IMPORTANT DATES:

IMPORTANT DATES:

Monday, June 30, 2014

Star Advertiser-article

Jun3 29, 2014

Master plan for Kailua marsh draws criticism from agencies

The proposal is a "land grab" that will alter the character of the area, some say

By Gary T. Kubota

The deadline for comments on the Kawainui-Hamakua master plan is Monday, and environmental and neighborhood groups are joining forces over concern that the proposed development will damage the natural resources and character of Kailua.
The draft describes the construction of 37 buildings, nine maintenance access roads, 11 parking lots, eight pavilions and a boardwalk. Nonprofit organizations would work with the Department of Land and Natural Resources on habitat restoration, stewardship and educational efforts.
"It proposes a land grab that will forever change the character of Windward Oahu," said Linda Paul, president of the Hawaii Audubon Society. "The state has no business even considering awarding land leases to private organizations, nonprofit or not, in Kawainui Marsh."
The department released a draft plan for management of the Kawainui-Hamakua Complex in May, initiating a 30-day comment period to seek public input.
The department also plans to prepare an environmental impact statement.
"The plan is intended to help DLNR meet its objectives to support restoration and habitat enhancement of this resource, provide public access, create educational and stewardship opportunities, support Native Hawaiian cultural practices, and provide outdoor recreational opportunities," DLNR Director William Aila Jr. wrote in a Honolulu Star-Advertiser commentary." Much of the plan is centered on restoration, habitat enhancement, stewardship and education, which is accomplished in partnership with nonprofit organizations to assist DLNR's resource management efforts."
The Audubon Society, Hawaii's Thousand Friends and the Kailua Neighborhood Board issued statements critical of the plan on Thursday.
Charles "Chuck" Prentiss, chairman of the Kailua Neighborhood Board, said the building of causeways -- including a boardwalk at the wetlands -- may alter the flow and hydrology of the marsh.
He said the boardwalks would also bring people through archaeological sites where artifacts are still being found.
Prentiss said in an email that vandalism and theft are an "ongoing issue."
Prentiss said the neighborhood board is worried about the impact of developing trails near residences at Enchanted Lake and Kailua High School, and the increase in law enforcement needed with allowing more access to residential areas.
Comments on the draft master plan can be emailed to kawainui@hhf.com. A copy of the plan can be found at www.hhf.com/kawainui/index.html.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

StarAdvertiser-article

June 18, 2014

Kailua clubhouse in the running for $50k, TV star help

By Erika Engle

The Boys & Girls Club of Hawaii has made it to the finals of a nationwide contest, for which the grand prize is a share of $100,000 and the expertise of home improvement expert Ty Pennington.
The club's Windward Clubhouse for Kids is among 50 semifinalist projects in the "Ultimate Neighborhood Give Back Challenge," selected from more than 320 entries submitted from 49 states.
Mortgage lender Guaranteed Rate is staging the competition to fund a project that will make a meaningful impact in its community, according to a statement.
Voting to narrow the entries down to six finalists is open through July 8. Entrants have submitted short videos detailing their projects which are linked on the Guaranteed Rate Facebook page for voting.
The six finalists will be announced July 15, and the first-place winner, to be announced Aug. 1, will receive $50,000, plus the expertise of Pennington for a day. The five remaining finalists each will receive $10,000 toward their projects.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

StarAdvertiser-article

June 17, 2014

Our View: Hiking trail woes a signal to DLNR

Maunawili Falls Trail is a "victim of its own popularity," said Suzi Dominy, one of the homeowners who lives near the trail head in Kailua. She's right — the foot traffic at the nature attraction has worn down, littered and generally overburdened the area.
But the other victims here are the neighbors themselves. Some hikers park on the street and leave only a light footprint to mark their visit. But others are thoughtless, disturbing neighbors with noise and intrusions on private property. Residents clearly have to share the public streets, but nobody signs up for the kind of harassment they encounter at Maunawili.
The conflict shines a light on the needs of this one community and, more broadly, on the state's failure to deal responsibly with the upkeep of recreational areas, including its web of hiking trails.
The problem is particularly acute at Maunawili, where there are several reasons for its popularity. It's a short hiking trail accessible to all skill levels, and it ends in a natural pool and falls that tourists and kamaaina alike can enjoy.
It is not unique in this respect — Kailua state Sen. Laura Thielen notes that the Lanikai "pillbox" trail similarly draws visitors to neighborhoods — but many other trails are more insulated from residential zones, starting from points more removed from suburbia.
A permanent solution is essential for such high-impact trails, including a parking lot that separates the foot traffic from the homes. State Rep. Ken Ito has rightly secured $200,000 in planning funds for a lot with restrooms to serve the Maunawili trail head.
But there are complications, not the least of which is siting the lot, Thielen said: Negotiating with property owners who might be able to sell an adequate parcel to the state is a long-term proposition, and it's one that should come with a maintenance plan as well.
In the meantime, residents need some relief, so the state Department of Land and Natural Resources should increase its over- sight of trails such as Maunawili Falls, exploring various strategies to limit the impact on neighbors.
For example, this may be a place where coordination with city officials is needed to restrict parking to limited hours of trail access; exception permits could be issued to residents. Signs outlining the restrictions should be prominently posted and rigorously enforced.
Other steps, including providing and maintaining a limited number of portable restrooms on the trail itself, should be considered.
Beyond the specifics of this location, the Maunawili Falls problem is symptomatic of how the state manages parks: It develops them but puts far too little thought into what happens after opening day.
When Thielen headed DLNR during the administration of Gov. Linda Lingle, the agency proposed a $240 million improvement plan, financed primarily with user fees, but it failed at the Legislature.
Since then there have been capital improvement project allotments for specific projects, but state leaders really need to take a hard look on its overall investment in maintenance. Trails are especially underfunded. According to a 2010 report, the forest-recreation budget has been cut over the years to half what it was 20 years ago. Just over $350,000 is set aside for Oahu's 40 trails and seven dirt roads, according to current DLNR figures.
At a time when the Internet has raised the profile of formerly "secret" spots, it's unrealistic to give their maintenance and supervision such a low priority. And as many Maunawili residents would surely testify, it's unfair to private property owners, as well.

PacificBusinessNews-Article

June 13, 2014

Abercrombie appoints George Okuda to Windward Oahu House seat

Gov. Neil Abercrombie has appointedGeorge Okuda to serve in the Hawaii state House of Representatives, in the Windward Oahu district seat formerly held by Jessica Wooley.
Wooley, whose Windward district stretches from Kaneohe to Kahaluu, stepped down on May 5, six days after the state Senate confirmed her appointment as director of the state Office of Environmental Quality Control.
Okuda has served as an aide to another Windward state representative, Rep. Ken ItoD-Kaneohe-Olomana, since 2000, drafting, tracking and analyzing bills, and prior to that served as a legislative aide to former state Sen. Bob Nagata and was a member of the Kahaluu Neighborhood Board for six years, two of those as chairman.
“George has more than a decade of public service experience and has active legislative ties to the windward Oahu community,” Abercrombie said in a statement. “He will bring stability during this transition period.”
Okuda, a licensed civil and structural engineer, previously worked for Hawaiian Electric Co.

Sunday, June 15, 2014

StarAdvertiser-article

June 15, 2014

Hikers leave Maunawili a mess, anger neighbors

Brazen hikers who leave a mess in Maunawili anger the neighborhood

By Leila Fujimori

Suzi Dominy said she found 11 young Chinese tourists one day lined up in front of an outdoor bathroom at her home near the Mau­na­wili Falls trail in Kai­lua.
"When I asked what they were doing, they replied, ‘Using the bathroom,' like what a silly question," said the 65-year-old homeowner.
"Hikers leave everything from muddy shoes, muddy clothes to babies' diapers, bottles, cans, anything you can think of, they dump on the grass here," she said, adding many frequently knock on the door, asking, "Where's the trail?"
The burgeoning popularity of the Mau­na­wili Falls trail, reportedly the second most popular Oahu falls trail, has resulted in streams of hikers, which have residents at their wits' end.
"It's a victim of its own popularity," Dominy said.
Residents blame the Internet for the rising popularity of the Mau­na­wili Falls Trail that has tourists tromping through its typically soggy 1.5-mile hike to the falls, and the path has degraded due to heavy use.
The short trail, easily accessible from public roads, attracts residents and visitors, who are increasingly discovering Kai­lua.
Residents estimate that on busy days up to 100 cars clog up residential streets of the 250-home neighborhood. Some arrive on tour buses and noisy mopeds.
Hikers — boots, legs and clothes caked in mud — come off the trail and either help themselves to garden hoses from nearby yards or are constantly knocking on doors asking to use the hoses, residents say.
Those stories and other incidents, ranging from picnicking on curbs and leaving behind bags of trash as well as car break-ins, prompted the Mau­na­wili Estates Community Association to petition the governor, the Department of Land and Natural Resources and their legislators to make improvements, such as establishing a parking lot.
Forty-year Maunawili resident Claire Ganiku, 78, says she can't get into her own driveway because it is often blocked by cars. She's seen a man strip down to his underwear with car doors wide open, blocking residential traffic.
"Friends had to double-park and walk to the house," she said, adding people can be heard making "Tarzan calls in the forest at night."
Chris Nakamatsu, a board member of the Mau­na­wili Estates Community Association, said there are many Oahu state trails, but "very few of them have these issues. Very few of them have waterfalls."
One resident counted 60 people sitting around the waterfall at one time.
Some visitors are ill-prepared for real hiking, and the Fire Department is often called to rescue individuals on the slippery trail and at the waterfall, where many love to dive into the small pool from heights of roughly 4 to 20 feet.
On Wednesday night firefighters found a couple who got lost on the falls trail and ended up deep in Mau­na­wili Valley on a connecting trail.
Nakamatsu said fire personnel have told her the trail has gone from a roughly 7-foot-wide path to at least 20 feet wide.
She said a DLNR official told her it is the second most used falls trail on Oahu after the Manoa Falls Trail.
Resident Austin Schenk, 20, said in the last four or five years, trails have grown wider and there are more of them. "It's so heavily foot-trafficked, people start veering off trails, pretty much zigzagging up the stream. … Roots are exposed," he said.
He said people often party at the pool area, which is often littered with water bottles, cans, food wrappers, muddy shoes and towels.
On Thursday, however, the trail was relatively clean, with the occasional sole of a shoe and slipper stuck in the mud.
Nakamatsu said the community brought awareness to state officials of the problems three to four years ago and renewed its push a year ago.
State Rep. Ken Ito (D, Kane­­ohe-Mau­na­wili-Kai­lua) obtained $200,000 this legislative session for planning and design of a parking lot with restrooms near the trail head.
DLNR hired a consultant that came up with five options.
Nakamatsu said the cost could run $2 million to $6 million, which does not include the land.
DLNR says it is in discussion with the private landowners for the parking lot proposal.
But Nakamatsu said, "Because we know how long things take, we need some short-term relief," suggesting portable toilets, a security guard and improved signage.
She said the community believes if the state can't afford to maintain the trail and provide parking and amenities, perhaps it is a resource that should not be open.
State Sen. Laura Thie­len, former Land Board chairwoman, said, "What it comes back to is the state's refusal to invest in the management of these public recreational places."
She said the problem lies with declining amounts of money for maintaining recreational places and at the same time putting in several hundred thousand acres of newly acquired land dedicated as park reserves and public recreational places.
DLNR said current funding for its trail system is not sufficient to cover all of its needs statewide, including at Mau­na­wili Falls.
Its total budget for all 40 Oahu trails and seven dirt roads is $354,920, with three staffers. Of that, $70,335 goes to 22 nonmotorized trails, including Mau­na­wili.
Thielen said she doesn't believe the parking lot idea, requiring the state to purchase or have a long-term lease on land, is economically feasible if the state is not putting in money to maintain its recreational areas.
She suggests reducing use hours, enforcement, signage, rubbish cans and a courtesy campaign for users to pack out trash.
_____
CORRECTION: Chris Nakamatsu is a board member not president of Maunawili Estates Community Association as a previous version of this story reported.

Friday, June 13, 2014

PacificBusinessNews-article

June 13, 2014

Winds of change at PBN's Windward Oahu Means Business

Change and transitions were major themes that emerged when PBN headed over the Pali Friday morning for our Windward Oahu Means Business panel discussion.
About 200 people attended this debut event—most of our panel discussions are focused on a single industry, but in West Oahu last month and Windward Oahu this morning, we’re also reaching out to regions where businesses of all kinds face similar challenges and opportunities.
Our panelists were Cynthia Manley, president of the Kailua Chamber of Commerce, member of the Kaneohe Business Business Group and director of public relations, Le Jardin Academy; May Nishijima, vice president and Kailua branch manager, First Hawaiian Bank; Puna Nam, owner and founder, Cinnamon’s Restaurant; Herb Lee, Jr., executive director, Pacific American Foundation; andScott Carvill, owner and principal broker,Carvill Sotheby’s International Realty.
A big takeaway: Whether the issue was the new Target scheduled to open next March, or partial development of Kawainui Marsh to accommodate visitors, or the growing impact of tourism in Windward Oahu, we learned that region wants more thoughtful planning. Growth and development is inevitable and brings many benefits, but our panelists — Windward residents themselves — hope to see a better balance that preserves the essential character of Kailua and Kaneohe.
PBN is grateful to event sponsor Hawaii Health Connector, presenting sponsor Kailua Chamber of Commerce, contributing partners Kaneohe Business Group and Retail Merchants of Hawaii and our hosts Friday morning, Mid Pacific Country Club.
No doubt you see stories online and in our pages stemming what we’ve learned. Meanwhile, here’s a glimpse of the morning’s event.

StarAdvertiser-article

June 13, 2014

Mike McKenna's Windward Ford sold to entrepreneur

By Erika Engle

Longtime Hawaii auto dealer Mike McKenna, 81, has sold McKenna's Windward Ford after nearly five decades in the industry.
The dealership was sold for undisclosed terms to California auto dealer Jay Gill, who has five dealerships selling vehicles from 11 different manufacturers, according to Aiyaz Dean, the dealership's new general manager and a 28-year veteran of the Hawaii automotive industry.
Gill first landed on Hawaii shores 40 years ago on his way to California as he emigrated from his native India, Dean said.
Gill was back in Hawaii to finalize the deal "40 years to the day" after first arriving in the islands, Dean said.
In addition to his auto dealerships, Gill has interests in farming and other businesses, but the former McKenna dealership is his first business in the islands.
Gill Island Motors Inc. was formed for the transaction, and the dealership will do business as Windward Ford of Hawaii, according to state business registration records.
Most of the dealership's previous employees were retained, and the new management comprises Dean, General Sales Manager Angel Santiago, Howard Villa and Nick Westerville.
Dean said customers can expect the same warm welcome when they stop into the dealership that McKenna's crew provided for so many years.
As its first gesture to the community, the dealership will offer free safety checks to any active-duty service member with a valid military ID, Dean said.
He would not have sold his dealership to just anybody, said McKenna's longtime Controller Rose Rufo, who will remain in her position. "He loves his employees"and was in the dealership Thursday signing his final payroll for them. "It was bittersweet," she said.
In his younger days, McKenna sold mangoes on Maui before his time in California, said Dave Rolf, longtime friend and executive director of the Hawaii Automobile Dealers Association.
"Mike McKenna is an icon" of the Hawaii automotive industry, he said.
McKenna has been Dealer of the Year at the state level and also was awarded Dealer of the Year at the national level by the American International Automobile Dealers Association.
He owned many car dealerships over the years, including some in California now operated by his son Daniel, and his daughter Michael has long been a fixture at the Kailua dealership.
Over the years, his dogs Hana and Hana-boy also have figured prominently at the dealership and in its advertising.
"He was so prominent. He really was the one who started the idea of giving away a car" during Project Graduation overnight parties for Hawaii high schools, as well as initiating a year's free use of a new car for the Hawaii Teacher of the Year, Rolf said.
McKenna's Windward Ford over the years give $1 million to Hawaii schools in its "Spirit of Giving" campaign in which $100 from every car sold was donated to the school of the buyer's choice, Rolf said. "He's the quintessential active dealer in the community."
Under McKenna's reign he received a President's Award from Ford Motor Co. and as such was rewarded with a small allocation of the 2005 GT, described in a 2004 Honolulu Star-Bulletin story as the "pulse-quickening, eye-bugging, way-cool, 5.4-liter, V8, 500-horsepower muscle car that is the centerpiece of the automaker's centennial celebration."
The GT was named "Pace Car for an entire company" during a 60-second commercial titled "The One" that aired just before the 2004 Super Bowl.
McKenna said at the time nobody at the dealership would drive any of those cars very far, preferring to leave the mileage-adding privilege to the eventual buyers, whose names McKenna never revealed.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

PacificBusinessNews-Article

June 10, 2014

Goodwill Industries of Hawaii to re-enter Kailua with 11th Hawaii location


Goodwill Industries of Hawaii Inc. plans to re-enter the Kailua market in Windward Oahu with the opening of its 11th location in Hawaii later this month, a spokesman for the nonprofit told PBN.
The store, which will be located in a former Price Busters location at 105 Oneawa St., is scheduled to have a grand opening on June 21 with a soft opening anticipated within the next week or so, said Rick Kuwahara, spokesman for Goodwill Industries of Hawaii.
About 10 people will be employed by the new store and donation center.
“It’s a one-stop location,” Kuwahara said. “It’s a good location on Oneawa Street next to Hardware Hawaii.”
Hardware Hawaii also is Goodwill’s landlord for the new location.
Goodwill previously had a store in Kailua, but the building was torn down to make way for the Kailua Town Center redevelopment, which is anchored by Whole Foods Market.
Goodwill, which has a donation center on Keolu Drive in Kailua and in Kaneohe, has eight stores on Oahu.
Founded in 1959, Goodwill Industries of Hawaii reported 2012 revenues of $24.5 million, ranking it sixth among Hawaii nonprofits.
It has about 500 employees and 500 volunteers, according to PBN research.

Monday, June 9, 2014

PacificBusinessNews-article

June 9, 2014

PBN heads Windward to talk business in Kailua, Kaneohe


By Janis L. Magin

My husband grew up in Hawaii, and talks of the days when people rode horses along Kailua Beach in front of the old Castle estate and how his parents bought one of the first houses built in Aikahi Park, only four years after the modern Pali Highway connected Honolulu with Windward Oahu.
Today, Kailua is one of the most desirable places to live in Hawaii, where those modest houses built in the 1960s and 70s routinely sell for $1 million and designer showplaces on the beach can fetch $10 million or more.
It's also a desirable place to do business, especially for retailers — the number and variety of stores from Windward Mall in Kaneohe to Kailua Town — includingWhole Foods Market and, soon, Target — is reducing the reasons for residents to make the drive over the Koolau Mountains to shop in Honolulu. Those businesses, along with Kailua Beach, are also luring tourists from all over, but especially visitors from Japan, who arrive by the busload in the parking lot behind Macy's and Longs Drugs and roam the town on foot and on bicycles.
This Friday, PBN and local industry experts will take an in-depth look at the growing Windward business community during a the Windward Oahu Means Business event at the Mid Pacific Country Club in Lanikai. There's still time to join us — registration closes Monday night. Go here to sign up.
The panel discussion will feature Cynthia Manley, president of the Kailua Chamber of Commerce and public relations director for Le Jardin Academy; May Nishijima, vice president and Kailua branch manager for First Hawaiian Bank; Puna Nam, owner of Cinnamon's restaurant; Herb Lee Jr., executive director of the Pacific American Foundation; and Scott Carvill, owner and principal broker of Carvill Sotheby's International Realty.
Real estate is sure to be high on the list of topics for discussion on Friday, fromAlexander & Baldwin's $373 million purchase of the Kaneohe Ranch commercial real estate portfolio last year, which included a large portion of Kailua town, to the escalating prices of residential real estate on the Windward side.
The modest four-bedroom home my in-laws purchased in 1963 for $26,000, and sold for $160,000 in 1981, is today estimated to be worth more than $1 million, according to the real estate website Zillow. It's not too far off the market — the one house on their street that's currently on the market —an upgraded four-bedroom house built in 1964 — is listed for $1.15 million.

HHF-Plan

March 2011
Wetland Restoration and Habitat Enhancement Plan
for Kaiwainui Marsh

Friday, June 6, 2014

HawaiiNewsNow-Article

June 05, 2014








Kailua residents pan Kawainui plan

By Rick Daysog

KAILUA, OAHU (HawaiiNewsNow) -Kailua residents are balking at a state plan to redevelop Hawaii's largest wetlands.
The Kawainui Marsh Master Plan is a re-write of a 20-year-old proposal to manage 1,000-acres of state owned land in Windward Oahu.
But critics say the plan allows the construction of 17 new buildings, overnight camping facilities and parking lots that cater to Waikiki tour buses.
"I'm appalled. And most of Kailua is appalled," Kailua resident Annette Kinnicutt said during a packed meeting of the Kailua Neighborhood Board Thursday night.
"We didn't want restrooms, we didn't want overnight stays, we didn't want huge parking lots. We just wanted it to be accessible."
The state Department of Land and Natural Resources said it doesn't want to create a tourist attraction and that any development will touch less than 1 percent of the marsh area.
But residents said that's still too much.
"We felt it was way over the top is in terms of the development. It's supposed to be a sensitive bird sanctuary area," said Charles Prentiss, chairman of the Kailua Neighborhood Board.
Added state Rep. Cynthia Thielen:
"I'm pretty upset with it. Think about what are we doing. Are we making a second Waikiki here, a tourist destination?"
The state believes the concerns are overblown. It said the additions are mostly restrooms, parking spaces, bike paths and pavilions.
"What try to make the area accessible for folks, so folks can get up there and enjoy the area and use it for recreation and education," said David Smith, the DLNR's forestry programs branch manager for Oahu.
Residents have until June 30 to voice their concerns with the state. After that, the state will likely file for an environmental impact study by the end of the summer.