Though they are no longer tiny, having
experienced the vacation rental-induced mushrooming effect of so many
houses in these parts. One of the A-frames is called Rainbows End,
and is owned by Joseph and Patricia Gernard of Texas. The other is
called Ka Hale Poo O' Kauai and is owned by Ron
Seiple of Oahu and his wife, Mary Elizabeth.
In his Oct. 6, 2010, application to the
Kauai County Planning Department for a nonconforming use (NCU) permit
to operate a TVR, Seiple submits a notarized affidavit in which
swears that he has operated a vacation rental on the property since
1972. Under the county ordinance, a unit must have been in use as a
TVR prior to 2008 to qualify for a permit. Seiple also added a note
that read, in part:
We have owned this property since
1972. It was a legal [sic] vacation rental managed by Kauai Real
Estate and Vacation Rentals, Napali and Prosser from that time until
it was seriously damaged by hurricane Iniki [in 1992]. After Iniki we
rented this property as a long term rental unit until a few years
ago. Two years ago we began a major re-building of our property as it
was long overdue.
The “major re-building” he is
referencing was a $243,000 expansion that added 2,111 square feet to
the existing 1,178-square-foot house. It was allowed under a building
permit that was first issued in 2007, revoked on June 24, 2008 and
then re-issued on Aug. 14, 2009.
The county zoning ordinance states:
“If any nonconforming use ceases for any reason for a continuous period of 12 calendar months or for 1 season if use be seasonal, then the use should not be resumed and any use of the building or property thereafter shall be in full conformance with the provisions of this chapter.”
Yet despite acknowledging that his
property had not been in vacation rental use for the previous 18
years, and had been under construction for the past two years — two
admissions that proved the nonconforming use had ceased for more than
a year — Seiple was still given a TVR permit. Curiously, the TVR
permit was issued before the final building inspection on June
30, 2011.
Seiple clearly had,
by his own admission, ceased his non-conforming use for more than a
year, yet still he was allowed to resume it. What's more, a review of
county tax records show his property taxes are calculated according to the
original square footage, not the expansion.
Meanwhile, after the county adopted the
first TVR ordinance in 2008, the Gernards applied for an NCU permit to
legally operate Rainbows End, which they had purchased in September
2000 for $600,000. In his notarized affidavit, Gernard claims the
house had been used as a vacation rental since Jan. 1, 2001, and
swears:
“No building permits have been
issued since then [the original in 1972]. The house has not been
modified since it was built. A previous owner modified a garage
storage area to accommodate an “Ohana Unit”. It is not known to
us if these modifications were permitted by the county. This “Ohana
unit” is presently unused and is being reverted to storage in
accordance with the regulations for TVR.”
The county conducted an inspection, as
the initial TVR ordinance required, and found that the “ohana unit”
was an illegal dwelling unit with a full kitchen — as in an
installed range, not just a rice cooker.
The county ordered the Gernards to
cease and desist TVR uses on the property, and stop using the storage
shed as a living unit. The Gernards also were ordered to “submit
plans and applications along with filing fees for review by the
department for all illegal construction additions and alterations.
Such construction, additions and alterations without proper approval
shall be demolished and removed.”
The Gernards responded by getting a
building permit valued at $54,000 on May 28, 2009. The Planning
Department reviewed the permit and made the comment, “Violation
exists.” That permit was subsequently
closed. On July 26, 2010, the Gernards were issued a building
permit for a lanai, garage and bedroom addition that essentially
encompassed the illegal structure into the original 1,577-square-foot
residence, enlarging it by 1,234 feet.
However, it appears that even more work was done, as a current ad for Rainbows End states, emphasis added: "Everything in the 3 bedroom 3 bath house is new." The original house had just one bath. The property is served by a cesspool.
In 2010, the county revised the TVR
ordinance, removing the mandatory inspection and other requirements, and allowing agricultural properties to apply. On Sept. 23, 2010, when the house
was still under re-construction, the Gernards resubmitted their application. This time, it was granted, on April 5, 2011, even
though, like Hale Poo, the non-conforming use had ceased for more
than a year. Like Hale Poo, the permit was approved months before
the final building inspection, which took place on Sep. 21, 2011,
when the certificate of occupancy was also granted.
And like Hale Poo, Rainbows End was able to accommodate many more guests than in the original structure. Non-conforming uses are supposed to be brought into compliance, not expanded.
And like Hale Poo, Rainbows End was able to accommodate many more guests than in the original structure. Non-conforming uses are supposed to be brought into compliance, not expanded.
A review of the TVR files shows no
record of either owner submitting any documentation to prove the
houses had been used as vacation rentals prior to 2008, such as leases or a record
of paying general excise or transient occupancy taxes.
Furthermore, it appears that Seiple is currently not using his house as a TVR, which raises the question: are people allowed to “bank” these valuable permits until they're ready to sell the property and take advantage of the higher prices that can be gained by having a lifetime TVR permit? As we saw in the first installment of "Abuse Chronicles," a TVR permit can add $1 million to the value of a house.
Next, the King and the Princess.
Furthermore, it appears that Seiple is currently not using his house as a TVR, which raises the question: are people allowed to “bank” these valuable permits until they're ready to sell the property and take advantage of the higher prices that can be gained by having a lifetime TVR permit? As we saw in the first installment of "Abuse Chronicles," a TVR permit can add $1 million to the value of a house.
Next, the King and the Princess.
Joan
ReplyDeleteGreat job on research, I have found that the adminstration and council for years have never followed the charter, rules and code they created. When a member of the public shows up. Shows a clear viloation of the law, they stop ask the C.A. about it the C.A spouts out some B.S. and then they vote on it. 99% of the time they vote and never gives the issue a member of the public brought.
If Larry, Moe, and Curly were still around I think they could do a better job of handling these tasks.
ReplyDeleteCesspools are being overburdened by multiple (10+?) people staying in these houses at a time. The cesspools are contaminating our groundwater.
ReplyDeleteAlso, you think these people are paying taxes to Kauai for running these illegal TVR's?
What about parking in these neighborhoods? And noise? And the loss of jobs that should employ people at hotels.
Meanwhile, up and up go real estate prices that the locals can't afford!
We need better enforcement. Research such as this should be used in whistleblower lawsuits.
"And the loss of jobs that should employ people at hotels."
ReplyDeletehuh?
Meanwhile, up and up go real estate prices that the locals can't afford!
locals can live in many affordable real estate on kauai - does not have to be ocean view/front or hanalei yah?
Maybe they purchased Bynum's kitchen sink, kitchen cabinets full of food, knife block and large stainless refrigerator that you forgot to report in you "thorough coverage" which to this day amounts to nothing more than peddling his lawyer's mantra "just a rice cooker folks. Nothing to see here". Shameless you are.
ReplyDeleteFrom Jake's infamous secret tape:
ReplyDeletehttp://kauaieclectic.blogspot.com/2012/09/musings-terrible-words.html
“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.
And quit trying to change the subject --- unless, perhaps, you are one of those involved in the TVR scam and wish to keep people distracted?
ReplyDeleteplenty affordable real estate in kilauea and deep valley wainiha
ReplyDeleteDoes it really have to be explained that you are being criticized not for mentioning the rice cooker but for leaving out the other stuff in order to try to minimize Bynum's guilt and maximize the old Prosecutor's guilt? Really?
ReplyDeleteDoes it really have to be explained to you that Tim wasn't guilty? Charges were dropped because there was no case. Get over it.
ReplyDeleteYes they can 'bank' the permits - proof - Hanalei Ridge development permit.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate the reporting on this issue but it's infuriating...and what recourse do we have. Anyone? Bernard, County Council? WTF!
ReplyDeleteDo you think that they pass all of these TVR permits without full review because they were afraid that if they didn't give the owners the permits, they would be sued?
ReplyDeletePossibly because they wrote a really shitty law in the first place...
Hale Poo.
ReplyDeleteThere is no "right' to home ownership. Those that can afford property are the ones who own property.Stop complaining because others have something that you don't.
ReplyDeleteThe land owner has rights, of course, but land use law does allow the regulation of health and safety.
ReplyDeletesorry Charlie...you can't have a slaughter house on residential land.
"Yes they can 'bank' the permits - proof - Hanalei Ridge development permit."
ReplyDeleteHanalei ridge has a zoning permit. these are nonconforming use permits. entirely different
I think the one commentator is right - Big money = Big lawsuits against the county either created the fear or there was a threat of lawsuit that if the Big money didn't get what they wanted in the way of TVR permits.
ReplyDeleteThe "right" to homeownership is not the same as homeowners rights....apples and oranges. I am not "Charley"
ReplyDelete10:15 AM
ReplyDeleteguess you are far too young to remember Charlie the Tuna.
12:41 Why post such nonsense ? Nothing to do with the subject . Keep guessing..I guest.
ReplyDeleteyou can report to your heart's content, but after the last prosecution of TVR violation, I promise you that you'll NEVER, under any circumstances, EVER, see a TVR violation prosecuted during this administration.
ReplyDelete1:20 PM
ReplyDeletetrue dat!
this administration is just like Kunimura and Kusaka - corrupt until the end.
Let's make sure it ends with this one.
Kauai voters get what they deserve...corrupt politicians.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your next in-depth report Joan.
ReplyDeleteThanks, again.
Wow, they keep getting better and better, or more and more flagrant.
ReplyDelete