Political

Molokai and Hawaii – Island Politics

Maui County Police Update

Monday, October 20th, 2008

By Marie Nowell

The Maui County Police Commission made its first appearance on Molokai since a resident attempted a citizen’s arrest on an officer five years ago.

This year’s meeting went notably smoother. Molokai resident Bill Feeter addressed his concerns to the board regarding substance abuse, domestic abuse, abandoned cars, the Power Plant, the County Park Ranger, animal control, Father Damien canonization plans, poaching, and jet ski regulations.

“The police department is very proactive in working towards the drug problem,” said Chief Thomas Phillips. He explained that the Molokai Police Department is well aware of the reoccurring issues of drug, alcohol and domestic violence, which have been concerns for the past 25-30 years.

District Commanders reported on bureau highlights for the month of September. A total number of 28,929 reports were processed last month, ranging from traffic reports to arrests made throughout Maui County.

Bob Jones Gets it Wrong on Molokai

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Honolulu newspaper columnist Bob Jones recently wrote a piece on his observations of Moloka‘i. As a columnist, he is paid to present his opinions as fact, and as a journalist of a sort, he has a protected right to say whatever he wants. It is just unfortunate to see anyone bare his ignorance and narrow-mindedness in such a public way.

For those who have not encountered Jones’ Moloka‘i musings, he calls it "the Screwed Up Island," and says that residents should not try to preserve the island and its lifestyle "if you insist on welfare." He closes by claiming that, "Most people make something happen. Not on Moloka‘i."

Mr. Jones lives in the suburbs of Honolulu. I imagine he shops at Whole Foods, recycles, and keeps his property in a condition that prevents his neighbors from giving him dirty looks when he goes on his evening walks around the neighborhood. He orders the fresh catch in restaurants to keep his cholesterol down. He occasionally buys produce from the farmers’ market because it is closer to nature, and to support local agriculture.

None of those things are bad. They are simply lifestyle choices that he has made, a version of day-to-day life that makes him happy and comfortable, the way that all of us would like to be in our lives. If there is a negative aspect to the Jones lifestyle it is the assumption that his choices are superior to anyone else’s.

Moloka‘i residents—the people that Bob Jones has chosen to belittle—have made other choices. In his column, Jones criticizes the lack of fresh produce at the local market. He misses the vital fact that on Moloka‘i, home gardens are as common as two-car garages in Honolulu; fresh produce is still warm from the sun, with dirt clinging to its roots. When Moloka‘i talks about fresh fish, it is the fish we caught ourselves earlier that day.

Yes, life on Moloka‘i has its own unique challenges. Nobody wants to pay five dollars for a gallon of gas. More jobs would strengthen the local economy. We could use more medical care.

At the same time, living on Moloka‘i brings gifts you would not find if we became another suburb of Wailuku. The community has a bond and a sense of mutual support that has become too rare in modern society. Moloka‘i lives close to the land, and close to the heart.

Most importantly, Moloka‘i has stepped up to take control of its own destiny; Moloka‘i belongs to Moloka‘i. Large hotels and upscale housing developments do not fit into the vision that has grown naturally from what the island’s residents envision for themselves. Tourism may be part of that, along with responsible agriculture and appropriate energy industries. But it will be on the community’s own terms.

There are things in life that you can only sell once, because as soon as you do, you know you’ll never get it back. Moloka‘i’s heart, future, and destiny are among those things. If Bob Jones can’t see that, he should think about staying on his own lanai, enjoying the sounds of traffic going by.

Don’t Mess with Akaku

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

State asked not to interfere with public TV.  

By Catherine Cluett 

“What is really going on here?” asks Dan Emhof, Special Projects Coordinator for Akaku: Molokai Media Center, addressing fellow Molokai residents, the Governor’s Advisory Council, and Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) representatives. Emhof testified against state involvement in public acces television at a hearing last Tuesday on Molokai set up by the DCCA to get feedback from the Molokai community about the bidding process, or request for proposal (RPF), that Akaku, the public access television station for Maui County, has been mandated to participate in.

The hearing was hosted by the Governor’s Molokai Advisory Council, who invited the DCCA to coordinate their Molokai visit with the Council’s monthly meeting. Glenn Chock, Program Specialist, and Laureen Wong, Staff Attorney, attended the meeting as DCCA/CATV representatives.

GMO: A Technology of Agri-business

Friday, October 10th, 2008

GMO: A Technology of Agri-business

Expert Claire Hope Cummings visits Molokai.

By Catherine Cluett

Claire Hope Cummings is making bold statements. She says there is a technology that is violating the laws of nature and evolution. She says it is causing farmers in India to commit suicide, and claims this technology has been developed purposefully as a tool for social control. She says it is also being used by the largest employer on Molokai.

What is this technology? Genetically modified organisms, or GMOs for short.

Genetic modification allows for the development of traits many farmers and large-scale growers believe is helpful for production. “Roundup Ready” soybeans, for example, have been altered to be resistant to the herbicide Roundup. BT corn has been developed to contain its own insecticide by adding a gene coming from the bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis.

Cummings is a journalist, activist, and former environmental lawyer of 20 years. She is also author of Uncertain Peril: Genetic Engineering and the Future of Seeds, a book that has been compared to Rachel Caron’s Silent Spring.

Last Wednesday, Cummings visited Molokai to talk to community members about the technology and impacts of GMOs. Soybeans and corn are the two major crops affected by genetic modification, she says. GMOs are grown on Molokai, as well as communities around the world.

The process of creating a GMO, says Cummings, involves cutting the DNA of an organism, plant or animal, and forcing molecules upon it which will alter its make-up, severing the evolutionary development of the organism. “They talk about a product; I talk about a process,” says Cummings. She describes the process as the “matrix of control”: control of nature’s processes, control of the political climate, and thus, control of economics.

The problem many people have with GMOs goes far beyond any moral or scientific dilemmas.

Cummings points out that because it is a patented technology and ownership is a key player in the GMO field, violations are bound to occur. Many of these violations are unintentional, over which violators have no control. Contamination of non-GMO crops through pollen being blown by the wind is common. Violators found to have the GMO gene in their crop are often sued by the company owning the patent to the technology, says Cummings.

California is the only state to have bans on GMOs in some counties, and has recently passed a law protecting farmers from being sued if their crops are contaminated, Cummings adds. Farmers in India have been known to commit suicide because they could not pay the royalties owed to patent owners after the farmers were sued for contamination.

After the meeting, the audience was encouraged to spread information about GMOs by word of mouth. Resident Carla Hanchett reminded the community, however, that Monsanto is Molokai’s biggest employer and is a sensitive subject for many people to discuss, even with friends.

The company has had a positive impact on the lives of many Molokai residents, and has no documented safety or environmental violations on the island. “Monsanto provides our local non-profits with thousands of dollars in grants and have generally been a good neighbor,” says Dispatch Editor Todd Yamashita.

Cummings has five main reasons she believes using the technology of genetic modification is detrimental to a sustainable and healthy world.

First, Cummings calls the use of GMOs “bad farming.” “Think chemicals when you see GMOs,” she says. The process, Cummings adds, destroys nature and the integrity of plants and plant systems. In addition, plants modified by genetic engineering do not give back as much to farmers and consumers as non-GMO species. “GMO plants are 10-15% less productive than non-GMOs, and the food they produce is less nutritious,” says Cummings.

Bad economics is the second reason Cummings gives against the use of GMOs. “This technology grows on chemicals and green manure,” says Cummings. She adds that more than $26 billion annually goes to fund the business of genetic modification. “It causes the economics of scarcity,” Cummings says. GMOs place the abundance of nature up against the economics of owning and selling that is a key aspect of the GMO industry.

“We’ve taken the culture out of agriculture,” Cummings says. “Now all we have left is agri-business.”

“It’s also bad social policy,” she explains. “Patents are the life blood of this technology of ownership.” The judge that legalized plant patenting, Clarence Thomas, was a former corporate lawyer for Monsanto. Under Reagan’s presidency, the use of GMOs became unregulated, says Cummings.

Bad biology is another reason Cummings argues against GMOs. “Altering living, growing systems is just messing with us and the natural world,” she says. The contamination rate is also very high, she notes: conventional corn is 80% contaminated by neighboring GMO crops. “The sugar cane that used to be on this island had human genes,” Cummings told the audience.

Bad science is the fifth point Cummings brought to the table. Back when GMOs were being developed, science was “primitive,” she says. “Now they know DNA is not the secret of life. It’s more like RNA.”

“It’s a technology solely controlled by corporations.” Cummings says. “Just because they get it to work, doesn’t mean it’s good.”

“The story of seeds is our story,” she adds. “What we do to seeds is what we do to ourselves, and the future of seeds is in our hands.”

Water Protection at the Forefront

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Department of Water Supply suggests plan to protect Molokai’s groundwater sources.

By Catherine Cluett

Water is a topic of concern for most people on Molokai. For some, the concern lies in the soaring costs of opening their faucets. Scarcity of this valuable resource is a worry for others. For the Department of Water Supply (DWS), one of the biggest concerns at this time is protection of Maui County’s groundwater for safe consumption.

During a meeting last Thursday of the Molokai Water Advisory Committee, the DWS presented the Wellhead Protection Strategy. “Source protection is not required by law,” emphasized DWS planner Marti Buckner. “It’s going to take you to protect it.”

The Wellhead Protection program requires public involvement to move forward. “The process has not yet started on Molokai because there has been no public process,” adds Buckner.

Unstoppable Aloha

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Unstoppable Aloha

One Act Parade

By Catherine Cluett and Marie Nowell

The State may have cut funding for the Aloha Parade this year, but the Hammond family kept the spirit of aloha by holding their own parade. With decorated cars and banners, Patricia and Chris Hammond and their children honked through Kaunakakai’s streets Saturday to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Festivals of Aloha.
Next year is the 50th anniversary of Hawaii’s statehood, and the Hawaii State Tourism Authority cut funding for this year’s noteworthy festivals of Aloha anniversary parade to save up for next year’s big event.
“But this is an important event,” says Molokai resident and Little Grass Shack owner Patricia Hammond. “They pulled a sneak attack.”
But instead of feeling helpless over the funding loss, they organized their own parade, even calling the police for approval. “We just wanted to carry on the aloha spirit,” says Hammond.

Hammond would like to give special mahalos to:
Kawano Ohana for many years of Aloha; Chris, Hikili'i, Kapahu, & Sunni for their never failing Aloha; Lisa Wooldridge for Decorations; Kalawe Ohana; Tongonan Ohana; Moloka'i 'Aina Momona Community Garden for supplies.

Ranch Requests Quarter Million in Property Tax Breaks

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Ranch Requests Quarter Million in Property Tax Breaks

Says Kaluakoi Hotel worth $315,000.

By Molokai Dispatch Staff

Molokai Properties Limited (MPL), known as Molokai Ranch, got rid of its biggest operational expense when it closed down and terminated its employees in March. Now MPL management is trying to continue cutting expenses by appealing over 72 of its property tax bills received from Maui County for 2008.

If MPL management is successful with its appeals, it will save over $250,000 in property tax payments it makes to the County.

Depreciated Values
In 2007, MPL appealed taxes on nine properties assessed by the company at $22,899,600. In appeals documents, MPL claimed the properties were only worth $16,512,900. In 2008, the company is claiming that the same lands have depreciated to $6,255,570, according to 2008 appeal documents.

Last week the County’s Real Property Tax Board of Review traveled to Kaunakakai to hear appeals from a number of Molokai landowners including MPL for 2007 property tax bills.

Dan Orodenker, General Manager for MPL, appeared briefly at the meetings and advised the Board that MPL was withdrawing its 2007 appeals on all nine properties.

He offered no definitive reason for the withdrawal.

The Board of Review will return to Molokai at a later date to take up 2008 appeals.

One of the nine properties is the Kaluakoi Hotel, which was closed in 2001 and has been allowed by MPL to continue deteriorating. For 2008, the County valued the 18 acre hotel site and buildings at $5,867,600. MPL is appealing, and claims the hotel property should only be valued at only $315,290, less than the cost of an average single family home on Molokai.

If MPL is successful with its appeal, the property taxes on the hotel property for 2008 will be only $545.88, according to County records. The tax would be less than what many residents living in Kaunakakai’s Ranch Camp subdivision pay on their modest single family homes.

Uncontested Properties

Despite MPL filing over 70 property tax appeals with the County for 2008, there are many properties over which MPL is not challenging the County.

One property is the 6,348 acre La’au Point parcel for which MPL is planning a controversial 5-mile coastal development. In 2006, MPL reported to investors that the La’au parcel was worth $14,910,000.
The County has the property currently assessed at only $147,400. MPL’s 2008 tax bill for La`au is $1,091. This is substantially less than what many Kaluakoi residents are paying on their individual homes and condos.

MPL is not contesting this tax bill.

MPL’s now-defunct 30-acre Kaupoa Beach Village site is also not being contested. While it appraised in Ranch figures for $5,380,000 a few years ago, the County has it valued at only $105,400 in 2008. MPL’s property tax bill for this property is a mere $474 for the year.

A State of Decline and Few Remaining Trees

Before the shutdown of operations in March, MPL had warned of a “doomsday” scenario should it be unsuccessful in developing La`au Point. Indeed, since shutting down operations, MPL has allowed its oceanfront properties to fall into disrepair.

Most of the trees on the Kaupoa property have died, and what little else on the property remains similarly continues to deteriorate. At the company’s Kaluakoi Hotel, sidewalks are falling into the sea while hotel rooms host stray cats and beehives.

In a correspondence to homeowners, MPL has told residents that the company will be cutting down the remaining coconut trees because of liability issues and because MPL does not have the funds to keep the trees trimmed.

Kaluakoi condo owners are circulating an “adopt a tree” letter, however, and residents are being asked to contribute $70 per remaining tree every nine months for trimming and debris removal. The donation will be paid to MPL.

“It’s very important we do what we can to save the remaining trees. Once they are cut they will not grow back in our life times,” wrote West end resident Jeff Kent, who has already contributed $840. The sum will keep MPL from cutting 12 trees. In the letter Kent said there were approximately thirty trees remaining.

Let’s Talk Story

Friday, October 10th, 2008

For a lot of us, one of the great memories of home comes from those times on the lanai, or around the kitchen table, where we just talk about what is going on around us. Who is doing this and that, what cousin is moving where, some politics, a little bit of just plain sharing the moment. Call it chewing the fat, wala‘au, talk story, it is more than sharing the news.

As a Senator representing a wonderfully complex district, I often wish I had more time to spend with every one of you. I learn great things in every conversation, feel your support and, sometimes, your disappointment or frustration. Talking with you is the best way I know to learn what is going on, and where your deepest concerns lie.

For my friends and ‘ohana on Moloka‘i, I know that there are day-to-day concerns that sometimes do not make it across the channel to the media on Maui or in Honolulu. Anyone with a deep understanding of Moloka‘i appreciates that the conversations in your homes and in the community are where the grassroots issues first come up.

I would like to make this column—which I hope will be the first in a long weekly series—a regular way for us to carry on this conversation. Serving our district means facing some simple geographical facts. We cover four islands, so it is not likely that everyone will gather in the same place. And while technology may make it seem that your neighbors on Lana‘i and in Hana are closer than ever, there are still challenges in seeing where your interests are the same, and where they may differ.

Frankly, we just won’t have as many chances to sit and talk story in the traditional ways. But rather than give up on that time-honored tradition, we will simply have to find new ways to keep the conversation going.

At the same time, I don’t want to be the person who comes to your house and won’t stop talking long enough for you to let you share your mana‘o too. Instead, I hope that this will be a place where we can share ideas. You can look forward to not only a report of what issues are at the top of the Senate’s agenda, but also what I am hearing in my community meetings with your neighbors. I will share my opinions, and I hope you will free to share your as well.

Of course, for this to work as a new version of an old-fashioned talk story session, it is up to you to speak up and join in. I know that sometimes community members feel that their representatives stop caring as soon as they get elected, or that we lose sight of their concerns once we land in Honolulu. Join me in overcoming those old ideas and artificial barriers. Call me at my Senate office, email me, or come to a community meeting and tell me what concerns you.
So let’s talk story.

Judge Rules to Review Secret Procurement Opinion in Akaku Case

Monday, October 6th, 2008

 By the Akaku Team

Akaku: Maui Community Television enjoyed a small victory in the courts last week, regarding its lawsuit against the State Attorney General (AG) and the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA).

In his Motion for Summary Judgment dated Monday, Sept. 29, Judge Joel August ordered the Defendants to release by Nov. 15 an AG opinion that has to this day been a secret for DCCA eyes only. Judge August will privately review the underlying premises that began this controversy more than three years ago before deciding whether or not to make it public.

At the crux of the lawsuit is the DCCA's and AG's take that Hawaii's cable access television stations should submit to a state procurement or bidding process. Meanwhile, Akaku's concern is that procurement behind closed doors on O`ahu would remove community voices from deciding who runs public access, and leave it up to state government agencies.

Fake Funny Farms – Maui County redefines agriculture to include vacation rentals.

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

By Glenn Teves

It seems like we’re constantly changing the definition to words to suit our lifestyle changes and our response to money.  Once upon a time, agriculture meant the production of food, fiber, and timber. All of a sudden, this definition is being turned on its head with the recent enactment of a law that allows transient vacation rentals on agricultural lands. Has the County gone over the edge or do they know something that we don’t? 

Just like the song of the late 60’s by Cat Stevens, “Where do the children play”, my question now is “where do the farmers farm if they farm at all”. With some farm land in Maui County exceeding $500,000 an acre, probably the highest in the nation, who in their right mind will want to farm when they’ll be spending the rest of their life paying for the land. Farm land has shifted from a resource, as envisioned in our state constitution, to a commodity sold to the highest bidder and the County is taking the lead in making this happen.

Fake and funny farms dot the island from east to west, along with a new generation of pseudo-farmers all trying to find a way to get out of farming, yet still benefit from the zoning and tax breaks. Now, there’s a new crutch to lean on and make big bucks with transient vacation rentals, and bed and breakfasts.

I attended a Sustainable Agriculture Conference in Kona last week and the first question asked of everyone was, “What will be needed to create stronger local and regional food systems that are less reliant on imports from elsewhere?” Expecting responses such as farmers market and community-supported agriculture, my response was ‘a catastrophe’. The only way we will change in Maui County is when a disaster forces us to change. By that time, we’ll be eating each other.

Still, the question begs to be answered, “Who will grow our food when the farms are surrounded by houses with residents screaming about the tractor noise, dust, and funny smells and the farmers give up. This is already happening. But who really cares anyway! I still remember a farmer in Colorado I visited who used to spread manure on his fields from nearby feedlots each spring, and would receive a barrage of calls from irate neighbors. When asked, “What is that smell? He replied, “It’s the smell of money.”

Well, not anymore. Now with the New Wave Maui farming, you don’t even have to add manure or fertilizer to your fields. You can create a farm without even farming. All you have to do is construct transient vacation rentals on your farm land, and paste farm pictures on all the windows so your visitors think they’re staying on a farm. You can change the pictures by the seasons, such as classic Tuscany in the spring, or Napa Valley in the late summer.

You can create the ultimate in local cuisine by heading down to Safeway or Costco, buying all kinds of fruits, vegetables, fish and shrimp from Chile, Mexico, China, and who knows where, head back home, and whip up a luscious brunch for your unknowing visitors. No one would be the wiser, and visitors would have a once in a lifetime experience as a result. If you want to get fancy, you can spice things up and add a little more ambiance at the same time by tying a Holstein cow near the entrance to your rental units.

 

I would never have come up with this great idea on my own, and have to thank the county council and the mayor for thinking ‘outside the box’ and being on the cusp of regional land use planning. I hope they keep their thinking caps on, because I know this is only the beginning of some great ideas to come. If they run out of more ideas, I have some smart pills on hand that I can donate to them, but they have to move fast because it’s only good until my rabbit gets the runs.