Senators Give Honolulu Rail ‘A Great Deal of Opportunity’
A Hawaii Senate committee passes a bill to extend the GET rail surcharge another five years, but makes clear the money should only be used to build the rail line.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee on Tuesday voted to extend a 0.5 percent General Excise Tax surcharge for Honolulu鈥檚 rail project another five years beyond its Dec. 31, 2022, expiration.
The vote on indicates that lawmakers are supportive of helping the city complete its $6 billion driverless commuter rail project despite cost overruns and questions of lax oversight.
But by limiting the extension to five years with additional caveats, the senators also showed that they don鈥檛 want to write a blank check to the city and the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation without more assurances about how those taxpayer dollars are being spent.
鈥淔irst and foremost, the Senate is very clear that it wants to make sure that the job that was started is completed,鈥 said Sen. Jill Tokuda, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee. 鈥淚n terms of the information that we鈥檝e been provided we feel that this is giving HART and the city a great deal of opportunity.鈥
The bill will likely go to conference committee, where House and Senate members will hash out a final version. Legislation can dramatically change or even die during conference committee, which is conducted largely out of the public eye.
Another proposal related to the GET, , appears to have stalled out in the House Finance Committee as there has been no hearing scheduled for the measure, meaning HB134 is the likely candidate for a final vote.
鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely critical to how we live on this island not just today, not just 25 years from now, but 100 years from now.” 鈥 Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell
Tokuda said she has 鈥渟erious concerns鈥 about how the city plans to operate and maintain the system once it鈥檚 built, and noted that she doesn鈥檛 think GET surcharge revenues should be used for that purpose.
As a result, she included an amendment to HB 134 that would only allow the funds to be used for construction costs on the 20-mile route from East Kapolei to Ala Moana Center. If there鈥檚 money left over those funds could also be used to plan additional spurs to downtown Kapolei and the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
Tokuda questioned Caldwell and Honolulu Department of Transportation Director Mike Formby over how the city expected to pay for operations of the rail and bus system together since fares are not expected to cover the full cost.
The city heavily subsidizes the bus and Handi-Van services with more than $200 million per year. With rail online the amount the city must make up is even higher.
In 2020, HART has estimated the city鈥檚 total subsidy for rail, bus and Handi-Van services will be $316 million, according to documents provided to the Legislature. By 2030 that amount is expected to increase to $490 million, which is less than one-third of what is expected to be recovered from fares.
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But what seemed to worry Tokuda was that the city hasn鈥檛 yet determined how it would cover the gap, although Formby told her that several groups have been formed to look at farebox and other revenue options.
鈥淲e鈥檙e committed that we will have a solution that we can present to the public,鈥 Formby said. 鈥淏ut I can鈥檛 tell you today that we will have the answer. We certainly don鈥檛. But we鈥檙e committed to have a solution.鈥
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell pushed hard to convince senators 聽to approve a 25-year tax extension so that the additional spurs into Kapolei and to the UH-Manoa campus could be built. Officials have said the 25-year extension would be enough to complete both legs.
鈥淭he only thing we can do is deny them the taxpayers鈥 money. It鈥檚 not our money, I keep reminding them, it鈥檚 taxpayers鈥 money.鈥 鈥 Sen. Sam Slom
Caldwell even proposed his own version of HB134 that would push the sunset date to 2047 in exchange for the city reaching certain milestones, including obtaining environmental clearance for those future spurs and performing financial and management audits of HART.
The mayor took advantage of last week鈥檚 traffic snarl that led to widespread gridlock and commuter wait times of up to five hours to advocate for the rail project. He also expounded on the benefits of transit-oriented development around the system鈥檚 21 rail stations as a means to boost the island鈥檚 affordable housing stock.
鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely critical to how we live on this island not just today, not just 25 years from now, but 100 years from now,鈥 Caldwell said. 鈥淚t is the only near-term solution to our traffic problems and to our housing problems.鈥
But lawmakers were unconvinced, particularly Sen. Sam Slom. The Senate鈥檚 lone Republican loudly criticized the project for having a nearly $1 billion deficit with just over 2 miles of railway actually constructed.
He told Caldwell the city should be grateful that the Senate is even considering extending the GET surcharge for five years, saying that his colleagues have thrown out a financial 鈥渓ifeline鈥 to bail out the project even though there are still many unanswered questions.
鈥淭he city and HART have had long enough time to demonstrate to us that they can keep their word, that they know what they鈥檙e doing, that they can give us accurate information and figures that match, and that has not been the case,鈥 Slom said. 聽鈥淭he only thing we can do is deny them the taxpayers鈥 money. It鈥檚 not our money, I keep reminding them, it鈥檚 taxpayers鈥 money.鈥
Slom, who voted against HB134 along with Sen. Gil Riviere, said he also intends to ask Attorney General Doug Chin for an opinion on the 鈥渓egality and constitutionality鈥 of the state鈥檚 10 percent administrative fee on the GET surcharge.
The current version of the bill does not address the fee, which will amount to hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for the state for the duration of the surcharge.
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Nick Grube is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at nick@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at . You can also reach him by phone at 808-377-0246.