Diary

SB 2450

Hemp day

Dated

Sat, Feb 25

SB 2450 / With the state facing a $1.2 billion budget shortfall, Maui Sen. J. Kalani English figured the timing could be right this session to ease up on marijuana.

After all, his bill to decriminalize possession of less than an ounce of marijuana is expected to save the state about $6.2 million–the amount now spent to enforce possession laws and process offenders through the courts. And his legislation giving counties the authority to set up dispensaries–aka “compassion centers”–for medical cannabis patients will generate additional revenues through a $30 per ounce tax, to be split 50-50 by the state and counties.

“The counties should be very interested in this because really, right now the counties have only two forms of raising revenues,” English said. One is property taxes and the other is the transient occupancy tax (TAT), which is shared with the state, unless lawmakers decide otherwise.

But while money may be the carrot to entice votes, it isn’t the only issue. Although Hawaii was the first state in the nation to approve medical marijuana, the only legal way for patients to get the substance is to either grow it themselves or have it done by a registered caretaker. That approach isn’t working well for some of the 5,700-plus patients now authorized to use marijuana, and transporting marijuana between islands is also problematic.

“It’s time for us to frankly and openly discuss this issue and also move it forward,” English said. “I think we have to have the compassion to provide medicine to people who need it.”

The bill, SB2213 Draft 1, allows the centers to cultivate and sell marijuana and plants to patients and their caregivers, while giving each county the authority to establish such centers. The measure is up for a vote by the Senate Ways and Means Committee on Thursday.

Although some Hawaii police and prosecutors have opposed the proposal, citing concerns about increased crime and enforcement, it’s gotten support from medical marijuana patients and the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii.

Sen. Brian Taniguchi, chair of the Judiciary Committee, meanwhile, has scheduled a hearing for SB 2450, the decriminalization bill, at 11am Thursday. The bill was co-sponsored by 20 of Hawaii’s 25 senators.

“For me, it’s really a public policy call,” English said. “ Sending somebody to jail for a small amount of marijuana is a failed policy.”

Celebrating Hawaii, nature, culture and wellness for over 35 years!
SURFER, The Bar

COMMENTS

We often print online comments in our “Letters to the Editor” section of Honolulu Weekly. While submitted letters are often edited for length and clarity, online comments we use are printed entirely as they are written for the website. If you do not wish for your comment to be used in Honolulu Weekly print issues, please write “Don’t Print” at the end of your comment. For questions, e-mail editorial@honoluluweekly.com. Thank you!

blog comments powered by Disqus

This week

Still on Board

Given the city’s crumbling infrastructure and rail controversy, it’s hard to believe anyone would want to be the next mayor of Honolulu. But a few do want the job, including the incumbent, Mayor Peter Carlisle, the former Honolulu Prosecuting Attorney who won a 2010 special election to fill the remainder of Mufi Hannemann’s term.

City Council 101

I’d never been to a Honolulu City Council meeting until a few weeks ago. Features, not politics, was my beat.

Nurturing a living culture

Victoria Holt Takamine is a kumu hula, a cultural activist and a teacher and has an impeccable pedigree to back up all these titles. Born of an alii family whose kuleana was in Moanalua, she graduated as a hula teacher under the legendary Auntie Maiki Aiu Lake and taught hundreds of students in her own halau (Pua Alii ‘Ilima) and at the University of Hawaii.

Public access

On April 25, a state judge dismissed trespassing charges against a Kauai man after finding that he had been exercising traditional native Hawaiian rights hunting wild pigs on private land. Kui Palama, 28, was arrested on Jan.

transitional Housing

The city plans to dish out $3.5 million from its Affordable Housing Fund and either purchase or renovate a structure to provide transitional housing for Honolulu’s special needs homeless population. “Our community has invested considerable effort and resources in addressing homelessness,” Mayor Peter Carlisle said in a statement, “but there remains a population whose disabilities or chronic conditions make it difficult for them to participate in traditional shelter programs.” Carlisle is referring to those homeless with mental illnesses, addictions and physical disabilities.

Poi Mill shut

Makaweli Poi faces an uncertain future after its owner, a corporate subsidiary of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) ordered the West Kauai mill to suspend operations May 23. Mona Bernardino, chief operating officer of the corporation, Hiipoi LLC, says the move to shut down Makaweli Poi was prompted mainly by financial concerns.

Sewage study

A resolution adopted by the City Council will solidify an agreement between the City and County of Honolulu and the University of Hawaii Water Resources Research Center (UH-WRRC) to conduct an analysis of impacts from ocean sewer outfalls on the marine environments off of Oahu. The city will pay UH-WRRC as much as $2.5 million for biological and sediment studies in portions between now and June 30, 2017 .

pedaling 9-5

Along with the deep, verdant growth of spring sprouts an unyielding desire to spend more time in the open air. That’s why it should come as no surprise that National Bike Month falls in the sun-drenched time of May.

Billions of …

Of the many letters you publish against rail, how many offer an alternative that won’t send us into further economic demise? Billions of gallons of oil are imported for us from every oil-producing nation on this planet so that we can buy billions of gallons of gasoline.

Goodbye bus, hello rail?

TheBus is taking a back seat to rail. At the May 3 Downtown Neighborhood Board meeting, an audience member asked city Transportation Director Wayne Yoshioka when we could expect the bus route cancellations and changes to be reversed.