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Monday, April 22, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs April 22, 2013


KA`U’S VERY TASTY AVOCADOS could soon have more than backyard value for fruit coming from one kind of tree. Hawai`i Sharwil avocados may receive permission from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for shipment to the mainland in winter, but only to the cooler states where fruit flies cannot survive. The USDA found that Sharwil avocados are more resistant to fruit fly infestation than many of the other types of avocados grown in Hawai`i. The agency projects that Hawai`i could export some 396,000 pounds of Sharwils a year to the mainland, which would call for increasing statewide production by 50 percent. In 2011, Hawaiian orchards sold about 700,000 pounds of Sharwil avocados. With mainland markets opening, sales could reach more than $1 million a year and grow significantly under a specialty Hawaiian branded label.
      Avocado sales in Florida top $20 million a year. In California, avocado sales top $460 million a year. Sharwils, originally bred in Australia, fruit in winter, creating a natural market niche. The only states to which they would be imported, according to proposed federal regulations, are 32 northern tier states and Washington, D.C. from November through March. Agricultural practices would be closely overseen on registered farms by inspectors, with requirements to maintain fruit fly traps in orchards, keep records on any fruit fly presence and keep orchard floors clean from fallen fruit. Farmers would also have to pack mature, hard avocados with stems in place within 24 hours of picking. Each packaging facility would be registered and inspected as well as screened to prevent fruit fly entry. According to the USDA, U.S. consumption of avocados almost doubled between the years 2000 and 2010. The USDA is also proposing allowing avocados to be imported from Spain.
Russell Kokubun and Brian Schatz joined Gov. Neil Abercrombie and
Dwight Takamine at the governor's confirmation ceremony in Pahala.
      Big Island farmers have been writing in to encourage the exportation to the mainland. Sen. Brian Schatz wrote to the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, noting that the late Sen. Daniel Inouye initiated two science panels with the best science and scientists re-examining shipping protocols from Hawai`i to the mainland. Schatz wrote, “Consistent with previous scientific findings, Sharwil avocados were again found to be very poor hosts for Oriental fruit flies. The panels went on to identify procedures that are part of a systems approach. With this approach, the risks of accidental introduction of Oriental fruit flies to the U.S. mainland are practically nonexistent.... We applaud the USDA in being so diligent in assessing and redefining shipping protocols for Sharwil avocados.”
      With the avocados from Hawai`i being shipped in winter, they would mostly compete with foreign imported avocados rather than those from California and Florida, Schatz noted. “Given the superior quality of Hawai`i Sharwils, this competition would be good for the American consumer, for American farmers, and for the American economy,” Schatz wrote.
      Volcano resident and chair of the Hawai`i Department of Agriculture Russell Kokubun wrote in support of easing shipping restrictions. He explained that ever since the suspension of exports in 1992 when Oriental fruit fly larvae were found in a shipment of avocados to the mainland, “the Hawai`i Congressional Delegation, the Hawai`i Department of Agriculture and the Hawai`i Avocado industry have worked very closely with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to strengthen the shipping protocols to minimize the risk of introduction of the Oriental fruit fly to the continental United States.”
      Kokubun wrote that he does “not take these types of rule deliberation lightly. As a state with more than 25 percent of the organisms on the threatened and Endangered Species list, we know the importance of good science as the basis of shipping protocols. It is somewhat ironic that the pest at the center of the proposed rule, the Oriental fruit fly, is an alien invasive species inadvertently introduced to Hawai`i in the early 1900s.”
      The background, proposal and comments on allowing untreated Sharwil avocados to be shipped to the continental U.S. can be read at http://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=APHIS-2012-0008.

Green Sands residents meet with County Council member Brenda Ford.
Photo by Bobby Tucker
GREEN SANDS HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION met yesterday with County Council member Brenda Ford to talk about neighborhood initiatives including establishing a permanent park on land where the community now gathers on Ka`alu`alu Road and Pua Street. Community members also talked about better potable water service, including building water tanks and water pipes to service the homes. Currently, homes are served from meters on Ka`alu`alu Road that tie into the county water system. Spaghetti waterlines follow the road to the subdivision and go to individual homes. Maintaining the pipes to the properties remains the responsibility of the residents, even along county roads. The group also talked about the need to improve county roads. 
      Ford pledged to help the community study alternatives. She said she would work with residents to see if the park could be dedicated by its owner to the county, with a community group involved in its management. She also pledged to work on better potable water delivery to the homes. She also agreed that water storage is needed for firefighting and that fire hydrants are necessary throughout Green Sands.

Camille and Barbara Dolton volunteered at Ocean View's pancake
breakfast Saturday. Photo by Bobby Tucker
OCEAN VIEW COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION’S regular pancake breakfast has resumed on the third Saturday of each month. More than 70 breakfasts were served last Saturday. Gov. Neil Abercrombie’s West Hawai`i Island liaison Barbara Dalton and her daughter Camille, a substitute teacher in Ka`u schools who also works at Volcano Garden Arts, volunteered to cook for the group. The breakfast is held at Ocean View Community Center beginning at 8 a.m. and wrapping up at 11 a.m.

THIS IS NATIONAL PARK WEEK, and Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park celebrates by waiving entry fees through Friday and offering special programs throughout the week. 
A trek on Thursday goes to Pu`uloa Petroglyphs.
NPS photo by Jay Robinson
      Tomorrow at 11 a.m., volunteer ranger Charlene Meyers guides an invigorating four-mile, three-hour hike through the rain forest and onto the crater floor of Kilauea Iki. Participants learn how the 1959 eruption forever changed this landscape.
 Meet at Kilauea Iki Overlook parking lot on Crater Rim Drive
.
      On Wednesday at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m., volunteer ranger Noel Eberz leads a one-mile, one-hour round-trip hike exploring volcanic features like fissures and lava trees that were formed during the 1969-74 Mauna Ulu eruption. The hike highlights the process of plant survival on this harsh lava landscape.
 Meet at Mauna Ulu parking lot, four miles down Chain of Craters Road.

      Ranger Adrian Boone leads a two-hour, 1.5-mile round-trip trek across ancient lava flows to Pu`uloa Petroglyphs, the largest petroglyph field in Hawai`i, Thursday at 1 p.m. Participants discover the meanings inherent in these rock carvings and gather a greater understanding of the native people who created them.
 Meet Boone at Pu`uloa Petroglyphs parking area near the end of Chain of Craters Road, a 45-minute drive from the park entrance.

      Participants should wear sturdy hiking shoes and long pants and bring a hat, raingear, day pack, snacks and water.
      For these and other regularly scheduled programs, see nps.gov/havo.

Miss Ka`u Peaberry for 2011-2013, Rebecca Lynn Kailiawa-Escobar, will be
part of the Miss Ka`u Coffee Pageant this Friday at Ka`u Coffee Mill at
6:30 p.m.. Photo by Julia Neal
MISS KA`U COFFEE PAGEANT kicks off ten days of Ka`u Coffee Festival activities Friday, April 26, 6:30 p.m. at Ka`u Coffee Mill. Tickets are $10 in advance. Call Pageant chair Gloria Camba at 928-8558 or see one of the candidates.

THIS SUNDAY’S KA`U COFFEE RECIPE CONTEST deadline has been extended until Friday, April 26. The event, called the Triple C Recipe Contest for Cookie, Candy and Cracker recipes using Ka`u Coffee, takes place on Sunday at Ka`u Coffee Mill as the mill celebrates its first anniversary. The afternoon includes Ka`u Coffee tasting from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., and music with Keoki Kahumoku and the `Ukulele Kids. Meet Miss Ka`u Coffee and tour the Ka`u Coffee Mill and Farms.
      The recipe contest for professionals, amateurs and students begins at 2 p.m. The winner of each Ka`u Coffee Cookie, Ka`u Coffee Candy and Ka`u Coffee Cracker category in each division will receive a $150 prize. Second place will receive $100, and third place will receive $50. The overall Signature Grand Prize winner will receive $500. See the entry form in the April Ka`u Calendar newspaper or download it from www.kaucoffeefest.com or www.kaucoffeemill.com.
      Entry forms and free bags of coffee to use in contest entries are available at Ka`u Coffee Mill, and in Pahala at R&G Store and Pahala Plantation Cottages office.

KA`U BOYS VOLLEYBALL overpowered Hualalai and Christian Liberty Academy in four sets Saturday at Ka`u High school gym in a double-header. In the first match, Ka`u beat Hualalai in three sets, 25-14, 25-16, 25-13. In the second match, Christian Liberty Academy beat Hualalai 25-10, 25-19, 25-19. Ka`u trumped Christian Liberty Academy in the third match  25-13, 25-18, 20-25, 25-20. Ka`u Boys Volleyball's next match will be this coming Saturday hosting the Pahoa Daggers at 10 a.m at Pahala.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Sunday, April 21, 2013

Miss Ka`u Coffee candidates Kawailani Houvener, Tiare-Lee Shibuya, Rachel Ornelas and Seneca Lee Oleyte get
ready for this Friday's pageant at Ka`u Coffee Mill as they pick coffee and experience the Miranda farm.
Photo by Nalani Parlin
PAHALA LIBRARY DREW NEARLY 400 PEOPLE on Friday to celebrate the 50th year of Pahala Public & School Library. It was a day of community, faculty and students of Ka`u High & Elementary School coming together during National Library Week.
Blaze DeLima, Debbie Wong Yuen and Eilene O'Hara at Pahala Library's
50th anniversary celebration.
      Special guests brought commendations and congratulatory letters: Eilene O’Hara for East Ka`u’s Sen. Russell Ruderman, and Blaze De Lima for Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, and for her father, Brian De Lima, who is Hawai`i Island’s board member in the Board of Education. “State Librarian Richard Burns, who was not able to attend, sent a huge, gorgeous floral bouquet,” reported library branch manager Debbie Wong Yuen.
      A special presentation was made by calligraphy artist Ikuko Furuya, who presented limited edition special pins she designed for Tokyo, Japan, one of three finalists for the 2020 Summer Olympics.
      Throughout the morning, the library was graced by entertainment by haumana of Hannah’s Makana `Ohana Hula Halau, Ka`u Middle and High School `ukulele and ensemble students, and haumana of Halau Hula O Mahealani.
Gabriella Santos
Aiyana Galletes-Alapai
      Throughout the day, Hawaiian Civic Club of Ka`u provided a hands-on demonstration in making lauhala bookmarks. In the afternoon, students of all ages enjoyed a special treat - temporary airbush tattoos for their arms.
      The event concluded with prizes for winners of the Haiku contest, who read their poems. Elementary winners are Gabriella Santos, 5th grade – first place and Chaz Kajiwara-Ke, 1st grade – second place. Middle/High School winners are Aiyana Galletes-Alapai, 8th grade – first place and Morrighan Ottor, 7th grade – second place. Special commemorative bookmarks were created, featuring the first place Haiku poems.
       Wong Yuen talked about the library service provided in the building constructed 50 years ago, in 1963. She noted also that the first public and school library opened in the early 1950’s behind the present county basketball and tennis courts and was managed by librarian Doris Koga. Her daughter, Naomi Yoshida, an avid reader and library patron, was presented a lei in memory of her mother.
      Prizes were also awarded to Rhonda Ruggles, who was the fiftieth person to come to the celebration, Tiare Wong Yuen, a fourth grader, who guessed the closest number of materials in the library collection, and Ron Ebert, who guessed the closest number of registered patrons at Pahala Library.
      Wong Yuen said she thanks the many local businesses for their generous support, as well as the Friends of the Ka`u Libraries, all who made the day-long celebration possible.

New police commissioner Bobby Gomes emceed the
groundbreaking in October for the new Ka`u Gym &
Disaster Shelter, now under construction.
Photo by Julia Neal
RETIRED POLICE OFFICER BOBBY GOMES is a new police commissioner, nominated by Mayor Billy Kenoi and affirmed by all nine “yes” votes of the County Council. While the County Council meeting was held in Kona last week, Gomes was interviewed for the commission from Hilo Council chambers through the interactive video system that allows remote participation in Waimea, Ocean View, Hilo and Kona. After being approved, however, he said he plans to personally thank each Council member for confirming his nomination when they swear him in in Hilo. Gomes is an active volunteer in the Ka`u community and can often be seen as a peace officer at community events and in the office of the Na`alehu Police Station. He has hosted a show on KAHU Radio and plays and sings music at community gatherings, along with his wife Phoebe Gomes, an accomplished singer and hula dancer.
      The retired police officer is himself an award-winning hula dancer. The Gomes live in Pahala.

HAWAI`I COUNTY POLICE COMMISSION has delayed a decision on Kittrena Morgan’s complaint of physical and mental injury she claims occurred when she was arrested during the Oct. 25 eviction of Abel Lui and others from Kawa. According to Chelsea Jensen, of Stephens Media, Hawai`i County officials said at the time that Morgan became emotional during the procedure and did not cooperate. She was arrested and charged with simple trespassing and resisting arrest. 
      On Friday, the commission heard Morgan’s complaint and deferred the issue to its next meeting scheduled for May 17. Corporation Counsel Lincoln Ashida told Jensen that more information and investigation were needed.
     According to 3rd Circuit Court records, Morgan pleaded not guilty to the charges on Jan. 24. Her trial is set for May 14 before Chief Judge Ronald Ibarra.
      Morgan’s complaint alleges that, when officers executed the writ of possession and ejection, they caused her bodily injury and emotional distress.

“SOUNDS MORE LIKE A CORPORATE ADVOCATE rather than Consumer Advocate,” wrote Lisa Kirbin, of Ocean View, to the Public Utilities Commission regarding the proposed contract for `Aina Koa Pono to grow feedstock and produce biofuel at a refinery in Ka`u. “We are extremely disappointed Mr. Ono did not represent the consumers at all since the consumers are overwhelming against the HELCO/AKP alliance, yet he testified in favor of it.” 
      Kirbin asks the PUC to “turn your attention to the continuing concerns that we all still have concerning the proposed contract between HELCO and `Aina Koa Pono. It is obvious that there will be no rate nor economic benefits to the community at large.
      “Also in question are issues that will forever negatively alter the landscape and lifestyle of Ka`u, including clearing of the land of all vegetation/trees resulting in erosion, the use of GMO ‘sterile’ grasses that will contaminate local crops, the use of poisons and chemicals that will leach into the water table and ocean, massive unproven microwave technology with undetermined long-term consequences to the health of the residents and animals, displacement and housing for workers, massive trucking activity on rural roads, etc.
      “This is not a viable business proposition for this area, and the people who live here do not want it in our neighborhoods. We ask for permanent rejection of this proposal for a pono resolution.”
      Although the period for public testimony on the proposed contract has passed, people can still send letters to the PUC at hawaii.puc@hawaii.gov or 465 South King Street, #103, Honolulu, HI 96813.

Kilauea Iki Crater is the site of a hike Tuesday during National Park Week. NPS photo by Michael Szoenyi
HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK volunteer ranger Charlene Meyers leads an invigorating four-mile, three-hour hike through the rain forest and onto the floor of Kilauea Iki Crater Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Participants learn how the 1959 eruption forever changed this landscape.
 The hike is one of several special events celebrating National Park Week, with free entry to the park Monday through Friday.

THE TEN DAY KA`U COFFEE FESTIVAL begins this week with the following activities: 
      Miss Ka`u Coffee Pageant - Friday, April 26, 6:30 p.m. at Ka`u Coffee Mill. Tickets are $10 in advance. Call Pageant chair Gloria Camba at 928-8558.
      Simply Elegant: 2nd Annual Ka`u Farmers Table - Saturday, April 27, 5 p.m. at The Inn at Kalaekilohana. Tickets are $75 in advance. Visit www.kau-hawaii.com or call 939-8052. 
      Triple C Recipe Contest - Sunday, April 28, 2 p.m. at Ka`u Coffee Mill. Enjoy culinary treats using Ka`u Coffee as an ingredient. Free entry and tasting for the public. Live entertainment. To enter the contest with a $500 grand prize, see www.kaucoffeefest.com or www.kaucoffeemill.com or call 928-0550. Pick up entry blanks at R&G Store, Ka`u Coffee Mill and Pahala Plantation Cottages in the Olson Building on Pikake Street. 
      Ka`u Mountain Water Systems Hike – Wednesday, May 1, 9 a.m. starting at Ka`u Coffee Mill. Reservations required. $35 includes lunch and beverages. See kaucoffemill.com or call 928-0550.
      Coffee & Cattle Day – Friday, May 3, 10 a.m. on `Aikane Plantation Coffee Farm. $25 includes lunch and beverages. Call 927-2252 for reservations.
      Ka`u Star Gazing at Makanau Mountain – Friday, May 3, 5:30 p.m. $35 includes light snacks, Ka`u Coffee and beverages. See kaucoffeemill.com or call 928-0550.
      Ka`u Coffee Festival Ho`olaule`a – Saturday, May 4, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. at Pāhala Community Center. Enjoy a free, full day of music, hula, Ka`u Coffee Tasting, educational displays and demonstrations, food, arts, crafts, vendors and a keiki corner. Enjoy live entertainment featuring: Hawaiian Falsetto of Darren Benitez • Keaiwa with Demetrius Oliveira • Lori Lei Shirakawa Hula Studio • Bolo • Miss Ka`u Coffee & Her Court • Keoki & the `Ukulele Kids with Fiddle & Guitar of Molly & Elliott Russell • Cyril Pahinui • Halau Hula O Leionalani from Lana`i, Japan & Pāhala • Loeka and Pomai Longakit. Call Chris Manfredi at 929-9550.
      Ka`u Coffee College - Sunday May 5, 9 a.m. at Pāhala Community Center. Educational series featuring researchers and industry professionals. Free for farmers. Call Chris Manfredi at 929-9550.
      For more, see www.kaucoffeefest.com.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs April 20, 2013

Incentivizing health care training and practice in rural Hawai`i is the theme of a health care conference last week in
Pahala and today and tomorrow in Honolulu. Photo from Ka`u Rural Health Community Association
SHORTAGE OF DOCTORS AND OTHER HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS, particularly in rural areas like Ka`u, is a main theme of the 2013 Hawai`i Health Workforce Summit: Improving Provider Satisfaction and Practice Sustainability, today and tomorrow on O`ahu. West Ka`u state senator and physician Josh Green hosts the event, moderates panel discussions and introduces Gov. Neil Abercrombie. Green spearheaded legislation at the 2013 Hawai`i Legislature to incentivize doctors and other health care practitioners to practice in Hawai`i.
Sen. Josh Green hosts a convention
today on attracting more health
care providers.
      Organizers of the event, including Dr. Kelley Withy, of the John H. Burns School of Medicine and its Hawai`i/Pacific Basin Area Health Education Center, has announced that the Big Island has a shortage of 194 physicians.
      Green said this morning that legislative support for incentives to draw health care providers here includes a bill for a residency program in Hilo that would result in outreach to rural places like Ka`u. He said another bill would help fund an `Imiloa program, which Green described as a pipeline to encourage and help pay for education for Native Hawaiians to become physicians.
      Green said his goal over time is to have one hundred physicians in the incentive programs to practice in underserved areas of Hawai`i in exchange for funding to help repay their medical school loans. He said the measures are likely to pass this year and predicts that the governor will sign them.
      Green said the conference today has attracted 250 health care professionals coming from each island. He said the event is paid from workforce funds collected through physician licensing fees that also go for data gathering and other research.
      A State Loan Repayment Program that was recently put in place encourages primary health care providers to work at designated Health Professional Shortage Areas in Hawai`i in exchange for providing relief in educational loan debt. Physicians, nurse practitioners, certified nurse-midwives and physician assistants are eligible. Physician specialties that qualify include family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, geriatrics and psychiatry. Health care professional can apply by Oct. 1. Nine physicians will be selected to receive $40,000 each to help pay off educational loans in return for a commitment of two years of practicing in underserved Hawai`i locations. Those selected are expected to be involved with workforce development activities like health career recruitment and teaching, in addition to practicing medicine.

Ka`u Hospital nursing director Nona Wilson and hospital clerk
Ty Chun, who trained on the job at home in Ka`u.
Photo from National Park Service
KA`U RURAL HEALTH COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION held its own conference last week in Pahala with a similar theme: Establishing a Ka`u Rural Health Academy: Focusing on Health, Education, Research Opportunities and Economic Sustainable Training Programs. Elisa Yadao, a senior vice president with health insurer HMSA, gave the keynote speech on The Impact of Establishing a Rural Health Academy in Ka`u. She talked about its value to preventative medicine, local health care services, enabling the elderly to stay in their homes and providing jobs for Ka`u.
      Ka`u Hospital director of Nursing, Nona Wilson, said the Ka`u conference was “all collaboration” with many representatives of agencies and educational and health institutions and community members participating. Wilson pointed out that Yadao “is homegrown, from Hilo, a Kamehameha School representative and former television news reporter. Her speech was down-to-earth as she explained how using technology can help rural Hawai`i.”
      Wilson talked about her own partnership with Ka`u Rural Health Community Association and its founder Jesse Marques to encourage better health care and economic opportunity. She discussed career ladders for registered nurses – to educate the youth of Ka`u for health care work while they stay in their home towns. She said she and Marques are talking to the community college, University of Hawai`i, University of Phoenix and other institutions. “Youth from Ka`u will be excellent health care providers. They understand the culture, and the people feel comfortable with them,” the Ka`u Hospital nursing director said.
      The issue of providing opportunity in Ka`u is about “growing your own,” said Wilson. “There is no reason we can’t do this,” she said, pointing to technology like Skype and other online educational tools. “We have all the tools we need to create opportunities for our own people to have meaningful careers, so they can support their families and stay at home and enjoy the community and the place that they love.” She suggested the Ka`u Rural Health Community Association’s Long Distance Learning Center, near the library in Pahala as an excellent place for education.
      In supporting education that keeps people at home, Wilson said, “One of the things that I get from the people of Ka`u is that they don’t want to give up their lifestyle, and their lifestyle is good.” She pointed to a certified nurses assistant training program initiated by Marques, from which Ka`u Hospital hired graduates. “That’s wonderful. Why can’t we do more?” asked Wilson.
      She described the staff at Ka`u Hospital as treating “everybody like family because they are family. You can’t teach people that. They have it. People take pride for providing services. Ka`u Hospital is homegrown,” she said.

Bills that passed the Legislature focus on efforts to modernize the state's
electrical grids.
BILLS INFLUENCING DECISIONS by the Public Utilities Commission have passed the state Legislature. 
      Senate Bill 1040 requires the PUC to consider in their decision-making the value of implementing advanced grid technology to accommodate more clean energy. “The increased scale, speed and accuracy of the information provided by advanced grid infrastructure systems can better support initiatives to break the state’s petroleum dependence,” the bill states.
      Senate Bill 120 directs the PUC to establish a policy to implement economic incentives and cost recovery regulatory mechanisms that would induce and accelerate electric utilities’ cost reduction efforts, encourage greater utilization of renewable energy, accelerate the retirement of utility fossil generation and increase investments to modernize the state’s electrical grids. The bill states that, using the current business model, “electric utilities are not incentivized to aggressively reduce energy costs or seek lower cost alternatives or efficiency gains.”
      “The current electric ratemaking process employs a single authorized rate of return that is applied equally to all utility plant investments,” the bill states. “This methodology does not differentiate between plant investments to modernize the electric grid, which should be encouraged, and investments to preserve old, inefficient fossil generation, which should be discouraged. Retiring old, inefficient utility fossil generation acts as a financial disincentive for electric utilities because the electric utilities can only earn a return on plant investment that is actually used and useful to provide utility service. The early retirement of utility fossil generation may create costs that are stranded and cannot be recovered from ratepayers. The continued operation of old, inefficient utility fossil generation therefore preserves existing utility financial returns.”
      The bills now go to the governor for consideration. The status of these and other bills is available at capitol.hawaii.gov.

“PLEASE PUT ASIDE POLITICS and consider the overall cost of using this unproven technology on the people of this Island as well as the entire state of Hawai`i,” writes Pahala resident Sara Witt to the Public Utilities Commission regarding the proposed contract for `Aina Koa Pono to grow feedstock and produce biofuel at a refinery in Ka`u. 
      Witt says AKP has “disregarded the concerns of the community over this project,” and refers to the question of whether an Environmental Impact Statement will be done.
      “The Island of Hawai`i pays the highest electricity rates in the state, affecting all commerce conducted on this Island. HELCO wants the public to pay for the expansion of their business, charging more and then passing on the cost,” Witt says. “As a business owner, this doesn’t make much sense to me. I was not aware that I could ask those in my community for money to expand my business and then charge them more for my services.
      “Not only is cost a factor of the `Aina Koa Pono, LLC fantasy, but the cost to our agriculture with the radiation from the huge microwaves.” Witt referred to research that microwaves harm bees.
      “The district of Ka`u wants to become the breadbasket of Hawai`i,” she said. “Let’s make decisions working toward this goal.”
      Although the period for public testimony on the proposed contract has passed, people can still send letters to the PUC at hawaii.puc@hawaii.gov or 465 South King Street, #103, Honolulu, HI 96813.

THE NATURE OF NATURE opens today at Volcano Art Center Gallery with a reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Elizabeth Miller and John Matsushita works offer journeys into the multi-layered dimensions of life on Hawai`i Island through paintings and sculpture. The exhibit is open daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. through June 2.

DURING NATIONAL PARK WEEK, Kilauea Military Camp in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park invites all park visitors to experience how KMC serves America’s troops. All facilities and services, including guest rooms, available to the general public Monday, April 22 to Friday, April 26. For more information, call 967-8371.
      Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park also waives entry fees for these dates.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.