Best of Honolulu 2008

Best of Honolulu 2008
Youth Speaks Hawai‘i

Civic

Editors’ Picks

Best Disappearing Act
Gov. Linda Lingle

There was a time when all the energy in Hawai’i politics came from the fourth floor of the State Capitol. Four years ago, Gov. Linda Lingle looked set to run the table with ambitious reforms in resource management, big rethinks of educational and economic policy and stunning progress on Hawaiian Homelands. These days the governor’s headlines, such as they are, feel reactive, and tentatively so at that–she’s not happy about teacher travel, she wants more of a voice in tourism policy, she thinks rail should be on the ballot but isn’t sure whether she supports it or not. She made a splash earlier this year with a bold proposal to buy Turtle Bay, and she does have some thoughtful policy initiatives brewing, but for whatever reason–distraction created by plans for a U.S. Senate run, the stunning ascent of Mufi Hannemann as a political force or just plain old second-term blues–the governor has been quiet as a Washington Place mouse. –Ragnar Carlson


Best way to feel good about wasting money

Funding random student and teacher drug testing may make community leaders sleep better at night; but at what cost? Supporters of student drug testing say that the tests give students a reason to “just say no.” An even better reason would be our children’s complete understanding of the social and biological effects of drugs.

“We should be using effective drug education that is realistic,” Hawai’i Drug Policy Forum president Pamela Lichty says. “We have to provide students with accurate information, not scare tactics.” And while Hawai’i public school teachers continue to point to the constitutional violations of random drug testing, we can only hope that abstinence advocates don’t have virginity tests in the work for teachers who aren’t married. –Travis Quezon


Best mentoring of Hawai’i’s Youth

What started a decade ago at the old Wordstew events hosted by the godfather of Hawai’i slam poetry Jesse Lipman, where Hawai’i’s young people stuffed into a loft to listen to hip-hop and hear what would eventually evolve into the Islands’ own unique brand of slam, has been highlighted this year by the success of the Youth Speaks Hawai’i slam poetry team. Founded in 2005 by Steve Kealoha Wong, its teachers have been dedicated to building the next generation of leaders, teens aged 13–19, through both written and spoken word poetry. This summer, the Hawai’i team was the winners of the national championship at the 11th annual Youth Speaks’ Brave New Voices competition in Washington, D.C. –T.Q.


Best Acknowledgement of Hawai’i’s homeless

In June, Gov. Linda Lingle extended an emergency proclamation for Hawai’i’s homeless for the fourth time since 2006. The proclamation allows state agencies to bypass red tape and expedite the construction of homeless shelters and transitional housing projects on O’ahu. The State Legislature estimates that there are more than 6,000 homeless people on any given day–more than 800 of them are children–and that 37 percent are of Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian ancestry. –T.Q.


Tracy Ryan of Arresting Prostitutes is Legal Exploitation.

Best reason to legalize prostitution

When politicians and police cracked down after public outcry on the visibility of prostitutes in Waikk and Chinatown, the industry simply pushed into someone else’s backyard–literally. Without addressing what Libertarians view as the true criminal element in prostitution–pimps–Hawai’i residents are simply denying the inevitable existence of “world’s oldest profession.” –T.Q.

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

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This week

Fortress Oahu

With roots planted in the 1893 overthrow of Queen Liliuokalani and a presence that extends through the entire archipelago, the military’s influence in Hawaii is surpassed only by tourism. The military controls some 236,000 acres throughout the state, including 25 percent of the land mass of Oahu, and thousands of square miles of surrounding airspace and sea.

Breaking The Waves

“I’m having a hard time not swearing right now,” Spike Kane says in his UK accent, all smiles after his first surf session at the second annual Hawaii “They Will Surf Again” event hosted by the Life Rolls On Foundation (LRO). “It just feels so good to be in the water again.” Kane beams.

Greedy, Scheming Saga

Into Willie Sabel’s vast and detailed set enter a cast of rippled sweatshirts and oversized shoulder-pads, thanks to Dusty Behner’s sense of color and history, and Lisa Ponce de Leon’s especially-80s hairstyles. A few of the bunch even manage to hold-their-own against the largeness that is the setting of Dividing the Estate, the newest show to hit Manoa Valley Theatre.

Mayumi Meets Mother Earth

Mayumi Oda, an artist often dubbed the “Matisse of Japan,” is a petite woman with boundless ambitions. In the book Merciful Sea: 45 Years of Serigraphs by Mayumi Oda, meetings with intensely raw and passionate artists, including Ginsberg, Rothko and De Kooning, triggered her to reflect, “I am small.

Editor’s Note

Everything’s coming up mangoes. And last week, we joined the crowd at Foster Botanical Garden to witness the first-ever Honolulu blossoming of Amorphophallus titanium, nicknamed the “Corpse Flower” for its malodorous, fly-catching bouquet.

he’s official

Through the years there have been many mayors who’ve aspired to be governor, but for the first time in Honolulu ’s history, a former governor is running for mayor. At Honolulu Hale on Friday, May 18, as he signed the nomination paperwork making him an official candidate for the 2012 race, Cayetano told the room that, back in January, he made his decision quickly.

Rail suit hangs on

Important back stories are huddled behind last week’s Star-Advertiser headline, “Federal Judge Narrows Lawsuit on Rail.” Foremost is that the lawsuit will go forward unimpeded. The same substantive points of contention including the most important historic and cultural sites are still at issue.

wed lockdown

In announcing his support of same-sex marriage two weeks ago, President Barack Obama reinvigorated a vexed debate. Locally, the wrangle has been deadlocked following the contentious legalization of civil unions and subsequent federal court challenge in January.

outsourced LEI

Thailand grows 75 percent of the flowers used in Hawaiian-made lei, but a flooding in the country last fall destroyed 80 percent of its orchid crops, according to Summer Campos, co-founder of the Hawaiian Lei Company. Together with the graduation season and the growing popularity of lei on the mainland, “All lei prices have inflated due to the orchid shortage,” Campos says.

Bus cuts

Lynne Matusow’s letter [“Goodbye Bus, Hello Rail?” May 16] hit the nail right smack dab on the head. The rail may have its attributes but it seems the more we delve into it the bad seem to outweigh the good.

Second “city”

We have a problem with traffic congestion on the major highways leading into the city; we have the controversy over the issue of rail; and we have the concern over preserving prime agricultural lands. It would seem to me that all these issues point to one thing in one way or another and that is the development of a second city in Kapolei.

Traffic mess

Though you didn’t discuss it in the most recent issue, there was a brief mention of how long it took for the Kinau off-ramp to be completed. Ambulances [had] ALWAYS been able to take the exit BEFORE Kinau, and turn left directly into the Emergency Room.

More politics

I enjoyed your issue on Mayoral Candidate Peter Carlisle. It would be great if you did a series on those running for the two congressional seats and the Senate race.

Ads not edit

On [April 26] the Weekly [ran] a story damning Hoopili as you have been for quite some time. Then you are running a full-page promotional ad this week?

Editors’ Reply:

It’s important to understand the difference between editorial content and ads. At the Weekly, they are two completely separate departments.

Corrections

We retract the letter “Questionable Ethics?” [May 9] and apologize to Herb Barboza for its inaccuracies. Mr.