Once
upon a time — June 16, 1972 to be exact — Miki Kaipaka got a
building permit valued at $21,000 to construct a 1,456-square-foot
house with three bedrooms and two baths on the Wainiha River.
Twenty
years later, Peter Vollman bought the house for $490,000. It was
advertised in the MLS listing as:
“AFFORDABLE
OCEANFRONT, JUST REDUCED FROM $750K TO MEET RECESSION MARKET!! MUST
SEE TO BELIEVE THIS DELIGHTFULLY LIVEABLE WITH OUTRAGEOUS VIEWS!
OWNER FINANCING! FIREPLACE!
In
2002, Vollman Limited Partnerships sold the house for $600,000 to
Craig and Karen Mills. Though county records show permits had been
issued only for a fence and minor hurricane repairs in 1993, the
sales listing indicated that other changes had been made (emphasis
added):
Oceanfront
3bd/2ba home completely renovated
enjoy spacious living room w/sliding glass windows &
private deck. Fireplace, A/C, 6 ft
wood fence, elec gate. Big ocean views.
Over
the next three years, the house went through an even more dramatic
transformation, though again, county records show no building permits were
issued for any of the work. When Victoria Anne
Leadley bought it for $1.475 million in 2005,
it was described in the sales listing as
having three bedrooms, three baths and a 560-square-foot lanai:
Remarks:
Sometimes oceanfront, this
home was completely rebuilt--inside and out--with
the very best of everything. Travertine floors (including the lanai),
marble baths, fantastic kitchen with granite countertops and
stainless steel appliances. Two master suites, each with double
lavatories and oversize doorless walk-in shower. A truly luxurious
property in a unique location. Wonderful artist neighbors on both
sides. On the Wainiha River with a spit of sand between you and the
ocean. A dock for your kayak, and a
large lanai for enjoying it all!
Furnishings are separate from sale.
Private
Remarks: Call for viewing
instructions. House is in vacation rental.
This is not the house you remember. The new floor plan, renovations,
and decor will astonish you and your clients.
Plan to spend a bit of time sitting on the lanai to appreciate the
ever-changing view.
Today
the house is again for sale — for $2.579 million. So why, you may
ask, has it increased so substantially in value, even though the
market is down? Well, it's got a bona fide vacation rental permit now. And as Realtor Jane Abramo discloses in her current listing, it has some new structures, too, though again, no record could be found of any permits:
Remarks:
Kauai Paradise House. This lovely home is a must see. This is a very
successful and fully permitted vacation rental. TVNC-1266. All
vacation rental reservations, preferential VRBO status, plus separate
targeted website are being sold with the property. Recent
upgrades include a new 200 square foot front lanai, expanded 600
square foot covered back lanai with travertine tile, 150 square foot
deck above the river, a brand new roof, fresh paint inside
and outside, new fencing and tropical landscaping. This
meticulously renovated private oceanfront retreat on the North Shore
of Kauai in Wainiha is perfect for short or long-term getaways for
family or friends seeking luxurious accommodations with majestic
views. Discover the relaxing elegance of Kauai, where hectic modern
life is a remote memory and tropical splendor is your reality.
Lovingly refurbished on a private, fenced lot nestled at the edge of
the breath-taking Pacific, Kauai Paradise House boasts its own
exclusive beach, panoramic views, elegant Tommy Bahama furniture,
opulent travertine tile floors, 3 suites with 3 marble bathrooms (1
in each bedroom for the ultimate in intimacy), gourmet
stainless-steel and granite kitchen with bar seating, built in
convection oven and microwave, plus trash compactor. A
vaulted-ceiling soars over the great room with wrap around sofas and
hidden armoire entertainment center. The living room and separate
dining area lead out to a covered lanai for the BBQ with couches for
intimate conversations, and seating and table for alfresco dining,
lush tropical backyard landscaping with coconut, ginger, avocado and
palm trees, a secluded sun deck, and your own boat dock. Soak in
unparalleled views of the river, the sandbar and the deep blue of the
Pacific Ocean from every room. There's nothing left to do but take
possession. All showings subject to 48 hour notice if the home is
occupied by vacation guests.
As
an aside, the “exclusive beach” that Jane is falsely hawking —
all beaches in Hawaii are public, which she surely must know — just so happens to be the same little sand spit where the county bulldozed fishing shacks belonging to Native Hawaiians three years ago.
Though
the house was being used as a vacation rental when Leadley
bought it in 2005, the county did not pass a law authorizing TVRs
until 2008. In order to qualify for a permit, a house had to be in
compliance with federal flood rules and the county Special Management
Area law. Owners were also required to prove they had a General
Excise license, and had been paying taxes on the rental. Furthermore,
all building permits had to be up to date, and the property was
supposed to be inspected to ensure that everything was kosher.
However,
that property's TVR application included no records of “occupancy
and tax documents, including all relevant State of Hawai‘i general
excise tax filings, all relevant transient accommodation tax filings,
federal and/or State of Hawai‘i income tax returns for the relevant
time period, reservation lists, and receipts showing payment,”
as required under the county ordinance.
Instead,
an unsigned lease was submitted as
“evidence” of rental history, even though the document clearly
states, “This lease is not valid unless signed by tenant and
agent.” Leadley also submitted a signed and notarized affidavit
swearing that building permits were issued for all the structures on
the property, and “there were no expansions, alterations,
improvements or uses contrary to State and County land use and
planning laws.”
And though the county TVR log shows an inspection date of March 18, 2009, no inspection report was included in the file.
Yet
somehow, Leadley got her TVR permit. Former deputy planning director
Imai Aiu approved her application, using the same form letter
that appears in numerous other TVR files.
Curiously, though an inspection report was included in Leadley's most recent renewal application, it was blank.
Now, bear in mind that this house is still served by a cesspool, and it also sits in the flood plain. Under federal law, if a house is significantly altered, it must be brought into compliance with the 1981 federal flood standards. But since no building permits were issued for the complete re-do — not even the bogus “unsubstantial improvement” permits that I exposed previously on PIKO — it still does not meet flood standards.
Now, bear in mind that this house is still served by a cesspool, and it also sits in the flood plain. Under federal law, if a house is significantly altered, it must be brought into compliance with the 1981 federal flood standards. But since no building permits were issued for the complete re-do — not even the bogus “unsubstantial improvement” permits that I exposed previously on PIKO — it still does not meet flood standards.
Yet the property has a TVR permit for life, so long as the subsequent
owners continue to send in their renewal applications — a benefit
that added a cool $1 million to the value of the house.
It's
worked out great for Leadley, and the realtors. But about what the community,
the natural environment? Are either well-served by having a
non-conforming commercial use too close to the ocean and a river? And
what about the unsuspecting tourists who rent it, including the
Canadian man who recently jumped to his death off that unpermitted
deck?
After
I first reported the lack of building permits for the property, I sent an email to
planning director Mike Dahilig asking what actions his department was
going to take. He replied, “I have cc-ed
[county spokeswoman] Beth Tokioka on this e-mail and she will be
heading our response.” Beth replied, “The Planning Department is
investigating the situation and has no conclusions to report at this
time.”
Since then, I had a chance to dig into the TVR file, where I found these additional irregularities. Perhaps
it's time for county Prosecutor Justin Kollar to launch his own
investigation. Because it sure seems like something fraudulent is
happening here. And as I will show in upcoming posts, this is not an
isolated incident.
Joan, good reporting! This is the stuff i like about your blog----you do your research and inform us lazy people---we need people like you to bring awareness to such situations!
ReplyDeleteway to dig. let's see how many rats will scurry from their holes. i believe the opa has to get involved to put any teeth in this cancer.
ReplyDeleteSomething is most obviously rotten in Denmark...uh, Wainiha. There are, unfortunately, only two possible scenarios. The first is unbelievable incompetence. The second is someone greasing the skids. Either one is criminal, IMHO. And, before anyone goes playing the "go home haole" card, this has nothing to do with "cultural values" (other than they're being trampled upon) or racial considerations. It's simple graft, and it's killing the island's real culture and human value.
ReplyDelete, I sent an email to planning director Mike Dahilig asking what actions his department was going to take. He replied, “I have cc-ed [county spokeswoman] Beth Tokioka on this e-mail and she will be heading our response.” Beth replied, “The Planning Department is investigating the situation and has no conclusions to report at this time.”
ReplyDeleteMike points at Beth; Beth points back at Mike. And the circle-jerk continues.
There are too many illegal TVR's that overwhelm cesspools, cause too much noise, are problems with parking in neighborhoods, aren't paying their taxes, etc! These must all be shut down. We should have a bounty hunter system to improve enforcement. Shut them all down!
ReplyDeleteFraud is fraud! Revoke all illegal TVR permits. Prosecute the realtor for continuing this fraud. More writing and reporting on these illegal activities please!
ReplyDeleteIf only you cared enough to have dug so hard when Tim Bynum was running an illegal apartment on ag land. Oh, but you were conflicted. You had to make the prosecutor who was prosecuting him wrong. You are so hypocritical. I can't believe the acolytes who slather you with pathetic praise for you "bravery" and "honesty." You are a fraud.
ReplyDeleteThe bottom line is unfortunately the bottom line...
ReplyDelete12:12 -- Actually, I did dig into Tim's situation quite thoroughly. And I determined that what was happening was more akin to persecution, not prosecution. However, I am planning to get into that issue a little more, so stay tuned, "dear" reader.
ReplyDeleteJoan reported about Tim way back. Do a search for Bynum on this website and you'll see posts that are highly critical of Tim.
ReplyDeleteAnd get over it, Jake or Charley.
ReplyDeleteMmm, who was the inspector who didn't even file a report - oh we don't in we because, there wasn't one done...wonder if it was another Mikey miracle permits...
ReplyDeleteThe facts about Tim have been fully disclosed. He is allowed to rent rooms in his house - Charley, Jake or Shay - I hope y soon have to start paying you own legal bills.
ReplyDeleteAudit the planning commissioners, commission attorneys, planning inspectors and the TVR owners. Once you dig into their financial records you will find the greasing palms. These criminals in office needs a reality check and send their carcasses To jail this time. DO NOT cut them deals and let them get off committing crimes like Costa and Imai did.
ReplyDelete"I hope y soon have to start paying you own legal bills"
ReplyDeleteNot likely since Tim's suit against Shay is what the lawyers call frivolous. Every lawyer is this state knows shay has total immunity. If she decides to sue the county, it will undoubtedly end up paying her several tens of thousands of dollars. Thanks Tim. dumb shit.
It makes sense when you have Imai's fingerprints all over this one. Wouldn't be surprised if Imai/Ian initiated the removal of those beach shacks to keep their clients happy and I say clients because its well known that Imai was moonlighting on the side. This house has to be one of the more extreme examples of abuse and fraud of the TVR process.
ReplyDeleteYes Joan did indepth investigation over the Bynum issue and called him on it on this very blog. His case turned out to be so manini that it didn't warrant the overzealous, vendetta driven investigation that Shay pursued. There is no comparison between Bynum and this case.
Only the extremely wealthy can get away with circumventing the law because money talks. Ordinary folks like the Hawaiians whose fishing hale had been there for years get literally bulldozed by the system while the realtors, owners, architects/planners walk away with pockets full of money without having to play by the rules. I hope the family of the tourist who died sues the owner/realtor/Planning Dept. for participating in and benefitting from the fraud.
Waiting to see what you reveal next Joan. Let the sunshine in. Be interesting to see how Carvalho et al will deflect all this bad press.
March 4th is gettin' closer... lookin' BRIGHTER every day! Who shall we suggest is honest enough that would like to volunteer to make one no-fly list?
ReplyDeleteThe next story is that most of the contractors and unions are bringing in illegal immigrants to do construction work for dirt cheap wages. These contractors and union big wigs are pocketing nearly 90 percent of the paid wage, while Kauai construction workers sit on the benching illegals are used and abused. Kauai's dirty little secret of Greed through dark capitalistic souls.
ReplyDeleteImai always did have an interesting interpretation of the law...and he did spend a lot of time drawing plans...wonder if he still does that in his new position.
ReplyDeleteWere Imai and Ian fired because of this kinda stuff? Ok betta correct, were they moved to another department cuz of this kinda stuff?The more corrupt in their county jobs,more better friend you are of the mayor
ReplyDeleteIf a permit was issued, when it did not comply with the law - due to department negligence - can a court revoke it?
ReplyDeleteIn Maui County - any renovation within the SMA required an SMA permit - Kauai County does not consider an interior renovation without expansion within the SMA requiring of a permit.
ReplyDeleteIsn't this land Conservation District? Where is the state? Commercial use of CD violates state law.
ReplyDeleteThis property is still taxed as a Single Family Residence. It should be shut down TODAY before more people die.
This is a RICO case. Shut it down and arrest the players.
it's not in conservation land - it is SLUD Open.
ReplyDeleteI understand your frustration - the level of incompetence is beyond belief.
Looks like the inspector's name is Vil - what kind of inspection report is it if it wasn't even filled out properly?
Mahalo NUI LOA e Joan!
ReplyDeleteIs it more than coincidence that the appointment to the planning commission of the mayor's #1 "fix it" man, John Isobe, was just confirmed by the council? All the mines here seems to meet up at the administive offices. Ian's and Imai's safe landings were Bernard's payback for something. There's something happeneing here- What it is ain't exactly clear. There must be some money to follow...
ReplyDeleteMost houses on Kauai have building code violations. Nothing new today. Nearly impossible to enforce the codes. Kauai has major problems with it's citizens . Let's solve those first.
ReplyDeleteIsobe is a smart guy but what exactly were his qualifications to be a planning commissioner?
ReplyDeletebtw what is March 4th - Dahilig's resignation date?
Isobe qualification #1 he will do whatever the mayor tells him
ReplyDelete#2he can persuade the rest of the non thinking commissioners to also do whatever the mayor tells them
#3 He's a recycled commissioner,
#4 He is a Public relations specialist, which we all know the mayor needs
#5 all we get is spin and crap
2:14 PM
ReplyDeleteMost zoning violations do not result in a death, however, this one did. Zoning violations and the ensuing ability to fine those owners will ensure public health, safety and welfare of the community.