:

A Honolulu City Council committee has advanced a resolution that asks the city to address the gross sewage smell in Kakaako near downtown Honolulu.听
The committee adopted Councilman Stanley Chang鈥檚 version of the resolution on Wednesday.听The measure asks the city to identify the sewer problem and submit reports with recommendations for fixing it on Jan. 31 and March 31 next year.听
But the version that passed lacked some of the more stringent language initially suggested and emphasizes fixing the problem near intersections, rather than residences.
颁辞耻苍肠颈濒飞辞尘补苍听Ann Kobayashi and Councilwoman Carol Fukunaga had wanted a聽report from the city by the end of this year.
But Lori Kahikina, director of the city鈥檚 Dept. of Environmental Services,聽argued against the Dec. 31 deadline, saying that the problem is too complex.
“We don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 realistic that we鈥檒l have something concrete next month,” she said. “We don鈥檛 want to shoot ourselves in the foot.”
Kahikina said that the department still doesn鈥檛 know the cause of the sewer problems that plague the area.听
The city said that delays in infrastructure projects along Auahi St. are preventing them from resolving the Kakaako issue sooner.
Kobayashi said that she had wanted the city stop issuing conditional permits for new developments in Kakaako until the sewer issue is fixed, but the idea didn鈥檛 garner enough support among council members.
There are a slew of new developments 鈥 including a 46-story tower 鈥 slated for Kakaako, prompting concern from residents about the long-standing infrastructure problems.
Richard Baker, a resident of Chang鈥檚 district in Hawaii Kai, criticized the councilman鈥檚 draft, saying it 鈥渢akes the pressure off聽the city to really do something about this problem.鈥
Chang said that he thinks the resolution is a great step forward toward fixing the issue.
image

Courtesy of Honolulu City Council

鈥斅Anita Hofschneider

Support Independent, Unbiased News

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.