About The Kaʻū Calendar

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Jan. 16, 2013

This initial fissure opened Jan. 3, 1983 to begin Kilauea Volcano's current eruption. A program about the eruption takes place next Wednesday at Pahala Plantation House as part of Volcano Awareness Month.
Photo from USGS/HVO

THE TWENTY-SEVENTH STATE LEGISLATURE opened today in Honolulu with Senate President Donna Mercado Kim mentioning Ka`u in the first few seconds of her speech. She noted that this year begins with several newcomers to the Senate…. “From Ka`u and Puna comes Russell Ruderman,” she said. 
       Kim noted that she grew up in a rural area, “one of five kids in a poor working-class family. Like many of you, both my parents worked and struggled to keep food on the table and a roof over our heads. Given those modest beginnings, never could I have imagined that I would someday be standing before you as Senate President.”
      She said: “The Hawai`i of our childhood was a lot different than it is today. We had a smaller population, an economy still largely dependent on agriculture, no freeways, no traffic congestion, fewer of the social ills that we now see, and a smaller, and no doubt simpler, government. We were blessed with a strong spirit of community. We took care of each other. As kids, we played with tops, bean bags, and marbles, in the streets with friends from the neighborhood. We walked to school together, and we were unburdened by the concerns that we worry about these days.”
Senate President Donna Mercado Kim
      She described an old Hawai`i much like Ka`u remains today: “Then there was that special teacher, aunt, or uncle who mentored and influenced our lives. For me, it was Kumu Hula Aunty Maiki Aiu, who instilled in me the traditional Hawaiian core values of aloha, lokahi (harmony), kuleana (responsibility) and ha`a ha`a (humility).
      Through hula she taught me discipline, respect, hard work, and grace. These values are the foundation of our kupuna that has been handed down from generation to generation.”
      She thanked another Big Island senator Malama Solomon and the Beamer-Solomon halau “for perpetuating this legacy.”
      Beyond personal hopes and wishes, Kim spoke to the Legislature’s having helped improve Hawai`i in public education, in the growth of charter schools, University of Hawai`i, health insurance coverage for individuals and families and in laws that give protections to workers.
      She noted all of the work going into recovery of the visitor industry and said, “Our host culture can teach, touch, bridge, and inspire those who embrace Hawai`i and our people.” In particular, she said, “Hawaiian music and dance transcend differences in race, nationality, or language.” She said she is working with others on the establishment of a museum/center of Hawaiian music and dance atop the Hawai`i Convention Center.
      Kim, who replaced Shan Tsutsui as Senate president when Gov. Abercrombie appointed him as lieutenant governor, is Hawai`i’s first Filipino-American Senate president.
      See more in tomorrow’s Ka`u News Briefs.

NEIGHBOR ISLAND CHILDREN AND YOUTH make up 63 percent of the wards confined at Hawai`i Youth Correctional Facility, Mayor Billy Kenoi told the state Senate Ways and Means Committee yesterday. “We must do more to intervene earlier to provide better, more positive alternatives for these young people. We urgently need to divert these youths out of the criminal justice system and into services that will allow them to succeed and thrive.” 
      He noted that “this year, the Office of Youth Services in partnership with the Hawai`i County Office of the Prosecuting Attorney will launch the first juvenile intake and assessment center in East Hawai`i with $ 200,000 in grant funding from the federal Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. This new program to assess at-risk youth who have been arrested for minor or status offenses will identify the needs of these young people and will link them and their families with appropriate services. These youths are not a threat to public safety,” said Kenoi. Diverting them out of the criminal justice system will help to free up our police officers for more important patrol duties, making better use of our public safety resources.”
Mayor Billy Kenoi
Photo by Julia Neal
      Kenoi said the state administration’s proposed budget includes $ 800,000 for each of the next two years to expand this juvenile intake and assessment effort to every island in Hawai`i, “and we strongly agree with this initiative. This appropriation would provide enough funding to open a new center in West Hawai`i, and will benefit our young people, our police and the entire community. It will save our state taxpayers money in the long run.”

PRIMARY CARE TRAINING AND RURAL RESIDENCY programs to increase the number of physicians on Hawai`i Island and around the state was another push by the mayor at the Legislature yesterday. He talked about a “severe physician shortage, with a recent study estimating that the County of Hawai`i needs 150 more doctors to provide an adequate level of access to health care for our residents.” Kenoi told legislators that projections by John A. Burns School of Medicine show the physician shortage will dramatically worsen in the next five years as many doctors retire. “An important piece of the solution for our community is the rural residency program, which is now undergoing national accreditation and will begin training residents in 2014. National research shows that 80 percent of residents practice near where they train, and we know this program will help ease the physician shortage in our county and in rural areas across the state.”

U.S. REP. TULSI GABBARD asks Ka`u residents to join thousands of volunteers around the country who will honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by participating in a National Day of Service this Saturday. Events on the Big Island are being held in Hilo and Kona.
Rep. Tulsi Gabbard
      In Hilo, participants can help clear 15 acres of land (cutting underbrush and trees) to be used for the Rediscovering Ahupua`a Life System organization’s educational activities, which include teaching keiki about aqua and animal science. Call Blaise Delima at 987-5698 for all the details.
      In Kona, a cleanup of Kahalu`u Bay Beach is scheduled. Volunteers help remove plastic trash and cigarette butts that pose hazards to marine life at this park that is used by hundreds of thousands of visitors and residents each year. For more information, call Bob Kim at 756-3828.

KA`U AG WATER COOPERATIVE DISTRICT meets tomorrow at 4 p.m. at Royal Hawaiian Orchards’ field office in Pahala. For more information, contact Jeff McCall at 928-6465 or mccalljeffreyw@gmail.com.

THE 30TH ANNIVERSARY of Kilauea Volcano’s East Rift Eruption is the topic at Pahala Plantation House a week from today, Wednesday, Jan. 23. Tim Orr, USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory geologist, reviews highlights from the past 30 years and talk about recent developments on Kilauea’s East Rift Zone. He also shows photos and videos of the ongoing eruption. During its first three years, spectacular lava fountains spewed episodically from Pu`u `O`o vent. Since then, nearly continuous lava effusion has built a vast plain of pahoehoe lava that stretches from the volcano’s rift zone to the sea. Although the eruption has been relatively quiet during the past year, with mostly steady, but unusually weak, activity, it has produced some dramatic lava flows in past years.
      The program, which is part of Volcano Awareness Month, begins at 6:30 p.m.

CONFLICT RESOLUTION: Reframing Problems to Generate Solutions is the title of the first community workshop for 2013 sponsored by the nonprofit Ku`ikahi Mediation Center. Kimberly Dark will facilitate the session on Saturday, Jan. 26 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Hawai`i Community College in Building 388, Room 103. “This half-day workshop focuses on understanding and practicing the skill of reframing contentious, position-based statements into neutral language that helps everyone think more clearly and develop possible solutions,” says a statement from the organization. Ka`u residents are invited to sign up. These skills can be used at home as well as in the workplace, schools, associations, meetings and more. 
       Tuition for the community workshop is $50. To register, contact Ku`ikahi Mediation Center executive director Julie Mitchell at 935-7844 x 116 or julie@hawaiimediation.org.

VOLCANO SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES hosts a public meeting Thursday, Feb. 7 at 6:30 p.m. at Cooper Center in Volcano Village. The school’s board of directors and educational director will be introduced. Architectural renderings of the consolidated campus at Keakealani on Haunani Road will be on display for comment by citizens of the community. Plans for a community fundraising effort will be ready for discussion, and the contributing architects will be available to expand on their ideas. Light refreshments will be served. 

KEA`AU CAME TO KA`U last night for boys high school basketball. In the JV game, Kea`au Cougars beat Ka`u 51 to 34. In the varsity game, Kea`au took home the win with 53 points to Ka`u’s 43. High-point scorer for Ka`u’s JV team was Franklin Orcino with 13. High-point scorer for Ka`u’s varsity team was Janson Candaroma with 10, reports athletic director Kalei Namohala. The teams’ next games are tomorrow at Kamehameha.

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

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Jan. 15, 2013

Sen. Dan Akaka became the first recipient of the Aloha Award of Merit yesterday and is congratulated by Gov. Neil Abercrombie.
Photo by Shane Tegarden.
A RURAL RESIDENCY PROGRAM for physicians and nurses to train and work at such hospitals as Ka`u is one of the priorities that Mayor Bill Kenoi is taking to the state Legislature when it opens its 2013 session tomorrow. The measure has been adopted by the Neighbor Islands legislative collaborative group, which is asking for $5.6 million over two years for the Hawai`i Health Systems Corp’s primary care training program. The name of the local program is Hawai`i Island Family Medicine Residency. Also on the health front is the plan to invest another $41 million through bonds during the next two years to expand the College of Pharmacy & Health Science in Hilo.
       Both measures are also supported by Sen. Josh Green. Also in the legislative package from the county is money to modernize civil defense warnings, which could lead to the replacement of three dozen sirens on the Big Island.

Rep. Cynthia Thielen
REQUIRING A REASONABLE RATE OF RETURN for electric companies is the goal of Representative Cynthia Thielen, (R-Kailua), who plans to introduce legislation at tomorrow’s opening of the state Legislature that would create a permanent Task Force to determine and periodically revise the reasonable rate of return. The bill also establishes a bipartisan joint legislative oversight committee to determine if the Public Utilities Commission is enforcing the reasonable rate of return.
      Thielen said, “The electricity costs for ratepayers in Hawai`i have increased at a constant and precipitous rate, and these increases have created serious financial hardships for Hawai`i residents. One of the most important functions of the PUC is to approve or deny rate increases proposed by HECO, but in reality, the PUC rarely denies rate increases.
      “HECO, by statute, is guaranteed a reasonable rate of return on its rate base. But what constitutes a reasonable rate of return? The statutory language that created the PUC and gives it its powers does not elaborate. This, in turn, gives the PUC vast powers to deny HECO rate increases, but more importantly gives the PUC the ability to allow HECO rate increases without any concrete standards to review the proposals for ‘reasonableness’” said Thielen.
   The bill’s purpose clause explains that “for over 100 years, Hawaiian Electric Company has had a monopoly on energy production in Hawai`i with the objective of efficiently and adequately fulfilling the energy needs of the state and its residents. In exchange for the privilege of providing non-competitive electrical services within the state, HECO is subject to supervision by the PUC and is required to abide by its regulations."
      Thielen said that requiring a reasonable rate of return for electric utilities “will keep HECO honest and provide more checks and balances, which translates into consumer rate savings for all of us.”

Sen Dan Akaka received the Aloha Award of Merit
yesterday. Photo by Shane Tegarden
WHERE I LIVE, THERE ARE RAINBOWS, sang Sen. Dan Akaka yesterday when he became the first recipient of the state Legislature’s Aloha Award of Merit. The award was established in 1993 to honor those who provide distinguished service to Hawai`i and devote their lives to the people and place of Hawai`i. Gov. Neil Abercrombie and four former governors attended. As a recipient of the award, Akaka may be called on by the governor to serve as an emissary to represent the Aloha State.
      Akaka retired from Congress after the 2012 session, after serving for 22 years in the U.S. Senate and 14 years in the U.S. House. He chaired the Senate’s Indian Affairs Committee and is well known for his Akaka Bill, which attempts to give more self-governance to Native Hawaiians.
      The Aloha Award of Merit ceremony was held in the state House of Representatives chambers. For the music, Akaka’s sons accompanied him on guitars.

MISSING AT SEA is the status of a 67-year-old Pahala man after falling off a South Point cliff while fishing Sunday night. Fire/rescue units responded to a 10:26 p.m. alarm Sunday to Ka Lae for a fisherman who fell into the ocean. Witnesses reported that the man fell about 20 feet into the ocean while fishing and was last seen about 50 yards offshore. They lost sight of the fisherman due to darkness, reports the Hawai`i Police Department. 
      County fire/rescue crews conducted a water and land search with the assistance of a Coast Guard C-130 plane and Dolphin helicopter searching up to six miles from shore. A Hawai`i National Guard Blackhawk helicopter performed an aerial ocean search up to three miles out. Searchers were not able to find the man. The area is popular for fishing but has high cliffs and strong currents.
      The search was scheduled to resume today with the fire department’s Chopper One helicopter.

The cliffs of Ka Lae at South Point are a popular fishing spot. However, another
 fisherman from Pahala fell into the water Sunday, and the search
resumed today. Photo by Julia Neal
A HILO MAN WAS FOUND DEAD in his vehicle on Hwy 11 in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park Saturday, reports Jessica Ferracane, of the park’s Public Affairs office. A park ranger discovered the lifeless body of Steven L. Elliott in a white 2002 Ford pickup truck parked on the shoulder of the highway near mile marker 35 at 9:34 a.m. The cause of death is unknown, and an investigation is being conducted by the National Park Service. An autopsy by the medical examiner is scheduled for today.

HAWAI`I POLICE DEPARTMENT is hosting its next community access meeting next Friday, Jan. 25 from noon to 2 p.m. at Cooper Center on Wright Road in Volcano Village. The event allows the public to meet the Police Department’s command staff and to discuss police-related concerns with the police chief and commanders who oversee police operations in Volcano and Puna.
      The Volcano event continues district community meetings, which are rotated throughout the eight police districts on the Big Island. To aid police commanders in focusing on specific community concerns, police officers ask that participation in this meeting be limited to persons who live or work in the immediate area.
      Those interested in participating but unable to attend may e-mail their concerns or comments to copsysop@hawaiipolice.com. For more information, call Acting Captain Reed Mahuna at 965-2716.

USGS/HVO geologists Tim Orr, at left, and Matt Patrick
present programs during Volcano Awareness Month.
Photo from USGS/HVO
VOLCANO AWARENESS MONTH CONTINUES with another After Dark in the Park program tonight at 7 p.m. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory geologist Matt Patrick presents an overview of Kilauea’s summit eruption, including a survey of the volcanic processes occurring within the vent, at Kilauea Visitor Center Auditorium in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. The program is free, and park entrance fees apply. 

ALSO AT KILAUEA VISITOR CENTER AUDITORIUM, Kai Ho`opi`i, an Aloha Festivals Hawaiian falsetto contest winner, shares music of his `ohana tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. as part of the park’s ongoing Na Leo Manu, Heavenly Voices, presentations. The concert is free, and park entrance fees apply.

VALENTINE VARIETY SHOW AUDITIONS are Thursday at 4 p.m. and Saturday at 10 a.m. Auditions are open to all ages and talents, and all applicants and performers must be able to make one of the scheduled auditions, one mandatory dress rehearsal on Feb. 7 and 8 and show times, which will be either Feb 9 and 16 or Feb. 10 and 17. Acts for the show to be held at Volcano Art Center’s Ni`aulani Campus in Volcano Village should be no longer than five minutes. Acts can be music, dance, drama, comedy, magic, juggling, acrobatics or any other form of entertainment. Solo and group acts encouraged. $15 application fee per act waived for VAC members. For an application or more information, email julie@volcanoartcenter.org

HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY geologist Tim Orr presents a program at Pahala Plantation House a week from tomorrow on Wednesday, Jan. 23. Orr’s talk includes photos and videos reviewing highlights and recent developments of Kilauea’s 30-year-long east rift zone eruption. The program, which is part of Volcano Awareness Month, begins at 6:30 p.m.

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

Monday, January 14, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Monday, Jan. 14, 2013

Hawai`i's 2013 Legislature opens Wednesday, with four newly elected legislators representing Ka`u.
THE STATE LEGISLATURE OPENS this Wednesday, Jan. 16, with four newly elected legislators representing Ka`u. Incumbent Sen. Josh Green’s district extends to Honu`apo from Kona. Freshman Sen. Russell Ruderman’s district extends from Honu`apo throughout Volcano and Puna. Incumbent Rep. Denny Coffman’s district extends from Kona to Honu`apo, and freshman Rep. Richard Onishi’s district extends from Puna through Volcano to Honu`apo. The number of elected officials who will represent Ka`u in the state Legislature this year is up from two last year. None of them live here, but all promise not to forget this remote district.
Rep. Richard Onishi
      The change comes with the U.S. Census in 2010 and the subsequent redistricting to ensure the one person–one vote promise in the democratic form of government.
Sen. Josh Green
      Committee assignments in the Senate have Green, a physician, returning to chair the Committee on Health. He also sits on the Committees on Commerce and Consumer Protection, Energy and Environment, and Human Services. Ruderman sits on the Committees on Energy and Environment, Education, Water and Land, and Ways and Means.
      The committees for the state House of Representatives are yet to be confirmed, as the Speaker of the House has not been finalized. Maui Rep. Joe Souki claims he has the lead and will replace Speaker Calvin Say. His backers are a group of Republicans and Democrats but remain a vote short to be able to set up the committees, according to various news reports.
      The Senate majority, comprised of Democrats, unveiled its priorities last week, promising to be “open, inclusive and collaborative in its decision-making on initiatives impacting the state of Hawai`i,” said Senate president-elect Donna Mercado Kim. The theme of the Senate majority is No Na Mamo, which means “for all generations.”
Rep. Denny Coffman
      The Senate majority announced it would work on Food & Energy Resiliency; Supporting People, Strengthening Communities; and Government Efficiency and Accountability.

SOLAR TAX CREDITS could shave some $139 million off state income tax revenues this year as homeowners and businesses invest more in photovoltaics to wean themselves from expensive electric bills. However, the state wants to reduce the loss in tax revenues by reducing the credits and is taking its argument to the 2013 state Legislature, which opens Wednesday.
      According to a Sophie Cocke story in Civil Beat, Republican state Sen. Mike Gabbard said his main focus this session “is making sure that the tax credit isn’t having too big of an impact on the state’s pocketbook, and not crippling the industry or making it too expensive for residents to install solar panels.” Gabbard chairs the Energy and Environment Committee and looks at a number of bills that would change the laws for solar credits.
      Sen. Russell Ruderman, who represents east Ka`u through Puna, campaigned on removing impediments to more solar. Ruderman said that solar is the obvious solution to Hawai`i’s energy challenge.
Sen. Russell Ruderman
          Ruderman said this morning that the amount the state says it’s losing from solar tax credits is a “little exaggerated.” He described the emerging solar sector of the economy as “the hottest part of the construction industry. It creates a lot of jobs and puts a lot of benefits back into the community,” he said.
      Ruderman said that instead of eliminating tax credits, he supports reducing them over five or six years so people have time to plan and invest in solar.
      He said he will introduce three solar-related pieces of legislation into the 2013 Legislature. One would prevent the utilities from charging customers for an interconnect study.
      Another would set up a loan guarantee for people who can’t afford to put solar on their homes.
      The third would create “community solar, as they call it,” Ruderman said. “You could sign up for energy created by a solar farm, even if it is not in your own neighborhood or your roof,” he said.
      See more at www.civilbeat.com.

MORE MONEY FROM THE TRAVEL INDUSTRY could offset solar credits for homeowners. The state won a case last week that requires online travel reservation firms to pay general excise taxes to the Hawai`i government whenever it books a Hawai`i hotel room. The state sued to collect money from Expedia, hotels.com, Priceline, Hotwire, Orbits and Travelocity. The taxes date back to year 2000 and could be worth some $150 million to the state of Hawai`i.
      The online reservations companies argued that their businesses are outside of Hawai`i, but they lost in the Tax Appeals Court of Judge Gary Chang. Chang did rule earlier that the reservations companies are not responsible for paying the transient accommodations taxes.
      Gov. Neil Abercrombie noted that former Republican Hawai`i Governor Linda Lingle declined to go after collecting these taxes. He said he made the issue a top priority for his governorship.

DLNR wants to protect more of the state's watersheds
which include Ka`u Forest Reserve.
PROTECTING THE STATE’S WATERSHEDS is a priority for the Department of Land and Natural Resources, reports Sophie Cocke in today’s Civil Beat. During this year’s state Legislature, the department plans to try to secure $11 million a year over the next decade to double the percentage of land protected. According to the story, DLNR said that it has taken 40 years to protect only 10 percent of the state’s most important watershed areas. 
      At a briefing of the Senate Energy and Environment Committee last Friday, DLNR’s native ecosystem section manager said the revenue would come from a new bag bill that would charge 10 cents each for bags that aren’t banned or from an increase in conveyance taxes.
      The Civil Beat story reports that, according to the department, “more than half of the state’s forests have been lost, in large part due to invasive species such as Christmas berry that have choked out native species.” It also said pigs, cattle and goats trample vegetation.
      The story says protecting Hawai`i’s watersheds has been a major DLNR initiative under the Abercrombie administration. Last year, efforts to gain dedicated funding from the Legislature failed.
      See more at www.civilbeat.com.

THE COFFEE BERRY BORER is the subject of a meeting at 5 p.m. at Pahala Community Center today, co-hosted by Synergistic Hawai`i Agriculture Council, University of Hawai`i College of Tropical Agriculture & Human Resources and Ka`u Farm Bureau. Ka`u Farm president Chris Manfredi said that all coffee farmers should attend, whether or not they have CBB. He said the education session will focus on control and eradication of the pest which has severely impacted coffee farms on the island. The meeting will be followed by a Farm Bureau directors meeting.

Matt Patrick Photo from USGS
HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY geologist Matt Patrick presents an overview of Kilauea’s summit eruption, including a survey of the volcanic processes occurring within the vent, tomorrow at 7 p.m. at Kilauea Visitor Center in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. The free After Dark in the Park program is part of Volcano Awareness month. Park entrance fees apply. 

KAI HO`OPI`I, an Aloha Festivals Hawaiian falsetto contest winner, shares music of his `ohana Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at Kilauea Visitor Center in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. The free concert is part of the park’s ongoing Na Leo Manu, Heavenly Voices, presentations. Park entrance fees apply.

KA`U AGRICULTURAL WATER COOPERATIVE DISTRICT meets Thursday at 4 p.m. at Royal Hawaiian Orchards’ field office in Pahala. For more information, contact Jeff McCall at 928-6465 or mccalljeffreyw@gmail.com.

IN SPORTS THIS WEEK, grade checks for winter sports athletes are due today. 
      Ka`u High boys and girls soccer teams play at home, with Hilo High coming to Ka`u High tomorrow for games beginning at 2 p.m. On Saturday games with Kohala High begin at 1 p.m.
      Ka`u High girls basketball team travels to Kamehameha Wednesday, then on Friday meet Pahoa High at home.
      In boys basketball, Kea`au comes to Ka`u tomorrow, then Ka`u goes to Kamehameha on Thursday.
      Ka`u High’s wrestlers have a meet in Pahoa on Saturday.

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