Government

We the Powerful

Friday, December 11th, 2009

We the Powerful


Last week, for the second year in a row, the Public Access Room (PAR) was on hand to not only motivate Molokai residents to get more politically active, but help them get started. The office is a non-partisan, free service from the capitol.

“Our purpose is to help the average citizen understand their government,” said the workshop’s leader, Virginia Beck.

The lawmaking process can be confusing, Beck said, and that is exactly why her office exists. On the Hawaii State Government website, you can search for your representative or senator, look up a bill by number or keyword, find out how to testify, hear ideas from previous testifiers and sign up to find out about a particular hearing.

The workshop focused on how to get directly involved in the lawmaking process – something many people don’t know they are capable of, much less how to go about it.

• Do you have an idea? Make it into a law!
• Find your legislator – a representative from the House or a senator – on the state website by plugging in your address.
• Research a legislator who would be interested in your idea and is willing to introduce the bill. Also look into specific committees for interested members.
• There is a time restraint: the bill must be introduced a week after the start of session (January 20, 2010).
• To succeed, the bill will need to be introduced, pass through the relevant committee and three readings by the house and senate and amended so all parties are pleased.
• It is then enacted, funded by the joint house and senate budget committee, implemented by the relevant state agency, reported in media, and understood by the public.
• Use the interim (May through December) to research and start action on your idea, as well as find time with your legislator.


Fore more information on how to get your own ideas set in stone, contact PAR at par@capitol.hawaii.gov, or by phone at (808)-587-0478. Learn more about what they do at www.hawaii.gov/lrb/par

Floods ID Molokai as Disaster Area

Friday, December 11th, 2009

USDA News Release

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated Hawaii and Maui counties in Hawaii as primary natural disaster areas due to losses caused by drought that occurred from Jan. 1, 2009, and continuing.

Kalawao County was designated a natural disaster area Dec. 9, 2009, making all qualified farm operators in the designated areas eligible for low interest emergency (EM) loans from USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA), provided eligibility requirements are met.  

Farmers in eligible counties have eight months from the date of the declaration to apply for loans to help cover part of their actual losses.  FSA will take into account the extent of losses, security available and repayment ability. 

Library Furlough Schedule Released

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Library Furlough Schedule Released

It seems that no state department is immune from the wave of furloughs sweeping through Hawaii this year. Last week the public libraries announced that they, too, would be closing their doors in order to save money. Molokai’s public library has scheduled 15 furlough days between now and the end of May. The library will closed of the following dates:

December 16, 24, 31
January 13, 27
February 3, 10
March 5, 12, 19
April 7, 14, 21
May 5, 19

For more information contact Molokai branch manager Sri TenCate at (808) 553-1765.

November Police Report

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Nov. 2
- Nathaniel Lee Oswald. Kaunakakai. O.U.I, Racing on Highway, Exhibition of Speed.

Nov. 3
- Heidi Naupaka Horcajo. Kamalo. Abuse of Family Household Member.
- Chad K. Mokiao-Willing. Kaunakakai. Driving after license suspended/revoked for O.U.I.

Nov. 4
- Whislyn M. Kaulili. Kualapu`u. Forgery II, Fraudulent Use of Credit Card, Theft II, Theft of Credit Card.
- Jennie Ruiz. Kualapu`u. Forgery II, Fraudulent Use of Credit Card, Theft II, Theft of Credit Card.

Nov. 6
- Tina L. Rawlins. Kualapu`u. Contempt of Court.

Recycling Center To Close

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

The County of Maui Department of Environmental Management, Solid Waste Division, announced today that the Molokai Metals Recycling Facility at the Molokai Landfill has reached its permitted storage capacity and will be closed temporarily beginning Friday, Dec. 11. The site was designed to be an interim facility; a permanent site is being built and is expected to open in late Spring of 2010.

The facility has been accepting vehicles, appliances, scrap metal, tires, propane tanks and car batteries. During the temporary closure, no materials will be accepted in accordance with State Department of Health permit requirements.

For more information, contact the Solid Waste Division at (808) 270-7875. Callers on Molokai may dial 1-800-272-0117 and request extension 7875.