So started a new day on Kauai, and at
The Garden Island, too, where publisher Casey Quel Fitchett was fired yesterday — an event publicly celebrated under the “breaking news”
headline: Ding dong, the witch is dead! (Click on image to enlarge.)
The article, which was
quickly taken down from the paper's website, sarcastically ridicules the “positives” associated with Oahu Publishing Inc.'s (aka
Star-Advertiser media monopoly) purchase of the paper:
“You may also have noted we've
grown in the number of pages, increasing both outsourced editorial
content and ads that help readers save precious dollars without
requiring any local investment by the company. For the first time
since their accounts were lost to OPI on Quel Fitchett's watch, Kmart
and Longs advertising inserts are once again part of your Sunday TGI,
because Quel Fitchett losing those contracts to OPI's Midweek is what
strengthened OPI while weakening TGI enough to make the purchase
possible.
Our foremost goal is to produce a
newspaper that makes Kauai proud without actually investing in the
product. How are we doing so far?”
I think we all know the answer to that
one, sadly....
Oh, well, I'm sure OPI can round up somebody from
South Dakota who has always wanted to live on Kauai to take Casey's
place. Most likely a man, since OPI is such an old boy's club.
Yup, owner David Black couldn't find even one wahine to round-out his all-male board of directors. What's up with that?
Meanwhile, OPI's MidWeek Kauai is going through a
change as well, with writer Amanda Gregg and her hubby, deputy
housing director and former deputy planning director Imai Aiu, headed for
Boston. Guess now we'll never know why Imai approved all those
vacation rentals even though the owners failed to prove they were
eligible for a non-conforming use permit.
But OPI and Obama aren't the only
ones worried about and clamping down on whistle-blowers and leaks. Kauai County has issued
its own media relations policy that channels everything through
the mayor's office.
Under the First Amendment-stifling directive —
approved by County Attorney Al Castillo — all county employees are
forbidden to
“proactively distribute information or initiate discussions with
media representatives concerning County issues without first
consulting with the County of Kaua`i Communications Team – and in
particular, the Public Information Officer (PIO).” It goes on to
state:
Spokespersons,
staff, and members are not to give statements “off the record.”
Any
discussions, whether in an informal or formal setting with media
representatives, will be considered on-the-record (even if the media
representative says that the discussion is “off the record”).
It
doesn't specify what punishment will befall those who deviate from “the
process." Perhaps they'll be sentenced to sit through 10 County
Council meetings without a smart phone for diversion.
I
understand the role and value of a PIO, and in all fairness, the
“communications team” — Beth Tokioka, Mary Daubert and Sarah
Blane — is efficient and responsive. But surely managers making
$100,000+ per year can be trusted to talk the party line to
reporters.
And what of those agencies — county council, auditor,
KPD, prosecutor — whose staff are technically county workers,
though they're not under the purview of the mayor's office? Does all
the information from these departments have to be vetted by the
mayor's office, too, even though he's their political enemy?
Whether
it's Obama or Bernard, it seems we'd be better off if people focused more on doing
the right thing, as opposed to tightly controlling the information that's released to the public. Because it is our government, after all.
While we're talking about doing the right thing, the Department of Hawaiian Homelands yesterday nixed Eric Knutzen's plan to lease Anahola homelands to harvest and cultivate trees for his wood chip-burning plant. For years homesteaders have been protesting their lands being leased to non-Hawaiian grifters.
Finally, DHHL listened. Or, rather, five of the eight commissioners did.
While we're talking about doing the right thing, the Department of Hawaiian Homelands yesterday nixed Eric Knutzen's plan to lease Anahola homelands to harvest and cultivate trees for his wood chip-burning plant. For years homesteaders have been protesting their lands being leased to non-Hawaiian grifters.
Finally, DHHL listened. Or, rather, five of the eight commissioners did.