Government

Moloka`i County on Your Corner

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

Mayor Alan Arakawa's "County on Your Corner" on Moloka`i will be held on Thursday, Sept. 22 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Mitchell Pauole Center in Kaunakakai.

"It is important to connect with people face to face," says Arakawa. "'County on Your Corner,' which is scheduled in a different location each month, is a good way for myself and members of my cabinet to interact with the community on the issues that are of most interest to them."

Joining Arakawa at this "County on Your Corner" event will be Council Chair Danny Mateo and some members of Arakawa's cabinet.

For more information, call 280-1299.

Become a Voice in the Reinstated Nation

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Share mana`o and become educated on the Kingdom of Hawaii, also referred to as the Reinstated Hawaiian Nation. Register to vote in the upcoming election. We need more mana`o and ike so we can shape what the government will be like. Meetings are held every Thursday at 6 p.m. at Mitchell Pauole Center. This is also an opportunity for those who want to become participants or citizens of the nation, to start the process. All are welcome to attend and register to vote. The time has come for us to stand up for our basic human right called sovereignty in Hawaii, and especially on Molokai. This effort is supported by Hui Kane.

Recovering a Species

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Recovering a Species

The number of Hawaiian monk seals alive in the world is diminishing rapidly, but officials do not think their fate is sealed. That’s why the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) under the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is proposing actions they believe may help the recovery of the critically endangered species.

Some of those actions include population monitoring, behavior modification of seals (to discourage human interaction), health and disease control and translocation. While a few of these activities are already practiced under current federal permits, the NMFS is seeking new permits to implement and allow more actions.

The impact of these actions is currently being examined through a process called a Programmatic Environment Impact Statement (PEIS.) That process involves the collection of data, the examination of environmental, cultural and social impacts of the proposed recovery actions and public feedback.

In a hearing about the PEIS held on Molokai last Thursday, community members and fishermen offered their opinion on the proposals. Many expressed concerns about the large amount of fish Hawaiian monk seals eat – fish that they say could be going to feed their families.

“The point we are trying to make is fish is very important food source for us,” said fisherman Walter Naki.

Others didn’t support officials tampering with nature.

“We love the monk seals but we have to find the right balance – we are not God to say we’re going to put them here because they’re extinct,” said resident Eddie Tanaka.

here way before us,” said resident Loretta Ritte.

Sprague said if permitting and funding goes through, the soonest seals would be temporarily translocated would be 2013.

The public has until Oct. 17 to submit comments on the PEIS. The PEIS process is scheduled for completion in late 2011. Visit nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/eis/hawaiianmonkseal.htm for more information. Comments may be emailed to monkseal@noaa.gov or mailed to:
NOAA Fisheries
Office of Protected Resources, Pacific Islands Regional Office
1601 Kapiolani Blvd, Ste 1110
Honolulu, HI 96814

Get Your State ID

Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Need a State ID? Your chance is coming up. State ID personnel will be at the Kaunakakai Elementary School to process applications for State ID cards on Saturday, Oct. 15 from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The fee is $10 for senior citizens 65 years and older, and $15 for all others, payable in cash only. State ID cards will be processed and mailed to applicants within 10 business days.

Priority will be given to applicants with completed application forms and required certified documents. Applications without these documents cannot be processed.

• New applicants must provide at a minimum an original social security card and a
certified copy of their birth certificate (or resident alien card, if applicable).

Senator Akaka’s Mahalo

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

Senator Akaka’s Mahalo

On Friday, Aug. 26, many Molokai veterans boarded the ferry to Maui at 5 a.m. to attend an appreciation luncheon coordinated by the Maui Veteran Council for Senator Akaka held at the Maui Tropical Plantation.  More than 500 veterans and guests attended—including the 18 Molokai vets with their yellow shirts that stood out in the crowd.  While politician and veteran groups honored Senator Akaka with proclamations and some tokens, Molokai honored him in Molokai style.  After thanking him for being instrumental in getting many of the Molokai Veterans Affairs (VA) services (VA physician Dr. Hafermann, more psychologists/psychiatrists, benefit counselor and social worker visits, etc.) and health benefits that are available today for some 600 Molokai veterans.

Jesse Dudoit, Ben Bali, and Hank Ellertson presented the ho`okupu (offering) from Molokai that included an all-Molokai products basket (bread, honey, sweet potato chips, Molokai  poi, etc.) donated by Irene Tancayo and a stand-up engraved wood paddle expressing aloha from the Molokai Veterans.  The crowd applauded and Senator Akaka was ecstatic when hearing what was in a cooler being presented to him filled with ophihi from Kama Han, limu `ele`ele (seaweed) and cooked he`e (squid) from Earl Paleka, dried squid from Dobie Enoka, kukui nut from Jesse Dudoit and Karen Joao, limu koho and chili peppa watah. 

Mahalo to the veterans who attended the luncheon to represent the Molokai Veterans. They are Wendy DeFreitas, Dr. David Hafermann, Bo Mahoe, Kama Han, Mac Poepoe, Jesse Dudoit, Earl Paleka, Rosalie Scweiber, Clay Adachi, Sam Kealoha, Jim Bevil, Hank Ellertson, Jr. Habon, Ted Johns, Ben Bali, Manny Garcia, Lou McKee, and myself.

Larry Helm, Commander
Molokai Veterans Caring for Veterans

Veteran’s Corner

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Community Contributed

Column by Jesse Church

The Sound of Safety

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

The Sound of Safety

Tsunamis. Earthquakes. Hurricanes. Acts of war.

Hawaii’s Department of Defense (DOD) uses civil defense sirens to alert residents when emergencies strike, and it’s time to make sure they’re fully functional and standardized, according to officials.

With some of Molokai’s 11 sirens built as early as the 1960s, the DOD wants to upgrade six of them – and add six more – as part of a statewide project approved by the state legislature earlier this year. On Molokai, that means making all sirens omni-directional – a circular design that provides premiere sound coverage – and making sure they’re solar-powered with back-up battery systems. The process will also standardize the wireless control system the DOD uses to activate the sirens, according to Hawaii Self Civil Defense spokeswoman Shelly Ichishita.

Travis Tancayo, fire captain with Kaunakakai’s Engine 4, said sirens are an essential part of safety when disasters strike.

“A lot of times people don’t have radios or televisions, so as a last resort we depend on those sirens,” he said.

The process took a step forward this month when the Molokai Planning Commission (MoPC) unanimously approved special management area (SMA) exemptions for sirens to be replaced on specially regulated coastal land at Kamiloloa (near Hotel Molokai) and One Ali`i Park. A third siren, to be built at Duke Maliu Park, would replace a current siren at Kaunakakai Elementary School.

The DOD also hopes to upgrade sirens at Kalamaula Park, Kilohana Elementary School, Kamalo and Maunaloa, according to information provided by Department of Accounting and General Services Planner Brian Isa, who is overseeing the permitting process on behalf of the DOD.

The DOD has also secured funding to build new omni-directional, solar-powered sirens at Papohaku Beach Park and Kaunakakai’s Pu`u Hauole Park, he said, and are awaiting funding to build new sirens Molokai High School, Kualapu`u Park and the Kalae Picnic Area.

Permitting is nearly complete for all sites except the Kalae Picnic Area and Kalamaula Park, which are awaiting funding and Department of Hawaiian Homelands approval, according to Ichishita.

If the process goes as planned, she expects construction to begin after a building contract is awarded around November. The construction should take between 90 to 120 days, she said.

Each siren costs about $85,000, including equipment and installation, according to DOD Assistant Communications Officer Fay Alailima-Rose. Like existing sirens, new sirens would be mounted on brown polls about 50 feet tall.

Alailima-Rose, who attended the Aug. 3 MoPC meeting, explained old sirens would be removed once new ones are functional, and confirmed an archaeological monitor would be constantly on site during all construction.

Although Molokai’s height limit for SMA structures is 35 feet, she said DAGS would apply for a height waiver if necessary because 50-foot sirens provide about 1.3 square miles of coverage, while a shorter siren would provide less.

“I totally support any safety for this community, so I totally support this project,” commissioner Lori Buchanan said July 27.

Connecting the Names

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

Connecting the Names

Last Wednesday evening found a group of Molokai residents poring through lists of names. They were looking for anything familiar, searching for clues that would connect them to the thousands exiled to Kalaupapa.

“We’re talking about names, but behind every name is a person and a family,” said Anwei Law, a historian who has been visiting Kalaupapa for about 40 years.

Many came to the workshop led by Ka `Ohana O Kalaupapa with one name they already knew – and left with dozens of possible relatives. The Kalaupapa Names Project is a statewide initiative to gather information about the estimated 8,000 individuals who were sent to the peninsula beginning in 1866. Fewer than 1,000 of those people have marked tombstones. The `Ohana – a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving the memory of Hansen’s disease patients (also known as leprosy) – has found over 7,000 names, according to Law. The names will become part of the Kalaupapa Memorial, a project currently being planned to honor those who lived and died on the peninsula.

Over 700 remain unknown – and it’s now up to their families around the state to help identify them.

“It seems like everyone has a family connection and that’s what we’re looking for,” said `Ohana secretary Valerie Monson.

,” said Law.

Letters from patients give insight into the isolated lives they led. A letter from J.N. Loe, one of first 12 people sent to Kalaupapa, “didn’t ask for clothing, didn’t ask for food – it asked for a newspaper,” Law explained.

Photos offer another key to both history and identification.

“We always show photos and hope that someone will recognize them,” said Law. The `Ohana has asked families – and residents who may not know they have family history in Kalaupapa – from across the state to review names, correct spelling and add information to help complete the puzzle.

Sol Kaho`ohalahala, an `Ohana board member and Lanai resident, recalled the first time he found out he had family in Kalaupapa.

In 1996, he was invited to attend a conservation workshop on the peninsula, and by chance met a kupuna who turned out to be his uncle’s wife – “an uncle no one ever talked about,” he said. On a tour of the peninsula, Kaho`ohalahala then discovered a tombstone next to Siloama Church marked “Lillian Kaho`ohalahala.”

“My heart was heavy… I cried the whole weekend,” he recalled. “Our ohana are all part of that aina – their bones are there, their spirit is there… and we have a responsibility…. All who lived and died there should never be forgotten,” he told Molokai residents last week.

Set in Stone

The Kalaupapa Memorial, a vision begun by patients decades ago, was authorized by President Obama in 2009. Since then, patients have chosen its site – where the old Balwin Home used to stand in Kalawao – and an environmental assessment is currently in process. The group is waiting for the final go-ahead from the National Park Service (NPS), according to Kaho`ohalahala. They expect a “no impact” ruling.

The `Ohana are also in negotiations with the NPS to sign a general agreement for the memorial. The agreement spells out, among other issues, who will be responsible for the building, maintenance, funding, design and rights to the historical documents and archives that have contributed to the memorial. The `Ohana must raise all the financial support to build and maintain the monument – no federal funding has been provided. The `Ohana is also negotiating to maintain “intellectual rights” of the research documents, according to Kaho`ohalahala.

Next year, the `Ohana will “put out a call” for the memorial’s design, he added. Families, and even students, will have the chance to participate in the conceptual design of the monument. Criteria will include holding the 8,000 names and creating a design that will “fit” in the selected location.

New Bottomfish Rules

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

The Main Hawaiian Island (MHI) bottomfish season opens Sept. 1, and the state’s Department of Aquatic Resources (DAR) wants to more accurately count how many “Deep 7” and other bottomfish are being pulled from the ocean.

Starting this year, commercial fishermen must report to the DAR all bottomfish catches within five days of each trip – a substantial change from previous years, when for-profit fishermen were required to submit a monthly bottomfish catch report.

Officials said the changes will allow the DAR to collect more accurate data, which will help them better manage Hawaii’s fisheries.

However, some local fishermen feel their livelihood is being overregulated.

New Ho`olehua Fire Captain

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

New Ho`olehua Fire Captain

The Ho`olehua Fire Station welcomed two additions to its team this month, following promotions out of Maui’s Kahului station.  was promoted to captain from firefighter 3, while  was promoted to firefighter 3 from firefighter 2.

are working hard,” he said. “They’ve always got it done, when they have big brushfires over there, when it comes to searching for people … those guys know their island.”

Knutson, an 11-year veteran, grew up in Illinois and moved to Maui in 1985. He began his career in Paia after some paddle-boarding friends convinced him to take the firefighter test.

Both men will split their time between Molokai and Maui, where their families reside.