside from the perennial road work,
nothing else is happening in construction.
Into this depressed scene comes Kauai Beach Villas — the condo/timeshare project at Nukolii — with a lawsuit against the county. KBV is affiliated with PAHIO, which is led by Lynn McCrory, who has already made a tidy pile developing timeshares in Princeville.
Old-timers remember Nukolii, and the
very questionable events that led to development of a resort — now the Hilton Kauai Beach Resort — on that
windy, reefy coastline.
It seems the PAHIO folks are
unhappy because the new TAU ordinance — adopted by the Council in
response to a citizen's initiative — won't allow them to develop
another 1,000 units out there.
Never mind that the land in question isn't even
zoned for 1,000 units. Or that the likelihood of finding an investor
for such a development — or that many timeshare buyers — is
essentially nil. Or that 70 percent of the voters approved the
charter amendment that led to the TAU (transient accommodation unit)
ordinance.
(As a quick refresher, the amendment
took authority for processing most TAU requests away from the
planning commission, which had been approving resort development at a
rate far greater than suggested by the General Plan, and gave it to
the County Council.)
I think what really hit me in the legal
complaint was the assertion that the charter amendment and TAU
ordinance “frustrate KVB's investment-backed expectations and do
not substantially advance a state interest.”
In other words, developers like Lynn McCrory are leveraging not what they actually have, but
what they expect. As for "advancing a state interest" — what,
there's no value in regulating growth on an island, or carrying out
the directive of the electorate?
Just kinda shows you the cheeky
mentality of developers who so rarely hear the word no in Hawaii.
Carl Imparato of
Coalition
for Responsible Government, the grassroots group that got the charter
amenment on the ballot, thinks the complaint is "without merit." But the Coalition and the county will still have to respond to it. And that means legal fees.
I only hope the County Council, which has been quick to allocate special counsel funds for the prosecutor, the mayor, the police commission and other county matters, will be equally willing to invest what is needed to fight this challenge. After all, this charter amendment was the will of the people.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Musings: On Self-Determination
I
was perusing Facebook and saw a post by Andre Perez regarding Sen. Akaka's last ditch effort to get the
Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act —
aka Akaka Bill — approved before he retires. As Andre wrote:
Fed-Wreck
is back on the table minus the language of creating a roll and
qualification process BECAUSE... the Abercrombie appointed Roll
Commission is already performing that function! So contrary to what
the Roll Commissioners have been saying about self-determination,
Fed-Wreck appears to have already been pre-determined. Mahalo for
showing your true colors, we got yo ass...
Such suspicions are not new. As
I reported in the Honolulu Weekly, when the Roll registration was
launched in July:
Though
some Hawaiian nationals have dismissed the roll process as a tool of
the state, [Roll Commissioner Commissioner Naalehu] Anthony is
encouraging them to participate. “It’s not our job to make a
government,” he says, noting that the Commission will dissolve once
the roll is published. “Independence, federal recognition, state
recognition–all of these things are up for discussion. But we’ve
got to know who is in the pool [in order] to have a discussion.”
However, the press release distributed by Abercrombie’s office says
the process “will eventually lead to federal recognition of Native
Hawaiians.” OHA officials on hand for the launch also seemed to
think that federal recognition was the goal, and that it was
attainable.
Now,
as Andre so vividly notes, the perception that Gov. Abercrombie's administration and the feds are actively directing the process of Hawaiian
self-determination has picked up steam with news that Akaka amended
his bill to reflect the Commission's work. As
the Star-Advertiser reported:
The
new legislation drops provisions that created a process to determine
who qualifies as Native Hawaiian and enroll them as part of creating
a new Native Hawaiian government. A new Native Hawaiian Roll
Commission, set up by the Hawaii Legislature, is performing those
functions.
By
stripping out those sections, Akaka was able to cut the bill down to
about 15 pages from an original 60 pages with the hope that
Republican opponents would find it more palatable, since it removes
the controversy over who qualifies as Native Hawaiian.
Meanwhile,
Abercrombie has come out swinging in defense of another one of his
proposals that's meeting resistance — the Public Lands Development
Corp. In typical Abercrombie fashion, he spent more time trashing
opponents than outlining any real merits of the PLDC:
Abercrombie
dismissed critics in the environmental, Native Hawaiian and labor
communities — including many who want the corporation abolished
because of a potential threat to the environment — as the "usual
suspects" who used public hearings this summer on the
corporation's draft administrative rules to create "conspiratorial
hysteria."
Abercrombie
said opponents have appointed themselves as the public's voice and
the "arbiters over what is appropriate or inappropriate in terms
of development."
The
article also included comments from Rep. Chris Lee, one of the few
legislators to oppose the bill — alas, the Kauai contingent supported
it — saying that opponents would likely need to get two-thirds'
majorities in the House and Senate to achieve a repeal, since
Abercrombie said he would veto a repeal bill.
Despite
criticism from citizens who believe, correctly, that the public
will little have sway over the actions of the PLDC, Abercrombie is
urging people to give it a chance:
"You've
got to put it in practice first to see what it is," he said.
"Give it a chance. Give it some breathing room and see how it
works."
The
governor said he doubts critics are interested in improving the law,
"because their attitude is, no matter what you do, no matter how
you change it, you can't change it good enough to suit us."
"Because
the only way that would work, is that you would agree with us in the
first place that you've got to pass anything you want to do past us
first. We've got the imprimatur first."
"My
support? It gets stronger," the governor said. "When I see
people out there pushing people around. When I see people out there
saying ‘We get to decide.' What do you mean we get to decide?
"The
legislators ran for election. I ran for election."
Ummm,
except the guv and legislators aren't the ones who will be
calling the shots on PLDC decisions. Those will be made by an
un-elected board comprised of state agency heads and
development interests. And the people, quite rightly, are saying no,
we want to have a say on how public lands, Hawaiian lands, are used. Because frankly, we don't trust you.
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