As independent groups continue their efforts to influence Hawaii elections by flooding airwaves with ads about ballot issues and stuffing mailboxes with fliers about candidates, voters are mostly left in the dark about who is spending the money and where it鈥檚 coming from.

These political action committees last filed finance reports with the state Campaign Spending Commission in August, which shed some light on who contributed the hundreds of thousands of dollars they spent before the primary election and how those funds were used.

But their next reports aren鈥檛 due until Oct. 27, just eight days before the Nov. 4 general election. That鈥檚 two weeks after absentee ballots are mailed out and a week after early walk-in voting begins.

So for the two most critical months in the election, voters are being bombarded with information trying to convince them to feel a certain way about a candidate or issue without being given a close look at the accounting 鈥 not to mention motivations 鈥 behind it.

Surfers paddle in front of Kaanapali Beach on Maui. A group of timeshare owners have formed a PAC there to support a candidate who they hope will help give them a lower tax rate.

Edmund Garman via Flickr

鈥淚t’s crucial for citizens to know and understand which independent groups are trying to sway public opinion 鈥 essentially their vote,鈥 said Carmille Lim, executive director of Common Cause Hawaii.聽鈥淎ds placed by outside organizations often contain disinformation intended to manipulate voters, and can unfairly hurt candidates in the process.”

The Hawaii race for governor has seen its share of ads funded by mainland groups, including the Democratic and Republican governors associations which have targeted David Ige and Duke Aiona. But big money is also showing up in聽lower-profile races.

County council elections, especially聽on Maui and the Big Island, are receiving unprecedented attention from PACs this election.聽

Timeshare Owners Want Tax-Friendly Candidate

Among the biggest spenders on the Valley Isle are independent groups funded by timeshare owners and unionized carpenters who want to oust Elle Cochran from her council seat representing West Maui.

Cochran, who has held the seat since 2010, is perhaps best known for her strong positions on environmental issues and sustainability. She鈥檚 also been a fearless advocate of labeling genetically modified organisms and strengthening the regulations of pesticides that biotech companies like Monsanto and Syngenta spray on their crops.

She鈥檚 the only current council member who has supported Maui鈥檚 ballot initiative to ban genetically engineered farming until it鈥檚 studied and聽deemed聽safe by the council.

While biotech companies鈥 PACs have spent over $800,000聽to defeat that initiative 鈥 easily outgunning the groups opposed to GMOs 鈥斅爐he PACs聽specifically targeting Cochran’s聽race against first-time candidate Kaala Buenconsejo don鈥檛 seem to care about that聽issue.

Elle Cochran

Maui County Councilwoman Elle Cochran faces a candidate who has received thousands of dollars in support from super PACs.

Elle Cochran's campaign

A new PAC called has raised $250,000, devoting much of it to radio ads and glossy campaign fliers in support of Buenconsejo.

Meanwhile, an old PAC under a new name is聽also involved in the race.聽

Forward Progress, headed聽by Executive Director John White, has hired people to canvas neighborhoods on Maui, ran ads and聽produced mailers for Buenconsejo.聽White did not return a message seeking comment.

PRP is a partnership between unionized carpenters and contractors that lobbies for major projects that produce more jobs. It聽was a major player in the 2012 mayoral race in Honolulu, spending more than聽$3 million to聽defeat former Gov. Ben Cayetano, who was campaigning against聽the city鈥檚 $5.2 billion rail project.

Cayetano sued PRP for libel and slander over its campaign聽against him. A聽settlement in June required PRP to give the University of Hawaii $100,000 and the Hawaiian Humane Society $25,000 in Cayetano鈥檚 name. The group also had to run an apology in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

PRP has stayed out of the bigger contests聽this election, focusing on local council races despite close races for聽governor and seats in the Legislature and聽Congress.聽

Super PACs can spend unlimited money for or against a candidate so long as they don’t coordinate their efforts with the candidates. This could explain why Buenconsejo told The Maui News in August that聽, acknowledging that some have overstated his record聽and aren鈥檛 entirely accurate.

Maui Timeshare Ohana鈥檚 money comes from two other PACs 鈥 Ocean Resort Villas North and Ocean Resort Villas 鈥 that are funded by timeshare owners who frequent the Westin Kaanapali resort on the Valley Isle.

Kaala Buenconsejo

Kaala Buenconsejo, candidate for Maui County Council, has received thousands of dollars in support from independent groups operating beyond his control.

Kaala Buenconsejo's campaign

The timeshare owners feel excluded from the political process. Most live on the mainland, so they can鈥檛 vote in Hawaii but are affected by the decisions elected officials make 鈥 namely, raising taxes on timeshares.

The group’s ads and mailers don’t talk about聽taxes. Instead, they assert that聽Buenconsejo will聽invest in clean energy, like solar power; help local businesses by cutting through bureaucratic red tape; and eliminate wasteful government spending so the county can improve its roads, public safety and parks.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to help elect people to the council that will listen to the issue,鈥 said Grant Gillham, who runs a government affairs consulting business in Nevada and was asked by a friend to help organize the PAC for the timeshare owners.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a feeling that that鈥檚 not happening right now,鈥 he said, noting many of the council members have been dismissive of the owners鈥 concerns that their timeshares are taxed far higher than any other category, even hotels.

Gena Kraft, a San Jose businesswoman who chairs the Ocean Resort Villas PAC, said Maui timeshare owners tried for years to work with the council on the issue of fairness.

鈥淚t became clear we weren鈥檛 being heard,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e basically homeowners on Maui and we have for years now had some issues with segregation with property tax rates and it鈥檚 become extremely one-sided.鈥

The current tax rate for timeshares is $15.07 per $1,000 of net taxable assessed valuation. The rate for hotels and resorts is $9.11, while the residential rate is $5.57.

The two Ocean Resort Villas groups filed a lawsuit in 2013 against Maui County and the council over the tax rates for timeshares. That case is pending.

Maui Timeshare Ohana has sent at least three mailers to Valley Isle residents and produced two radio ads supporting Buenconsejo. Printing and mailing the fliers alone cost over $62,000.聽

The PAC ,聽leaving $150,939 in the bank. But because the law doesn鈥檛 require the group to file its next campaign finance report until late this month, it鈥檚 unclear how the rest of that money has been used.

For his part, by the August primary, including donations from mainland PACs like the American Resort Development Association-Resort Owner鈥檚 Group. His campaign account was down to $2,758 by Aug. 9.聽

Cochran’s campaign owed almost $55,000, mostly to her mother and husband who helped get her going in politics with seed money in 2010. She鈥檇聽 and spent $1,111. Her campaign had $2,060 on hand as of Aug. 9.

Hawaii, Honolulu Council Races Feel聽PAC Influence

On the Big Island, Forward Progress has been spending tens of thousands of dollars on radio ads and mailers backing Ron Gonzales, Tiffany Edwards-Hunt and Maile David for the Hawaii County Council.

David won her seat outright in the Aug. 9 primary by securing more than half of all the votes cast. Gonzales and Hunt both advanced to the general election.

Forward Progress has also funded three negative mailers against first-term Councilwoman Margaret Wille, who has led the county’s fight against GMOs, but聽it聽hasn鈥檛 reported the expenses yet, according to a 聽last week.

The Campaign Spending Commission is investigating Forward Progress and plans to take up the Big Island matter at聽its next meeting, Oct. 22, the article says.

Forward Progress also 聽to represent Pearl City on the Honolulu City Council. Elefante won the District 8 seat outright in the primary.

Voters need information about campaign contributions and expenditures “at a time that would be useful and meaningful.” 鈥攕tate Sen. Les Ihara

The group, which is funded by union dues paid to聽the Hawaii Carpenters Market Recovery Program, had by Aug. 9.

Aikea, a super PAC funded by union dues from Unite Here Local 5’s hotel and hospitality workers, has been聽spending almost at the same level as Forward Progress, but on different races.

The group paid tens of thousands of dollars for people to go door-to-door to get voters to support Joli Tokusato’s effort to oust Carol Fukunaga from her聽District 6 seat on the Honolulu City Council. Tokusato聽lost in the primary, so now the group is canvasing to get working-class families involved in the political process.

Meanwhile, state Sen. Les Ihara plans to introduce a bill next session, which begins in January, to address the reporting deadlines for PACs and candidates. He’s tried for years to get something passed, but without success.

In 2011, Ihara tried to move up the reporting deadline to “10 days before the first day that walk-in ballots are accepted.” That , referred to the Judiciary and Labor Committee chaired by Sen. Clayton Hee, never got a hearing.

The Campaign Spending Commission tried as well that year, pushing a bill that would have added an additional finance report to be due Sept. 30. The legislation cleared the House but died a similar death in Hee’s committee without a hearing.

Next year could be different. There will be a new Judiciary and Labor chairman, since Hee gave up his seat in the Senate for an聽unsuccessful bid for lieutenant governor.

Voters need information about campaign contributions and expenditures “at a time that would be useful and meaningful,” Ihara said.

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.

 

About the Author