06-23-2008, 01:10 AM
Preface: I am not a resident (yet) nor a registered voter in the State of Hawai'i. In the hopes that I soon will be an informed Hawai'i citizen, I've been trying to follow the discussions here on Punaweb, and gather more information from elsewhere on the Web.
I've seen various references in a number of places about the possibility of political, social, and business issues being addressed by Hawai'i city, county, and State governmental bodies in private, closed-door sessions, or outside of the normal conduct of the government's (the people's) business. Cronyism is, I think, the term which applies to this practise. Cronyism is certainly not unique to Hawai'i, but there are ordinances in some places which deal with this directly.
I'm familiar with California's Brown Act, which prohibits most governmental business from being conducted behind closed doors, particularly where there is a quorum of the legislators or councilmembers. There are exceptions provided for addressing personnel matters, matters where court cases are pending, etc., but in even those cases, a public statement of the purpose of the executive session is required.
Question: Is there a sunshine/open meeting law on the books in the State of Hawai'i to prevent most governmental business (the people's business) from being conducted out of the eye of the public?
Please do not take this in any way as casting stones, I'm honestly just trying to understand the way thing work in Hawai'i. I'm under the (possibly misinformed) impression that cronyism is a tacitly accepted part of Hawai'i society, or at least was accepted until fairly recently.
Aloha! ;-)
I've seen various references in a number of places about the possibility of political, social, and business issues being addressed by Hawai'i city, county, and State governmental bodies in private, closed-door sessions, or outside of the normal conduct of the government's (the people's) business. Cronyism is, I think, the term which applies to this practise. Cronyism is certainly not unique to Hawai'i, but there are ordinances in some places which deal with this directly.
I'm familiar with California's Brown Act, which prohibits most governmental business from being conducted behind closed doors, particularly where there is a quorum of the legislators or councilmembers. There are exceptions provided for addressing personnel matters, matters where court cases are pending, etc., but in even those cases, a public statement of the purpose of the executive session is required.
Question: Is there a sunshine/open meeting law on the books in the State of Hawai'i to prevent most governmental business (the people's business) from being conducted out of the eye of the public?
Please do not take this in any way as casting stones, I'm honestly just trying to understand the way thing work in Hawai'i. I'm under the (possibly misinformed) impression that cronyism is a tacitly accepted part of Hawai'i society, or at least was accepted until fairly recently.
Aloha! ;-)
Aloha! ;-)