IMPORTANT DATES:

IMPORTANT DATES:

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

PacificBusinessNews-article

February 11, 2015
The Grove restaurant in Kailua closes
By Lorin Eleni Gill
The Grove restaurant in Kailua has closed after more than three years in business.
Some of its former customers are reporting on Yelp that the restaurant's last day of business was in early December. Signs posted in the window say "closed" and "no trespassing."
The Aulike Street restaurant, which served "globally inspired island cuisine," was founded by former Turtle Bay Resort award-winning chef Fred DeAngelo, along with Troy and Brandy Antonelis. PBN reached out to the owners seeking comment.
Loyal Grove patrons enjoyed dishes such as warm Brussels sprout salad, Maine lobster risotto and Chinese five-spice braised beef short ribs.

Monday, February 9, 2015

StarAdvertiser-article

February 9, 2015

Leave it to city department to justify new traffic signs

By June Watanabe

Question: Some neighbors and I would like to petition for a four-way stop at Kainalu Drive and Mookua Street in Kailua. It is the only through street from Kalaheo Avenue to Maluniu Street, therefore is very busy. People sometimes drive right through and there are many accidents. Kainalu Drive itself is notorious for speeding, and a four-way stop would slow people down. Currently, there is no other mandatory stop between the stoplight at the Kailua Fire Station and Kaha Street near Kainalu Elementary. Can you please advise how/who to petition for a four-way stop? Does the city keep data on accidents that we could access for that specific area?
Answer: There's no need for a petition.
Instead, a simple request to the city Department of Transportation Services would prompt an investigation into whether a four-way stop is justified or warranted based on the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices via an engineering study, said DTS Director Michael Formby.
Among the criteria considered:
» A traffic signal is going to be installed, and a multiway stop would be an interium measure.
» Five or more crashes have occurred at the intersection in a 12-month period "that are susceptible to correction by stop signs."
» Vehicular volume from the "major" street averages 300 vehicles per hour for any eight-hour period, and the combined vehicular, pedestrian and bike volume entering from the "minor" street averages 200 for the same eight-hour period.
"DTS does not maintain location-specific accident or crash data," Formby said. Instead, DTS retrieves the data on a case-by-case basis for warrant studies.
DTS has not received any request to study the Kainalu-Mookua intersection, which is between Kainalu Elementary and Kailua Intermediate schools.
However, it did study complaints it received about speeding in the vicinity of the schools and is working on a project to "calm speeds" by alerting drivers to how fast they are going with signs, Formby said.
DTS plans to install two sets of "driver feedback" signs, one posted near each of the two schools, he said.
Contacting DTS
To request four-way stops or other traffic-related measures, Formby said, the community can go through their neighborhood boards or City Council members.
However, you told us you were not able to get any response after contacting your neighborhood board and Council member.
A third option is to write to DTS directly.
Send your request to Traffic Engineering, Department of Transportation Services, 650 S. King St., 2nd Floor, Honolulu, HI 96813.
Question: I received a corrected Form 1099-G from the state Unemployment Division. The first form stated $0.00 state income tax was withheld from unemployment benefits. The corrected form provided the tax amount withheld. How much did this error cost taxpayers for the second mailing? Hopefully it was sent to a select few and not everyone who received unemployment benefits.
Answer: About 15,000 amended notices, out of the nearly 40,000 original Form 1099s sent to claimants who opted for the state withholding deduction, were mailed, said William Kunstman, spokesman for the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations.
The cost of the second mailing:$7,318.56 for postage; $455, envelopes; and $421, computer run/printing and staff labor.
The money came out of federal funds in the operating budget, Kunstman said.
How did the error occur?
For the tax year 2014, the Unemployment Insurance Division implemented a new cost-savings measure of outsourcing the 1099G process as an alternative to using state resources, Kunstman said.
However, an error occurred when the "1099G IRS report file" was sent to the contractor for printing with only federal withholding information instead of both state and federal withholding amounts, he said.
———
Write to “Kokua Line” at Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 7 Waterfront Plaza, Suite 210, 500 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu 96813; call 529-4773; fax 529-4750; or email kokualine@staradvertiser.com.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

HawaiiNewsNow-article

February 3, 2015

Street closure in Kailua could add to traffic woes


By Chris Tanaka

KAILUA, OAHU (HawaiiNewsNow) -
Aoloa Street in Kailua is convenient for residents of the 1006 units that live in 7 condominium complexes on it and Aoloa Place.
Perhaps too convenient.
"We had too many people coming through this private road, and it costs us because we own it, we have to maintain it" said resident Teddy Bosch.
The Kailua Gardens Community Association Board, which is comprised of representatives from each of the condo complexes, recently sent out messages to all the residents, announcing an impending move aimed at reducing non-resident traffic on the street.
Beginning February 15, the gate on the Kailua Road side of Aoloa Street will be open from 5am to 9am only. For all other hours of the day, seven days a week, it will be closed.
Not all residents are pleased.
"I think it's kind of silly. We already pay fees to maintain the street. I don't understand why we have to keep it closed all the time" said resident Kali Gall.
The move was made with pedestrian safety and cost control in mind. Because it's a private street, the City and County of Honolulu is not responsible for maintenance. According to the KGCA Board, it has spent 75 thousand dollars on pavement repairs in the past four years due to overuse. That figure doesn't include sidewalk and streetlight repairs. Each condo is docked a $5.55 monthly fee to pay for these fixes.
Residents going to the beach, Kailua District Park, or other areas in Kailua town will have to access them via Hahani - where the new Target is located. The traffic implications are daunting but some say, worth it.
"That's the price we have to pay to keep our property in good condition" said Bosch.
EMS, HFD and HPD have all been notified, and will all have access to a lock box to open the gate in an emergency. Additionally, the Board said it will review the decision in the future and could add an evening window. It's conducting a second engineering study on adding an electronic gate to give residents access 24/7.