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Mateo Re-election Challenge Dismissed

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

A Second Circuit Court judge threw out the challenge to Maui County Council Chairman Danny Mateo’s candidacy last week, saying he didn’t have authority to rule on the case.

At a hearing Sept. 16, Judge Joel August said the case was in the jurisdiction of the Hawaii Supreme Court. Attorney Lance Collins said in an interview he plans to file a new challenge with the Supreme Court this week.

His client, Nellie Laird-Woods of Lahaina, had filed the petition seeking to disqualify Mateo, who represents Molokai on the county council, from November’s ballot, arguing another full term and he would exceed the five-term limit.

Kalaupapa Celebrates Aloha

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

The small, isolated community of Kalaupapa didn’t let their size stop them from throwing a grand party on Sept. 1 for the settlement’s third annual Night of Aloha. Patients, staff and topside folk celebrated with festive music, hula and stomachs full of ono food.

“It went absolutely beautiful,” said Ziana Kaulia, a Department of Health employee who organized the event. Kaulia said she started the event in 2008 after hearing some of Kalaupapa’s patients talk about the Aloha Weeks they used to have decades ago.

“They were never able to participate in the court,” Kaulia said. “That’s why I wanted to start something like this, so the patients could participate and be in the court.”

Credit Where It’s Due

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Credit Where It’s Due

The photo that appeared on the front cover of last week’s issue, Sept. 15, may have been taken by Molokai Dispatch staff, but was crafted by an impassioned group here on the Friendly Isle. Some members of Kalamaula Mauka – Hawaiian Homestead Association created a new homestead group: `Opio o Molokai – the youth of Molokai. Among their beginning goals was to increase participation in the voting process.

“Our number one target is Hawaiians, but we know it’s important that everyone get out,” said `Opio member Suliana Aki. “It’s important who represents us, and who we can see in regard to complains and compliments.”

Following the primary elections, `Opio o Molokai encourages all of us to keep up the momentum, get educated and vote in the general elections in November. Mahalo to Candice and Stanley Bicoy, Vanna and Kanahele Montizor, Royce Villa, Fred Aki, Sybil Lopez, and `Apelila and Kapena Meddela for the message.

Hau`oli La Hanau

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Hau`oli La Hanau

Students from all of Molokai’s Hawaiian immersion programs come together once a year to honor Hawaii’s last reigning monarch, Queen Lili`uokalani.

Hosted by the Queen Lili`uokalani Children’s Center (QLCC) on Molokai, this is the seventh year the student’s have shared `oli, hula and essays written about the queen, according to Andrina Reyes, QLCC office supervisor. This year marks the third year that all immersion schools – MHS, MMS, Kualapu`u and Punana Leo – have come together in a larger celebration.

means a lot,” she said.

Tavares Tops Mayoral Primary

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Tavares Tops Mayoral Primary

Mayor Charmaine Tavares beat out the competition to win Saturday’s primary for Maui County Mayor. With 25.4 percent of the vote as of Sunday evening, Tavares will face second-place finisher and former Maui County Mayor Alan Arakawa, who received 24.4 percent, in November’s general election.

Randy Piltz came in third with 19.4 percent, followed by Chris Hart with 10.5 percent. Molokai’s Patricia Hammond, known locally as Sally Chow (she was listed on the ballot as Sally Chow Hammond) was seventh of 11 candidates with 134 votes or 0.5 percent.

Here on Molokai, Tavares got 27.8 percent of the vote; Arakawa got 23.7 percent; Hart got 20.3 percent; and Piltz got 12.6 percent.

Prescription Drug Trade-In

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

Prescription Drug Trade-In

Molokai Drugs will host it’s first-ever Drug Take-Back Day for customers to bring in unused or expired medications for safe disposal.

Drug Take-Back Day on Molokai is Tuesday, Sept. 28 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. The service is free and anonymous. It is part of a national campaign sponsored by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration aimed at minimizing safety and environmental risks associated with medication disposal.

Medications must be in original containers since labels may contain safety information, and personal information should be made unreadable by covering with tape or permanent marker. Officials from the Narcotics Enforcement Division will be on hand to dispose of all medications.

Safe disposal can prevent accidental poisoning, overdose or abuse by someone other than the prescription-holder.

“There have been a lot of unfortunate situations here that could have been prevented if a household didn’t have old medications,” Pharmacist Kelly Go said. “That’s one of the reasons we wanted to have this program.”

Safe disposal also prevents the dangerous environmental effects from washing drugs down drains or toilets. Wastewater treatment plans are not designed to remove or process many compounds found in medication, which can end up in surface and ground water.

A 1999 study by the United States Geological Survey found that 80 percent of stream water in the US contained detectable levels of medications.

Medications and antibiotics can also destroy bacteria necessary for skeptics system to operate.

For more information on Drug Take-Back Day, call Molokai Drugs at 553-5790 or visit www.disposemymeds.org.

Maunaloa School Stays Open

Monday, September 20th, 2010

Maunaloa School Stays Open

Maunaloa Elementary School turned 73 this year, and – after some trepidation about its future – will make it to 74.

The Department of Education (DOE) was looking to close the school under an economical proposal that would have sent its 71 students to Kaunakakai Elementary School roughly 18 miles away.

But the Board of Education (BOE) voted unanimously last Thursday to keep the west end school open with its full staff intact on the recommendations of Superintendent Kathryn Matayoshi and a board committee.

“I just feel ecstatic,” said Lana Freeman, a fourth-grade teacher at Maunaloa. “It’s a relief that it’s finally all said and done.”

The vote followed a nearly two-year study and public scoping period that drew a large and vocal crowd of Maunaloa supporters. In the final weeks leading to the decision, both Complex Area Superintendant Lindsay Ball and Matayoshi changed their original recommendations.

Initially, both had suggested to keep the school open but without a full-time principal. Ball and Matayoshi recently adjusted their recommendations to leave the campus and its full staff untouched.

With about a dozen Molokai residents watching the meeting, held at Maui High School, through live streaming Thursday night in Maunaloa’s cafeteria, the board voted without debate.

“The voices of Molokai were heard,” said John Penebacker, the chairman of the Committee on Administrative Services. Penebacker’s committee submitted the report stating that Maunaloa School should not be consolidated with Kaunakakai.

The essence of the consolidation proposal boiled down to money. State officials estimated the DOE could save at least $270,000 annually if Maunaloa was shut down. But pure economic benefit was not enough to bring the school to its knees.

“Students’ needs are more critical than annual savings,” said retired educator Rose Yamada, who also chaired the island’s consolidation task force.

Happy Faces
When Maunaloa’s only school was first identified as a viable candidate for closure, community members drew their battle swords to stave off DOE’s intentions.

“We have to fight for our kids because they’re all we have,” said Judy Caparida, a Ho`olehua resident. “What affects west end affects everybody on the island.”

The school sits at the heart of a rural, geographically distant community, whose pride runs deep, and perseverance stands firm. But for a town that has endured multiple challenges including job losses and business closures, the prospect of their neighborhood school closing brought no small measure of pain.

“We shouldn’t be shot in the knees,” said Dart Bicoy at a BOE meeting last month. “We’re already on our knees.”

Parents flooded public hearings held on the matter, stating their children thrived in small classrooms with individualized attention. Still, the threat of closure came despite Maunaloa students improving dramatically on state tests, having complied with all targets on the Adequately Yearly Progress for the No Child Left Behind policy.

After months of fighting and pleading for its school, the community proved to be instrumental in its survival. Last week, glum faces transformed into ones expressing joy and relief.

“This means that we have hope,” said Wendy Espaniola, a sixth-grade teacher at Maunaloa. “Hope for the future.

“My husband went to this school and my children, so it means a lot to us.”

Elly Abafo’s family has seen four generations attend Maunaloa School. A former student herself, Abafo’s mother and son also attended, and now her grandson, Royden.

“Before my mother passed away, she said this is a school we need to keep forever,” Abafo said, as her eyes began to swell with tears.

While some parents and teachers smiled with ease, kids squealed with excitement.

“I’m so happy I don’t have to move and get to see my best friends everyday!” exclaimed sixth-grader Kaimana Escobar.


Nominations Deadline Extended for Mayor’s Small Business Awards

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

County of Maui News Release

The County of Maui’s Office of Economic Development announced that the nomination deadline for the 2010 Mayor’s Small Business Awards program has been extended until Thursday, Sept. 23 at noon.

Completed nomination forms, along with two supporting letters of recommendation, must be received at the Maui County Business Resource Center (MCBRC) no later than noon on Thursday, Sept. 23.  Deliver completed forms to MCBRC, 70 Kaahumanu Ave., Unit B-9, Kahului, HI located in the Maui Mall across from IHOP.

Meet the Candidate: Neil Abercrombie

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Meet the Candidate: Neil Abercrombie

Neil Abercrombie spent 40 years representing different aspects of Hawaii and its communities. He says its time for a “New Day” in Hawaii, and wants to lead the way in educational and economic reform. The democratic governor candidate stopped by the Dispatch while on Molokai to discuss being “and agent of change.”

Molokai Dispatch (MD): Why are you running for governor?

Neil Abercrombie (NA):
Right here, my comprehensive plan [A New Day in Hawaii]. I took a look at what we all were doing, what Congress was doing to try to alleviate the conditions and circumstance of the recession, and I saw this paralysis of leadership in Hawaii. I have an advantage, 20 years of experience. The culmination of all those years was to come back and utilize that. And I realized others that are running have other ambitions. The governorship seemed to the others, I thought, as a stepping stone rather than a corner stone.

Ranch, and water and its distribution, what kind of education we’re offering, what be the role of agriculture, how do we get people off of welfare status, how to get people back in charge of their lives.

The Hawaii state primaries are on Sept. 18.

Meet the Candidate: Mele Carroll

Friday, September 17th, 2010

Meet the Candidate: Mele Carroll

Gaming, the homestead wait-list, renewable energy, and Rep. Carroll’s political future are among what she wants voters to know. She visited Molokai a few times this month, and sat down with the Dispatch to discuss her political future as a Molokai representative.

Molokai Dispatch (MD):
What are your top political priorities?

Mele Carroll (MC): The state’s owes a settlement of $600 million to the Department of Hawaiian Homelands (DHHL). Legislature mandates $30 million every year [to DHHL] that goes into building infrastructure to put more people on their lands. But the wait list for Hawaiians to receive land has tripled to 26,000 which is a good thing for Native Hawaiians, but a bad thing for DHHL. Currently DHHL is only able to provide [homesteads] for about 500 to 1,000 people a year. That is not enough.

Also, the settlement goes away after 2014. The director of DHHL told me that through commercial leases and federal grants they raise an estimated $18 million per year – but their operations cost is $22 million. After the $30 million goes away? You do the math. We’re not even making enough to sustain what we need to stay intact.

As Chair of Hawaiian Affairs my biggest priority is to build the DHHL trust fund. During statehood, the federal government obligated Hawaii to provide adequate funding to put Native Hawaiians on their lands in a timely manner. Because they haven’t lived up to this obligation, there have been several law suits. The latest, Kalima versus DHHL, is based on claimants who passed away without receiving land. The settlement could bankrupt the state, and the state is ultimately responsible because it’s in our constitution

MD: What about the blood quantum which states Hawaiians need to be 50 percent or more Hawaiian ancestry in order to qualify for homelands?

MC: If I had it my way, every Hawaiian who qualifies would be on the land and that’s my goal as long as I’m on the legislature.

But first things first – we need to reduce that wait list for the 50 percenters or more. Create economic development that allows Native Hawaiians to benefit from their land because they’ve got lots of land. Collaborate, not just with OHA – there are a lot of agencies and individuals that want to assist but we’ve got to make the connection. And it’s possible but we need the political will. I’ve taken it on very aggressively. I’ll be introducing my gaming bill one more time in January for that conversation.

MD: Your gaming bill got a lot of people jumping up and down – why gaming?

MC: DHHL doesn’t ask the state for general funds, there’s no political will to provide the funds, and right now the state doesn’t have the funds anyway. We need to provide a mechanism that provides the revenue. I introduced the gaming bill on Hawaiian homelands to shine a light on the trust fund and to say ‘if not gaming, then what?’

I went to Seattle in January to see what federal recognition has done for Native Americans. What I saw was the gaming – they own their own electric, telephone, cable and construction companies. They’ve empowered their people through entrepreneurship. They’ve reduced their own unemployment rates to the point they need to hire from outside. They even provide their own health benefits. It is the people who own the casinos.

A lot of people here go to Vegas and why are we investing in Vegas? Those who were against that bill I asked ‘are you willing to raise taxes?’ because the state is ultimately responsible - they took on that obligation from the federal government.

Of course you’d have to create a gaming commission, you need regulation. You can do it in a controlled way. The best thing about the American Indians in the North West is that they take care of their problems – their homelessness, their substance abuse – because they have the money to do so. We don’t. The state doesn’t. That’s why we’re in this situation.

MD: What else are you doing to improve DHHL?

MC: This past session we passed a bill that allows for a one-time extension on commercial leases, but lessees have to consult with beneficiaries and comply with chapter 91 which provides for public hearings. We want make sure there is transparency. 15 percent of revenue from extended leases will go into the Native Hawaiian rehabilitation fund to provide scholarships and grants through DHHL.

The law also allows DHHL to start building homes and infrastructure without the full amount by using the trust fund as credit. What we want to do is force the state to do what they’re supposed to do.

MD: Everyone is jumping onboard with renewable energy – where do you stand?

MC: We’ve done work in the energy sector coordinating all the different technologies for evaluation because what might be good for one island might not work for another. There is a resolution that was made at the last democrat convention asking the administration to do the study and present it to the public so we know our options. It also asks that the money stays in Hawaii – there are so many providers and vendors out there. We need to create a comprehensive study of what is available so that lawmakers and the community can be a part of that process that decides where Hawaii will go with energy. We’ve got to have that evaluation process.

We have an island system. You’re looking at transmission of energy from the neighbor islands which have most of the resources. But Oahu has the greatest need. We need to look beyond what Oahu needs. Right now I’m working with Lanai because the community doesn’t feel there is any community benefit – that’s the conversation we need to be having on Molokai – is there community benefit?

MD: It seems like you political career is gaining momentum – what are your aspirations?

MC: I’d like to be in the Senate should Senator English choose to continue on. But I haven’t made a decision as far as governor or congress. There are supporters who want me to do both. But my thing is spiritual. I put it to prayer and just say wherever Ke Akua wants me to be, that’s where I need to be. It’s because of Ke Akua that I’ve been able to unveil a lot of things and it’s through those prayers that many people have been sent to help me with this work. So I believe I’m supposed to be where I’m at right now and Ke Akua will tell me what the next step will be.