If Wednesday’s any indication, it’s going to be a long couple of months ’til the August primary.

The day started with Ben Cayetano standing in front of the Honolulu Fire Department a small group of retirees who as their candidate for mayor. He accused both the HFD and the local firefighters union of 鈥渄isrespect,鈥 鈥渋ntimidation鈥 and 鈥渂ullying.鈥

Next, the TV crews and reporters piled into an overloaded elevator and into a conference room where Fire Chief Kenneth Silva responded to Cayetano鈥檚 allegations by saying his department is 鈥渁political鈥 and doesn鈥檛 allow any group to use the facility for campaigning purposes.

But even before Cayetano spoke to the cameras, the Hawaii Fire Fighters Association announced its very own impromptu press conference to discredit Cayetano and the retirees鈥 endorsement of him. That notice was sent out three minutes before Cayetano鈥檚 presser began.

All in all, it was a busy morning following what will likely end up being a tiny blip in an otherwise contentious race. And to think, it all started with the endorsement by a small retiree organization that asks its members to pay an annual $5 fee for postage and envelopes.

The spat might not have played out so publicly if the retirees had endorsed Kirk Caldwell or current Mayor Peter Carlisle.

鈥淭hese guys have been endorsing for years and this is the first time this has happened,鈥 Cayetano said with a small chuckle. 鈥淚 guess they endorsed the wrong guy.鈥

The Honolulu Fire Department Retirees Association has previously endorsed current U.S. Senate hopeful Linda Lingle, retiring U.S Sen. Dan Akaka, and Duke Bainum, a former Honolulu City Council member who unsuccessfully ran for mayor in 2004.

While the endorsement of Cayetano seems to have brought the most vociferous reaction, both Silva and HFFA President Robert Lee said they have spoken with HFD Retirees Association President Donald Chang about his group鈥檚 endorsements in the past.

In fact, after the retirees association endorsed Lingle in February Silva sent a letter to Chang telling him he wouldn鈥檛 allow 鈥減olitically oriented organizations to utilize HFD property.鈥 This meant the association could no longer use the department鈥檚 facilities to hold meetings. It also couldn鈥檛 have its mail delivered there.

Lee said he also contacted Chang after the Lingle endorsement. But when the retirees association endorsed Cayetano, Lee said he felt the need to send an official letter asking Chang to withdraw the endorsement by June 4. Lee notes that the retirees association鈥檚 bylaws and constitution doesn鈥檛 allow it to endorse candidates. He also said that as a 501(c)3 nonprofit, the retirees association violates federal tax code whenever it endorses a candidate.

鈥淲e鈥檝e dealt with this issue in the past and mostly because they are a retirees group we鈥檝e basically tried to deal with them with respect. They did come from us and they are our retirees,鈥 Lee said. 鈥淭he ultimate goal is to try to get them to do what they鈥檙e supposed to do and not do what you鈥檙e not supposed to do. With any organization or association there are rules to follow and you should follow your own rules. And any information you put out there should be as accurate as possible and not mislead the public.鈥

To set the record straight, the HFFA developed a 鈥渕edia packet鈥 for its Wednesday press conference. In it was a timeline of events as well as a table to contents that included HFFA letters to its member for why it endorsed former Honolulu managing director Kirk Caldwell for mayor and why it did not endorse Cayetano.

Lee admits that the entire situation might not have 鈥渆scalated to this point鈥 if the retiree association鈥檚 endorsement was for Caldwell or current Mayor Peter Carlisle. Part of the reason for this has to do with long-standing friction between Cayetano and Hawaii鈥檚 labor organizations.

Chang, however, sees it differently. It鈥檚 all politically motivated, he said, and nothing more than 鈥渁 game of name-calling.鈥

鈥淭hey鈥檙e such a big organization. They鈥檙e big money people,鈥 Chang said of the HFFA and its nearly 3,000 members, one-third of whom are retired. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have the money they have. We don鈥檛 have the resources they have. All we have is our vote.鈥

He said he鈥檚 uncertain whether his association鈥檚 nonprofit status is sideways of federal tax code, although he claims it鈥檚 not. To him, it doesn’t matter. All the noise comes down to a single issue.

鈥淲e told them we have freedom of speech,鈥 Chang said. 鈥淵ou endorse who you want. We endorse who we want.鈥

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