Author Archives: Megan Stephenson

Big Mahalo for Great Wedding

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

On behalf of the Kaina and Kahoalii Ohana, we would like to thank the following people for making our wedding day special.  First of all, we would like to thank the Lord for giving us this special day to celebrate with our many, many loved ones and friends.  To our three children, Jonalei, Jonathan and Jonah who means everything to us, keeping us going and being a true blessings in our lives.  From the bottom of our hearts, mommy and daddy loves you very much!

To both our parents for bringing us into this world, for being here with us, for your unconditional love, support.  Also for being a very special part in our lives and for the blessings you have given us.  We love you all very much! 

Utility Scale Wind Farms on Molokai and Lanai

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

This proposal for wind farms is not just asking the residents of Molokai and Lanai to sacrifice their legacy and their land. It asks the taxpayers of the State of Hawaii and U.S. to pay a billion dollar-plus bill for what ultimately is a direct transfer of local wealth through our state regulated utilities to investors on the mainland.
 
Today, any project such as this must be based on a sound financial business plan in order to produce said promise of future economic opportunity, as well as to compensate for actual environmental damage and harm.

Reuniting the Ohana

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

A reunion is being planned in honor of the past and present ohana of Charles Victor Abraham Dudoit and Margret (Maggie) Maikai Nawahine. Their children are Clementine Lum Ho, Theodore Dudoit, Anna Dudoit, Clarence Dudoit, Fannie Hamili, Emily Pali, George Kiohinu Dudoit, John Kiohinu Dudoit, Jesse Dudoit, Ella Keahi Rodrigues, Benjamin Dudoit, Charles Dudoit, Isabella Spencer, Saramita Fujimori, Lizzie Haiku Tamura, Marjorie Edburg Tom Hoon.

The reunion will be held on Molokai, Aug. 6-7, 2011. If you are a descendant of Abraham and Maggie and would like more information please contact Mapuana Pali Kansana at (808) 553-5309 or Midge Keahi Nakagawa at (808) 567-6195.

Corina Keahi Gomes

A Righteous Life

Sunday, February 13th, 2011

I’ve often searched for a righteous life. What makes life righteous? Is it life itself? Is it the experiences we have that make life righteous? Perhaps it's love? Heaven maybe?

I have come to believe that what makes life righteous is being open so that others can experience God’s presence through us. It is possible. It’s a choice we can make, a choice that can grant us the experience of god through one another. How righteous is that? I’m not saying that it’s easy, but I know it’s true. I’ve experienced it on occasions with some of you here on Molokai.

And with this I'd like to say...to my family, friends, and students, thank you for helping make my life a righteous experience. I hope to return the blessing….

Happy Valentine’s Day,
Michael Hino

Scooping for Schools

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Community Contributed

Provided by Sue Forbes

Kamoi-Snack-N-Go will host its first “Scoop for Schools” on Feb. 16 from 6 to 9 p.m. Thirty percent of proceeds raised from ice cream sales at Kamoi’s during this three hour fun-raiser will go to support one of our local schools. For this inaugural event, Kamoi has chosen Kualapu`u School’s “East Coast Trip” as the beneficiary of monies received.

“We thought this would be a great way to give back to our community and our schools. We hope to coordinate this fun-raiser four to six times per year,” said Kamoi Snack-N-Go’s manager, Kimberly Svetin, the event’s originator.

Vets Lawsuit Nears End

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

The Molokai veterans group said it has discussed a tentative agreement with Maui County which would OK the permit for a new veterans’ center in Kaunakakai. The permit was submitted nearly five years ago by the Molokai Veterans Caring for Veterans.

“It looks like there’s a light,” said Larry Helm, commander of the veteran group.

“This administration is committed to finishing the project as soon as possible,” said Zeke Kalua, Mayor Arakawa’s executive assistant for Molokai and West Maui.

County lawyers and veterans’ attorney James Fosbinder will meet this week to discuss a settlement of the veterans’ lawsuit, filed in September 2010. Each party has made a settlement offer, according to Jane Lovell, deputy corporation counsel for the county.

Wind Resistance

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Wind Resistance

The state, in conjunction with federal agencies, is moving forward with a plan which could connect Oahu, Maui, Lanai and Molokai by an undersea power cable. The cable would funnel wind-generated electricity from the three smaller islands to Oahu. Public input on Molokai has so far been negative.

Up for discussion – or non-discussion in the case of last Thursday night’s meeting at the Mitchell Pauole Center – is whether or not the state should proceed with the monumental interisland energy project, currently estimated to cost $1 billion.

Meeting attendees were visibly frustrated when they were told by state representatives that questions about the project could not be answered. Instead, procedural information was all that was shared.

A group of about 10 protestors stood outside MPC with signs declaring “Hawaiian Way or No Way” and “Ask Da People First.”

“This is not a done deal,” said Dawn Chang, the meeting’s facilitator and the project’s outreach specialist, before she opened up the floor to comments.

 “My community really [doesn’t] know what’s going on,” said Molokai Planning Commission member Lori Buchanan.

“If I don’t understand [and] it’s shoved down our throats; I don’t want it,” said Barbara Haliniak, president of the Molokai Chamber Foundation.

“I know it’s frustrating for you guys,” said Josh Strickland, head of Renewable Energy Programs in the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT). He added that the meetings are designed to help the state identify which questions the study will answer and what kinds of impacts the project could have.

A Detailed Study Begins
The federal Department of Energy (DOE) and the state are working together to draft a programmatic environmental impact statement (PEIS) which assesses whether it will be worthwhile for the state to proceed in building the undersea cable.

say they going to give us,” he said.

Chaikin said he also wanted to know who is the deciding body in accepting the project.

 “You need to lay out exactly how the Molokai community will be involved in this process,” Chaikin told the officials.

DOE advisor Tony Como told the Dispatch, the DOE, the Department of the Interior, the Corps of Engineers and the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) all have an “approval role.”

But Steve Lindenberg, senior advisor at DOE, said they are stewards of the process and that the community will make the final decision.

“We’re hoping very earnestly to help the people of Molokai understand what’s being proposed,” he added. “No one here has all the answers.”

Future Participation
In the meantime, Chang said PEIS officials would like to hold a more informal, culturally-appropriate meeting for Molokai before the draft PEIS is released in the fall.

“You know this, it’s your job to tell them,” Buchanan said to Chang, ‘them’ being the state officials. “That’s why you got people boycotting outside.”

Hawaiian rights activist Walter Ritte hosted a wind farm-related discussion on Molokai two weeks ago arguing a boycott of the state-sponsored study until meetings could be held in a more culturally appropriate manner. Ritte led the boycott outside last week’s state-run meeting.

The PEIS officials said there is still time for community members to have their voices heard. Scoping ends March 1, and residents of all islands can submit comments at the program’s website, hirep-wind.com; email hirep@dbedt.hawaii.gov; fax to (808) 586-2536, attention Allen Kam; or by mail to State of Hawaii, DBEDT, P.O. Box 2359, Honolulu HI 96804, attention Allen Kam

Ranch Weighs In On Wind
MPL holding wind energy informational meetings:
March 2, Mitchell Pauole Center, 5:30 p.m.
March 3, Maunaloa Rec Center, 5:30 p.m.
March 4, Kilohana School, 5:30 p.m.

Girls Paddling Places at States

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Girls Paddling Places at States

The girls’ paddling team beat every other qualified public school in the state, when they raced into third place at last weekend’s state championship meet on Oahu.

Molokai came in third at 4:12.12, behind Kamehameha Oahu (4:06.40) and Pac-Five (4:08.32) – two private schools on Oahu.

“After winning MIL and winning that, everything after that was just icing on the cake,” said coach Tania Kaholoa`a. “They did really, really awesome.”

The Lady Farmers placed second in their preliminary heat on Friday, with the second-fastest time going into the final race. Kaholoa`a also mixed up her crew, so her seven top paddlers could fill out the six seats both days: Kailana Ritte-Camara, Natalia Levi, Leenell Hernandez, Crystal Puaoi-Kawai, Keaka Kaiama, Jasmine Borden and Kawena Puhi.

“It’s never been done before,” Kaholoa`a said of qualifying for states. “To see that happen, pull that off, is a great joy to me and my assistant coaches.”

Clinic Funding to be Released

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Last week, Gov. Neil Abercrombie announced he would release a partial amount of a $1 million grant allocated to the Molokai Community Health Center (MCHC) for renovations of a new clinic. However, a spokesperson for the governor said a comprehensive health care plan, written between the health center and Molokai General Hospital (MGH), must be completed before any funding will be released.

The grant was approved by the legislature in 2009, with no requirements relating to an agreement between health care providers on Molokai. The bill calls solely for the funding of “plans, design, construction and equipment to renovate, retrofit and provide other improvements for an expanded facility,” according to the document obtained from MCHC.

Wind and Where?

Monday, February 7th, 2011

On January 26, a mixed segment of the community attended a meeting called Hawaiians Ku`e. The pitch was to honor our kuleana (responsibility). There was also an introduction of state sanctioned governance called Aha Moku/Aha Kiole.  In essence, it’s about community districts, from east to west Molokai, maintaining the natural resources of their areas by using a mix of ancient Hawaiian and modern practices.  It is a good start to have this practice in our community (more fish, ophi, limu, native plants, water resources, etc.) and if successful, may become a model for the rest of state.