How to submit testimony on climate and clean energy bills

Blue Planet Foundation is “a community organization that’s changing the conversation about clean energy. By creating sustainable models in Hawaii, we’re fueling the global transformation from fossil fuels to renewable solutions.”

This foundation has set up an easy way to submit testimony to the 2021 Hawaiʻi Legislative Session on climate and clean energy bills. Click on the link below to learn more!

https://mailchi.mp/7fa20f506a6a/get-ready-to-make-an-impact-this-legislative-session?e=2c45a426c9

Maui Business Brainstormers Community alert – Highway 30 to Close- Please Help!

One of my students brought this petition to my attention and I thought I should share it for anyone who wishes to sign it!  It was created by Maui Business Brainstormers.  Here is a link to their website:  Maui Business Brainstormers

A a service to our members, we are making you aware of this communication about the Lahaina Bypass, which in fact affects everyone on Maui and especially businesses in the tourism industry as well as West Side businesses. Any of you who have customers driving to or from the West Side to get to your business will be affected, and the reputation of Maui overall is likely to be impacted.

Please take one moment to help get some discussion and community input on the imminent opening of the new section of the Bypass, and  the CLOSING of highway 30 at that point – by signing the online petition here:

www.protectlahaina.com

Please pass it along!

We think many folks on Maui don’t realize that in March when they open the southernmost section of the “Lahaina ByPass”, they will be permanently CLOSING Highway 30 (Honoapiilani Highway) at that point, near “cut mountain’.   ALL TRAFFIC WILL BE ROUTED ONTO THE BYPASS AT THAT POINT.   You will no longer be able to drive from Lahaina/Launioapoko through to Olowalu (or the reverse) – that section of road will be permanently closed. Coming from Kahului toward Lahaina, ALL TRAFFIC WILL BE ROUTED ONTO THE BYPASS just past Olowalu to go north.   To me, that means this is not a Bypass but a replacement highway – replacing 2 lanes (one in each direction) with 2 lanes, which does not help us with the traffic congestion to and from the West Side.  And worse, the northern end now stops at Keawe Street, with no real traffic plan there at all to manage all the forced Bypass traffic trying to go north that will now be dumped off at Keawe (where Barnes & Noble and Walgreens are).  Keawe Street is already dangerous (try exiting left from Walgreen’s, or worse yet, try crossing from Walgreen’s over to Foodland Farms…and we don’t even have the full ByPass traffic yet!!!  There are no stop lights or anything planned for Keawe, other than a new right turn lane onto the lower highway.  And with this plan, the lower highway that goes straight through Lahaina and out toward Kaanapali will become ONE LANE as it moves from Papalaua Street out towards Safeway (before and after Keawe), so Lahaina Town is going to get REALLY backed up going either direction across that intersection.

A meeting was held recently where the community attendees unanimously asked for the following:

1) Do not open the new southern Bypass section until there is a connector farther NORTH of Keawe, to bring the traffic pass Lahaina’s already-congested area

2) Keep the lower highway open permanently as an alternative to the Bypass. A “Bypass” means you can bypass another route – this plan shuts down any alternate route.

3) Improve Keawe Street to make it safe for the cross-traffic in and out of the Emerald Plaza  industrial areas and the 2 shopping plazas (B&N, Walgreen’s).

But we were told the project is moving ahead anyway as planned and will open in Feb/March.

PLEASE sign the petition to help us at least have some input to the plan. PASS THIS ON TO AS MANY MAUI RESIDENTS AS YOU CAN. This affects everyone really, since West Maui is a huge tax base for the whole island and the traffic is rapidly becoming an inhibitor to residents and visitors alike. And of course all of us on the West Side have a vested interest to get a plan in place that will actually HELP traffic, not make it worse. Please sign and forward this link to others!!! !

“Lahaina- if you are not aware of the entirety of the proposed upcoming changes to our only highway…please look into it to see how you WILL be affected. Our community has significantly changed since the drafting of this proposal and we deserve proper urban planning as well as safe, effective traffic management. Please sign the petition to buy us all more time, so that the project can be done correctly and efficiently!!”

You can see the actual road plans here:

http://www.lahainabypass1b-2.com/project-details.php

Civil Rights Discussion – January 19th

MAUI PEACE ACTION free public program: 

MPA co-hosts the ACLU of Hawai‘i for a civil rights discussion Thursday, January 19, 2017, 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., UH Maui College, Ka Lama 103.

Topics to be discussed are: Safeguarding Civil Rights in a Trump Administration, Community Control of Police Surveillance, and Ending Mass Incarceration in Hawaii.  Coming to Maui to speak on these issues are ACLU-HI’s Legal Director Mateo Caballero;  Legislative Coordinator Mandy Finlay, and Deputy Director Kit Grant.

The program is free to the public and is sponsored by the ACLU of Hawai‘i, the UHMC Human Services Department, and Maui Peace Action. Light refreshments, ADA-accessible. Walk-ins welcome. RSVPs help us plan: [email protected],

The American Occupation of Hawai’i: Genocide through Denationalization with Dr. Keanu Sai

The following event will be taking place this Thursday, Nov. 3rd at 6:30 pm in Kalama #103.  I encourage all of you to attend this event.  Extra credit points will be given to those students that choose to write a one-page paper highlighting the main points of the talk and connecting it to a topic we have covered in class.

keanu-sai

Darkness Over Hawai’i: The Annexation Myth Is the Greatest Obstacle to Progress

The following is an article written by Williamson Chang, Professor of Law at the William S. Richardson School of Law at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa. I have included the Abstract here to give you a background of the article. Click on the link at the bottom of the page to read the entire article.

To: Delegates to the Hawaiian Convention to Establish a Governing Entity 

Before moving ahead, Native Hawaiians must study and learn about the various forms of government throughout the world. Others around us know little about our real history.  We, too, may not know our full history. We must gather more knowledge before making the momentous decisions which are ostensible objectives of this convention. Justice Scalia, an extremely educated and esteemed constitutional scholar is an example of how little the world knows about the history of Hawai’i.

Recent remarks by Justice Scalia reveal the extent and consequences of the campaign of deception asserting that Hawai’i was acquired by a joint resolution. This claim is not only false. It is impossible. The inability of the Joint Resolution to acquire the territory of the sovereign nation of Hawai’i was emphatically pointed out during the Senate debate on the Joint Resolution in the summer of 1898.

Justice Scalia is not the only one deceived. The Hawai’i Supreme Court, in a 2013 ruling on the effects of annexation, blithely ignored the most basic of all state laws–those describing the boundaries of Hawai’i. Truth-telling through re-education of Native Hawaiians–and the rest of the world–is just the beginning. One must not underestimate the tremendous need for knowledge that must precede such an enormous task as nation-building.

Whether one supports restoration of the Kingdom or Tribal recognition, what Hawaiians need now is more scholarship about the world–particularly as to the world of newly emerging sovereign states and the history of decolonization. We should not let the current United States administration in Washington push us into tribal status. The path we take must be fully informed. Native Hawaiians must fully comprehend all the advantages and disadvantages of Federal Recognition as a Tribe.

Darkness Over Hawaii: The Annexation Myth Is the Greatest Obstacle to Progress

Candidate Forum hosted by UHMC Student Government

The Candidate Forum hosted by Student Government will take place on Tuesday, Sept. 27th from 5-8 pm in the Multi-Purpose room in Pilina.  I will be offering extra credit for students who attend and complete a short write-up on the event.  You can receive two extra points for asking an insightful question.  I hope that all of you will take advantage of this opportunity to meet the people who will be representing all of us!

student-govt

Indigenous Crop Biodiversity Festival

Indigenous Crop Biodiversity Festival begins this week!

ICBF logoCelebrate indigenous crops and biodiversity conservation in Maui Naui, Aug 24-30, 2016! This is a parallel event to the IUCN World Conservation Congress that begins on Oahu next week.

The Indigenous Crop Biodiversity Festival 2016 is a unique and extraordinary event that will bring together participants from around the globe to experience a week of inspiring actions, workshops, site visits, special lectures, films, music, art, food and celebration around some of the most pressing conservation and sustainability issues of our time. To volunteer at the festival, contact Penny Levin at [email protected]. They are still looking for lei givers and helpers for the main festival day.
Learn more and see the full schedule of events at www.icbf-maui.com.

Student Assistant — Fall 2016

There is a student assistant position available for students interested in outreach, education, or policy.  Or maybe you are just passionate about breathing clean air on campus!!

breathe in life

Seeking a Student Assistant to work part-time now through Fall semester

  • 100 hours total, standard student pay rate (9.75/hour)
  • Grant-funded position to support the Smokefree UHMC Initiative
  • Starting A.S.A.P. (ideally before school starts)
  • Hours are flexible -we’ll work around your class schedule and other life obligations

Sample tasks:

  • working at tabling events
  • helping to implement a logo contest
  • helping to plan a movie night
  • creating a social media presence
  • taking and organizing pictures
  • posting documents to a Laulima site

If interested, please contact Kathleen Hagan at [email protected]

smoke free uhmc