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Family Practice

Monday, February 16th, 2009

The Neuter Scooter roared into town last week. 



Molokai’s Humane Society brought the clinic here. The clinic is staffed by an Indiana family and they love coming to Hawaii.
Dr. Peavy is the veterinarian and mom. They attended to more than one hundred cats, all of which they spay and neutered as well as gave shots.
It was the first time they had worked on Molokai.  The scooter will be back on Molokai in three months and expect to stay two days.

Contact Molokai’s Humane Society at 558-0000.

Alien Invasion

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Molokai Invasive Species Committee continues the fight

By Catherine Cluett

Molokai is known as the last Hawaiian island, and its residents take pride in their history, culture, and land. But with care of the land, comes care of plants and animals, and native species are often wiped out by invasive and non-native varieties. Controlling those predator species is a big job – one that MoMISC, or the Molokai/Maui Invasive Species Committee, has taken on with success.

MoMISC has been doing such outstanding work on the island, in fact, that this year, despite budget cuts across the board, all MoMISC positions will remain secure. This is due in part to the organization’s successful collaboration with other Molokai groups, such as The Nature Conservancy, the Molokai Land Trust, the Kalaupapa National Park, and the United States Department of Agriculture, to name a few.

Operation: Warm Clothes

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Operation: Warm Clothes

Molokai residents have donated 2000 pounds of clothing for Afghani families in need.

Richard Messina poses with 2000 pounds of clothing on his lanai waiting to be distributed to families in Afghanistan by his Airman son, Joseph. Photo by Bevan Analoro.

By Catherine Cluett

Joseph Messina is an airman with the Air Force. While working in the rural villages of Afghanistan in the bitter cold, the soldiers noticed the Afghani families had no warm clothes, Messina and his fellow airmen began giving away their own clothes to freezing villagers. Messina told his father, Molokai resident Richard Messina, about the situation. Within weeks, 2000 pounds of clothes had accumulated on the Messina’s lanai, donated by concerned Molokai residents. Queen Liliuokalani Center alone donated over 300 pounds of items.

“It’s blowing my mind,” says Richard Messina. “A lot of people have donated and it’s still coming.” He’s calling the effort “Operation: Warm Clothes.”

There’s only one problem – they have to pay to ship 2000 pounds of clothing to Afghanistan. Messina says it costs $79 to send a 49-pound box. He’s hoping the military can help, but so far, it doesn’t look hopeful.

Joseph Messina, meanwhile, has set up a way to distribute the clothing directly to the people in Afghanistan who need it. This will avoid having the supplies end up in the wrong hands, says his father.

To help raise money for shipment, a fundraiser event is being held at Hotel Molokai on Sunday February 22, from noon to 4 p.m. Musical entertainment will be offered by the “Anahaki Blend and Friends” band as well as Lono and others. The event will also feature raffle drawing and door prizes, one of which is a whale watching trip donated by Molokai Ocean Tours run by Nancy and Ernie Poland. Tickets for the event are available for a donation of $5.

Messina says they’re still looking for clothing donations. Warm clothing is what’s needed – like jackets, socks, shoes, sweater and blankets – for men, women and children. You can also offer monetary donations to assist with shipping.

For tickets to the fundraiser event or for more information, call Richard at 553-4328.

Fishing for Answers

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Community discusses amendments to fisheries regulations

By Catherine Cluett

Marine life is one of Hawaii’s most treasured resources. With Molokai’s dependence on subsistence living, preservation of resources like the island’s fisheries becomes all the more vital to every day life. But many have noticed a decline in the quality and quantity of marine resources around the state, and it’s a complaint the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) is trying to solve by talking to communities throughout the Hawaiian Islands and soliciting their input in a proposal to amend existing fishing regulations.

Bill Puleloa, an aquatic biologist with DLNR, visited the Governor’s Molokai Community Advisory Council last week to get some answers from Molokai residents about how to best manage, conserve and restore the island’s marine resources.

Blazing the Trail

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Blazing the Trail

Ke `Aupuni Lokahi receives grant to plan Pala`au trails.

At the Pala`au Pavilion in Kalae, Bill Garnett outlines the Ala Pala`au project that would provide recreation, restoration and employment.

By Catherine Cluett

For Bill Garnett, much of the future is found in the past, and he lives that motto every day in his work with rare and native plant restoration on Molokai. This philosophy also led him to read through old Hawaii Tourism Authority (HTA) documents which pointed to historic trails in the Pala`au State Park region in Kalae.

Garnett’s peek into the past lead to a $90,000 grant to plan for uncovering and restoring those same Pala`au trails.  The goal is multi-faceted -- restoring native forests and rare species, providing cultural interpretation of these resources and presenting a new area of recreation as well as employment.

The HTA awarded the grant to Ke `Aupuni Lokahi, Inc., (KAL) a non-profit organization for community improvement. The grant funds only the planning process, which will include gathering ideas from the community and completing the necessary environmental and cultural reports, permits, and analysis to facilitate implementation of the plan. Education and training in natural resource management, with an emphasis on youth stewardship of the land, is a key component of the project which is being called Ala Pala`au.

“This is the biggest grant they have ever given for a natural resources project,” says Garnett, an employee of the University of Hawaii who oversees the planting of rare and endangered plants in Kalaupapa and around the island.

Garnett expects the planning process to take about a year. It will involve not only comprehensive preparation for every aspect of the project, but also completion of a botanical survey of the area.

The project will provide new recreation, restoration and employment, according to Meredith Speicher, a planner with the National Park Service (NPS).

The NPS in Kalaupapa has also volunteered their staff to match the funds in labor for the project. Guy Hughes, NPS Natural Resources Division Chief, says Park Superintendent Steve Prokop hopes the topside trails and lookouts over Kalaupapa will be a way for people to experience the peninsula even if they are not able to make the trek down.

One bordering landowner expressed concern that once they open their doors to this project, it would take on a life of its own. “What guarantee do we have that this will not turn into something more in the future?”

In short, there is no guarantee, according to Hughes. But Stacy Crivello, a KAL board member, is quick to point out that communication is integral to the project’s success, and nothing will happen without landowner’s cooperation.

Lori Buchanan, member of the Molokai Planning Commission and the Molokai Invasive Species Committee, added that the project would need protection against potential liability. “Who is responsible if a tourist falls on the trail?” she asks. “What agency will be held accountable?”

No one has all the answers yet. Garnett points out that part of the project’s purpose is job creation and training, and that hopefully Molokai residents will take responsibility for tasks like trail maintenance. “But we have $90,000 to plan this, so we better be able to answer all these questions,” he says.

Garnett hopes to work with local nurseries to supply native plants for the area, and schools to involve youth in the work.

Another challenge the project currently faces is a lack of clarity of land ownership and property lines. The Department of Hawaiian Homelands owns the majority of the land earmarked for the project, and several divisions within the State of Hawaii as well as the National Park Service lease portions of it. Defining the boundaries between these parcels will be a large part of the planning process, says Garnett. 

Ke Aupuni Lokahi is a non-profit organization established to administer the Enterprise Community (EC) Grant awarded to the Molokai community in 1998 by the United States Department of Agriculture. That grant sunsetted in December 2008, according to Benny Venenciano, Administrator of KAL. 

While KAL’s EC status is over, the work it does in the community is not, and Venenciano says the organization is continuing to offer support to the projects it began, many of which now stand on their own feet. These include the Molokai Land Trust for open space conservation, the Molokai Community Health Center, and the Molokai Community Development Corporation, which provides affordable housing.

The first public meeting for the Ala Pala`au Trails project will be held in mid-March. Look for the specific date and time in the Dispatch calendar.

Call Ke `Aupuni Lokahi at 553-8188 for more information or if you would like to volunteer in the planning of the project.

Hawaiian Blossom

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Singer Raiatea Helm and her boyfriend, Guy Sibilla, met Barack and Michelle Obama at a fundraiser at the Kahala Mandarin back in August.

Here’s what she had to say about the encounter: “Meeting Obama was quite an honor.  Just being in his presence had to have been one of the most powerful feelings ever.  He is a very charismatic and articulate man”

She recounted one particularly funny moment from the evening:
 “We all thought about singing a song for Obama…We decided to sing "Hawaii Aloha,” not even less than a minute in to the song, we hear him coming from the back of the room saying, "Hey, I know that song."  Then he started to sing a long with us and took some photos.  It was really fun.”

Raiatea Helm also performed at the Hawaii State Ball for Obama’s inauguration.  Don’t forget to catch her performance on Molokai on March 13 at the Hotel Molokai.

Room to Grow

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Momentum building for MCC-Molokai to acquire more land.
By Sean Aronson

Demand for higher education on Molokai is large, but as things are now, not everyone can be accommodated.  While money is the main limiting factor, there is cause for optimism. Just as Obama inspired hope in the country, so, too, is there hope for the future of Molokai’s higher education.  

That’s because a college education on Molokai could be getting a boost if a couple of budget proposals fall into place.  A Senate and House bill recently introduced would allocate $500,000 for the purchase of expanding acreage of the Molokai Education Center (MEC). The money would allow the current infrastructure to more than double in land – from two to five acres.

Hawaii in Legal Spotlight

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Ceded lands case headed to US Supreme Court at the end of the month.
By Sean Aronson

The United States Supreme Court in Washington, DC may be far away, but it will soon tackle an issue close to home for Molokai residents – ceded lands.  The highest court in the land will address whether the State of Hawaii has the jurisdiction to sell lands that remain in dispute.

And the timing could not be more interesting.  2009 marks the 50th anniversary of Hawaii statehood.  All this less than a month after Hawaii saw its first son elected president.  This year is shaping up to be one for records, when it comes to Hawaii in the national conversation.

Molokai residents received a briefing on the ceded lands issue this past weekend.  

Not as Crazy as it Looks

Monday, February 9th, 2009

It seems that every session, legislative observers look for unusual bills that eventually get unexpected public attention. Last session it was The Aspartame Bill, this session it may be The Pit Bull Bill. Briefly, The Aspartame Bill would have banned all food products containing the artificial sweetener aspartame, found in such products as diet soft drinks, sugar free gums and candies, and the packaged sweetener Equal. It is known by its brand name, NutraSweet. It didn’t survive.

The Pit Bull Bill, this year’s SB79, would make it a misdemeanor to own or sell a pit bull dog. It has been getting fresh attention because of some recent incidents on O‘ahu involving pit bull bites. Needless to say, many of us have gotten calls and emails from people on both sides of the issue, some of whom thought the bill has already passed. It hasn’t, and it has little chance of making it very far.
Whatever these bills’ individual merits, their introduction and progress through the session offer important lessons on the legislative process and community involvement.

First, both bills show how residents with particular concerns can gain entry into the system. I introduced the aspartame bill last session "by request," as did Senate President Colleen Hanabusa this session with the pit bull bill. “By request” refers to a bill that a group or individual has asked a legislator to introduce, and that the requestor will support through the process.

Hawai‘i law does not include a form of initiative or referendum that allows citizens direct access to the legislative process. As a result, "by request" or "BR" bills represent a rare opportunity for interested citizens to propose legislation. This session, sixteen Senators have introduced over 425 bills by request, covering a broad range of topics. Also among those bills are laws proposed by the Governor’s office, the State Judiciary, and the mayors of Hawai‘i’s four counties.

The fact that a bill may represent an idea outside the public mainstream does not mean it does not warrant introduction. The broader idea behind the aspartame bill was that we need to be attentive to our food supply. The pit bull bill reminded us of our concern for safety, and the fact that we may face unexpected dangers. The bills also illustrate how quickly an idea can enter the public consciousness. Last year the aspartame bill got a hearing, which is not true for every bill introduced. The pit bull bill suddenly seemed prescient when two incidents involving the breed occurred on the very day that a story about the bill appeared in a daily newspaper.

Experience has shown that a new idea can take two to three years to move to the forefront. Perhaps deeper concerns about the quality of our foods and owners’ liability for their animals may be on their way into the broad public consciousness.
The thing to keep in mind is that the process of introducing bills by request gives those with emerging concerns a chance to bring them into the public arena, where they may seem less…unusual…down the road.

Youthful Celebration

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Kainani Waits, 11, performs hula with keiki from Kilohana School.  The girls performed as part of the 5th annual Keiki Expo held at Mitchell Pauole Center.  
This year’s theme was ‘Opihi and highlights included the “Diaper Dash” and a reading of ‘Kai the ‘Opihi Gets the Point’ by Molokai’s own Gail Shima Omoto.
 Despite the hot day, hundreds of Molokai keiki took part.  Inside the pavilion, parents were able to sign their keiki up for preschool and take advantage of support services from the Department of Health and many other organizations.