Neil Abercrombie was beaming.
It was Aug. 19, 2010, and the Democratic candidate for governor was addressing the Honolulu media at his Ward Warehouse campaign headquarters.
In his hands was a pamphlet with a lush taro field, green mountain range and blue sky pictured on the听cover.听It was a comprehensive听plan, Abercrombie said, to solve Hawaii鈥檚 problems.
“This is a culmination, a road map, of almost 18 months of talking with communities all across the state 鈥 a bottom-up endeavor,鈥 Abercrombie said that day. “We have had dozens of meetings and conversations, with experts of every range.”
The candidate continued: “This is not a project list 鈥 it鈥檚 all here, a crystal-clear choice as we go into the last 30 days to the primary.”
Not much has been said of the plan this year as the governor has sought re-election. But as recently as last September, he told attendees at an Asia-Pacific clean energy conference how his administration had made progress on his New Day promise of big changes in renewable energy.
Referring to the plan’s own subtitle, the governor called it听a听foundation听to invest in education, rebuild the economy,听sustain Hawaii听for future听generations听and restore public听confidence in government.
“We put it in writing because we wanted to be held accountable,” he said at the conference.
So, how did Abercrombie’s New Day Plan pan out?
What the Plan Called For
It would be unreasonable to hold the governor accountable for every word in the听43-page听听plan as well as the follow-up called the听, which came out in October 2010 in advance of the general election that year.
Indeed, in听his foreword to the plan, Abercrombie acknowledged听that听it听did not cover “every aspect of governance.” He also said his administration would “continually refine and improve our plans.”
Still, in many ways the plan adheres closely to what became top听priorities of the administration that was sworn in almost听four years ago: Education (early, lower and higher), energy (including sustainability) and health care (including care for seniors) are the dominant听issues. Others include housing, small business and technology.
Some of these听same issues are cited often by voters as priorities. As the governor听explained, the plan was formed with the input of people across the state.
The New Day plan, however, is less of a “plan” and more of a policy statement and vision.
Much of the text is comprised of statements that are broad and difficult to disagree with, such as: “Every aspect of our lives is intertwined with the natural resource听of our islands. Our survival is literally dependent听on proper听stewardship.”
That said, some promises were kept.
For example, Abercrombie said听he would听not increase the general excise tax (he didn’t), and he wanted to incorporate the superintendent听of schools into his Cabinet (he did) and make early learning and听expansion of health care a priority (GG Weisenfeld and听Beth Giesting, respectively,听head those initiatives as part of the governor’s office). He has also helped form an intergovernmental approach to homelessness, as he said he would.
The governor appointed a chief information officer of the state, helped resolve “long-standing controversies” for Native Hawaiians (e.g., the administration secured a deal with the Office of Hawaiian Affairs to settle past-due ceded-land payments) and he arguably employed “a firm and consistent approach to criminal justice” through the Justice Reinvestment Initiative听that aims to reduce prison time, return prisoners听incarcerated in Arizona and save costs.
Much of the New Day text is comprised of statements that are very broad and difficult to disagree with.
The New Day Plan said it would “protect the human and civil rights of all, regardless of categories.” There is no better example of that pledge being met than the enactment of same-sex marriage in Hawaii last year. (The plan did not mention marriage but rather听civil unions, which the governor signed into law in 2011.)
Other promises were not kept.
For example, an “independent Hawaii Energy Authority” was not created. (More on that later.) Nor is there a “Governor’s Technology Council.” And Abercrombie is not still advocating for passage of the Akaka Bill in Congress that would have established federal recognition of Native Hawaiians. Sen. Dan Akaka retired in 2012 and Sen. Dan Inouye passed away that year, effectively killing the legislation, although recognition听may still come through the executive branch.
Abercrombie also said, “We will build secure prison facilities in Hawaii on the basis of cost-effectiveness, safety and benefits to the community, and we will maintain the highest standards for corrections staff as represented in current collective bargaining agreements.”
While Kulani prison on the Big Island was reopened听this summer, and while the Department of Public Safety is seeking input from potential developers of new prisons, this is still a work in progress.听Meanwhile, there have been repeated problems with inmate suicides and escapes, and correctional officers smuggling contraband and taking so many days off that visitation hours get canceled.
And, Abercrombie said he wanted to “decentralize school administration” and “entrust principals with control of programs and听budgets.” David Ige, the state senator who is challenging the governor in the Democratic primary, said the opposite happened. The governor also spent much of the early part of his administration dealing with the protracted collective bargaining standoff with the Hawaii State Teachers Union, something that angered other unions.
Other proposals are difficult听to assess.
Did Abercrombie, for instance, “prepare for the impacts of climate change”? Did he “raise the demand for local food”? Did he “align the electric utility’s success with Hawaii’s clean energy goals”? The administration has worked听toward these goals, but they are far from met.
There are also things absent from the New Day Plan that would become major issues in the administration, things that arguably could not have been predicted. There is no mention of increasing the minimum wage or protecting Turtle Bay, two accomplishments for which Abercrombie deserves some credit. You will also not find the word “Kakaako” in the plan, though听the governor has successfully pushed for its development, to the consternation of some.
What Happened to the Plan
As with any plan, it had to confront reality.
The New Day Plan ran into trouble during the administration’s first two weeks in office. Abercrombie held a press conference to announce that听the state faced an $844 million budget shortfall over the next two fiscal years. The governor听characterized the shortfall as a “giant sinkhole.”
That put a serious crimp on the New Day Plan,听which would require unspecified amounts of funding for new programs.听Asked where new revenue would come from, the governor said that it would come from 鈥渞etooling,鈥 鈥渞econfiguring鈥 and 鈥渞estructuring鈥 the budget.
Despite the fiscal听challenges, the听governor did not听abandon his vision. Indeed, he听used the words “new day” nine times in his first state-of-the-state address in January听2011.
“This new day begins with an honest account of the state of our government,” he explained, referring to the budget shortfall.
He called for New Day Work Projects that would听use the听bonding power of the state to “partner with willing private parties, streamline processes, and provide work that will result in paychecks for families across our islands.” The projects would include capital improvement plans for the University of Hawaii system.
After surviving a rough first session with the Hawaii Legislature, where the governor saw many of his ideas die, the governor held a press conference in听August 2011 that served as听a status report on the New Day.听(The front row guests at Washington Place included state听Sen. Ige.)
It was a sober affair.
Abercrombie said that, despite having closed a $214 million deficit for fiscal year 2011, the state still faced serious budget challenges. The “threatening storms,” as he described them, included unfunded liabilities from employee retirement funds and medical benefits, rising health-care costs, over-dependence on imported energy and food and large听program cuts from Washington.
鈥淲e put it in writing because we wanted to be held accountable.” 鈥 Gov. Neil Abercrombie
His听new plan listed听steps for moving the state听forward, including identifying 鈥渉igh value鈥 projects for the newly created Public Lands Development Corporation and putting together a plan to bring prisoners back from the mainland with the help of the Justice Reinvestment Initiative.
With the help of the Legislature听and criminal justice system leaders, JRI has been a success for the governor. 听The PLDC, however, was repealed after fierce community opposition.
The New Day Plan has not disappeared, but it is no longer at the forefront. In his , the governor evoked the phrase “new day” again听鈥 but just once.
He said, “When I entered office, we issued a call for a New Day in Hawaii. We presented and implemented a plan that has guided this administration and our state over the last three years through difficult times. We faced hard choices and had to make tough decisions. I am grateful for the Legislature鈥檚 collaboration as we navigated through troubled waters. The question before us then, is 鈥 what direction shall we now set our sights?”
The governor’s speech focused on the state’s fiscal picture, early childhood education, homelessness, the minimum wage, prisons, Turtle Bay, kupuna care, sustainability听and invasive species.听Those issues are now part of the gubernatorial election discourse.
Speaking of the campaign, Abercrombie’s two opponents in 2010 had plans, too, but they were far shorter.
搁别辫耻产濒颈肠补苍听Duke Aiona听released a campaign brochure just听seven pages in length.听鈥淎 Policy Agenda for Hawaii: Jobs and the Economy鈥澨齠ocused on helping听small businesses听create jobs by听streamlining the permitting and licensing process and creating 鈥渁 competitive tax system.鈥
Democrat Mufi听Hannemann’s issue papers were comparatively modest in size as well. His听听had only 10 points, including听鈥淢ove Forward on Rail. Remove the roadblock in the Governor鈥檚 office, get our construction industry working, and build a 21st century transit system.鈥
Aiona will likely be the GOP nominee again this fall, 听joined on the ballot by Hannemann, who now represents the Hawaii Independent Party. A three-way contest听will ensue with either Abercrombie or Ige.
What Abercrombie Says About听the Plan
It is easy to cherry-pick Abercrombie’s New Day Plan. What does the governor himself think about how things turned out?
In an email through a campaign spokesman Friday, Abercrombie said, “I’m proud of the achievements and progress our Administration has made on delivering significant promises and goals in the New Day Plan to benefit Hawaii and its people.”
The governor reiterated the plan’s major themes and steps and then listed what he sees as specific accomplishments:
- “We have secured additional preschool funding, placed a constitutional amendment question on the ballot to allow public-private networks of quality learning, seen increased test scores in 4th and 8th grade (National Assessment of Educational Progress)听scores, have more students taking (Advanced Placement)听college prep courses and more students going to college, and a successful digital curriculum program.”
- “We have strengthened our economy by investing nearly $3 billion in infrastructure investment that kept residents employed, maintained and achieved one of the lowest unemployment rates in the nation, maintained our strong tourism market share and achieved a $1 billion turnaround in our state finances.”
- “The state has increased its renewable energy use to go beyond the timeline and goals under the Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative, protected our watersheds and forestry areas with our ‘Rain Follows the Forest’ initiative, protected lands near the Turtle Bay resort on Oahu and Lipoa Point on Maui in perpetuity, improved and increased funding for invasive species and actively planned in preparation for climate changes that will affect our islands.”
As for the promise of “restoring public confidence,” Abercrombie said his administration had “eliminated furloughs, negotiated fair contracts with our employees, most for multiple years to ensure that we don鈥檛 have any disruption of critical government services, and restored essential services that were cut or eliminated during the recession.”
“Our administration was guided by the New Day Plan, which helped our team formulate initiatives and focus on necessary priorities.” 鈥 Gov. Neil Abercrombie
He concluded: “Our residents can now be assured that our state government is running on sound fiscal management that will live within its means, be able to pay its debts and liabilities, save where we can by putting funds in reserves, and continue to have a positive fiscal balance.”
This argument, of course, is the key platform of the governor’s re-election bid.听
But he also acknowledged that his administration fell short in some areas of the plan.
“While we have made progress on increasing our local food production, it remains an area for which we would have liked to have seen more results,” he said, adding that the state is “building a foundation” to invest听in irrigation systems, protect important agricultural land and increase loans to farmers.
The governor also defended what he sees as progress toward energy independence.
“There appears to be some misplaced understanding about the goal of establishing an independent Hawaii Energy Authority as a promise unfulfilled,” he said. “In fact, in 2011, we passed Act 166 which established the Hawaii Energy Reliability Authority (HERA) as an attached body to the Public Utilities Commission with the authority to development and enforce reliability standards. HERA is just a different name than the independent Hawaii Energy Authority, but its functions, power and purpose are the same.”
The governor is referring to , whose purpose is to听“ensure the stability and reliability of the state’s power grid,” from Ige’s Ways and Means committee approving the measure.
The act, which听came from legislation submitted by the administration, authorized the Public Utilities Commission to听“develop, adopt, and enforce reliability standards and interconnection requirements” and contract for “the performance of related duties with a party that will serve as the Hawaii electricity reliability administrator.” (Italics added for emphasis.)
The听Hawaii Electricity Reliability Administrator, or HERA, is something .
Act 166听explains that听HERA should have听“an appropriate level of independence to fairly and impartially review matters concerning interconnection to the Hawaii electric system听…听including independence of the entity from any electric utility, any user, owner, or operator of the Hawaii electric system, or any other person, business, or entity connecting to the Hawaii electric system.”
Is HERA the same thing as HEA (for Hawaii Energy Authority), the acronym used in the New Day Plan? At least one energy policy听expert says no.
Henry Curtis, executive听director of the nonprofit advocacy group 听who听,听told Civil Beat Sunday that the “electricity reliability听administrator” 鈥 or HERA 鈥 is “fundamentally different” than the “Hawaii Energy Authority” the governor had sought.
What Others听Say About听the Plan
The key platform for David Ige’s candidacy is that the citizens’ trust in the governorship 鈥 public confidence, in other word 鈥 has听eroded听under Abercrombie and must be restored. He said he hears it over and over when he meets with constituents across the state.
Ige also argues that the state Legislature deserves a lot of credit, too, for sound听fiscal management. He has repeatedly pointed out that lawmakers had to trim Abercrombie’s budget requests by hundreds of millions of dollars over the past four years.
For his part, Ige said he looked through the New Day Plan听four years ago but had not checked it out recently.
“I do know听when I looked at it听a year ago, it just seems听like they forgot听about the plan,” he said. “When you look through听it, they talked about听doing a lot of different things. I am kind of听curious as to what they would say now. If you听just scan it, most of the things seem like they haven’t even been started. I am not sure which听ones they think they made听significant progress on.”
Ige singled out the plan’s call for self-sufficiency and self-reliance regarding energy and food production for criticism.
“He promoted it, and he said, ‘Elect me and I will do this.'” 鈥 State Sen. David Ige, referring to Abercrombie
“If you use the metric, I don’t听think there has been any progress,” Ige said.听“Growing our own food, producing our听own energy. … There has been听some听progress in producing听energy, but that really听is about听the solar panel tax credits.”
(To read about Ige’s own plans, . The candidate听said his campaign is working to issue new proposals before the Aug. 9 primary.)
Should the governor be held accountable for his plan?
“He promoted it, and he said ‘Elect me and I will do this,'” Ige replied. “I suppose that’s why I am careful about my own promises, because I intend to keep them. That’s always been the way I operate. Sometimes people criticize me for not being willing to make promises that I cannot keep.”
Ben Cayetano agrees Abercrombie should be held accountable for his plans.听The former governor,听who used to be very close to Abercrombie, is now supporting Ige.
“I gave it a look,” Cayetano said of the New Day Plan. “I thought听it was a lot of lofty things听he wanted to do, like听sustainability and things like that. But one reason why I am not supporting him is that the policies听that he actually听developed and followed听went counter听to some of that.”
Cayetano provided an example: “When we talk about preserving听agricultural land so we can develop sustainability听in food production, and then you go and do things like听support听development听of Koa听Ridge and Hoopili (on Oahu), that’s not productive.”
Cayetano had a plan for his administration, too. He said some things worked out, like his proposal to cut the personal income tax rate. He built public schools and renovated classrooms. And he saw to it that the University of Hawaii’s medical school was built in Kakaako.
“I听think anybody running听for office ought to听have some vision听of what they would听like to see happen.” 鈥 former Gov. John Waihee
But he said another big idea 鈥 making听Hawaii听the听premier health care听center of the Pacific, on par with the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota or the MD Anderson Cancer Center听in Texas听鈥 didn’t happen.
“In fairness to him, my accomplishments听are from听eight years,” said Cayetano, who served from 1994 to 2002. “The first four years听of my term were听really rough. The economy听was at its worst ever, there were foreclosures and听bankruptcies.听What he inherited wasn’t even close.”
Another former governor, John Waihee, thinks Abercrombie听deserves four more years. And he has good things to say about听the New Day Plan.
“I听think anybody running听for office ought to听have some vision听of what they would听like to see happen,” he said. “The New Day Plan was a statement of that vision for the governor.”
Waihee, too, had a plan when he ran for his first term in 1986. But he said his plans were far more developed when he sought re-election in 1990.
“It’s because听we were听building on what was done in the first term,” he said. “The governor听is doing that now. His plans are a sort of projection听of what you want to see, and then they actually get modified. The governor,听for example,听has a plan for听early听childhood听education听that he is putting forth in his re-election, yet it was developed earlier. It听evolves.”
Waihee said circumstances听don’t always听meet projections. And he agrees voters should hold Abercrombie accountable.
“But voters know that the plans are a vision, and what they听really听ought to be holding the governor听accountable听for is how well he keeps articulating and moving听in direction of the plan,” Waihee said. “The听plans are never听written in concrete. What they really听are is a guide to what a candidate wants to accomplish听later on, and the plan shows听how far we got and what more needs to be done.”
Waihee concluded, “It’s about describing听a better future. And if voters听agree, they ought to vote for it.”
Abercrombie, obviously, hopes people will vote for him and his ideas.
“There are areas of substantial achievement and success,” the governor said of his plan. “We have also made progress in areas but not yet realized the goals we set forth for the people of Hawaii. If I鈥檓 fortunate enough to get re-elected, the concepts within the plan will remain an important part of our agenda.”听
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About the Author
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .