If you want to know what a veteran union lobbyist and ally of Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie really thinks of the state of things in Hawaii, read on.

On Saturday, , who’s been representing the University of Hawaii Professional Assembly at the Hawaii Legislature since 1988, to faculty behind closed doors.

Civil Beat obtained a copy of his remarks, which are published below in their entirety. Let’s just say Radcliffe didn’t hold back. A few key insights:

  • “I am tracking 143 bills for you right now. Half of them are ‘take aways.’ I expect we鈥檒l defeat all of them. You also want me to get you more money. I won鈥檛. In fact, we will be damn lucky to keep what we had.”

  • “The Legislature is beginning its second quarter out of four, with no direction and no plan.”

  • “The Governor鈥檚 100th day in office is today. How鈥檚 that working out for him 鈥 and for us 鈥 do you think? Not so hot, sez I. If we are all in a canoe, it is the damndest one I ever saw. Looks more like the closed hold of a sinking ship to me.”

  • “We have become a goddamned cargo cult. We think that the great god 鈥淲ashington鈥 has money, and when we send our chief up there, that Washington is going to rain money down on us. Are you crazy? The nation is broke.”

When contacted about the speech Sunday, Radcliffe, said the audience “loved” it.

“I’m an entertaining guy and I give entertaining speeches,” he told Civil Beat.

Radcliffe was a member of Abercrombie’s transition team, helping review Cabinet picks. He’s sympathetic to the governor in his remarks, comparing him favorably with governors on the mainland and crediting him for trying to address the financial problems facing the state. But he paints a bleak picture of the state of government in Hawaii.

The following is the text of his speech.

Speech to UHPA Sat. Feb. 12

I am here to cheer you up. Happy Valentine鈥檚 Day!

I am tracking 143 bills for you right now. Half of them are 鈥渢ake aways.鈥 I expect we鈥檒l defeat all of them. You also want me to get you more money. I won鈥檛. In fact, we will be damn lucky to keep what we had.

BUT

How long have I been telling you that the revenues to pay for government are inadequate to pay the cost of government?

Ten years?

It has been at least ten years. Ten years, I think. In that time, the economy has gone down, up, and down鈥攂ut each down has been deeper and has taken a toll, and each up has not been enough to restore funding levels鈥s a result government has suffered鈥 It is now a Potemkin Village 鈥 a shabby Potemkin Village.

The carpeting in the Governor鈥檚 office has not been replaced in I don鈥檛 know 鈥 10-15 years? The lights don鈥檛 all work. The air conditioning is stuck at 60. The offices of other departments are often in much worse shape. There are gaping holes in some of the ceilings 鈥 By the way, to save money, the air conditioning in all government offices is shut off at 4:30 PM, and of course on all weekends鈥 and on furlough days. But because people need to work, because they are so shorthanded 鈥 they work without the air conditioning 鈥 And it is pretty clear that the state has not had enough money to buy air conditioning filters for years 鈥 so most government buildings are full of mold and virus鈥攁nd the workers who are left are sick workers.

In terms of manpower, all 16 departments 鈥 not counting DOE and UH, are between 60% and 40% undermanned.

Dozens of government programs are gone 鈥 teen pregnancy, job training, youth programs in general, etc. all gone鈥.Gone. What are left are food stamps, employment training for adults, some programs for the disabled鈥攃hild and protective services 鈥 the youth jail鈥 Those things for which our government is under court order to provide 鈥 things like that. We cannot adequately enforce our laws on food safety, occupational safety, and etc. The questions of the public go unanswered for lack of manpower to answer phones.

The Governor wants to bring our felons back and build new prisons here鈥ot likely. Not soon.

By the way, some of these social service agencies have been coming to me to hire me 鈥 to help them regain their state funding鈥 and I am refusing to work for them. It would be taking money under false pretenses. They are done. Toast. Over with. Get it? People out of jobs. Kids out of programs. It is gone. Gone.

Government is a business that enforces laws, provides social services, and shuffles paper鈥 and that is not being done adequately any more.

There is no legislative stomach for increasing taxes either. The soda tax, liquor tax, tobacco tax, pension tax, plastic bag tax, are probably all going to die. Raising the GE Tax is possible 鈥 but improbable 鈥 but as a last resort 鈥 it will happen.

One of the current moves to 鈥渂alance the budget,鈥 is SB 120鈥 which raids all the special funds鈥.and puts them into the General Fund. This is like ending earmarks 鈥 and makes as much sense. It just takes money from the hands of this government staffer in an executive department, and let鈥檚 that government staffer, a legislative staffer, decide where to spend money. Forty per cent of the UH Budget is in special funds 鈥 but by comparison鈥 78% of the Department of Agriculture鈥檚 funds are鈥 There are dozens and hundreds of such funds in all departments. It is nuts. It will fail.

Taking the Medicare Part 鈥淏鈥 money from current retirees is also a non-starter. Taxing pensions will fail鈥攕ez I.

Yesterday, on his 99th day in office, he was not booed 鈥 but Neil was roundly condemned by government retirees and government workers in the sort of words that you all know have never crossed my own lips鈥..But he was battling. He was leading. He was down there fighting. He was trying. You and the other public employee groups did not agree with him 鈥 and 鈥 truth to tell 鈥 I told him from the get go that he cannot do this 鈥 it ain鈥檛 legal鈥ut he is doing what he said he would do. And let me pause here and say this:

This Governor is the most liberal, and I say with the sweetest of ironies, the most like you, of all we have ever had. His government is filled with UH people and it is an administration that truly respects and admires you 鈥 but he has choices to make and so do you. Now in New Jersey, we have a fat, mean, loudmouthed, Republican, bully using public employees, and especially teachers 鈥 as ragdoll punching bags, as he gleefully tries to beat public unions to death鈥.Our guy wants your support, and you won鈥檛 give it. OK鈥

But notice the difference in approach 鈥 OK?

Gambling, the only money making idea out there, will likely fail for the 11th year. My bill will create 14,000 new private sector, tax paying jobs 鈥 and raise $143 million a year in taxes each year 鈥 but it will change the ambiance of Hawaii鈥..Oh, God, no! Not that. Can鈥檛 have it. We鈥檇 rather see pregnant teenagers commit suicide by the carload, or see rats the size of cats in our restaurants, than change our precious ambiance.

Like poverty doesn鈥檛 change our ambiance.

Like creating a permanent underclass isn鈥檛 going to change our ambiance.

You can keep your ambiance. Our people need jobs.

Some of you say no to gambling, but you want to legalize marijuana cultivation and sale. There is not much difference in my view. Both activities are illegal now, and both activities, if legal, would provide jobs and benefit Hawaii, in that they are going on now anyway, and regulation and taxation would grow the economy. Well they are different this way: a casino is much more labor intensive.

When he came into office, Neil said that he wanted to cut unemployment in half 鈥 and it was, what 鈥 seven, eight percent? The Star-Advertiser put unemployment and underemployment at 16.7% last week鈥.and the legislature is trying to pass legislation to stop non-judicial foreclosures..because they see folks are going to lose their homes. The average credit card holder in Hawaii 鈥 is over $8,000 in debt per credit card.

But we are not all in the same canoe?

It鈥檚 not me, it鈥檚 you?

I鈥檓 OK, you have problems?

Is that the way you see it?

Neil is trying to build things. To get construction going again. But thousands of construction workers are on the bench. Why? Government, even with leaders who want to move, just can鈥檛 move fast. Permits and meetings and then there are the environmentalists with their concerns and the Hawaiians with theirs 鈥 and time drifts on and funding goes elsewhere 鈥 and nothing gets done.

The Legislature is beginning its second quarter out of four, with no direction and no plan. The Governor鈥檚 100th day in office 鈥 is today. How鈥檚 that working out for him 鈥 and for us 鈥 do you think? Not so hot, sez I. If we are all in a canoe, it is the damndest one I ever saw.

Looks more like the closed hold of a sinking ship to me.

So what鈥檚 a poor Governor to do now? Easy. Simple.

Road trip.

He鈥檚 going to Washington to 鈥済et money鈥 from the Feds. Yep. Look at me. Listen. We have become a goddamned cargo cult. We think that the great god 鈥淲ashington鈥 has money, and when we send our chief up there, that Washington is going to rain money down on us. Are you crazy? The nation is broke, and Hawaii is a tiny, eentsy bitsy row of dots afloat far away on a distant ocean. There ain鈥檛 no more Washington money. Dan Inouye is not Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy. The game is up. I told you and I told you and I told you. About the economy. About the ERS. About the EUTF. About all of it..and now the day has come 鈥 and after ten years you are not ready.

Did I cheer you up? Are you happy?

Is it still someone else鈥檚 problem?

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