02-14-2016, 10:37 AM
First of all, I find it odd that you would equate subdivisions of pallet shacks in Ka'u with Uncle Roberts property in Puna.
Let's just put aside the elephant in the room that is the ambiguity of Native Hawaiian rights and sovereignty (btw Uncle Sam the tobacco man benefitted from similar ambiguity).
If the issue is that some subdivisions should be exempt from the building codes and the associated property taxes and some should not be exempt, then the question is on how earth would you implement such a program?
The real question here is can some people be required to follow the codes and laws and pay the associated property taxes when the assessor comes to visit while their next door neighbors are using a pit toilet and camping in a rickety shanty town?
The easy answer is to make sure you purchase your home in a subdivision with CCRs and then you have a built in defense against people who think rural Hawaii in 2015 is like rural Alaska in 1965.
Let's just put aside the elephant in the room that is the ambiguity of Native Hawaiian rights and sovereignty (btw Uncle Sam the tobacco man benefitted from similar ambiguity).
If the issue is that some subdivisions should be exempt from the building codes and the associated property taxes and some should not be exempt, then the question is on how earth would you implement such a program?
The real question here is can some people be required to follow the codes and laws and pay the associated property taxes when the assessor comes to visit while their next door neighbors are using a pit toilet and camping in a rickety shanty town?
The easy answer is to make sure you purchase your home in a subdivision with CCRs and then you have a built in defense against people who think rural Hawaii in 2015 is like rural Alaska in 1965.