Gary Hooser's dual roles as Kauai
County Councilman and president of the Hawaii Alliance for
Progressive Action are already in conflict with his opposition to one
of Gov. Ige's cabinet nominees.
Hooser's group was one of 20 opposing
the nomination of Carleton Ching to lead the Department of Land and
Natural Resources. In today's The Garden Island he is identified as a
Councilman and HAPA president in issuing this quote:
While Carlton Ching is no doubt a
competent administrator, his extensive background as a lobbyist on
behalf of development interests are inappropriate credentials for a
position responsible for the preservation of our states finite
natural resources. Each of us has some inherent bias and this
position deserves someone whose bias leans toward protecting our
natural environment for the benefit of future generations, rather
than for the development and commercialization of those same
irreplaceable public resources.
First, Gary should always make it very
clear that he is not speaking for the Council in any of his HAPA
activities. Similarly, when he was speaking at the Center for Food
Safety's Vandana Shiva event, he was introduced as a Kauai
Councilman, and he did not clarify that his views are not shared by
the Council.
It's also inappropriate for Gary to be
speaking so strongly against a nominee that the Council and county
will need to work with should his appointment be confirmed. By
denouncing him as biased, he's already burned his bridges with the
guy. How can that possibly serve the best interest of the people of
Kauai?
But then, Gary doesn't give a crap
about the Council, or serving the overall public. He just likes being
able to use the title of Councilman as it gives him a bit more
credibility (but only among those who don't know him) than he would
have as president of a small, obscure advocacy group.
Gary also takes his case for his badly flawed anti-burning bill to TGI's editorial pages
with an opinion piece titled: Smoke — hyperbole, reality and
politics. Gary, who led the fear frenzy of Bill 2491, knows all about
hyperbole and politics, but his editorial shows he still has a poor
grasp of reality.
He claims:
Bill #2573 does not and will not ban
life as we know it on Kauai. Bill #2573 does not ban backyard
barbecue’s, smoke meat, cooking in imu, or the roasting of
marshmallows on an open fire. Nor does it ban spray painting, torch
lighting, weed poisons, smoking of cigarettes, body odor, the wearing
of excess perfume, fireplaces or the burning of wood, charcoal or
gas.
However, given the language of his bill,
it most certainly can be used to ban “backyard barbecue’s, smoke
meat, cooking in imu, or the roasting of marshmallows on an open
fire,” as well as “torch lightings, fireplaces or the burning of
wood, charcoal or gas.” It could even be used to ban cigarettes.
Here is the wording:
It is declared to be a public nuisance
and unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation in the County of
Kauai to intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly cause, permit, or
allow to escape into the open air, smoke, soot, poisonous gases,
dirt, dust or debris of any kind from any smokestack, chimney, flue,
or incinerator, or any opening of any building, or from any
smoldering or open fires under the person's, firm's, or corporation's
charge or control, in such a manner or in such a place as to cause
injury to the health of persons or damage to the property.
Gary himself has said if a person gets
a notice from a doctor saying that smoke from any fire is harming
their health, they can use it to push enforcement of the law. And as
Prosecutor Justin Kollar pointed out in his testimony against the
bill, it's pretty easy to get a doctor to write a letter saying
whatever you want.
Though the letter may not hold up in
court, it could still be used to harass and annoy citizens who are
making fires for any number of legitimate purposes.
Gary also shows he excels at
disingenuous speech when he writes that his bill is modeled after a
Maui ordinance and says, “It is my understanding that barbeques, imu and
smoke meat still thrive on the Valley Island and these practices have
not been banned, limited or restricted by the existence of this
ordinance.”
What Gary doesn't say is that the Maui
ordinance has never been enforced. He knows that, because it came up
in the last Council meeting, yet he still pretends otherwise. This is
the kind of blatant dishonesty that is so very disturbing about the
way Gary plays politics.
Gary then goes on to essentially
acknowledge that this bill, which is resulting in county time and
money and an untold amount of community angst, is intended to rectify
one situation on Kauai, where he has already played judge and jury
and determined that a man using a fireplace is harming his neighbors
and should be arrested and thrown in jail.
Gary claims the state Department of
Health has failed to act, but as the man with the fireplace has
noted, his place has been checked out numerous times and he is doing
nothing wrong. If his fireplace and outdoor barbecuing practices
aren't faulty, and he's not burning inappropriate materials, why
should he be stopped just because a neighbor doesn't like smoke?
As a woman so astutely noted on a
Facebook post about Gary and his dogged determination to help a few
families with this misguided, poorly written, unenforceable bill:
Sometimes it's hard to know when to
take off the cape.
You're not a super hero, Gary. You're
not even a good lawmaker, or else you would have started with a much
better bill, instead of bringing an ambiguous piece of legislation to
your colleagues to hash out.
But what really made me laugh, and
shake my head, was Gary's closing line:
Of course my preference is that we pass
no law at all, that mutual respect and consideration be the norm
among neighbors, and that the golden rule prevails without the need
for bills, public hearings or other such nonsense.
And our preference, Gary, is that you
begin to practice what you preach.
Maybe Mel Rapozo allowed Gary some Fame Time, to deter any feelings that the Council Chair may use his power to submarine certain bills. But, your blog is spot on.
ReplyDeleteGary's HAPA involvement and his public oratory as HAPA and as a Council person will cause confusion.
I am not worried about the Governor or soon to be inducted DLNR head Ching, holding any umbrage toward Kauai due to Gary's lop sided BS.
The Gov has known Gary for years. The Gov and others at the STATE Leg know that Gary is a liar, can't be trusted and is purely self seeking. Otherwise they would be a little more cordial to him on his MANY trips to the Square Building. Gary is persona no gratis with his old chums in the Senate.
But a big investigation and ETHICS should be put toward Gary and HAPA and his voting on land, water or zoning issues. He will put himself first and screw the public.
Well said, Joan!
ReplyDeleteI have an even stronger reaction to that closing line. Hypocrisy at its worst.
ReplyDeleteChimneys and smoke houses. Rid us of these loons.
ReplyDelete"without the need for bills, public hearings or other such nonsense" - at least Gary admits it's nonsense.
ReplyDeleteGary's conflict of interest with HAPA needs to be investigated. HAPA helped him win his Council seat, yet donations to HAPA did not have to be reported as campaign donations. Something stinks, and it's not smoke.
Chuck.
ReplyDeleteExplain, please. Why no report?
Joan, Looking forward to reading about other council membersʻ conflicting roles, too. Whoʻs next?
ReplyDeleteWell, so far both Arryl and JoAnn have recused themselves when faced with possible conflicts so aside from Gary, we're off to a good start.
ReplyDelete