As Councilman Gary Hooser's lobbyist registration bill returns to the Kauai County Council tomorrow, his
own actions clearly demonstrate that he himself is engaged in active
lobbying.
Since the release of the Joint Fact
Finding Group's report on agricultural pesticides, Gary has been
vigorously lobbying people to support the panel's recommendations.
In emails that were sent out both under
his own name and HAPA, the “nonprofit” group he heads, Gary
issues this call to action:
HELP SEND THE GOVERNOR A STRONG
MESSAGE: SIGN THIS PETITION PLEASE!
Gary then links to a petition that is
sponsored by HAPA and addressed to Gov. Ige and the Hawaii
departments of Health and Agriculture. It “demands” they
“immediately, via executive order, rule making authority or by
legislative action,” ban chlorpyrifos; require disclosure of
restricted pesticide use; “require pesticide free 'protection
zones' around all schools, hospitals, and homes,” and “acknowledge
and preserve” county home rule rights.
According to definitions that Gary has
advanced in his lobbyist registration bill:
The term “lobbying” shall mean
communicating, directly or through an agent, or soliciting others to
communicate, with a State or County officer or employee for the
purpose of attempting to influence any Legislative action or
Administrative action. “Person” means a corporation...or any
other organization or a representative of a group of persons acting
in concert.
Clearly, by his own definition, Gary is
engaged in lobbying. He is exempt from registering as a lobbyist only
if he is acting in his official capacity as a Councilman. In this
case, he most certainly is not, because the Council has taken no
position on the JFFG report. And he can't be acting simultaneously in his official capacities as a Councilman and head of HAPA.
It's bad enough that Gary — a paid
public servant — is improperly lobbying on behalf of an advocacy
group that he created and leads. What's equally odious is his use of
outright lies to advance his position.
He claims, falsely, that the report
“strongly validates Kauai resident concerns” about agricultural
pesticides and “strongly refutes” the idea that stinkweed caused
the sickenings at Waimea Canyon School.
He then ramps up the rhetoric against
the seed companies:
The story is the same in community
after community. The companies come in to town, pollute and poison
the health and the environment but the ever elusive “statistically
significant evidence” linking one companies individual action to
one persons particular illness is most often impossible to isolate.
Everyone knows that pesticides are
poisons and that these companies are using them by the truckload.
The evidence in this report proves without question that these
poisons are drifting into the air of our schools and into stream
waters and the water we drink.
Uh, no, it actually doesn't prove that at all.
Gary concludes with:
And of course what we do as a community
is fight back until we win and these companies either comply with the
will of our community or they leave.
By which Gary means his strident will. So much for mending fences, co-existence, getting along. It's back to the old, "my way or the highway."
In the HAPA email, Gary claimed:
The industry supported this study and
had participants on the JFFG panel. The recommendations in the report
were made by consensus of the group.
Allan Parachini took to Facebook to call Gary out,
reminding him that that the JFFG was financed solely by the state and
county, and had no industry support at all.
What's more, the recommendations were
not “made by consensus.” JFFG members told me that
items were put to a vote, with the majority ruling. It's not
consensus when you pit a majority of folks who supported Bill 2491
against a minority who represent the seed companies. And though
individual members will be allowed to issue a statement on how and
why they differ with the report, those statements won't come out
until the final report, when it's too late to make any difference.
A friend recently asked why the state
and county shouldn't implement all the recommendations of the report. It's a good question, and a topic that I'll get into more fully in a separate post because it bears examination.
But it's no small matter to consider
this: endorsing all the recommendations is essentially handing Gary
and the “red-shirts” a victory. It's telling them, yeah, you can
lie and distort, fear-monger and inflame, bully and intimidate, manipulate and maneuver,
violate the code of ethics, and you'll get your way.
Do you really want to give Gary that
kind of power? Do you really want to endorse tactics that are among
the ugliest ever used in Hawaii politics? Do you really want to cave
in to a strategy that at heart has nothing to do with the health of
Hawaii's people and environment, and everything to do with
perpetuating a questionable national agenda?
Because sadly — and this is due to
Gary's own intense rhetoric — these recommendations are not a
stand-alone concept. Rather they are a direct reflection of a
last-place-candidate's political agenda. And they need to be viewed
and considered as such.
I think you need to read the Bill and other Hawaii lobby laws again Joan as you have it wrong, but understandably so as is complicated. Anyone can lobby without registering as a lobbyist, and it is only when you get paid to lobby that you become a lobbyist and have to register. You might want to correct your blog.
ReplyDeleteJoan "Do you really want to endorse tactics that are among the ugliest ever used in Hawaii politics?"
ReplyDeleteReally Joan? Uglier or even remotely comparable to the Massie murders where Territorial Governor Lawrence M. Judd commuted the 10-year sentences of the convicted killers to one hour, to be served in his office?
Gary must be related to the Clintons. The lies flow so naturally that even Gary himself starts believing the lies.
ReplyDelete@11:24. I did read the bill, and it says "for pay or other consideration." First, we have only Gary's word for it that he isn't paid, and his word is pretty much worthless. He could also be receiving other consideration, such as donations to HAPA and/or his campaign, votes, trips to Switzerland, Grateful Dead tickets, etc., etc.
ReplyDeleteI remember the fear mongering after Gary introduced the ban on plastic grocery store bags about 10 years back or so. Mel was yelling about how we all were gonna get food poisoning from meat soaked cloth bags. Well the bags gone and we are all still alive.
ReplyDeletePoliticians are just that way. All of them.
Would be nice to know what happened in the Massie murder/murders.
ReplyDeleteSee 12:10 Hint they served 1hr in the Govs office.
ReplyDeleteThere's only been about a dozen books (actual books, not "Kpd blue" books) about the Massie case so feel free to go ahead and hit up Amazon for that.
ReplyDeleteYawn. So worst case for hooser he has to register? You gotta pick up your game on this Joan. Surely you can nail the big fist for something meaningful?
ReplyDeleteJoan you should talk to the states native bird program in hanapepe if you haven't already.
ReplyDelete9:12 -- Yes, I know that you are always willing to minimize/overlook bad behavior on the part of the "big fist," as you call him. Unethical supporters foster unethical politicians.
ReplyDelete12:57 -- Did you mean to comment on the feral cat post?