Westside
Kauai Rep. Dee Morikawa and other members of the state House will be
meeting with the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) this week to discuss concerns about a proposed no-fishing
zone around Niihau.
“I
certainly don't support this,” Dee wrote in an email to me. “There
needs to be a fact-finding study to see if the Niihau complaints are
warranted.”
The
Robinson family, which owns the island, claims fishermen from Kauai
have been over-harvesting fish and
opihi on Niihau. The Robinsons have gotten support from Oahu Sen. Clayton Hee
and other Hawaiian legislators to introduce a bill banning fishing
around the island.
“When
you make a state law doing something like that, you set precedent,”
a Kauai resident who occasionally fishes neat Niihau told me. “It's
beginning to open like a can of worms. What's next? Larry Ellison on
Lanai? Hawaiian Homes in Anahola?”
William
Aila, director of the DLNR, reportedly is considering a similar
approach to resolve resource “conflicts” at Molokai and Lanai,
according to comments made at a November meeting with Kauai
fishermen.
The
Robinsons already have negotiated a memorandum of agreement with the
state and federal governments to possibly include the waters around
Niihau in the Hawaiian Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. Final state approval is still needed.
Though
all beaches in Hawaii are public to the highest seasonal wash of the
waves, Niihau has long been considered essentially off-limits for
shore landings — an unofficial ban the Robinsons enforced. Boating
activity has increased in recent years, along with disputes between
island residents and Kauai fishermen.
“There
was small kine altercations,” the fisherman told me. But an
incident earlier this year, in which Niihau residents reportedly
confiscated fishing gear from Keala Lanning and his nephews, who were
picking opihi, “seemed to start Bruce [Robinson] on the campaign to
shut Niihau off.” Lanning unsuccessfully sought a return of his property through DLNR.
The
fisherman acknowledged that "some people do take advantage," including
setting net in front of the one village where all Niihau residents live.
“That, to me, is not showing respect for the people. But it's not
right to close the whole island, because the state owns out to three
miles and up to the high water line.”
Fishermen
at the November meeting with Aila expressed concerns about
restricting access to publicly-owned resources. They also said
Niihau, Kauai and Kaula are connected, so the Niihau marine ecosystem
can't be managed independently.
Aila
and the Robinsons have justified the closure by saying Niihau residents
depend on the ocean for food because they have no refrigeration.
Others say Niihau is a “special case” because
it is one of the few places where Hawaiians can still engage in traditional subsistence lifestyles.
The
Association of Hawaiian Civic Clubs is also weighing in with a
proposed resolution contending that “in the recent months,
outsiders have become even more bold and have raided the island of
opihi and fish to the extent that oftentimes the people go hungry.”
The resolution also maintains “the urgency of the plight of the
Niihau people came to light through the Aha Moku Advisory Council on
Oct. 18, 2013, when the latest report of ten commercial fishing boats
were seen within the near-shore waters of Niihau taking as much opihi
as they could gather.”
But
others dispute those claims, saying fishermen haven't taken too much. Solar panels and generators do power
refrigerators on Niihau, they say, and the Robinsons operate a barge
that regularly brings in food from family members on Kauai. "The people there aren't starving," the fisherman said.
Though the Robinsons say Niihau has about 150 permanent residents, others say only about 30 to 50 people live there full-time. Many former Niihau residents have settled in Kekaha and Waimea.
Though the Robinsons say Niihau has about 150 permanent residents, others say only about 30 to 50 people live there full-time. Many former Niihau residents have settled in Kekaha and Waimea.
Niihau
residents also have access to wild game that is so plentiful, fishermen say, that some
hunters pay Robinson for the chance to engage in eradication hunts,
though they are not allowed to take the meat. The Robinsons also host
expensive safaris for tourists who want to hunt the exotic game
introduced there.
Some
fishermen contend Bruce Robinson is seeking the ban in part to protect the
resources for his own gain, because he reportedly has been selling
opihi from the island for decades. Others claim that Sen. Hee and his
friends were given “free reign” to hunt and fish on Niihau in
exchange for supporting a no-fishing law.
There
is also the issue of enforcement, with many asking how the state,
which has a tiny staff of conservation officers, could enforce a
no-fishing ban.
“I
would support beefing up the DOCARE enforcement staff to police the
island better,” Dee said.
“I
think the politically right thing to do is have some sort of
conservation in a way to satisfy both sides,” the fisherman said.
“Maybe a closed zone in front of the village” where residents do
regularly fish. But they can't easily access the rest of the island,
he said, so it should not be closed to fisherman from Kauai.
Though Dee's district includes Niihau, she was not consulted about the fishing ban by the state, her fellow lawmakers or the Robinsons. Dee said she asked DLNR and the governor's office for an explanation of the proposal two weeks ago, but heard nothing back.
Though Dee's district includes Niihau, she was not consulted about the fishing ban by the state, her fellow lawmakers or the Robinsons. Dee said she asked DLNR and the governor's office for an explanation of the proposal two weeks ago, but heard nothing back.
Dee
said further public
discussion on the issue “will occur when and if the bills are heard
during the session. In the meantime, I have been listening to people
and asking questions of those whom I feel may have suggestions. I'm
also very accessible through my legislative e-mail
[repmorikawa@capitol.hawaii.gov]
and
encourage anyone to submit concerns to me.”
Whtever they do, I hope they consult with cultural practitioners and carve out exceptions for the exercise of Native Hawaiian gathering rights and the rights of indigenous people under the UN treaty that Obama (and the rest of the world) signed.
ReplyDeleteDee Morikawa is worthless. She couldn't organize a prayer meeting in the Vatican, let alone negotiate the labyrinth of DOCARE/DLNR.
ReplyDeleteJust post warnings at all harbors, "ATTENTION. If you go to Niihau the Niihau people will enforce their rights in the old way. Do not call for help, you are on your own, just you and the Niihauans"
My only question would be. How can the Robinson's sign a MOU with the State for an Ocean that they don't own?
ReplyDelete“There needs to be a fact-finding study to see if the ... complaints are warranted.”
ReplyDeleteWow. That's novel.
Resource management is resource management. It really shouldn't matter where you live. If over fishing is happening then everyone should cool your jets. Ha'ena is working on a community based subsistence fishing area. Its not about weather you live in Niihau or Kauai, its about if you live in the ocean.
ReplyDeleteYeah let's blame the degradation of Haena on overfishing, not the globs of tourists who are covered in deet and sunblock and then go walk on the reef. People chase fish away, when more than 1 million tourists are swimming in the fishery, how does that work?
ReplyDeleteWell you can kiss it all off once that phony Omidyar gets going. It will be history and so will the remaining fish.
ReplyDelete"Some fishermen contend Bruce Robinson is seeking the ban in part to protect the resources for his own gain, because he reportedly has been selling opihi from the island for decades. Others claim that Sen. Hee and his friends were given 'free reign' to hunt and fish on Niihau in exchange for supporting a no-fishing law."
ReplyDeleteThese are lies made up to try and undermine the well-meaning attempt of Bruce Robinson to preserve the Niihau habitat for the Hawaiians who live there. Shameful lies.
On another note: The Robinsons dispute the State's ownership of the beach up to the high wash of the waves. The Robinson's deed from Kamehameha V show that they own the island to the outer edges of the reef. When the State made their beach ownership declaration in the 1960s they did not compensate the Robinsons for this taking and it is therefore an illegal taking and unperfected.
Anonymous said, The Robinson's deed from Kamehameha V show that they own the island to the outer edges of the reef.
ReplyDeleteThe Robinson's never bought Niihau from Kamehameha V. The island was bought by the Sinclair family. Robinson married into the Sinclair family.
And I have bought opihi from Niihau since the 70's when it was $85 a gallon. Now it's double that.
Most of the Niihauans now live on Kauai, There may be about 30 or so Kanaka that live there now.
Robinson on the last introduction invited over a hundred monk seals to Niihau of which each one will eat on the average, about 20 pounds of fish in a day.
2000 pounds a day or 30 tons a month.
Yep blame the fishermen.
Bottom line, Robinson's are setting the bomb for their own empire downfall...
ReplyDeleteThey don't have title "OWNERSHIP OF NIIHAU" or any Lands here in Ko Hawaii Pae Aina.
To Anonymous December 20, 2013 at 12:59 PM
ReplyDeleteIf you knew what your were talking about then you'd know that Bruce Robinson is a direct lineal descendent of Eliza Sinclair, his great great grandmother. Maybe you forgot that she only had daughters who settled with her on Ni' ihau and Kaua'i. One of the daughters married a Robinson and as custom dictated took her husband's surname. You can even look it up on Wikipedia and common knowledge to those who are obviously more informed than you.
So what would keep me from taking a small boat to the island and walking around it below the high water line? Are the residents going to actually murder me? What if I did this with a video camera and Sat phone?
ReplyDelete