quote:
Originally posted by Rob Tucker
Do not assume that it as easy as looking at notations on a map to discern the facts.
So a few short years back the State of Hawaii delivered responsibility and unclear title to over 800 miles of "roads in limbo" to the CoH.
Do not assume that that was or is the end of the issue.
Yeah, from what I got back, it appears it's a whole bunch of stuff intermingled that created a big problem. I'll paraphrase what DOT said.
1. Jurisdiction: The Roads In Limbo issue was resolved by an act of the legislature that turned over all the state roads in question to the county. Jurisdiction is in the hands of the county. That resolved the jurisdictional issue.
2. Maintenance: Hawaii County countered that the state turned over substandard and decaying roads to the county but provided no funding. This is being resolved thorough negotiation with the state.
3. Ownership: Still a big question. Over time the state acquired these roads but not all can follow a paper trail for legitimacy. As ownership is resolved, legal ownership to the county is being worked out with property owners. Others are just right of ways over private property. In some places, there’s no proof the government ever acquired the legal rights. But the biggest obstacle is when these roads deviated from what they thought and may be partially on private property and the private property owner may actually be on government land. This is where the road meanders from its original course to that straddling or crossing private property. The burden is on the government to prove they have the legal ownership when the property owners can show deeds or such that they own the property.
4. Use of Road. It was made clear that just because the county may have rights or ownership to a road, it does not mean the road is open for public use. The county can close roads for safety or engineering reasons. People should not mistake the word "Road" as meaning it's for public vehicle use.
Number 4 is the one that appears to create more problem than all the rest. As you mention, part of the Roads in Limbo was "paper roads". These roads appear on maps as roads, are labeled as roads, show as references on TMK maps, but do not exist. Some are close to people’s private driveways and because no physical roads exist, people mistake these private roads as public roads and react without thinking. Another issue is when these roads show on maps but the measurements do not match. You have a 1000’ foot piece of surveyed land on two parcels. One is legally 400 feet, the other legally 600 feet, but there’s supposed to be a 10-foot wide road also in that 1000’. So where does that road fit in the picture?
One big mess!