Author Archives: Megan Stephenson

Theodore Dudoit

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Theodore Dudoit Sr, 64, of Ualapue, Molokai, died on November 10, 2010 at his home in Honouliwai, Molokai. He was born September 13, 1946 in Ualapue.
He is survived by sons Theodore Dudoit Jr. of Waialua, Allin (Grace) Dudoit of Wailuku, Maui, Jesse (Kelly) Dudoit of Ho`olehua; daughters Marietta (Akida) Alapai of Honouliwai, Clare Dudoit of Springfield, Illinois, Kimberly Kai of Hauula, Oahu; brothers Mitchell Balutski, Jesse Dudoit Jr. and Andrew Dudoit; sisters Maggie Duvauchelle, Marilyn Ah Yat, Louise Linker, Eliza Kane; and 17 grandchildren.
Friends may call at a memorial service on Saturday, November 27, 2010, at 8 a.m. with service at 9 a.m. at the Waialua Congregational Church pavilion in Waialua, Molokai. Scattering of his ashes at sea to follow.

Robert Cooke

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Robert “Bobby” M. Cooke, Jr, 67, of Molokai, died on October 29, 2010 in Honolulu. He was born in Honolulu on February 12, 1943.
He is survived by his son, Erick Cooke, and his sisters Susan Harrington and Marie Vail. Memorial services will be held at a later date. Donations may be made to your favorite charity.

Edward Fulkerson

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Edward Fulkerson

Edward “Big Ed” Fulkerson Sr., 80, died peacefully in his sleep on November 8, 2010, in Fremont, CA.
Big Ed is survived by his wife Shirley, eight children, 14 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
After retirement, he and his wife Shirley moved permanently to Molokai Shores in Kaunakakai. He was very active in community service through the local Lions Club.
Private burial service will be held on Dec. 4 at the Fulkerson Cemetery in Santa Rosa, CA. A celebration of his life hosted by family and friends in Guerneville, CA, is to follow.

Trashing the Aina

Friday, November 26th, 2010

This is in regards to the picture in the Dispatch of the cars etc. being dumped on private property. You should be ashamed of yourselves. I am angry and disgusted that you would do this to the aina let alone on private property.
Did you get permission to do this? Bet not. Did you get rid of oil etc. in the car? Bet not.
Why didn't you dump it on your own property? Too ugly? Bet so. Are you going to call the county and get help removing all that trash? Bet not.

Thoughts of Molokai

Friday, November 26th, 2010

As the cold rain falls from the sky, our thoughts wander to Molokai. The cold, gray clouds cover the sun, thousands of miles from the endless fun; walking on the beach and swimming in the surf, so fast the time goes by, while on the island of Molokai.  Only a few short months now before we go, where the pace of life is easy and slow.  Once again we will see the people with aloha love, surpassed only by heaven above.

The most Hawaiian island in the rest of the chain, Molokai alone can only claim – Kalaupapa, the sea cliffs and all the rest, make Molokai the worlds best.  But alas as we sit in the frozen northern U.S. in the rain, snow and cold we know where it’s best. Just a few weeks and how time does fly, we’ll return to beautiful Molokai.  

Lesson of the Day

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Lesson of the Day

Ho`omana Hou students walked miles of Nature Conservancy mountain fence lines and found choke dead goats, like the one in the picture. All these goats starved to death as they got stuck in the fences and struggled for many days without success to get free. It was a sickening sight. Lesson of the day: Many times, good intentions are not enough.    
Walter Ritte

What’s Brewing at Coffees is Not Coffee

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Rules, regulations or policies that don’t work for the benefit of people, or do not serve a real purpose, don’t belong on any shelf. I’m in the dark to what is going on with our favorite Sunday sing along program at Coffees of Hawaii, and why they are closing both programs – the Sunday concert and the jazz group on Saturdays.

These two musical groups have brought great enjoyment to our people. I’m personally grateful to Coffees of Hawaii for providing these programs, because it is something good for all of us…it lifts our spirits and keeps us bonding in the spirit of aloha, which Molokai is all about.

Birthday Celebration

Friday, November 26th, 2010

I would like to send a big mahalo for all those who made my 70th birthday on Sept. 25 a wonderful and blessed celebration! To my children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nieces, nephews, brothers, sisters, my Papale Ula Ladies, my kupuna, friends and those who couldn't be there, you were sincerely missed. Mahalo nui loa and God bless.

Auntie Janice Pele

Leniency Offered to Delinquent Water Users

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

Leniency Offered to Delinquent Water Users

After years of struggling to pay the Department of Agriculture (DOA), the Molokai Irrigation System (MIS) Advisory Board has taken steps to help their water users pay delinquent accounts.

As of Aug. 31, 81 accounts are in delinquency – having not paid their water bill for 60 days or more – and owe a total of $341,091, according to Duane Okamoto, DOA deputy director. Of those, 25 owe more than $1,000 and account for more than half the water usage in the MIS.

“It’s just like any other utility,” Okamoto said at last week’s MIS Advisory Board meeting. Just like any other utility, the DOA has procedures to penalize those that do not pay.

However, after talking with the board and the community over the past few years, the DOA is offering more flexible repayment plans on Molokai. The MIS board is the only board in the state not to use standard collection procedures – if users don’t pay, the DOA cuts off their water.

“We would like to do this on a case by case basis,” Okamoto said in an interview after the meeting. “We need a board who’s familiar with the community to tell us, [so] we can give consideration to everyone’s situation.”

First, the board looked at delinquent accounts and found some water users that had passed away. For these accounts, it was recommended the debt be waived up to the date of death.

,” Okamoto said.

No Freebies
While the board came to a consensus for delinquent accounts, there are still homesteaders who do not pay their bills because they believe they should not be charged for water at all.

Board member and homesteader Moke Kim argued that the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act of 1920 stipulates DHHL is to provide water free of charge for the agriculture and domestic needs of homesteaders.

Okamoto said all those on MIS land – homesteaders and non-homesteaders – are charged transmission fees on their water usage at 47.5 cents per thousand gallons. Board Chair James Boswell suggested because homesteaders were being charged a transmission fee, a standard monthly fee should replace the per water usage.

“My water bill was especially high in the summer – over $400 in August,” Kim said at a previous meeting. “In September it was $300. Do you mean my transmission had changed?”

Okamoto reiterated that the rate is for the delivery of water, not for water itself, and that money goes toward system maintenance. He added the money is needed, as the DOA receives less money from the state legislature these days – down to $350,000 a year from $1 million about six years ago.

The recommendations will be reviewed by the DOA and brought back to the board for further discussion before any action is taken.

State To Host Kaunakakai Harbor Improvements Meeting

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

State To Host Kaunakakai Harbor Improvements Meeting

Department of Land and Natural Resources News Release

Several improvements to the Kaunakakai Harbor have been in the works, and the state Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR), in coordination with the Department of Transportation, invites the public to attend an information meeting  regarding its proposed Maui to Molokai ferry system improvements project for the Kaunakakai Harbor.

The meeting will be held on Wednesday, December 8, 2010, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Mitchell Pauole Center.

The proposed ferry improvements at Kaunakakai Harbor include the conversion of the existing ferry shelter into a comfort station (a new covered passenger waiting area will also be provided), installation of a new sewer lift station and 6-inch force main, which will eliminate the existing septic system and leach field; and installation of a 12-inch and 8-inch fire protection waterline.

“We encourage potential users of this system to attend the meeting,” said Laura H. Thielen, DLNR chairperson.  “This project will enhance the ferry facilities and provide the necessary supporting infrastructure for fire protection at the harbor and proper disposal of sewage to the County sewer system by eliminating an existing septic tank disposal system.”

Any person requiring special assistance (i.e. large print material, sign language interpreters etc.) is asked to contact Valerie Suzuki at (808) 587-0275.