The article says the House Bill 1716 did pass and that is $5M for all the islands' invasive prevention programs. Oahu well recognizes Hawaii island, and Puna in particular, as where little fire ants, coqui frogs, albizia trees and rat lung worm were introduced.
The LFA bill had the screwy special interest factor put in, funding for training canine LFA hunters. Dogs are getting bitten in the eye by LFA and sometimes going blind, snooping around on the ground. That was bizarre to put that in.
Green and Ruderman put in another bill that was Puna specific, basically ackowledging Puna is the infected area with the highest concentration of harmful invasives, so it would quarantine Puna from the rest of the state. It didn't pass:
quote:
http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/measure_indiv.aspx?billtype=SB&billnumber=2347&year=2014
SB 2347
Allows designation of quarantine areas and establishment of compliance agreements for transportation of certain articles. Establishes penalties for violations.
The other invasive species eradication effort bill that passed allows the use of a fungus pesticide on the coffee borrer beetles.
quote:
http://westhawaiitoday.com/community-bul...l-approved
Coffee berry borer bill approved
A bill that would appropriate $500,000 to subsidize purchase of pesticide to combat the coffee berry borer was approved Tuesday in a final floor vote by the state legislators. House Bill 1514 unanimously passed its final reading as amended in its final committee approval last week.
So, the coffee farmers of Kona have banned GMO for coffee plants but now have no choice but to introduce a non-indigenous predatory fungus from Africa to the west side. This is because somebody on the west side decided to smuggle in some African bean plants. Oahu is dealing with a bigger problem with a coconut beetle:
http://hdoa.hawaii.gov/blog/main/destruc...nut-trees/
DESTRUCTIVE BEETLES FOUND ON OAHU COCONUT TREES
"This island Hawaii on this island Earth"