Blog
News, updates, finds, stories, and tidbits from staff and community members at KAHEA. Got something to share? Email us at: kahea-alliance@hawaii.rr.com.
Beach Access Bill Needs Your Help!
From Marti:
Great news! S.B. 1088 has a hearing before Chairman Ken Ito (D-Kaneohe) and the House Water, Land, and Ocean Committee. This hearing may be the biggest hurdle this important bill faces. So, if you care about improving enforcement of your right to access the beach and mauka recreational areas throughout Hawaii nei, then now is the time to come out. We need make sure the Representatives do not make any unnecessary changes to the bill, so it is important to ask them to pass this bill as already amended.
The hearing is scheduled for Monday morning, March 23, 2009 at 9:30 am in room 325.
If you can’t attend the hearing, but still want to participate, then click on the link below and take a just a second to personalize your testimony to the Representatives. Tell them why uphold your constitutional right to reach the beach is so important and deserves improved enforcement.
TAKE ACTION NOW TO PROTECT PUBLIC ACCESS MAUKA-to-MAKAI (this is also where you can find out more about the specifics on this particular bill).
Big mahalos to the Beach Access Hawaii, Hawaii Surfrider Foundation, and the Hawaii Chapter of the Sierra Club for their support in this effort.
Hang Loose! See you Monday!!
Exempt from that, too.
Navy will not be fined for 7,000 gallons of sewage discharged during Port Royal grounding in Februrary. And yep, that’s the 7,000 gallons the Navy initally “forgot” to report to the State.
From the AP: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/H/HI_SHIP_GROUNDING_HIOL-?SITE=PAGRE&SECTION=US&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
Worst Idea of 2009
We’d like to nominate the bill proposing the repeal most programs and protections for beaches and coastlines in Hawaii (SB 1318 SD 1) as officially one of the WORST ideas of 2009.
From Elizabeth Reilly of the Hawaii Kai Neighborhood Board:
SB 1318 SD1 relating to planning and economic development titled “Coastal Zone Management; State Planning; Repeal” does just that “Repeals the chapters relating to coastal zone management and state planning, and transfers the authority and functions of the office of planning to DBEDT” despite DBEDT’s public opposition to this proposed action.
Decision-making was deferred on this bill yesterday by the Committee on Water, Land, & Ocean Resources.
Superferry to cease operations Thursday
From the Honolulu Advertiser:
The Hawaii Superferry said it will cease operations on Thursday following a ruling today by the Hawaii Supreme Court that went against the inter-island ferry service.
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090316/BREAKING01/90316039/1352
Superferry by any other name...
Write up from Joan Conrow on the Hawaii Supreme Court Superferry decision, which found Act 2 exempting the Hawaii Superferry from EIS law to be unconstitutional: http://kauaieclectic.blogspot.com/2009/03/musings-supreme-court-slap-down.html
My inbox, meanwhile, has been popping with jubilant messages about the ruling, but folks aren’t happy just because they won. They also see it as a vindication of the rule of law and the belief that laws are supposed to apply equally to everyone. You don’t just go in and have a new one written when a court decision comes down that you don’t like.
More Funding for Monk Seals?
This year, Hawaii is expected to receive $5.7 million to aid recovery of the planet’s most endangered marine mammal–the Hawaiian Monk Seal.
The funding marks a $3.6 million increase over last year’s amount.
From Coco Zickos at the Garden Island:
Monk seals are currently “red listed,” said Dr. Mimi Olry, who heads the Marine Mammal Stranding Network on Kaua‘i and serves as the island’s Hawaiian monk seal coordinator.
The listing means they are a critically endangered species and face an extreme risk of extinction, she said.
With only about 1,100 remaining, unless greater efforts are taken the Hawaiian monk seal may soon follow in the footsteps of the Caribbean monk seal’s untimely extinction.
Caught: NWHI Fishing Violations
Below is an excerpt from a press release sent out by the US Coast Guard today regarding possible illegal fishing in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands over the weekend. They didn’t provide much by way of details whether it was a local or foreign vessel, commercial or recreational, or what was on-board. As the investigation progresses, however, we will try to post updates on this incident.
“U.S. Coast Guardsmen aboard a buoy tender and a C-130 long-range aircraft from Honolulu documented the crew of a vessel believed to be illegally fishing in the protected waters of the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument this past weekend.
A Coast Guard C-130 crew was launched late last week from Air Station Barbers Point on Oahu and located the 79-foot U.S.-flagged long-line fishing vessel believed to be fishing inside the monument Friday, Feb. 27, 2009. The aircraft documented the vessel suspected of having its long-line fishing gear in the water approximately three miles inside the monument and approximately 875 miles from Midway.
The Coast Guard cutter Kukui, an Oahu-based 225-foot buoy tender, was diverted to the fishing vessel’s last-known position in the monument and dispatched a law enforcement team via small boat to board the vessel in order to examine the logs and interview crew members.
The Coast Guard buoy tender’s boarding team gathered evidence that was forwarded to NOAA’s Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement. In the event of a violation, the owner and operator of the vessel may face potential civil penalties and/or permit sanctions.”