Diary

Exec Address

Gov. Neil Abercrombie gave his State of the State address in the House Chambers on Monday, Jan.


Ben’s Issues

The Weekly asked former Gov. Ben Cayetano, who has been characterized by opponents in the Honolulu mayoral race as a one-issue candidate, to specify his overall goal.


Making Law

“For this session, we must focus our efforts on maintaining economic recovery and promoting immediate job growth,” said Speaker of the House, Rep. Calvin Say in his opening remarks as Hawaii state legislators convened on Jan.


KYO-YA-YA!

Finally! On Thursday, Jan.


Gridlock

Hawaii ’s State Department of Transportation (DOT) has joined the State Department of Agriculture and the Department of Permitting and Planning in reversing its position on Hoopili, having been against it when the project was rejected by the Land Use Commission (LUC) in 2009. DOT’s conditional endorsement hinges partly upon project developer D.R.


Monsanto Ed

A panel discussion held Jan. 18th at the UH Department of Hawaiian Studies raised ethical questions regarding Monsanto’s support of College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources (CTAHR), including the $500,000 contribution that created the Monsanto Research Fellows Fund.


Civics

Welfare Bill: The House Committee on Human Services will hold an informational briefing to discuss HB1710 and HB1711 relating to drug testing applicants for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF). Conference Room 329, State Capitol, 415 S.


Papaya Power

A company called BioTork out of Gainesville, Fla., has had recent success converting unmarketable Hawaiian papayas into biofuel. This milestone is the first in a collaborative research and development project with US Department of Agriculture Pacific Basic Agricultural Research Center (PBARC) in Hilo and the Hawaii-based engineering and economic development firm Rivertop Solutions.


Trick Evict

Just two days before Christmas, the multigenerational Phillips-Tehiva family of Hana, Maui received a criminal trespass summons–the result of a foreclosure–making it illegal (as of Jan. 2, 2012) for them to reside at their home located on property that has been in their family for over 100 years.


Coral Disease Recurs

An outbreak of the coral disease known as Montipora White Syndrome (MWS) has again been detected in the reefs of Kaneohe Bay. In March of 2010 an outbreak of MWS killed over 100 colonies of rice coral.


Bee Not to Bee?

It may seem contradictory that honeybees–technically still on the state’s invasive species list–could be so integral to Hawaii’s food sustainability. But farmers in Hawaii, just like farmers all over the world, rely on honeybees to pollinate their crops.


Aqua Czar

Starting Feb. 1, 2012, acting manager of the Board of Water Supply (BWS) Dean Nakano will step aside and the newly appointed manager and chief engineer Ernest Lau will take his place.


Civics: Be Heard!

Land Use Commission: Hearings continue as D.R. Horton-Schuler Homes L.L.C.


Editor’s note

Our second issue of the new year provides reasons to celebrate, although we wouldn’t be the Weekly without a reality check. Civil unions are now available in Hawaii to same sex couples, yes, but Shantel Grace’s cover story explains the painful ways in which this status falls short of equal protection under law.


This week

Endless (( Sonic )) Summer!

There’s a swell on the horizon. Listen closely and you’ll hear it…AUDIO INVASION 2012.

Circus Unleashed!

It’s been a while, but a man donning dresses and surgical gowns, spouting rap-rock assaults over a bed of crunchy guitars, has drifted back into the sunbeam of MTV like a forgotten fleck of light. With the spastic delivery of a fallen patient from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Matt Shultz, lead singer of Cage The Elephant, is channeling the preeminent poster-child of grunge–Kurt Cobain.

Beach Boogie Waves

Boys, beaches, bags of weed. In 2010, Best Coast blazed onto the music scene with a sealed Zip-lock of 7” singles that led the indie pop duo to roll out a fatty debut record called Crazy For You.

Red Hot Sounds, South of the Border

So what do you do if you’re a band who made it big in the L.A. hardcore-punk scene with several critically acclaimed self-titled albums under your belt?

Foster the Heartbreak

Last Thursday, Foster the People sent news through their publicist that they won’t be performing at Audio Invasion 2012 due to “unforeseen circumstances.” (They’ll return to Hawaii on March 18.) Rumors are their two Grammy noms for Best Alternative Album and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance led to their cancellation. What a let down.

RAIL RIFTS

On Jan. 26, members of the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transit (HART) Finance Committee mostly sat in silence while listening to an earful from Wynnie Joy-Hee of Mililani, who said that she had taken the bus all the way into town at 7am to address the issue of how her tax money is being spent.

RAIL BOSS WANTED

HART intends to hire an executive director as early as March 1, 2012. The semi-autonomous agency is currently headed by interim executive director Toru Hamayasu, who is also a candidate for the permanent position The ED’s salary has been estimated to be within the range of $150,000 to $350,000, and HART has allotted $300,000 for the position thus far, Vice Chair Ivan Lui Kwan told the City Council Committee on Transportation on Jan.

TEACHING TERMS

Poor communication between the union and the teachers themselves, on top of a general sense of mistrust, were blamed for the overwhelming rejection of the Hawaii State Teacher’s Association (HSTA) contract last week–an unprecedented two-thirds voted against the union-backed contract. The president of the teachers’ union, Will Okabe, quickly took the blame, stating in a Jan.

BEACH blocked

The “war on terror” has taken a bite out of beach access on Kauai, where the Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) has kept five miles of westside shoreline off-limits since Sept. 11, 2001.

KINDA KONA

A bill that would require bags of roasted coffee sold in Hawaii to list the place where each type of coffee it contains was grown, and its percentage by weight in descending order, was introduced to the state legislature by Sen. Josh Green.

DOG BILL

In September of 2011, the Weekly ran a piece highlighting one of Hawaii’s most dangerous invasive threats: the dreaded brown tree snake. Following up on Gov.

CIVICS: Be Heard!

HART Board: The Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transit will meet and take public testimony before convening an executive session. For more info, contact the project hotline at 566-2299 or e-mail [email: info].

The cost of Kiyosaki

[Jan. 18: “Cheap Advice”] Robert Kiyosaki did not talk, or attend.

Rails vs. roller-skates

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] The anti-rail pundits are right of course.

Capture the crooks

I propose that President Obama devote the remainder of his presidency to doing something useful, which would be to seek out all the crooks on Wall Street and Washington who have contributed to the sorry state of the economy in this country. Obviously he has not lived up to the expectations of a president and continues to perform as if Saul Alinksy was a member of his cabinet and the United Nations was his political platform.

Population overload

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] Traffic follows commercial development.

No haters

[Dec. 21: “Underground Railroad”] To all those opposed to the “rail.” You are the very people who will be in gridlock on the freeway, not able to move.

Vegetarian variation

I was delighted to read the new USDA guidelines requiring schools to serve meals with twice as many fruits and vegetables, more whole grains, less sodium and fat and no meat for breakfast. The guidelines were mandated by the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act signed by President Obama in December of 2010 and will go into effect within the next school year.

No exceptions

[Jan. 25: “Kyo-Ya-Ya”] Making an exception on zoning sets a dangerous precedence that will undoubtedly be followed by other properties.

Kyo-ya supporter

The protests last year of Turtle Bay’s expansion plans highlight the challenge facing us in Hawaii. We need to find a way to balance the need for new, upgraded hotel and timeshare offerings that visitors are increasingly seeking with the desire by nearly all residents to protect the remaining undeveloped areas of the island.

Efficiency not grandiosity

[Jan. 25: “Gridlock”] If the plan is to create a second city in West Oahu, I would consider that to be an urban center.