From that same
KHNL report from October.
Who knows if down the road the Army puts a contract out and the Superferry wins the contract, but right now the Army's got its own transportation - boats. The Army wouldn't need the Superferry to the best of my knowledge," says Army Chief Environmental Planner Paul Thies.
So all we have is someone saying they think it will be a military ship based on it may carry military vehicles and we have someone saying the military wouldn't have a need for the HSF, and it's all in the exact same article. So who do we side with? All we have is opinions, but no real facts, evidence, or anything tangible. I for one am not in the least bit impressed with the basis people are using to say the HSF has military purposes.
Now, my interest is peaked with Rob's comment:
"It seems the HSF may be more intended as a prototype military craft, subsidized by Hawaiian taxpayers, then a bonefide attempt to provide Hawaii with another means of transport."
Now, if that's true, the HSF is doing exactly what every manufacture or provider of services does, they find a cost effective way to present their product or services to potential buyers. If HSF wants military contracts and showing the vessel in operation is a way of achieving that goal, absolutely nothing wrong with that.
BUT, government is held to a different set of rules. If the HSF was never really about an alternative civilian transportation program, or at some point HSF officials knew it was not viable as a civilian operation, the question that must be asked is: "did the Hawaii elected officials who were promoting the HSF as an alternative civilian transportation method for the people of Hawaii know?"
If they truly believe the HSF is a pure civilian transportation operation that may be used by the military, and worthy of taxpayer support, that's one thing. But if they knew the HSF was no longer viable as a civilian transportation operation, yet they deliberately concealed this fact from the people and continued promoting the civilian application... Now you have the makings of big trouble.