A hui hou.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Pau Hana
A hui hou.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Musings: Shifting the Status Quo
The sky
this morning was black, though from clouds and not from darkness,
with just one small puka in the east — an eye of light that closed
when the rain roared through and then re-opened to sparkle the drops
hanging from the ironwoods, shimmer the sea splashing onto the shore.
Watching
Koko and Paele playing on the sand, it struck me that Paele has lost
the anxious fear furrows in his forehead. They were so pronounced
when I first got him that I thought he must be part Sharpei.
And I
reflected on Paele's first vet check two years ago, when he nearly
bit Dr. Basko. I wondered aloud if the dog I'd taken in was too traumatized and aggressive to rehabilitate. Dr. Basko replied, “He
just needs lots of love and happy experiences.”
Don't we
all?
Today is
the sixth anniversary of Kauai Eclectic, an event marked
statistically by 1,520 posts and 861,475 page views, and
intrinsically by my own reflections. As a journalist/blogger, I've
covered a lot of issues and dug up a lot of dirt, while personally, I've
been growing and healing all that time.
I've
changed, and it feels like it's time for the blog to change.
I'm not
quite sure if it's possible to bring love and happiness into the toxic milieu of
politics, environmental collapse and man's inhumanity to everything, but I do know it's time to shake things up. So I'm
going to take a little blog break and figure it out.
Exciting
things can happen when the status quo no longer exists.
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Musings: Dirty Little Secrets
It's
so wonderful to hear the plip-plop of rain again, the roar of a
squall arriving like a freight train through the trees, the drip,
drip of droplets falling from eaves and leaves. Everything has come
alive again, even the dirt.
Did
you know that Bill 2491 has a dirty little secret? I kind of hate to
bring it up, seeing as how so many people marched on Rice Street
because they believed that if they did, it would be passed, and if it
was passed, it would bring meaningful change.
The
truth is, this bill is very unlikely to ever be enforced. Its
sponsor, Councilman Gary Hooser, told me from the start that it would
rely on voluntary compliance by the chemical/seed companies. But
wait, isn't that what we have now with the state? Isn't voluntary
compliance exactly what people believe is inadequate?
Later,
when I expressed my dismay to Gary about the polarizing effects of a
bill that I saw as essentially meaningless, as in sounds tough but
lacks teeth, he tried to ease my concerns.
It
doesn't even matter if it's enforced, he told me. All that matters is
getting it passed.
I
suppose that's true if you're using Bill 2491 to build a political
movement or make a statement to the world — hey, we told the
chemical companies to piss off.
But
if you look at the vacation rental debacle, it's quite clear that if
the Administration does not want to implement and enforce a bill,
it's not going to happen, unless citizens bring a lawsuit. And do you
think for one minute that Mayor Bernard Carvalho and the public works
department supports 2491?
I
appreciate that Gary has brought this issue into the spotlight, and I
respect him for wanting to do something important. That's commendable
in anyone, especially a politician. I also understand why co-sponsor
Councilman Tim Bynum — despite so much Abuse Chronicles evidence to
the contrary — doesn't want to believe that fraud, incompetence and
corruption run through so many county operations, which is how he's justifying minimal money for enforcement.
But I've had a bad feeling in my na'au ever since Bill 2491 was
introduced because I know that most of its supporters have no clue about how our county functions, so they aren't in on
this dirty little secret. And they really should be, so they can
decide if they're OK with voluntary compliance and an Administration that will turn a blind eye, or if they want a
meaningful law that will give them the informed sense of safety and
security they're seeking.
Did
you know the county auditor's office has a dirty little secret? Well,
actually, it's got a quite a few, but the biggest is that it's
an agency that was set up to fail. When voters approved the
position, they no doubt believed it would function as a watchdog,
ferreting out corruption. Instead, when it came time to hire an
auditor, the Council had three applicants: county insider Ernie
Pasion, former county attorney Lani Nakazawa and a CPA who showed up
drunk for his interview. Rather than re-post the vacancy, or mo
bettah, broaden the search, the Council chose Ernie, with Lani as his
assistant.
Unfortunately,
neither was a licensed CPA, so they couldn't actually conduct any
real audits. But that didn't stop them from earning big salaries. As
auditor, Ernie is paid $114,848 annually, while according to a public
records request, Lani had been paid the
following as of June 19: FY10:
$74,061, FY11: $94,189.92, FY12: $102,142.21, FY13: $94,645.76. She
was also paid overtime: FY10: $5,430.62; FY11: $6,676.93; FY12:
$1,024.50; FY13: $1,749.46
If you look at the
auditor's website, you'll see nothing has been since spring of 2012, though a public records request shows that contractors were paid
through July 2012.
Nor
is anything likely to happen because Ron Rawls, the staff CPA, was
fired and is suing the county, and his position hasn't been filled.
So why have an auditor, or an auditor's office, or if it's going to be compromised by the same cronyism and incompetence that afflicts so many other county departments?
That's a question voters might have asked — if they'd known about the dirty little secret from the start.
Monday, September 16, 2013
Musings: Hide and Obscure
Often,
when I am walking in the wee hours with the dogs, the sky is clear
overhead — Makalii, Triangle, Betelgeuse, Jupiter and the rest shining
bold against black. But creeping in from the east, from Lihue side,
is the heavy, damp grayness of the cloud bank, ready to obscure, blot
out and hide.
So it is
with our county government, especially on the transient vacation
rental issue. As a story in The Garden Island reports, even our
gullible planning commission isn't buying the county attorney's
argument that all those hundreds of improperly issued TVR
certificates must be allowed to stand:
[Planning
Director Mike] Dahilig said the former planning director (Ian Costa
stepped out in November 2010) granted permits based on whether there
was enough evidence at that time for a nonconforming use. That
determination is still valid today, he said.
“That
doesn’t make sense to me,” Commissioner Hartwell Blake said.
It
doesn't make sense to any thinking person who values fairness,
honesty, integrity and the rule of law. But so long as the county
attorney's office keeps hiding the opinion, and the commission and
County Council don't challenge it, the nonsense will continue.
Who
actually requested that opinion, and who wrote it? That information,
like the opinion itself, remains secret. County Attorney Al Castillo
actually claimed to a friend that he didn't even know there was such
an opinion. Really, Al?
Perhaps
the opinion was issued unbidden to ensure the county never deals with
the root of this mess — a mess that was intentionally made when the
planning department chose to ignore the law and rubber stamp anything
that came across the counter.
It
wouldn't be the first time the County Attorney's office took the lead
in the TVR issue. Remember “beer gate,” when Mike, then a
deputy county attorney, lobbied former Councilman Dickie Chang to gut
the TVR bill, remove all those pesky requirements like inspections,
and proof that taxes were paid?
Did
Mike know then that planning had been ignoring the law? Surely he
must have had some inkling that things were amiss, seeing as how he
was the attorney advising the planning department and commission.
Though
Mike whines in the article that “County inspectors hired to
implement TVR laws were not adequately trained or supervised,” he
doesn't explain why he's kept those same unskilled inspectors in jobs for which they are not qualified. Nor does he reveal why he brought in Mike Laureta, a former planner who appears to be ethically
challenged, to supervise them.
If
you really wanted to fix a botched mess, wouldn't you bring in some
new, skilled people to deal with it? And by the same token, if you
wanted to maintain the status quo, wouldn't you hire the same people who
helped make and hide all that dirty laundry?
So is that why Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. usurped the commission's power
and appointed Dahilig as planning director? To make sure someone in
the know swept it all back under the rug?
Well,
the Abuse Chronicles dug it out again, and the Administration is
desperately trying to sweep it back under the carpet. And you know
what, they're gonna do it — unless the Council or a public spirited attorney intervenes.
Meanwhile,
the clock is ticking on the 60-day period in which citizens can
appeal TVR renewals approved by the department. Yet it would be
virtually impossible for anyone to file such an appeal because
planning wants to charge anywhere from $180 to $1,500 to disclose who
was approved. It's so obvious from Mike's failure to even create an
Excel spread sheet, much less update the on-line TVR log, that this
Administration has no interest in TVR transparency.
Like
I said, it's all about obscure, blot out, hide.
Ironically,
though the planning commission approved numerous flawed TVR
applications, with no questions asked, and then promptly fell asleep
at the wheel while the TVR law crashed, it's apparently wide awake now,
determined no request for a non-conforming use certificate will get
past it unchallenged.
That's why commissioners absolutely reamed a lady who sought a permit to made fudge in her kitchen. No on-site sales, no noise, no traffic — not even a stove. Just raw fudge, a few days a week, with the approval of all her neighbors.
Why,
we can't be allowing commercial uses to undermine a residential
neighborhood, they harrumphed.
No,
indeed. But it's apparently OK to turn numerous residential
neighborhoods into defacto resorts as the mayor, planning department and county attorney wink and nod their approval.
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Musings: One Thing Leads to Another
One
question not raised in the discussion on dog license fees is
how many more dogs the Kauai Humane Society will end up killing
because their owners can't or won't pay the impound fees and
penalties.
Under
the bill approved yesterday by the County Council, KHS now has the
authority to take your unlicensed dog from your yard, even if you are
standing right there, impound it and kill it after 48 hours if you
don't come up with the $35 to $80 for a license and associated penalties. If the dog is in jail longer than
two days, a $12-per-day boarding fee will be tacked on.
Though
many people, including Councilman Ross Kagawa, get a lot of love and
comfort from their dogs, others are more ambivalent. While they
wouldn't necessarily turn their pets in to the shelter, they will use
cost as an excuse for not bailing them out.
It's
unclear how KHS will use its new powers, which have the potential to
greatly alienate the public. KHS Director Penny Cistaro told The Garden Island that they're expecting to raise $100,000
to $120,000 in the next nine months from licensing, board and impound
fees:
“We
will be more proactive,” she said. “We will be sending out
renewal notices when licenses expire and we will be more active with
how we are getting people to license their animals.”
Let's
hope they start with a convenient licensing process, an education campaign and a light touch. Because as a dog-loving friend said recently,
what value do I get from a dog license? If it's to support KHS,
haven't I done my part already by adopting a stray?
Since
we're talking about nonprofits, MidWeek columnist Bob Jones reports that the state Attorney General's office has ordered Kauai Independent Food Bank to repay the state $50,000 for improper use of SNAP (food stamp) funds.
This is in addition to the $779,000 that KIFB had to repay the
federal government. Though former executive director Judy Lenthall
resigned in the wake of the scandal, the same Board of Directors
still reigns.
Fortunately,
the Hawaii Food Bank opened a Kauai Branch, which now provides
virtually all of the food that is distributed to the hungry on this
island. Just something to keep in mind during September, which is
Hunger Awareness Month. Food donations can be taken to the HFB-Kauai
warehouse, which is located in the Puhi Industrial Park, just down
the road from Mark's Place. (482-2224) A major need is rice.
Speaking
of food, a new study finds the practice of feeding bees high fructose
corn syrup could be contributing to colony collapse. Commercial
beekeepers typically take all the high-value honey produced by their
bees, which are trucked around to pollinate crops, and feed them
low-cost corn syrup instead.
Honey is packed with all sorts of good stuff, so corn
syrup is obviously not a nutritional equivalent — even though research from the 1970s
indicated the practice was safe. Now, however, entomologists are finding the
syrup-fed bees appear to have compromised immune systems that inhibit
their ability to ward off the toxic effects of pesticides and
pathogens:
Specifically,
they found that when bees are exposed to the enzyme p-coumaric, their
immune system appears stronger—it turns on detoxification
genes. P-coumaric is found in pollen walls, not nectar, and makes its
way into honey inadvertently via sticking to the legs of bees as they
visit flowers.
As
a major component of pollen grains, p-coumaric acid is ubiquitous in
the natural diet of honey bees and may function as a nutraceutical
regulating immune and detoxification processes. The widespread
apicultural use of honey substitutes, including high-fructose corn
syrup, may thus compromise the ability of honey bees to cope with
pesticides and pathogens and contribute to colony losses.
The
study is careful to say corn syrup itself isn't toxic to bees. But
most of it is made from Roundup resistant corn and contains
glyphosate residue, which is now being implicated in disrupting
critical gut bacteria and suppressing detoxification enzymes. So that certainly warrants some looking into.
While we're on the topic of Roundup, House Republications
have slipped an extension of the Monsanto Protection Act into
the spending bill designed to avert a government shutdown. As the
Huffington Post reports:
Since
its quiet passage, the Monsanto Protection Act has become a target of
intense opposition. The law effectively prevents judges from placing
injunctions on genetically modified seeds even if they are deemed
unsafe.
Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley has vowed to oppose it:
"I
will fight the House's efforts to extend this special interest
loophole that nullifies court orders that are protecting farmers, the
environment, and public health."
But
Jennifer Hing, a spokeswoman for the House Appropriations Committee,
said the panel doesn't expect the Senate to balk at the inclusion of
the Monsanto provision. "We have received no indication that
this is a concern," she said.
Really? None at all?
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Musings: Getting It Straight
Let me get this straight. Councilman
Gary Hooser introduced Bill 2491 because the state is failing to
properly monitor the chemical companies to ensure human and
environmental health.
And the state isn't enforcing,
according to Gary Gill, state deputy health director, because the Legislature isn't providing sufficient funding.
The Lege isn't allocating funding because so many of its members receive campaign contributions
from the biotech industry, support chemical ag, have other
priorities, don't think it's a problem, etc.
Bill 2491 would have Kauai County
pick up the slack instead.
In response, Council Chair Jay Furfaro
says it will cost about $4.4 million the first two years, and an
additional $911,000 to monitor annually after that. County Engineer
Larry Dill says it will require a staff of eight, and new training
for those workers.
Gary Hooser and his co-sponsor, Councilman Tim
Bynum say no, we want it done with minimal funding. Two workers
should be sufficient.
Councilwoman JoAnn Yukimura wonders if
public works can handle it period, “because they have no expertise
and the county is unable to even properly regulate things within their proper expertise, like vacation rentals.”
And that giant screw up happened even
when the Council was willing to give planning as much money and staff as was needed to
properly implement the law.
So if we give public works just a quarter of what it says is needed, aren't we setting the law up for failure from the start? Won't that pave the way for the Administration to return to Council one day in the near future, when people are pissed because nothing has been done, and say, hey, we couldn't implement/enforce because we didn't have the funding?
Meanwhile, the chemical companies keep digging their hole deeper, playing the clam-up, no compromises game. They're
apparently putting all their faith in their lawyers to kill anything that gets passed.
But the Dow Agrosciences manager did
make an interesting revelation in response to questioning from JoAnn.
It seems Dow only farms downwind of its “legacy village”
— it took me a few minutes to realize that's the new euphemism for
plantation camp — and it maintains windbreaks to protect camp
residents from drift and dust. “We don't farm where there are
houses,” Dow's Keith Horton said, noting that fields around the
camp are intentionally not cultivated or sprayed.
OK, so if Dow is actively working to
keep its camp residents from being dusted and dosed, don't the folks living around the Syngenta and DuPont-Pioneer fields deserve
the same consideration?
Kirby Kester of BASF also admitted the
chem companies were talking about possibly using drift monitors or
sensor strips to determine when, where and how drift is occurring,
though Syngenta's Mark Phillipson didn't seem too keen on that idea.
That sounds like a pretty cheap and
easy place to start if you truly do “want to determine if it
[drift] is in fact occurring,” as Pioneer's Cindy Goldstein
claimed.
Cindy also acknowledged that vegetative
buffers “could work,” while saying the company had taken down at least
one row of trees in response to complaints from residents about
lost views. Kirby said dust screens were another possible option.
All four chemical companies flat out denied
growing biopharmaceutical crops now or in the past 10 years.
Though it's hard to believe them, especially when trust is in such scarce supply these days.
On another note, Dr. Don Huber, the
internationally recognized plant pathologist who apparently was flown in by GMO Free Kauai, spoke about the
dangerous effect of glyphosate (Roudup) on both people and the soil. Part of
the problem lies in the fact that it is “indiscriminately used,”
he said.
We've noticed. That's why some of us
wanted 2491 to address Roundup use, especially by the county,
which sprays it in areas that are heavily used by the public and
children, including parks, sports fields, roadsides and the coastal Path, and especially by the chemical companies, which are primarily growing crops resistant to the stuff.
But that fight has been postponed for another day.
Meanwhile, as Huber noted: “It's not what we do [know] as much
as what we don't know, and that's why the precautionary principle
becomes critical.”
Monday, September 9, 2013
Musings: Systemic Poisoning
Golden shafts shooting from the sea
announce the imminent arrival of the sun, a pumpkin-colored sphere
that rises half obscured, gilding the clouds electric orange. Wind
ruffles the heliotrope trees, birds dive for fish and this fish
plunges in, rewarded with an infusion of joy.
The "mana marchers" yesterday were
rewarded with a good turnout and the presence of Mayor Bernard
Carvalho, appropriately dressed in purple, though I've got a hunch he's a blue shirt guy at heart. It's great that he showed up to
see the growing number of folks dismayed about pesticide use on lands stretching from Lihue to Mana.
The striking absence of the three
Councilmembers needed to get Bill 2491 out of committee — Nadine
Nakamura, Mel Rapozo and Ross Kagawa — does not bode well for the bill's success today.
Meanwhile, another sort of poisoning, a systemic poisoning
continues.....
I walked into a room yesterday where a
group of women were discussing the delays associated with obtaining a
building permit.
You have to get in good with the guys in the building department,
says one. Like how? asks the one who is waiting for approvals. Give
them stuff, says another. Money? asks the one. That would work, says
another. They like food, volunteers another. Do I just buy something
and go over there and put it on the counter? asks the one. Or do I
give it to someone special? Our builder did it, because he knows all
those guys, a woman explains. He just dropped off lunches one day and
right after that we got our permit.
I opened a copy of The Week and read a
blurb about a new survey by Yahoo that found the most common terms
searched by the 18-to-35-year-old crowd are how to twerk, how to boil
an egg, what is molly, what is hummus and what is a synonym.
A friend told me she was in the store
when a young woman approached her, distraught, asking for suggestions
on what she should take to counteract the radiation, by which she
presumably meant that which is being released by Fukushima. I share
your despair, my friend said, and suggested seaweed. “And then I got
home and looked at my seaweed and it's all from Japan,” my friend
lamented.
Checked the news and thought, how can the United States be ready to
attack Syria for using chemical weapons when we supplied Iraq with chemical weapons to use on Iran, dumped Agent Orange
on Cambodia and Vietnam, dosing our own troops in the process, and
used bullets and bombs filled with depleted uranium in Bosnia and Iraq, again dosing our own troops, and leaving the land contaminated with low-level radiation?
A woman sent me an email, told me she has a legally permitted vacation rental, pays all her taxes, jumps through the hoops, and it pisses her off that other people are operating TVRs totally illegally, and with impunity, even after I exposed it all in my blog. What is the next step? she asked.
I have absolutely no idea, but I replied to her email: I do understand your frustration and disappointment. It is also mine, except mine is compounded by being aware of the corruption and incompetence as it extends into every aspect of county government, not just the TVRs.
I sit on my porch and breathe deeply,
watch the clouds drape the green peaks of Makaleha and eat eggs laid by my neighbor's chickens, a gift given in
exchange for my gift of overripe papayas for her goat and horse, and
dried papaya for her.
It may not be an antidote, but I feel better.
Friday, September 6, 2013
Musings: Significantly Insignificant
The
new moon night was choked with stars, the Milky Way offering a fuzzy
path through our galaxy, reminding me of my interconnectedness, as
well as my insignificance.
Though
Kauai has been significant to the outside world primarily as a
tourist destination and Navy base, it's gaining some national
attention due to Bill 2491, the GMO-pesticide measure that goes
before the Council again on Monday.
Over
at Slate.com, writer Adam Skolnick has a interesting piece, reporting that a Waimea resident has been petitioning Pioneer
since 2000 to install windbreaks and mitigate dust. One has to wonder why Pioneer kept stalling, if it's the "good neighbor" it professes to be.
Skolnick also reported, (emphasis added):
In
the days leading up to public testimony, the chemical companies
flooded local media with ads, and flew in experts who spoke at town
hall sessions and testified before the council. One of their experts,
Dr. Steve Savage, a former DuPont employee and professor at Colorado
State University, presented a graph that compares per-acre RUP use on
Kauai to 17 states – including the entire corn belt.
At
first glance, it appears that Kauai uses less than half the
pesticides of the heaviest user, Kentucky. But read the fine print
and you’ll discover that while other state measurements represent
annual usage, tiny Kauai’s is calculated for a single growing
season. And we know that there are at least two, and often three
growing seasons in Hawaii, which means the amount of RUPs sprayed per
acre on this small island dwarfs that of all 17 states during their
biggest ever pesticide usage years. That is misinformation at its
most egregious, but may explain why the companies are so dead set
against disclosure.
Skolnick
ended with this:
As
for the suspected cancer cluster, whispers from local surgeons,
radiologists and oncologists who have been concerned about a possible
elevated cancer rate on Kauai for years finally reached the state
Department of Health in June who asked the Hawaii Tumor Registry for
a statistical analysis. The results can be found in a trim, one-page
report that suggests there is no cancer spike on Kauai.
“Anecdotal
evidence can be relevant,” said [Dr. Brenda] Hernandez, “because
that’s the front line of disease occurrence.” According to
Hernandez, the only way to determine if there is a cancer cluster in
Lower Waimea is to conduct a focused epidemiological study, which
would cost upward of $250,000, and could be part of an EIS were 2491
to pass. “If I lived there,” she added, “it would concern me.”
If
there's reason for concern, shouldn't such a study be conducted in
lower Waimea whether 2491 passes or not? I mean, $250,000 is only half the
amount that's been blown defending the county against Councilman Tim
Bynum's civil rights lawsuit — and just a quarter of the sum the state kicked down to resurface the Mana racetrack. Surely the county and/or state can scrounge up some
cash for a health study.
Meanwhile,
Forbes published something more akin to a hit piece that describes
how “an impressionable anti-GMO mob mentality
has been carefully cultivated in Hawaii by slick and well-financed
outsiders.” It states:
Although
they claim their opposition to the innovative technology is home
grown, a Genetic Literacy Project investigation, still in its
infancy, suggests that the opposition is flush with cash, getting
hundreds of thousands of dollars each year from mainland anti-GMO
organic organizations that have an ideological stake in blocking new
farming technologies.
It
also alleges that Walter Ritte, a board member of Hawaii Seed, may
have violated election financing and disclosure
laws in his 2012 run for OHA.
Walter
will be back on Kauai again this weekend to rally the troops at the
“mana march.” While it's great that people are finally waking up
about this issue, I don't understand the political strategy behind
holding a march on Sunday, when Lihue is essentially a ghost town. It
seems a troubling metaphor for the 2491 campaign, which has both
sides trapped in their respective echo chambers.
More
to the point, why isn't the march being held in Waimea, the epicenter
of the real action? By which I mean the place where the dirty deeds
are going down, as opposed to where the political theater is staged.
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Musings: Tricked
“It
seems like we got tricked, actually,” said Councilman Ross Kagawa
at yesterday's planning committee meeting.
Ross
was referencing the really crappy public access that the planning
commission accepted in approving Falko Properties' uberluxe Kahuaina
Plantation Subdivision on the North Shore, and his
recognition that once again a developer has scammed the county,
pretending its gentleman's estates are actually an agricultural
subdivision.
“It's like, OK, this is ag, this is going to be good for our community, we're gonna grow food and what not, you know," Ross said. "It turns out it's a subdivision, a residential subdivision that's gonna sell for a lot of money where our locals can't afford to probably rent it. And now not to have the access, the recognition of the ala loa [historical coastal trail], I feel like we got tricked.”
We did. And how many times has it been now? Yet the planning commission and planning department just keep going
merrily along, prompting Councilman Gary Hooser to ask Planning
Director Mike Dahilig why his department accepted a coastal access that
favored the developer, but was the worst option for the public. As in
walk a long ways and end up on the rocks.
Mike
replied that there was no legal requirement for planners to advocate
for the public. Which apparently is why they, and other "public servants," so rarely do.
Non-farming ag subdivisions aren't the only tricks being played on
the public. We also have the vacation rental sham. As Councilman Mel
Rapozo noted yesterday, Councilmembers who supported the TVR bill “honestly
believed it would reduce the number of vacation rentals outside the
VDA.”
Instead,
through failed implementation and non-existent enforcement, there's
been wholesale licensing of properties that never qualified for the
permit, and a proliferation of totally illegal vacation rentals.
What's more, it's become clear that nothing is going to be done about it.
We
were all tricked into believing the TVR law would solve the problem.
If anything, it's made it worse.
So
that's one reason why I've had a hard time mustering enthusiasm for
Bill 2491. It seems so many people believe it will be the answer to
the pesticide pollution on the westside, a way to dislodge the seed
companies.
But
if you have a mayor and an administration that is not interested in
enforcing a bill, then it goes the way of agricultural subdivisions
and TVRs — laws on the books that mean nothing.
Nothing except citizen frustration among those of us who believe laws are passed for a reason and government officials are bound to uphold them.
I
spoke today with a westsider who didn't want to be named in my blog, but
reminded me of the real people who are being impacted by the dust and
pesticides being sprayed by the chemical/seed companies. The caller shared the despair they feel, their abject unhappiness.
Those
westside residents are the reason why we need buffers between fields
and public areas, why we need to know what the companies are spraying, how much
and where.
So
when I think about them, it's a no-brainer. Yes, we need to pass
2491.
Then
I recall how often we have been tricked into thinking legislation,
public demonstrations, evidence, even mountains of evidence, can make
a difference.
And I wonder, aren't we just tricking ourselves, with
the belief that an inherently broken, corrupt system does work, ever even can work?
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Musings: Scraps
What
could be more stunning than Waialeale, totally free of clouds, a navy
blue hulk against a shell pink sky? Well, maybe purple cumulus clouds
edged in orange neon rising from a sea that looked like smoky glass, and felt like warm silk when I dove in.
I really don't want to dive into covering murders, but I did a bit of checking around after reading the comments left on my
recent post about the jail term handed down to ex-cop Joseph Genaro
Bonachita. He broke into South Park creator Trey Parker's Kauai
home while stalking Lauren Kagawa. She was found dead in her driveway on Aug. 17, 2009.
I
learned the Office of Prosecuting Attorney's “cold case unit” is
continuing to investigate her death. Sources also confirm the 27-year-old woman showed no signs of being beaten or
choked, as some commenters alleged.
KPD
closed the case in March 2010, with Assistant Chief Roy Asher saying an
autopsy and toxicology report attributed her death to a combination
of prescription drugs and alcohol. Still, her body was dumped in her
driveway, just one month after she had secured a restraining order
against ex-boyfriend Bonachita, saying he had choked and sexually
assaulted her, and she feared for her life. Back in 2010, Asher said
the cops didn't know who left her there, so apparently a few stones
remain unturned.
Who
knows. Maybe one day we'll find out what really happened. Meanwhile,
the OPA's cold case investigators are still working on the
island's other unsolved murders.
On
a brighter note, Forbes has named Kapaa one of the prettiest towns in
America. Yes, you heard me. Our scruffy little Kapaa, in the national limelight. I loved the
description by National Geographic Traveler writer
Andrew Evans, who apparently was wowed after Kamika Smith of Smith's
Tropical Paradise took him on a tour:
“It’s
a very Hawaiian town with traditional ukulele makers and fish taco
trucks parked under the palm trees,
Yup,
nothing says Hawaiian quite like a fish taco truck.
Speaking of things "Hawaiian," Civil
Beach and Huffington Post launched their HuffPost Hawaii site today. If you check out the blog roll on the left, you'll find a post by me: Truth a Casualty in Kauai GMO-Pesticide Debate.
Because nothing quite says Kauai like a good feisty scrap.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Musings: I Wonder
Vacation
rentals are back on tomorrow's County Council agenda, with Planning
Director Mike Dahilig scheduled to give us yet another boondoggle
update — this time, on the renewals, and any administrative or
court proceedings involving TVRs.
I
wonder, will Mike reveal to the Council that it's currently impossible for a citizen to find out who is operating a legal
TVR on this island without submitting a public records request and
paying $182.50? That kind of throws a wrench into the citizen
complaints upon which TVR “enforcement” is hinged, and it makes
it awfully hard for folks to challenge improperly approved renewals
within the 60-day period.
But
then, maybe that's the intent.
I
wonder, will the Council get into the core issue behind the renewals?
By which I mean the county attorney's determination that people can
keep TVR certificates they were never entitled to have, simply
because the county — through corruption, incompetence or both —
approved them back in 2009. Has the Council seen that opinion? Does
it accept it? Has it thought of hiring Special Counsel, someone who
is more experienced in land use law than Deputy County Attorney Ian
Jung, someone like Jim Bickerton, to review and
possibly challenge it?
I wonder, will
the public ever be allowed to know the rationale behind that opinion,
or even who it was prepared for? Or will we all be left hanging,
wondering why it is that some people were given the huge gift of a life-of-the-property TVR certificate, while other folks were totally
screwed because they didn't even apply, never dreaming they, too,
could have scammed the system?
I
wonder, how long will the Council let itself be suckered into the
stall and delay game, as Mike trots out shady numbers to prove he's
making “progress” — infinitesimal though it may be — when we
could have a functioning data base able to spit out accurate numbers
if he'd used a couple of the 90-day hires the Council has repeatedly
offered him?
Speaking of the stall game, I've been trying for a week to look again at the files of the 20 properties featured in the Abuse Chronicles. Now planning is telling me it will be at least another week before they can even tell me how much it will cost me for that peek. Seems they have just one employee who can figure it out, and s/he's on vacation.
Speaking of the stall game, I've been trying for a week to look again at the files of the 20 properties featured in the Abuse Chronicles. Now planning is telling me it will be at least another week before they can even tell me how much it will cost me for that peek. Seems they have just one employee who can figure it out, and s/he's on vacation.
I wonder when the Council might start considering some changes to the TVR
ordinance. A good place to start would be Maui's law, which you can read here. Though Ian Jung
has told the Council at least twice in public session that Kauai's
TVR fiasco is not exceptional, even Maui has thrown up its hands, a
chat with Maui planners revealed his assertion to be untrue.
Maui
has a good TVR law, one that its planning department properly
implemented and actively enforces. Whereas our county attorney
claimed we had to wholesale legalize TVRs on ag land or risk a dreaded
“takings” lawsuit, Maui requires TVRs in the ag district to
obtain a State special use permit.
Maui
also sets quotas for how many TVRs can be allowed in a community. For example, Hana: 48; Kihei-Makena: 100 (provided that, there are no more than
five permitted short-term rental homes in the subdivision commonly
known as Maui Meadows); Makawao-Pukalani-Kula: 40; Paia-Haiku: 88;
Wailuku-Kahului: 36, and West Maui: 88.
Compare
that to Kauai, where there are a few hundred in Hanalei-Haena alone.
The
Maui law also requires all advertising to contain a valid TVR
certificate number, which sure makes enforcement and citizen review a
lot simpler, while allowing visitors to ensure they are picking legal
rentals.
And
whereas we just gave away the fricking store by giving people
life-of-the-property permits, Maui wisely imposed limits:
Initial
short-term rental home permits shall be valid for a maximum period of
one year with an extension of two years if there are no recorded
complaints; shorter extension periods may be required by the director
to mitigate adverse impacts based on the department's investigation
of recorded complaints. Subsequent permit renewals may be granted by
the director for terms of up to five years on Lanai and Maui and up
to one year on Molokai.
Oh,
and check this out, (emphasis added):
Verification
of appropriate State and County tax filings shall be submitted by
June 30 of each year for the prior calendar year. No permit shall be
renewed without written verification of appropriate State and County
tax filings. No permit shall be renewed if the operation of
the short-term rental home has created adverse impacts or has caused
the loss of the character to the neighborhood in which it is situated.
The
most recent gutting of our law, the one orchestrated by the mayor and
Councilman Tim Bynum, eliminated any such requirements for renewals.
You just send in your money on time and that's it.
My
point is, we got a really crappy TVR law based on advice from County
Attorney Al Castillo and his deputies — the very same guys who are
now advising the Council on how to respond to its failure, the same guys who were supposed to be advising planning on how to implement it all this time.
So
mostly I wonder, will the Council let Mayor Benard Carvalho Jr. and
his attorneys keep thumbing their noses at them and the law they
passed? And if he can do it with TVRs, what will stop him from doing
it with other bills the Council passes?
Like
I said, maybe it's time for the Council to hire itself a good
attorney — one that hopefully will represent the public's
interest, and not the mayor's — and see what its legal options are
for cleaning up this mess at its source.
Monday, September 2, 2013
Musings: Monday Miscellany
The
day began with a wedge of cheese moon in a butterscotch sky, and
beneath it, a mouse, or maybe it was a rat. It's hard to be certain
with cloud shapes. But there's no doubt the kolea are back, and the
ruddy turnstones, evidence that summer is departing, despite the hot
temps and warm seas.
The Hawaii Fishermen's Alliance for Conservation and Tradition (HFACT), an
advocacy organization for some 3,000 small boat commercial fishermen who catch much of the fish sold locally, believes there's evidence to show the
humpback whale is sufficiently recovered to warrant its removal from
the endangered species list.
The
group has filed a petition to identify the North
Pacific population of humpback whales a distinct population segment
that should be delisted. A similar strategy is being employed to
delist the green sea turtle, though HFACT President Phil Fernandez said the whale petition is not connected to the honu
petition and the group is independent of the Western Pacific Regional
Fishery Management Council (Wespac).
In
explaining the group's rationale, Fernandez wrote:
International
rules banning the take of large whales have been in place for almost
50 years, we support these rules. Additionally, the Marine
Mammal Protection Act will continue to protect whales. HFACT
simply feels that the application of the ESA , which Congress
identified as the "protection of last resort" is not longer
necessary.
The
petition is also an attempt to sideline current efforts to expand the
Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. A draft
management plan is due out in early 2014. Fishers have
consistently complained that the NOAA Sanctuary Division is not listening to
them or considering their concerns, so they created HFACT and
submitted the petition.
In
publishing a 90-day finding, the National Marine Fisheries Service
noted:
We
find that the petition viewed in the context of information readily
available in our files presents substantial scientific and commercial
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted.
To
determine whether it is warranted, the agency is
“soliciting scientific and commercial information pertaining
to this population from any interested party.” Comments are due by
Oct. 28. You can view this document for more details on the petition
and how to submit comments.
A
petition of another sort seeks to prevent President Obama from
issuing an executive order to accomplish what the Akaka Bill, OHA and
the Kanaiolowalu (Hawaiian roll call) have all failed to do— give
kanaka maoli federal recognition. The petition reads:
The
Kana’iolowalu Roll Commission thwarts the legal context and spirit
of self-determination. We are not tribal, nor of tribes. Attempting
to transform our Hawaiian identity is an unconstitutional, race-based
action; a clear breach and violation of our perfect right denying our
due process under law.
We,
the Kanaka Maoli, have been misrepresented through materially false,
fictitious, and fraudulent statements implemented through the use of
false writings/documents. We oppose federal recognition of our people
and reject Kana’iolowalu.
We
ask that you respect the U.S. Constitution and comply with
international laws, Laws of Nations and the U.N. Declaration you
signed in 2010 based on the right to self-determination and
self-governance.
You
can sign if you agree with that sentiment, even if you aren't kanaka
maoli.
I
see the county is looking to transform Kawaihau Road to make it more
“pedestrian friendly.” Why? Of all the roads in Kapahi-Wailua,
it's already the friendliest because it has that little path that
runs almost its entire length, as well as crosswalks by the schools
and the still-closed spur to the coastal Path. But since the money is
tied to schools, attention will be focused on Kawaiahau Road, rather than
where it's actually needed, like the pedestrian death traps of
Kaapuni Road in Kapahi and Hoolako Street in Lihue.
Speaking
of pedestrian routes, Councilmembers Nadine Nakamura and Mel Rapozo
are seeking more info at Wednesday's meeting about a public easement that
Falko Properties plans to dedicate as part of its super luxe Kahuaina Plantation, which will turn more prime ag land into upscale gentleman's
estates between Moloaa and Kilauea. I do not understand why people who claim to care about the future of agriculture on Kauai, as evidenced by their interest in pesticide-GMO Bill 2491, don't seem bothered a bit by gentrification.
At any rate, Mel wants to know how the easement will
impact the location and establishment of the alaloa, a traditional
coastal trail, while Nadine wants to know more about the subdivision's approval process and the easement, “including the
parking area’s distance to the shoreline, the number of
parking stalls and responsibility for the maintenance of the approximately
one mile long public access.”
Mahalo
Mel and Nadine for being concerned about public access.