The Hawaii聽Environmental Council鈥檚 annual strategic planning meeting on Thursday started with weighty discussions of two major problems confronting the state: climate change and invasive species.

Scientists are warning that climate change may result in rising seas and drought across the Hawaiian islands, and fallen albizia trees in Puna last weekend illustrated the unintended consequences of invasive plants.

But by the end of a聽full day of discussions,聽it was clear that the cash-strapped state board has few resources with which to address those issues and is unsure whether it can expect any relief next legislative session.

Budget cuts have hampered the 15-member council’s ability to meet its mission, which includes聽reviewing and commenting on environmental impact statements and聽establishing the rules for the environmental review process.

Albizia trees are largely to blame for blocked roads and downed power lines after Tropical Storm Iselle hit the Big Island. The Environmental Council wants to do more to address this invasive species.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

The council serves as a liaison between the public and聽, now under the directorship of Jessica Wooley, a former state representative.

“We’ve been operating somewhat dysfunctionally for a very long time because we haven’t had the resources,” said Wooley, an ex-officio member of the council.

The office had聽11 people at the end of Gov. Ben Cayetano’s administration, she said, but now has five at best.

Wooley wants to change that. She’s pushing for the Environmental Council to have a separate budget from OEQC so that the council can at least have its own secretary. As it stands, the council chair, Mark Ambler, stays up late some nights typing up meeting minutes because there鈥檚 no one else to do it.

On Thursday, Wooley proposed a budget of roughly聽$80,000 for the council for fiscal year 2016, including $40,000 for a secretary, $23,000 for expenses and the rest for equipment.

Councilwoman Marjorie Ziegler argued that the council鈥檚 budget proposal should be more ambitious and that the board members should push for more.

鈥淭his is coffee money,鈥 Ziegler said. 鈥淲e need to start thinking like advocates and activists and not government agencies who will just roll over and not do anything because we can’t get $20,000.鈥

Wooley agreed that more money is needed but cautioned that even requesting a separate budget for the council is ambitious.

鈥淭hat’s not just moving a mountain, that’s like moving a planet,鈥 she said.

She said in the few months that she鈥檚 served as OEQC director, she鈥檚 been shocked at the disconnect between the organization鈥檚 mission and its resources.

鈥淓verything that I’m seeing since I started this job is crazy,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t’s insane what the staff is expected to do. Our budget is about $50,000 for our staff… May I remind you that the marketing budget for the Hawaii Tourism Authority is about $60 million?鈥

Jessica Wooley on March 7, 2014.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

Wooley also plans to ask聽the Legislature to remove OEQC from the control of the Department of Health, citing the mismatched goals of the organizations.

She was trying to get Internet connectivity in the office, but faced weeks of bureaucratic barriers because of DOH鈥檚 rules regarding privacy.

鈥淵ou and OEQC are stuck under a rock in DOH and it doesn’t fit,鈥 she told council members.

Multiple Responsibilities

Regardless of whether聽the funding materializes, Ambler聽wants the board to be more active at the Legislature and come up with ways to make the most of the upcoming International Union for Conservation of Nature World Conservation Conference, which Hawaii is hosting in 2016. It’s been likened to the Olympics of conservation and marks聽the first time the conference will be held in the United States.

He also wants the council to increase its public outreach. It is supposed to serve as a public liaison, but few people know it exists.

Ambler hopes to add video conferencing to allow people on the neighbor islands to watch the meetings. Another goal is to increase the organization鈥檚 number of Facebook likes from 230 to 300. (Vice Chair Scott Glenn suggested 400, but Ambler said he didn鈥檛 know if that was realistic.)

Ziegler said part of the problem is that people think invasive species are a fringe issue that environmentalists worry about. She is concerned that the public fails to see how it鈥檚 also a huge economic issue.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a shame that so little attention is given to invasive species,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need to do more.鈥

But it鈥檚 tough for the all-volunteer board to juggle聽all its聽responsibilities, which include updating the list of state projects receiving exemptions from environmental rules and coming up with ways to update the environmental rules.

A Need for Political Allies

Hawaii鈥檚 changing political landscape is casting a shadow of uncertainty over the council鈥檚 work.

鈥淭here’s things up in the air now that we won’t know until November,鈥 Glenn said.

The council has been working for years to revise the environmental rules under Chapter 343, but Glenn is not sure whether the next governor 鈥 state Sen. David Ige, former Lt. Gov. Duke Aiona or former Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann 鈥 will support the revisions.

Glenn聽has good cause for concern聽after former Republican Gov. Linda Lingle didn鈥檛 agree to the revised rules the council proposed during her administration.

Despite the uncertainty, Wooley said, the council needs to move forward with drafting new rules because they are outdated and leave the state vulnerable to lawsuits.

鈥淭here’s no reason for us to be operating under such ambiguous, unclear rules,鈥 she聽said. 鈥淚 don’t think we should hesitate to push for rule revision regardless of who’s in office.鈥

It鈥檚 also unclear how much support the council will receive at the Legislature next year.

Next year鈥檚 Legislature will be missing two key senators who helped secure millions of dollars to address invasive species this year: Ige, who chaired the Senate Ways and Means Committee, and Judiciary Committee Chair Clayton Hee.

But Rep. Chris Lee and Sen. Mike Gabbard, who chair the House and Senate committees for the environment and attended Thursday鈥檚 meeting, say they鈥檒l continue to push to address invasive species and climate change.

鈥淐layton was certainly a champion for focusing on the issue (of invasive species),鈥 Lee said. 鈥淏ut ultimately I think someone will step into those shoes… We have to address those issues because we can鈥檛 afford not to.鈥

He plans to re-introduce measures to promote water conservation and ensure sea level rise is taken into account in public infrastructure projects.

Meanwhile, Gabbard, an ex-officio member of the Hawaii Invasive Species Council, plans to revisit , which passed the Senate but died in the House this year.

Glenn Teves, a council member and longtime University of Hawaii agriculture extension agent on Molokai, brought up the measure during Thursday’s meeting and pointed out that the plant nursery industry lobbied hard against the bill and defeated it. He suggested part of the reason it may have died is that聽everyone was being too nice.

鈥淲e really need to start blaming who is responsible for the problem,鈥 he聽said.

The bill would have cracked down on invasive species by making more things subject to pest inspection, prohibiting transportation of designated pests, banning possession of certain pests, allowing the designation of quarantine areas and creating penalties for violations.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get a handle on this thing,鈥 Gabbard said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 ridiculous.鈥

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