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Tuesday, June 09, 2015

Ka`u News Briefs Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Researchers are studying the effects of marine debris, such as plastic and fishing line, on monk seals and other sea creatures.
Photo by Julia Neal
GOV. DAVID IGE YESTERDAY SIGNED into law four energy bills, including one that strengthens Hawai`i’s commitment to clean energy by directing the state’s utilities to generate 100 percent of their electricity sales from renewable energy resources by 2045.
Gov. David Ige signs 100 percent renewable energy legislation.
Photo from Office of the Governor
      Hawai`i State Legislature passed the landmark legislation (HB623) that fulfills one of Ige’s policy objectives by making Hawai`i the first state in the nation to set a 100 percent renewable portfolio standard for the electricity sector.
      “As the most oil dependent state in the nation, Hawai`i spends roughly $5 billion a year on foreign oil to meet its energy needs. Making the transition to renewable, indigenous resources for power generation will allow us to keep more of that money at home, thereby improving our economy, environment and energy security,” Ige said. “I’d like to thank the Senate and House Energy Committee chairs for championing HB623 and ensuring that Hawai`i remains a national leader in clean energy.”
      Another measure signed by Ige, SB1050, will help democratize renewable energy by creating a structure that will allow renters, condominium owners and others who have been largely shut out of Hawai`i’s clean energy transformation to purchase electricity generated at an off-site renewable energy facility, such as a large-scale solar farm.
      The law is also expected to provide relief to homeowners and businesses who are located on highly saturated circuits that cannot accommodate additional PV installations.
      In addition to the 100 percent RPS and community-based renewable energy bills, Ige signed into law HB1509, which sets a net-zero energy goal for the University of Hawai`i system and another that designates a state hydrogen implementation coordinator, HB1296.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Jay Kreuzer
KA`U HOSPITAL’S SISTER FACILITY IN KONA is laying employees off and closing a unit due to a $6 million budget deficit for its fiscal year beginning July 1. Kona Community Hospital, one of several facilities operated by Hawai`i Health Systems Corporation, will eliminate 34 positions and close its skilled nursing unit. The announcement follows Ka`u Hospital Administrator Merilyn Harris’s statement that the main impact of budget cuts here will be having to limit the number of long-term care residents to 13 instead of 16.
      “It is with deep regret that we must make these decisions,” said Jay Kreuzer, West Hawai`i Regional CEO of HHSC. “Over the past several years, the entire hospital staff has pulled together to help address our financial challenges. Our hospital departments are running efficiently, and there is no excess or waste to be trimmed. Sadly, these efforts do not offset our fiscal 2016 deficit due to lack of state funding.”
      According to Bret Yager, of West Hawai`i Today, Kreuzer said increased labor costs due to collective bargaining arrangements and retiree health benefits no longer covered by the state added to the deficit.
      Kreuzer also told Yager the facility is looking toward a public-private partnership like the one recently instituted at Maui hospitals to deal with budget issues.
      State Sen. Josh Green told Yager the existing state-run health care model can no longer sustain a public safety net hospital system. “This is why we have been moving toward enabling partnerships for our hospital system,” he said. “A partnership for Kona and Hilo with a local private entity would have been preferable to any layoffs like these.”
      See westhawaiitoday.com.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Researchers in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands work and live out of tents while
conducting monk seal surveys and related studies. Photo from NOAA
BABY MONK SEALS MAY BE THREATENED by marine debris that piles up in as remote of places as Ka Lae in Ka`u and the Northwest Hawaiian Islands. Seals become entangled in discarded plastic lines, and plastic mixes with real food. Ingested, plastics damage the health of sea life, from birds to nursing mother seals and pups. 
    The situation was recently shown through a voyage of the research ship Hi`ialakai, which made a 21-day cruise up the Northwest Hawaiian island chain for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The crew picked up one male and one female malnourished monk seal pup, prematurely weaned by their moms on Pearl and Hermes Atoll, and dropped them off at the new Marine Mammal Center’s Ke Kai Ola in Kona. The ship also dropped off more than a dozen researchers on French Frigate Shoals, Laysan Island, Lisianski Island, Kure Atoll and Pearl and Hermes Atoll. Two to four mission members are camping for four months at each location to collect data and work on monk seal survival. In addition, day trips to Ni`ihau, Nihoa and Midway were planned for surveys.
      According to a story in this morning’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser, “Stacie Robinson, a NOAA official with the Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program, said the 14 researchers will be doing population counts, disentangling monk seals from marine debris and moving the young seals to areas where there are fewer sharks.” The story by Gary T. Kubota said, “The population of Hawaiian monk seals, or Monachus schauinslandi — one of the rarest marine animals in the world — has been on a decline from as many as 1,600 a decade ago to as few as 1,100 today, according to scientists.” 
      The recent cruise also involved Sustainable Coastlines Hawai`i. The story quotes its executive director Kahi Pacarro, saying that the mission “helped to broaden his understanding of the importance of developing nontoxic byproducts.” He also reported that in some places, animals are nesting in mounds of debris. Pacarro reported that “many of the young albatrosses at Midway had ingested plastic. The rib cage of one dead chick was filled with plastic,” Kubota reported him saying.
      Pacarro noted that “debris arrives on the islands via the Pacific gyre garbage patch between Hawai`i and California,” the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.
      See more at http://www.pifsc.noaa.gov/cruise/ha1502.php and staradvertiser.com.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

HAWAI`I WILDLIFE FUND AND FRIENDS host their first-ever underwater cleanup event on Hawai`i Island this Sunday, June 14 at South Point. They will be joined by 10 divers from Japan with the Sea Beautification Society, alongside a team from Big Island Divers in Kona and Line-X in Hilo, and other individuals from across the island. “We are still looking for a couple of shoreline support volunteers and free-divers/snorkelers to help us haul out the marine debris,” said coordinator Megan Lamson. “Pray for good weather and no swell.” 
      This event was planned for Sunday because it follows the annual S. Tokunaga ulua tournament, and there should be plenty of ulua slide weights and sugi (monofilament line) to collect, Lamson said. Any fishermen who join the cleanup are welcome to the lead. Email kahakai.cleanups@gmail.com or meet at the hoists at 10 a.m. with dive gear. This will be a one-tank dive and should be pau around lunchtime.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U RANCHERS CAN LEARN ABOUT a new mobile slaughter unit coming to Hawai`i Island at Pahala Community Center this Sunday, June 14 from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Hawai`i Island Meat’s 36-foot trailer, made possible with funding from the Hawai`i Department of Agriculture, will meet USDA sanitation standards and be capable of processing eight to 10 head of cattle, 15 pigs and 30 lamb or goats per day. 
      For more information, see hawaiiislandmeat.com.

KA`U COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN Steering Committee meets today at 5:30 p.m. at Na`alehu Community Center. Public input is welcome on agenda items, which at this meeting are preparations for making final CDP recommendations.
      For more information, see kaucdp.info.

Dr. Tom Wilson
VOLCANIC ASH IMPACTS AROUND THE WORLD: Lessons from the Field and Laboratory is the topic at After Dark in the Park this evening at 7 p.m. at Kilauea Visitor Center Auditorium in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. 
      What kind of impact does volcanic ash have on farming, agriculture, communities, computers and critical infrastructure? Dr. Tom Wilson, a lecturer of Hazard and Disaster Management in the Department of Geological Sciences at the University of Canterbury, discusses what he and his team of scientists have learned researching both short- and long-term ash impacts in New Zealand, and the resiliency of rural and isolated communities to natural disasters. Their research has focused on the impact of recent disasters in the Canterbury region from snowstorm and flooding events, and the assessment of natural hazard risk for isolated communities.
      Free; park entrance fees apply.

HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK holds a talk story session about its draft general management plan, wilderness study and environmental impact statement at Kilauea Visitor Center tomorrow from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. A formal hearing will be held during the meeting to receive comments specific to the wilderness study.
      To review the DGMP/WS/EIS, see parkplanning.nps.gov/havogmp.

Monday, June 08, 2015

Ka`u News Briefs Monday, June 8, 2015

Hawksbill nesting season is underway, with many sites along the Ka`u Coast monitored by Hawksbill Recovery Project personnel. Photo by Dave Berry
HAWKSBILL TURTLE NESTING SEASON has just begun and continues through December. Punalu`u and Kawa are popular nesting sites for the endangered species, along with Kamehame, on the shore below Pahala, and other remote sites along the Ka`u Coast. Protectors of the turtles, guided by the Hawksbill Recovery Project based at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park, often camp overnight to prevent dogs, cats, rats, mongoose and other animals from dining on the eggs, as well as to prevent human disturbance. At Punalu`u, it is common to see a fence around nests with signage warning onlookers to keep away.
With the return of nesting season, Hawksbill Recovery Project personnel will
again work to protect nests along the Ka`u Coast. Photo by Dave Berry 
     While Punalu`u is a popular site for watching turtles, it is the hawksbill, or honu`ea, and not the green sea turtle, honu, that nests there. Green sea turtles live all year long at Punalu`u, except when they swim off to a remote atoll to lay their eggs. The hawksbills live out at sea and only come in for nesting.
         Lauren Kurpita, project coordinator for the Hawksbill Recovery Project, told Ivy Ashe, of Hawai`i Tribune-Herald, that more than 90 percent of documented hawksbill nesting has taken place on Hawai`i Island. According to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, hawksbills also nest on Maui, Moloka`i and O`ahu.
      Kurpita said most monitoring takes place along the coastline of Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park and other Ka`u coastal locations.
      According to Ashe, honu`ea take 20 years to reach maturity, and they are subject to predation throughout their lifetimes, making their recovery slow. They also only nest every three to five years.
      See more at http://www.nps.gov/havo/learn/nature/turtles.htm and at hawaiitribune-herald.com.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

REPRESENTING NANI KAHUKU `AINA, a proposed Ka`u Coast resort development makai of Ocean View, Tom Schnell, senior associate at PBR Hawai`i, offered written feedback regarding the draft Ka`u Community Development Plan during the public review period.
      Schnell requested that areas of Nani Kahuku `Aina’s property designated Conservation and Extensive Agriculture follow the State Land Use District Conservation and Agricultural District boundaries, “if these areas do not match already.”
Tom Schnell
      Schnell also suggested that the CDP’s policy about setbacks of development along the coast “be deleted in its entirety. We feel that: 1) a setback at 1,320 feet (1/4 mile) is too arbitrary; and 2) there are other protections already in place to account for the “science-based assessment” criteria listed. As an alternative, we could support a setback policy based on erosion rates, as Maui County and Kaua`i County have already established such regulations.”
      Schnell also noted that previous changes requested have not been made in the most recent draft.
      According to the draft CDP, Nani Kahuku `Aina filed a petition with the County Planning Department for an interim amendment to the General Plan to allow development of a cultural center, resort and mixed-use town near the shoreline makai of Ocean View. The draft states, “Before finishing the Final Environmental Impact Statement required to complete the petition, Nani Kahuku `Aina abandoned the project and initiated talks with The Trust for Public Land, the National Park and the county about acquisition of the parcel or a portion of it.”
      Schnell requested that the sentence regarding abandonment and acquisition be replaced with, “As of Sept. 2013, Nani Kahuku `Aina has not advanced the petition.”
      More of Schnell’s and others’ feedback is available at hawaiicountycdp.info/kau-cdp/plan-input/march-june-2015-public-comment-on-the-draft-cdp.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

HAWAI`I STATE SENATE, under new president Sen. Ronald Kouchi, has assigned members to committees for the next legislative session.
      Ka`u’s Sen. Josh Green, who will be majority floor leader and whip, will serve on committees for Housing, Human Services and Tourism & International Affairs. Sen. Russell Ruderman, who also represents Puna, will work on committees for Commerce, Consumer Protection & Health; Economic Development, Environment & Technology; and Water, Land & Agriculture. He also joins Green on Human Services Committee.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Lew Cook's Sky Map helps Ka`u stargazers locate celestial
bodies as their locations change each month.
PLANETS AND STAR GLOBS ARE TOPICS in the June issue of Stars Over Ka`u in The Ka`u Calendar by astronomer Lew Cook. 
      The three brightest planets set in reverse order of their brilliance around mid-month, Cook wrote. Venus is very low in the west and sets just about 10 p.m. Venus passes quite close to an interesting and beautiful star cluster around June 13 – 15. Venus acts like a signal light saying, “Here’s the Beehive cluster!” Get out your binoculars and look for Venus. If you’ve got good eyes and good binoculars, you’ll see Venus as a half-moon shape. Off to the left, about the diameter of the moon, you’ll see a bunch of stars that resembles a swarm of bees around a beehive. This cluster was one of the first astronomical objects studied by Galileo. It is also called Praesepe (manger in Latin) and is M44 in Charles Messier’s list. Don’t wait until 10 p.m. to see it – it’ll be too low, and you don’t want to look through all that dust and vog. Just go outside after it is fairly dark, and Venus is still high in the sky.
      Jupiter follows, having escaped the claws of Cancer, the crab, but now lies at the feet of Leo, the lion. Saturn has left his weigh-in with Libra (the Scales) and is doing battle with the claws of Scorpius.
      The M13 globular cluster, the brightest one in the northern sky, doesn’t have a signal beacon like the comparatively puny (but nonetheless impressive) Beehive cluster. Comparing the two types of clusters (globular and galactic or open) is like comparing one boat to an armada! Don’t you just love that term – a glob of stars? How many stars are in a glob? Tens of thousands! The Beehive cluster contains around 1,000 stars. M13 is a globular cluster with nearly a half million stars.
M13 globular cluster as captured by NASA's Hubble Telescope
Image from wikepedia
      Earlier in the evening you can get a look at the really big globular cluster of omega Centauri. Just after darkness falls, look far to the south, just above and to the right of the Southern Cross (labeled Crux) on the star chart. Use your binoculars if you have a pair – or a telescope. It is labeled with a rounded “w” on the chart. You are looking at 10 million stars in that glob! Why aren’t these more impressive than the Pleiades cluster or any of the open clusters that we study? Are their stars particularly dim? Are they very far away?
      The answers to these questions are, “No, their stars are bright,” and, “Yes, they are very distant.” They are all in our galaxy, but the Milky Way is a very big home. The Pleiades cluster is nearby, as cosmic distances go. It is around 500 light-years away. So is the Beehive cluster, at less than 600 light-years. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year – about six trillion miles.
      So how far are these globular clusters? Omega Centauri is some 16,000 light-years distant, while its smaller cousin, M13, is over 20,000 light-years distant. That is why they appear so much fainter than they might be expected to. An interesting note: both were discovered to be globular clusters by Edmund Halley.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U RESIDENT DICK HERSHBERGER brings Hawaiian Volcano Observatory founder Thomas Jaggar to life tomorrow and every other Tuesday at 10 a.m., 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. at Kilauea Visitor Center and Whitney Vault in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. Free; park entrance fees apply.

Ka`u CDP Steering Committee meets tomorrow to summarize public participation
and feedback received about the draft CDP and to plan future meetings.
THE PUBLIC IS INVITED to Ka`u Community Development Plan Steering Committee’s meeting tomorrow at 5:30 p.m. at Na`alehu Community Center. Public input is welcome on agenda items, which at this meeting are preparations for making final CDP recommendations. The committee summarizes public participation and feedback received during the draft document review period and prepares for future meetings. 
      According to planner Ron Whitmore, this meeting is not designed as an opportunity for additional or repeated comment on the Draft CDP.
      For information about the CDP, see kaucdp.info.

HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK holds a talk story session about its draft general management plan, wilderness study and environmental impact statement at Kilauea Visitor Center Wednesday from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. In addition, a formal wilderness hearing will be held during this meeting to receive comments specific to the wilderness study. Park representatives will answer questions and take comments.
      To review the DGMP/WS/EIS and provide comments online, see parkplanning.nps.gov/havogmp.
      Comments can also be mailed to Superintendent, Attn: DGMP/WS/EIS, PO Box 52, Hawai`i National Park, HI 96718-0052. The public comment period is open through June 30.

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

See kaucalendar.com/KauCalendar_June2015.pdf.



See kaucalendar.com/Directory2015.pdf and
kaucalendar.com/Directory2015.swf.





Sunday, June 07, 2015

Ka`u News Briefs Sunday, June 7, 2015

Bobby Gomes and the Pahala Kupuna hula group entertain for the new cookie kitchen grand opening at Punalu`u Bake Shop.
Photo by Julia Neal
A NEW COOKIE KITCHEN for Punalu`u Bake Shop opened to the public yesterday just off Highway 11 in Na`alehu. Fellowship, food and entertainment were on the agenda. Punalu`u Bake Shop recently grew its cookie baking business through contracts with Hawaiian Airlines and other buyers that require additional baking capacity, as the employment for Ka`u residents grew to a team of 40.
 Robert Taylor, of Taylor Built Construction Co., Inc.; Arnie Koss, Managing
Partner of Punalu`u Bake Shop; General Manager Connie Koi; Architect
Lloyd Sueda; and owner Duane Kurisu. Photo by Pamela Taylor
      The new building’s architect is Lloyd Sueda, of Sueda and Associates, and contractor is Bob Taylor, of Taylor-Built Construction Co., Inc. County Council member Maile Medeiros David presented a certificate from the council yesterday, commending Punalu`u Bake Shop for its steadily growing success and teamwork among employees and with the community.
      Managing partner Arnie Koss called General Manager Connie Koi and her Administrative Assistant Bernay Lorenzo “the backbone of this place” and said they are vigilant in their pursuit for excellence. To sell its Punalu`u Sweetbread and numerous other products, Punalu`u Bake Shop recently took its island delivery in-house, with new vehicles, drivers and a local marketing manager, Koss noted.
      Owner Duane Kurisu, who grew up in a sugar plantation camp, said “Ka`u is a special place.” He said that the addition of the cookie kitchen is another step in sharing the staff’s quality, care and “love with the world.”
      Connie Koi also recognized the crew for the expansion of the business, with new state, mainland and international markets on the horizon. One by one, she named every employee in the business to thank them.
Ka`u's Hawai`i County Council member presented a proclamation
to Punalu`u Bake Shop and General Manager Connie Koi.
Photo by Ron Johnson
      Music for the event was by Brad Llanes and Ti Chun. The Pahala Kupuna Hula group with Bobby Gomes performed, as did Punalu`u Bake Shop staff members Jolene Moses and Miss Ka`u Coffee 2013 Tiare-Lee Shibuya. Kahu Brian Borshard gave the blessing. Miss Ka`u Coffee 2015 Maria Miranda was on hand to welcome guests. Emcee was Punalu`u Bake Shop retail clerk Mandi Andrade.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

USGS HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY is hosting scientists from New Zealand and Alaska who are studying volcanic impacts. The scientists are here to focus on impacts of three globally relevant volcanic hazards: volcanic ash, volcanic gas and lava flows. They are funded in part by a joint U.S.-New Zealand Commission on Science and Technology Cooperation that supports international partnerships to co-develop advances in research, science and technology.
      The team includes USGS geologist Kristi Wallace from Alaska Volcano Observatory and her New Zealand counterparts: Graham Leonard, from the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences; Carol Stewart, from Massey University; and Tom Wilson, from the University of Canterbury. All are part of an international working group on volcanic ash.
Manager Connie Koi, with emcee Mandi Andrade, introduced
 Punalu`u Bake Shop employees serving food in the new
cookie kitchen. Photo by Ron Johnson
      HVO scientists discuss the working group’s objectives in the current issue of Volcano Watch.
      “The working group’s mission is to provide guidance to people, businesses and communities facing potential impacts from volcanic ash,” the article states. “They work in close cooperation with the International Volcanic Health Hazard Network to understand impacts of ash on agriculture, infrastructure, water supplies and human health. Surprisingly, there is very little rigorous documentation of the effects of ash on these critical aspects of human activities. The New Zealand government has made it possible for the team to travel to sites of recent explosive eruptions to study how people were impacted and how they coped.
      “New Zealand scientists in the working group have also conducted novel laboratory experiments to examine the impact of ash-fall on common electronics like computers and air-conditioning units. Imagine, for example, a desktop computer in an enclosed chamber. Now flip the switch and blast some gritty, abrasive, slightly acidic volcanic ash of varying concentrations into the chamber to see how well the hard drive, power supply and fan continue to function. (It turns out that they are surprisingly resilient.)
      “Even Kilauea and Mauna Loa have ash-producing eruptions from time to time, and the current activity at the summit of Kilauea occasionally sends small qualities of ash downwind. So, despite the team’s focus on recurring ash eruptions from charismatic stratovolcanoes such as Mt. St. Helens, Hawai`i and HVO will gain something from their efforts.
Miss Ka`u Coffee Maria Miranda and the big
dough mixer at Punalu`u Bake Shop's new
cookie factory. Photo by Julia Neal
      “The second objective of this international team is to learn about the impacts of Kilauea Volcano’s June 27th lava flow and ongoing volcanic gas emissions on people, infrastructure and agriculture here in Hawai`i. As Puna residents know all too well, the June 27th lava flow buried a road, destroyed one house, partially inundated a new solid-waste transfer station and threatened utility poles. Meanwhile at the summit of Kilauea, volcanic gas emissions continue to spread over the Island of Hawai`i and indeed the entire state.
      “The scientists are also interested in how people who call the Puna District home deal with the stresses related to living on one of the world’s most active volcanoes. The team will be meeting with representatives from business and government to gather insights into how communities and individuals cope with the threat of lava inundation.
      “Hawai`i is a spectacular laboratory for studying the ways in which people try to live in harmony with volcanoes and other natural hazards. For two weeks, scientists will be looking for insights that they can share with other citizens of planet Earth who find themselves in similar situations.”
      See hvo.wr.usgs.gov/volcanowatch.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U STUDENTS WHO LOVE NATURE and being outdoors, love a challenge and like to help plants and animals grow are invited to Agricultural Career Day for Youth a week from today on Sunday, June 14 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at Anna Ranch in Waimea. Participants learn about mentorship, internship and educational opportunities, as well as find out how they can build a career in agriculture – feeding their community and the world.
      “There is a wide variety of jobs in agriculture and supporting services going on right here on Hawai`i Island,” said Ka`u rancher Michelle Galimba. Topics at the event include Educational, Internship, Mentorship Opportunities; Careers in Agricultural Support & Science; Careers in Agriculture Production & Natural Resource Management; and Careers in Agricultural Processing and Marketing.
General manager Connie Koi and Kahu Brian Borshard, who
gave the Hawaiian blessing. Photo by Julia Neal
      John Replogle, of The Nature Conservancy, and Zach Mermel, of Forest Team, give presentations on Natural Resource Management.
      Farming presentations are provided by Derrick Kiyabu, of The Kohala Center; Mike Hodson, of Wow Farms; James Twigg-Smith, of Pacific Biodiesel; and Reggie Hasegawa, of Crop Production Services.
      Ainahou Animal Center’s Brady Bergin discusses veterinarian Internships. Chris English and Sabrina White, of Ponoholo Ranch; Sara Moore, of Kealia Ranch; Jill Mattos, of Hawai`i Beef Producers; and Linus Tavares, of Farm Credit Services present more programs related to livestock.
      This free event is open to students nine to 18 years of age and their parents or guardians. For more information, contact Galimba at mgalimba@kuahiwiranch.com or 808-430-4927.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U RESIDENT CHRIS MANFREDI ASKED Ka`u Community Development Planners to justify removal of existing urban expansion areas from the draft document in feedback he provided regarding the Draft CDP. According to Manfredi, the CDP recommends shrinking such areas in Na`alehu and eliminating a major one adjacent to Pahala without an alternative area identified.
Bradley Llanes and Sonny Ancheta are bakers at the new facility.
Photo by Julia Neal
      “As Ka`u grows, so too will its need for housing,” Manfredi wrote. “As written, the CDP will not allow a farm dwelling on a subdivided farm, and there are scant areas adjacent to Pahala for the community to expand. When questioned, the county planner (Ron Whitmore) stated there was ‘no obvious need’ for an alternative Urban Expansion area adjacent to Pahala.”
      Manfredi asked, “Has the County examined the projected demand for agricultural workers and related housing over the expected life span of the CDP? How many acres will be planted in various crops surrounding the Pahala area over the life span of the CDP? What data did the county use to determine the number of workers required to service these farms during peak harvest seasons?”
      More of Manfredi’s and other residents’ feedback is available at http://www.hawaiicountycdp.info/kau-cdp/plan-input/march-june-2015-public-comment-on-the-draft-cdp.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN Steering Committee meets Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at Na`alehu Community Center to discuss feedback received during the draft document comment period and plan future meetings. The public is invited. Though public comment on agenda items is always welcome at Steering Committee meetings, this meeting is not designed as an opportunity for additional or repeated comment on the Draft CDP, according to planner Ron Whitmore. For information about the CDP, see kaucdp.info.

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

See kaucalendar.com/KauCalendar_June2015.pdf.


See kaucalendar.com/Directory2015.pdf and
kaucalendar.com/Directory2015.swf.