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PCDP amendments at council yesterday
#1
J Yoshimoto and the Low Art of No Compromise.


We’ve all heard the old axiom that politics is the art of compromise.  That in order to get something you want to have to be willing to give up something. Since the days of the Roman Forum.  Such subtleties are lost on the current council majority.  They will likely prevail - but at a cost it seems.  A very small number of amendments are contentious.  Maybe 5%.

So Monday was a Big Day for the Puna Community Development Plan.  After nearly two years of delay  (primarily due to our then newly elected Mayor Billy Kenoi failing to nominate an Action Committee for the PCDP as required by law) the amendment process finally hit center stage at the council Planning Committee in the form of J Yoshimoto’s Bill 194.  

Bill 194 contains the collected wisdom and intent of former Planning Director Chris Yuen, Council members Yoshimoto and Naeole-Beason and the back room influence of Shipman Ltd. - the largest landowner in Puna.

(I don’t really want to paint Shipman really badly.  we actually agree on a lot of issues.  Just not how to achieve them.)

Bill 194 contains 83 amendments.  These amendments fall basically into  three groups.  

1.  Amendments proposed by Councilwoman Emily Naeole-Beason have simple and basic practicality.  

2.  Amendments to simply correct typos and Hawaiian spelling are no brainers and could have and should have sailed through long ago except that.....

3.  There are the amendments proposed by past Planning Director Chris Yuen.  There are only 2 or three of these in contention maybe 4.


On December 18th last year, while everyone is thinking of Christmas,  J Yoshimoto submited Bill 194 to the agenda.  This time with 83 bits and pieces glued together as one large lumpy hunk.  Emily’s amendments, typos, spelling changes and Yuen/Shipman’s stuff all attached at the hip.  

I couldn’t figure out the wisdom of that moment except in the sense that if everything could be rammed though at once as a single package then Shipman’s interests would slide through on the back of Emily’s amendments and typo corrections.

I feel bad for Emily in this.  If her personal amendments, all of them, were submitted to council on their own they would have nothing but near unanimous support.  Support from the Action Committee, support from other council members and support from community groups such as Friends of Puna’s Future (of which I am president).

But someone convinced her, unwisely in my opinion,   that her goals were tied to Shipman’s goals.  That someone apparently was, is  and continues to be Council Chairman J Yoshimoto.

So yesterday J’s Bill 194 had it’s moment.  Shipman packed the audience with a couple rows of testimony in support. J, Emily, Onishi, Enriques, Ikeda all looked quite happy and in control.

But there was a pesky problem or two.

The Planning Commission had failed to support Bill 194 using phrases like “something stinks”.  More importantly the PCDP Action Committee had submitted written testimony which, while supportive of the large mass - 95%, expressed clear qualms about four substantial changes to the plan.  What they are almost doesn’t matter at this point but they tend, in the eyes of the Action Committee, to weaken the PCDP.

This created a dilemma.  A dilemma only J Yoshimoto could solve.  Could he?  Would he?




The smart and simple thing.  The thing that would exemplify the “art of compromise” would have been to allow the many parts of the bill to be separated in workable groups.  Typos & Spelling,  Emily’s amendments and  the amendments everyone agrees upon and the few, perhaps four, that caused the community concerns.  Would J   compromise a bit and let 79 amendments flow forward and allow four to gain further community input?

J Yoshimoto could solve this.  Could he?  Would he?

He would not.

Failing to offer that simple compromise meant that the good stuff had to be passed along with the questionable stuff.  A bundle.  A package.  Take it or leave it.  No compromise.

Now the council has the votes to pass it all.  It clearly has the intention to do so.  It will in fact very likely happen.  But not quite yet.

Brenda Ford made a motion for a public hearing in Puna in August.  You could see the eyes narrow and a chill enter the room.

Ford and Yagong spoke to the issue of the questionable amendments.  They spoke to the sense that something not of the community was being forced.  They spoke of the “C” being missing from the PCDP, the  Puna Community Development Plan.   Not the Puna Special Interest Development Plan.

The call for a public hearing was cause for anger, venting, veiled insinuation and lots of frustration on the parts of Emily Naeole-Beason and Guy Enriques.  Yoshimoto basically kept rather calm and quiet.  Onishi looked like he wasn’t quite sure what to think.  Ikeda never says much.  Kelly Greenwell had left.  Hoffman watched from Waimea.

Emily is not happy with a public hearing in Puna.   She says she has other things to do.  Like campaign.  She says that a hearing will be very contentious.  Lots of anger.  She is angry so I guess she is right.  It will ultimately be her show.

I don’t know if she will read this but I would like to say that I know of no one that is personally opposed to her amendments.  It is not about her.  No one is trying to undercut her.  No one is trying to make her look bad.  All that is happening is that the Shipman amendments need to be fully discussed and understood by the public.  

Emily’s problem is that she has allowed her interests to become attached to Shipman’s.  J Yoshimoto is the one who bound them tightly together.   This was not done to help Emily.  It was done to help Shipman.  

It was done with the low art of no compromise.  Its really too bad.  79 of the amendments could have sailed through.  That’s 95%.  95% is an A.

The date and location of the public Hearing is yet to be announced. My guess is it will be in Keaau - Shipman territory.   It will be this August.  It will only be messy if Emily insists on it.  I probably won’t be there.  I’m likely  going to be mainland with my wife and kids.  Lucky me.



  
Assume the best and ask questions.

Punaweb moderator
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#2
The county council meeting yesterdy was intesting to say the least.I thought both sides presented their ideas well and repectfully. my favorite speaker was the fellow who hadn't made up his mind and loved Hilo and the bayan trees.It is important to set personal agendas aside and look at what is best for the community. I am not talking about a small committee who wrote the original PCDP,or Shipman, or the new arrivals from the mainland. Yes all of these voices should be heard but what about the people who have been in Hawaii for generations. Many people are traveling to Kona to work and some sleep on the beach becuase there are few jobs in Puna. Children are being raised in single parent homes because a parent works in Kona. This is a stress on marriage and chidren. When our children grow up they have to go to the mainland to find jobs. What do we need in Puna? Jobs! Now we must be very careful to not ruin the beauty and flavor of Puna. It is a big job to grow and not distroy.
The part of the meeting that was disturbing was the assumption that the original PCDP committee represented the voice of the people. Now I am sure that there are those who agree with this committee but are they the majority of the people? Mr.Yoshimoto, Ms. Naeole, And Mr. Enrique speak clearly to these issues at hand and were clearly elected by a large majority. They have heard the voice of the people and are responsible to carry out the promises they have made. I had never seen Brenda Ford before and found her arrogant and disrepectful of the other county coucil member. She clearly isn't listenig to the people of Puna.
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#3
Zelda, a couple months ago, I had a business meeting sponsored by the company I now work for. Attending were clients and associated who are instrumental in getting company agenda through government, community, and regulators. I was talking with our primary lobbyist and the topic turned to Hawaii County politics. I asked which was his favorite and worst councilmember to deal with. He smiled and said that his job is to achieve a desired result. That’s accomplished through manipulation, back-room deals, blackmail, and good gold fashion cons.

His least favorite was Ford. He said that anything he wants she will demand an explanation, justification, benefit analysis for her constituents, and transparency. Back-room deals, one-hand -washing-the-other, and all the usual things can't even be snuck in. This makes his job difficult as he has to be able to sell the idea on its merits to her.

If the above is what makes her his least favorite, I can imagine why makes one his most favorite. I think we all know who his most favorite was. If you elect crap, don't be surprise when people treat you like what you elected. Don’t be too proud of what is keeping Puna in the ghetto.
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#4
I don't often comment on this forum, but read it avidly. I was a participant in the PCDP process as a member of the Agriculture working group, and saw an intensely community-driven process first hand. The effort to develop a vision for where Puna is headed was seriously worked on by a very diverse group of people. The serious efforts to interject amendments that will substantially change that vision (that 5% that Rob's talking about) need to be challenged. The broad community has spoken, and will need to keep on speaking as our elected officials seem deaf to our voices, but not to their own and other more powerful interests.

In terms of how this public hearing is likely to play out, I can only express my wishes that it be conducted in a civil and respectful manner, and with the fond hope that our elected officials might once again hear the voice and vision of those who worked long and hard on this process.

A word to the wise about other island CDP processes... it obviously doesn't end when you've developed your plan. At that point the political process and deal-making begins. Bravo for Brenda Ford's ethics and willingness to stand up for what people have thoughtfully crafted. Bravo for the Planning Commission and the PCDP Action Committee for standing up for us.

To our council members: keep what's good, amend what needs it, and resist amendments that alter the basic intent unless they stand the test of broad community support. Above all, listen, and not just to those with whom you agree or are willing to be influenced by, but to all the people of Puna. You were elected to listen to all of your constituents.

Jane

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#5
Rob, you were exceptionally kind and generous with your take on Emily Naeole-Beason's approach to all this. To effectively bring Puna out of its "red-headed stepchild" status with the County, we need a person on the Council who is able to make alliances and partnerships that achieve concrete goals for Puna. Emily's alliances and partnerships are more likely to achieve someone else's goals, such as Shipman or the good old boys and girls in Hilo. Her response when someone insists on allowing the public to have input is usually annoyance or anger at having her approach questioned and her routine disrupted. Emily has allowed her ego to get in the way of doing the best for Puna.

Zelda, when the Puna CDP was being written, there were multiple appeals for people from all backgrounds and parts of Puna to participate. The organizers were begging for people to put their ideas into the plan. If some elements of the community did not participate, it was because they didn't care or couldn't be bothered. Also, Emily did not win a majority last time in the first round. She won because Gary Safarik got into the runoff, and a lot of people simply could not bring themselves to vote for him.

Mr. Orts, thank you for pointing out that the person on the Council who does the most to thwart the usual back-room deals is Ms. Ford. It's really too bad that the best voice on the Council for Puna isn't even from here, but I'm glad to at least have that much going for us.
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#6
Thank you for the input on the PCDP. I will to review it more but tell me how are you going to take care of the people who have to travel to Kona to find jobs? My passion is taking care of the children and I am saddened at what I see. In Walmart I see parents slapping their kids arround and screaming at them.I see babies in dirty old clothes in the store late at night when they should be in bed. There are many loving parents there too and some of the most beautiful children ever.
About Brenda Ford, I don't know all the history that is for sure and frankly I tried to go soft on Brenda but I know arrogant and I know condsending and maybe she was having a bad night but her behavior was shocking. Maybe you are used to her.
Thank you for ideas to ponder.
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#7
The Puna CDP is not a solution to all things. It is not a road, it is a road map. It was prepared by local citizens at the invitation of the County of Hawaii and was, and is, funded by the County of Hawaii and operated by the Planning Department.
Assume the best and ask questions.

Punaweb moderator
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