IMPORTANT DATES:

IMPORTANT DATES:

Monday, January 31, 2011

Star Advertiser-article

A c t i o n  i t e m  H E L P  N E E D E D!

This is not a time to give up! 

Please Call – Email - Write your letter of concerns NOW!

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January 31, 2011

Kailua Target deal finalized

Kaneohe Ranch has finalized a deal to bring Target Corp. to Kailua.

The land owner sold the 311,000-square-foot Don Quijote USA Co. Ltd. site on Friday despite opposition among a vocal group of residents who fear the big-box giant will change Kailua's small-town character, bringing in more people to the quiet neighborhood and causing further traffic congestion. 

Kaneohe Ranch said that all tenants on the Don Quijote site that have not secured space for in Kailua have been relocated. The retailers include Hakuyosha Dry Cleaners, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, Yum Yum Express, Ba-Le Sandwiches & Bakery and Twogood Kayaks Hawaii Inc. 

"We are faced with the fact that many of the commercial leases in Kailua town, which were negotiated in the 1950s and '60s as 50-to 60-year leases, are now coming to an end," said Mitch D'Olier, Kaneohe Ranch chief executive officer. "In quite a few cases, these properties have deteriorated substantially in the final years of these leases, and the current leaseholders cannot or do not want to negotiate a new lease. Don Quijote was looking to sell its lease and therefore was not interested in maintaining or upgrading the property.
Kaneohe Ranch was concerned that without the right tenant the site would steadily deteriorate."

The Minneapolis-based retailer plans to invest $40 million to build what will be its fifth Hawaii store, generating 250 construction jobs and more than 250 jobs at the store, scheduled to open in July 2012.
Construction on the 130,000-square-foot store at 345 Hahani St. is expected to begin this spring.

Don Quijote is closing its Kailua store on Feb. 5, affect more than 100 employees, according to a store supervisor.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Building Permit Application

Please help monitor Target's Building Permit application status via DPP's online system with the simple steps below:

go to:  http://dppweb.honolulu.gov/DPPWeb/default.asp?PossePresentationId=300

type in TMK number: 42001044
click: 'go'

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

TradingMarkets.com-article

January 25, 2011


Business Briefs


Jan 25, 2011 (The Honolulu Star-Advertiser - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) --
Don Quijote store in Kailua to close

Don Quijote USA Co. Ltd. is closing its Kailua store on Feb. 5 to make way for a Target Corp. store.

The closure of its 345 Hahani St. location will affect more than 100 employees, according to a store supervisor, who said the company is transferring items to its stores in Waipahu, Ala Moana and Pearl City.

The location was previously Daiei and, before that, Holiday Mart.

Target has come under fire from some Kailua residents opposed to a big-box retailer in the beachside town.

Target plans to invest $40 million to build what would be its fifth Hawaii store. The Minneapolis-based retailer has acquired the lease on the land to build a 130,000-square-foot store scheduled to open in July 2012.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Farewell - Yum Yum Express

Another long-time Kailua store has closed its doors yesterday.

We shall say farewell to Kailua's Yum Yum Express; which was located in the front of Don Quijote's building.   

We will miss you!

Star Tribune-article

Here is an article that was recently found in a Minnesota newspaper

January 22, 2011

Inside Track: Project opponents give Target a trimming

Dana Edmunds Photography

 Photo: A local with a lawnmower has expressed opposition to a proposed Target store in Kailua, Hawaii.  The appearance of the crop circle coincided with the area's Woe's Day Parade on Jan. 1.  This year's theme: "Holy Target."




When it comes to opening new stores, Target Corp. is no stranger to neighborhood opposition.

But in the Hawaiian community of Kailua, where the Obamas have spent their December breaks, Target opponents went a clip beyond the typical lashing out in newspaper editorials and meetings with government and business leaders.

They mowed their distaste of the bullseye right into the lawn of a community-owned park.
“We’re a small island community,” said lifelong activist Mollie Foti, who lives in Kailua. “The [shopping center] landowners have decided to maximize potential for profit by turning this into a tourist shopping mecca. A lot of small businesses have already been forced out. If Target comes in, that’ll happen on a big scale.”

Target plans to spend $40 million on a store that would open in 2012, making it the fifth in Hawaii. The Minneapolis-based retailer has purchased the lease agreement from a departing food and merchandise discounter, Don Quixote, and is in the process of negotiating a long-term lease.

A Whole Foods is under construction, and there’s already a Macy’s and Pier One in the center.

But Foti and others worry about the traffic a store like Target will bring to the area, which is accessible only by bridges and narrow roads and “has limited infrastructure,” she said. A state legislator, a neighborhood board and some city leaders are among those raising questions, according to the Honolulu Weekly.

Target said it has taken residents’ complaints to heart. It has reduced the number of driveways on a main drag from five to two, and will install traffic signals, turn lanes and pedestrian crosswalks. The company also is investing in extra landscaping, with native plants, benches and walkways, said spokeswoman Sarah Bakken.

The 130,000-square-foot store is almost 50 percent larger than the aging Don Quixote, but the retailer can’t scale back further because it needs extra space to handle distribution challenges of shipping to Hawaii, Bakken said. The average Target store is 125,000 to 180,000.

Bakken noted that letters in favor of the project also have been printed in local newspapers.

“We see both great support, and some concerns, that always surface,” she said. “That’s a natural part of the process.”

Friday, January 21, 2011

3-TALK meeting

Tuesday, January 25th
7:00pm
St. John Lutheran Church (1004 Kailua Road)

District 3’s City Council Member, Ikaika Anderson, will be holding his 3-TALK meeting.  These meetings allow anyone to personally ask questions, comment, voice concerns, etc. to our own City Council Member.  Our community needs to continue to raise questions and concerns to Ikaika about Target!!!

Windward Oahu Town Hall meeting

Tuesday, January 25th
7:00pm - 8:30pm
Windward Community College - Hale 'Akoakoa 105

Senator Jill Tokuda, along with Representatives Pono Chong, Ken Ito and Chris Lee, will host a meeting.

This meeting will provide residents with an opportunity to share their thoughts and concerns about issues facing our community and talk about issues and legislation facing the 2011 legislative session.

Anyone with questions or requiring special assistance should contact Erin Conner at 587-7215.

KITV4-article

January 21, 2011

Kailua Puts On New Face
Changes, Renovations Under Way

By Dick Allgire KITV 4 News Reporter

Work is progressing quickly on the new complex that will be anchored by the Whole Foods store at the main intersection in downtown Kailua. Residents can now begin to see more of the form of the final building design and how it fits in with the town.

"We'll complete our work in May of this year. Whole Foods would love to be open by Thanksgiving,” said Kaneohe Ranch president Mitch D’Olier. Kaneohe Ranch is a major landowner and developer in Kailua.

Whole Foods will be big competition for Down To Earth, the vegetarian and health food store near the new Whole Foods complex. Down To Earth celebrated its renovation Wednesday. The store has wider aisles, more freezer space and the deli is expanded.

“We've been open here 10 years, so it's time to do it. Whole Foods is coming, and we want to make sure we put on a really good face,” said Down Earth Chief Financial officer Mark Fergusson.

The Kailua Don Quijote store will be closing soon. Nearby businesses were already packing up and leaving Wednesday. Some Kailua customers were sad to lose the wide variety offered at Don Qujiote.

“I'm really sorry that they are closing because they were so convenient, have a big selection. They have just everything, and things are cheaper than anywhere else,” said customer Hilda Sant.

An employee said the Kailua Don Quijote will close Feb. 5.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Star Advertiser-letter to editor

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Exploitation of Kailua is the American Dream

Just as Bruce Voss has "grown up and still lives in" Kailua, so have I ("Target: It's another Holiday Mart," Star-Advertiser, Letters, Jan. 12). In my opinion, Kailua was destroyed years ago, even before places like Pier 1, California Pizza Kitchen, Walgreens and Whole Foods moved in.

Unnecessary stores are coaxed by a real estate company into moving here to make money, which they do. These stores satisfy the throngs of mainland transplants who come to Kailua because it was marketed to them by this same real estate company. This town is being exploited and that is upsetting many Kailua residents, including myself.

I've contemplated moving to a less-populated town in Hawaii, like Kailua used to be, but it's probably no use because some corporation will end up exploiting it the same way, because that is the American Dream.
 
Justin McCoy
Kailua

Monday, January 10, 2011

Don Quijote VS Target

Taken from the targetkailua.com website, below is an image showing the size of the existing 88,000 sq. ft Don Quijote store superimposed over the proposed 130,00 sq. ft. Target store.


(click image to view larger)

Sign Waving

THIS SATURDAY
JANUARY 22nd
1:00pm-3:00pm
Hahani Road (sidewalk in front of Don Quijote)

This is the last month Don Quijote will be open in Kailua Town!  Although Don Quijote is closing, our community has to remember that the Target Kailua store is NOT a "DONE DEAL".

We continue to ask for your time, help and support in this effort!  Please join this effort doing what you can -- if not sign-waving -- by emailing, calling, writing letters, etc.

NOTE: Target will most likely be submitting their paperwork for a building permit in the upcoming months! GOOD NEWS: Target has not yet turned in their Traffic Study; although at the November Open House, Target told us otherwise!! It is important that we, community members, join together to push forward in this new year!


Past sign waving events in this month:

Saturday, January 15th
1:00pm - 3:00pm
Saturday, January 8th
1:00pm - 3:00pm

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Honolulu Weekly-article

January 5, 2011

Off Target
By

Target / Remember Mufi Hannemann’s now infamous “Compare-and-Decide” mailer? It became a turning point in the primary race for governor and a “what not to do” case study in public outreach. Frontrunner Hannemann wound up being labeled divisive, vindictive and “the most dangerous politician of our generation.” The former Honolulu mayor–and union-backed shoo-in–ended up a 22-point loser to Neil Abercrombie.

Hitting the Buzz Saw


Target “pretty much ran into a buzz saw here in Kailua,” said Puna Nam, president of the Kailua Chamber of Commerce.

Just as Mufi Hannemann did in the face of eroding poll numbers, Target and its would-be landlord, Kaneohe Ranch, down play the strength and breadth of the community’s opposition. Both Kaneohe Ranch’s CEO, Mitch Dolier, and Target spokeswoman Sarah Bakken say they believe the community outcry is “over” and “waning.”

Meanwhile, state Rep. Chris Lee (D-51st), whose district includes Lanikai and Waimanalo, reports that his office has been flooded by more than 1,000 calls and letters from opponents. State Rep. Cynthia Thielen (D-50th), who represents Kailua and Kaneohe Bay, says that, in her 20 years as a legislator, no issue has generated a larger or more unified outcry from constituents. Nearly 1,500 calls and letters have come into her office opposing the project, just two in favor. Thielen says she has “asked Target to consider the community’s concerns and downsize and redesign the building to fit better into Kailua.

“I’ve gotten no response to that request,” she says. “They have stonewalled me.”

Lee reports similar difficulties communicating with Target. It’s clear that Target does not expect to keep the store afloat on the 55,000 Kailua-resident base and wants to draw shoppers from elsewhere. “The community,” he says, “is frustrated by not being able to get answers from Kaneohe Ranch and Target about sale versus lease of the land [and] impact on traffic. And numbers [on car and shopper volume] from other stores are also not forthcoming.”

Even Target’s recent attempts at dialogue with the community have been ill-designed. Thielen dismisses Target’s Nov. 20 community meeting at Kailua Elementary as “not an open, give-and-take kind of forum.

“They had stations spread out with executives you could go over and talk to,” she says. “It was like a wedding. You know how you have a tempura station over here and a sushi station over there and a carving station… In this way, they protected themselves from having to take and answer questions from the group as a whole.”

Lee and Thielen’s frustration with Target’s evasive communications tactics is shared by community residents and groups, whose requests for information and outreaches have been rebuffed.

“The anger and animosity that is building because Target has failed to be a good-faith partner to the community is not good for their entry into Kailua,” Thielen says. “The community concerns are very valid,” she adds. “I think it is such a mistake for Target to not come out and work with the community in a more cooperative manner.”

Traffic and a store size that is out of character for the Kailua area are not the only concerns that need to be addressed, she says. Target should also recognize concerns that its big-box store will hurt Kailua’s small-business community. “Bragging they were a ‘one-stop shop’ sends the message that people will stop shopping elsewhere,” she says.

Cascade of Events


Here’s how things went off target.

At a Nov. 4 meeting, the Kailua Neighborhood Board (KNB) passes a motion stating that it “does not support the development of the proposed 130,000-square-foot Target store in Kailua, and recommends that neither county nor state governments give any permits because this proposed development does not conform to the Koolaupoko Sustainble Communities Plan.”

This board conveys its recommendation to the city and Mayor Peter Carlisle in a letter dated Nov. 9, asking also that the city support implementation of the KSCP’s vision and intentions.

Three days later, on Nov. 12, the Target side pours the compare-and-decide gasoline on the sparks of community resistance. A letter signed by Kaneohe Ranch’s legal counsel, William C. McCorriston, of McCorriston Miller Mukai MacKinnon LLP, addressed to KNB chairman Chuck Prentiss, claims the board’s “request is both illegal and improper.” Then he drops a bomb: a threat of litigation. If the KNB’s request is implemented, he asserts, “we will seek compensation and damages.”

Alarmed, Reps. Lee and Thielen, on Nov. 19, co-sign a letter to Dolier reminding him that the KNB is elected to represent the community’s views, but that its recommendations are purely advisory. The city has jurisdiction over land-use decisions, and, if Kaneohe Ranch wants to sue someone, it should look there.

“This letter has been seen by many as an attempt to intimidate or bully the members of the Kailua Neighborhood Board,” Lee and Thielen say. They caution Kaneohe Ranch that it is in the company’s best long-term interests to deal with the community in good faith, rather than using strong-arm tactics.

In a Nov. 24 response to Lee and Thielen, Dolier says “the KNB’s action was directive and not advisory.” When asked on Dec. 9 if, in hindsight, it was fair to portray a “recommendation” from a purely advisory body as an issue of legal liability, Dolier explains that, at the time McCorriston’s letter was written, the company did not have a copy of the resolution; its intent, he says, was to point out that the KSCP is not an enforceable zoning instrument.

An Early Warning Unheeded


Almost prophetically, on Sept. 14, weeks before McCorriston’s letter and Target’s evasive public relations tactics fan the fire of community opposition, the grand-niece of Louis Kalapawai (yes, the one for whom the beach and store are named) Mahoe, Malia Peters, a fifth-generation Kailua girl, wrote to Kaneohe Ranch, respectfully reminding Dolier of the Hawaiian concept of “Kinaole,” which she describes as “doing the right thing, in the right way, at the right time, in the right place, to the right person (or people), for the right reason, with the right feeling, the first time.

“Kinaole,” she wrote, “can still prevail for Kaneohe Ranch and we ask that you consider this as you proceed to think about the legacy your decisions will have on this community. Kailua No Ka ‘Oi!”

You have to wonder. If not for Compare and Decide, might things have turned out differently for Hannemann? What price will Target pay in the long run if it and its local allies persist in behaving with similar heavy-handedness and divisiveness? What if they had consulted the community and voluntarily conformed to the KSCP, proposing one of their more compact, 60,000- to 90,000-square-feet City Target stores?

Beyond coulda, woulda, shoulda, two things are certain: Target does not need any discretionary permits from the city to move forward. But its success will, eventually, depend on loyal customers.

On Aug. 4, 2010, Kaneohe Ranch announced, “a new Target store in Kailua not only makes good business sense, but will meet the needs and wants of the community by providing a one-stop-shop experience, featuring high-quality products at a great value. Additionally, we feel this Target store will drive positive, long-term vitality and economic development for Kailua.” Since then, Target’s plan for a 135,000-square-foot Kailua store on the site of the 96,000-square-foot Don Quixote has been in the cross hairs of increasingly determined community resistance.

 

Target’s Tardy Response


Honolulu Weekly waited for more than a week for Target officials to respond to our emails and phone calls regarding specific community concerns about the planned retail store in Kailua. At that point, Targets’ non-response became the central issue. Then, Target’s landlord and real estate broker “made strong appeals to me to paint Target in a good light,” says reporter Donna Ching, who told them that she had received no information from Target. Shortly before publication, Target Communications Manager Sarah Bakken emailed these points:

Q. Will the city get a copy of the traffic study Target conducted? If so, when? Will it be made available to the public?

A. The city will receive a copy of the traffic study by year-end. Everything submitted to the county is public record.

Q. What changes has Target made to Kailua store plans as a result of the traffic study?

A. At Target, we know traffic is a major concern and have taken great care to thoughtfully examine the situation in and around our store site by completing a traffic impact analysis report. Based on key findings from local traffic engineers who analyzed existing and projected conditions, taking into account traffic generated by both Target and Whole Foods, Target commits to:
·Reducing the number of driveways on Hahani Street from five to two.
·Installing a new traffic signal at Hahani and Hekili.
·Constructing new, dedicated turn lanes and an additional pedestrian crosswalk.
·Conducting a post-opening traffic study.

Q. How many visitors or car trips are needed to make the Kailua Target store viable? Is it part of the traffic study?

A. Traffic generated by the developments analyzed, which included the Ironwoods project and the new Whole Foods development, was estimated based on trip rates contained within the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE), Trip Generation, 8th Edition.

Q. What is the population of Kailua/Windward Oahu that Target used when considering building a store in Kailua?

A. Approximately 120,000 people. Essentially, this number is the combined population of Kailua, Kaneohe and Waimanalo.

Q. What Oahu communities does Target anticipate will shop at the Kailua store?

A. As stated above — Kailua, Kaneohe and Waimanalo.

Q. How often will trucks deliver to the Kailua Target store?

A. Target distribution center tractor-trailer trucks will deliver 90 percent of store merchandise: 5-7 per week, or approximately 1 per day. Local carrier and vendor short trucks, vans, or mail and parcel delivery trucks: 8-12 per day. Receiving dock hours for local carriers and vendors are 8:00 a.m. to Noon, Monday through Friday.

Q. Did Target look at other sites in Kailua?

A. We looked at a variety of locations on the Windward side, but there were no other sites that were viable or that we felt appropriate. The current site is the retail zoned site that can accommodate Target on the Windward side.

Q. There have been some misperceptions about the Target Kailua store. What facts are critical for local residents to know?

Don Quixote made an independent decision to close prior to Target acquiring leasehold interests in the property.

Target’s redevelopment of the property will not require any variances or discretionary permits to the zoning. Instead, reuse of an existing site takes advantage of current infrastructure without the addition of urban sprawl.

Our $40 million investment will revitalize already-developed land that has not seen improvement in years, as well enhance the quality of retail development in Kailua and be a positive catalyst for existing and new businesses.

The opening of Target in Kailua will create 250 permanent local jobs and approximately 250 temporary construction jobs.

In Kailua, we have designed a 130,000 square foot store that is significantly smaller than the typical Hawaii Target because we heard concerns from the community about building size. A new Target store in Kailua won’t change the use of the property. We’re simply replacing one discount general merchandise store with another while making a significant investment in the core downtown of Kailua. The Salt Lake store, which was a remodel of the old Costco in Salt Lake, is approximately 150,000 square feet, and the store in Kapolei is 160,000 square feet.

the WHOLE picture

This overall "community" master site plan (2005) was found on Kaneohe Ranch's website.  We decided to superimpose the proposed Kailua Target store's site plan rendering, to see the entire picture of what MAY happen to Kailua Town.

...it sure seems like a lot of OVER-development for our Kailua Town.

NOTE: With the construction of  Whole Foods, the opening of Hinano Way (adjacent to Longs Drugs) to Hekili St, the demolition of Pali Lanes & other structures to make way for Kaneohe Ranch's Hekili Street redevelopment, WHY has our City government NOT provided our community with a comprehensive T.I.A.R (Traffic Impact Analysis Report) of our town center, one dictated by the Community, not by the major landowner, Kaneohe Ranch, who fails to have our best interest at heart???  

Kailua is our "home" and should not be turned into a tourist shopping destination!

(click on image to view larger)

KITV4-article

This is a prime example of what happens when big mainland stores enter the neighborhood -- they push out locally owned stores!

Now think about the effects a Target store would have on Kailua Town!

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January 3, 2011


Struggling Pet's Discount Closes Half Its Stores

Kapahulu, Hawaii Kai, Kaneohe Stores Closing

HONOLULU -- Locally-owned pet store Pet’s Discount is closing three of its Oahu locations, hoping to keep its other three stores open in spite of being buffeted by the recession and competition from a mainland big box pet retailer.

At Pet's Discount warehouse store in Salt Lake, across from the Target store, there are plenty of cute animals, like golden retriever-husky mixed puppies for sale, along with birds, bunnies and fish.

But there aren't many customers these days. The store was virtually empty Monday evening, often with more employees than customers.

"They're friendly. And prices are competitive, and I don't want to give the business to the mainland people," said customer Laarnie Dukes, of Red Hill.

"We are locally owned and operated,” said Ricky Baker, Pet’s Discount’s chief operating officer. “We try to let our customers know that. The employees that work in our stores have family here. They've grown up here. And we're just asking for support from the local community to keep us around a little bit longer."

Pet's Discount closed its Kapahulu store at Market City last month, shut down its Hawaii Kai store Monday and will close its Kaneohe outlet next week.

"We're trying to consolidate our operations. For some time now, we've been struggling. I think our customers have known that. We're trying to keep our stores stocked for them and we cannot do that with the number of stores that we have," said Baker.

But its headquarters warehouse store in Salt Lake and its Waikele store will remain open. Its Waikele employees printed fliers they've put up in other Waikele stores, reminding potential customers they’re still open.

"So that people know, you know, hey we're still here. Come on out, come help us stay in business. Help us stay open," said Jennifer Chang, manager of the Waikele and Kaneohe stores.

Just three years ago, Pet's Discount said it went through three times as much inventory compared to today. Some of its stores' shelves are empty because the stores couldn't afford to buy inventory.

Baker blames the recession and competition from mainland retailer Petco, which opened stores in Pearl City and Kapolei since March of 2009.

"It's been a struggle, a struggle for cash flow to be able to keep the supplies coming in and as a result, we lose customers. And if we lose customers, then we don't have the cash flow to bring more supplies, so it's a vicious cycle," Baker said.

Baker said he may have to close the Waikele store in the next month or so as well if business doesn't pick up there soon.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Kailua Neighborhood Board Meeting

Thursday, January 6th
7:00pm

Kailua District Park (Multi-Purpose Building)
21 S. Kainalu Drive

We encourage you to attend this meeting!  We must continue to voice our concerns at these monthly meetings.  Add your name to the "Neighborhood Concerns" list, or email NB chair Chuck Prentiss: prentissc001@hawaii.rr.com

NOTE: Whole Foods will have a 10-minute presention at this meeting.