Hawaii Supreme Court justices expressed skepticism about the state Land Board鈥檚 process of approving construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope on Mauna Kea during oral arguments in a case challenging the state’s endorsement of the $1.4 billion project.

The justices grilled state attorneys Thursday about whether the Board of Land and Natural Resources was wrong to approve a permit for the project in 2011 prior to holding a contested case hearing.

State attorneys argued that the was preliminary and that was given after the contested case hearing in 2013, while telescope opponents contended their right to due process was violated.

Mauna Kea supporters gather outside Aliiolani Hale before oral arguments Thursday.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

鈥淚 was a trial judge for a long time, I don’t recall ever making a decision where I decided the case before the trial,鈥 Justice Richard Pollack told a University of Hawaii attorney at one point.

That line of questioning dominated the hearing at Aliiolani Hale in downtown Honolulu, which attracted hundreds of people and lasted so long that the State Judiciary offered to comp parking for people who couldn’t refill their meters.

The justices’ questioning of Richard Wurdeman, the attorney for TMT opponents, was far less confrontational, allowing him more time to develop his own points.

There is no deadline for the Supreme Court to issue a decision, and in the meantime the TMT may legally proceed with construction.

An anti-TMT demonstrator lies on the ground to block construction crews from heading up Mauna Kea last June.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners and environmental activists have been trying to stop the telescope’s construction for a decade, but resistance intensified this year after dozens of protesters were arrested in April blocking construction crews from going up the mountain.

The , a nonprofit organization funded by universities in the United States, China, Japan and Canada, hasn’t been able to resume construction.

The lawsuit brought by Mauna Kea Anaina Hou, KAHEA: The Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance and others challenges many aspects of the project, including whether building the telescope violates state rules governing conservation districts.

But on Thursday, justices zoomed in on the issue of due process, aiming a barrage of questions at University of Hawaii attorney Jay Handlin and Deputy Attorney General Julie China.

The Land Board is supposed to appoint a hearings officer to conduct a quasi-judicial contested case hearing on whether a permit should be granted if there is a 聽for one. The board did so for the TMT’s permit application, but only after issuing conditional approval of the permit in 2011.

Justice Sabrina McKenna pursues a line of questioning.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Justice Sabrina McKenna was particularly skeptical, asking whether it would ever make sense for a court to give a judgment before holding a trial.

鈥淛ustice can perform its function in the best way only if it satisfies the appearance of justice,鈥 she said, quoting a previous court decision.

鈥淛ustice must not only be done, but manifestly seen as done,” she said.

That was encouraging to TMT opponents who packed the courtroom and sang in Hawaiian both before and after the hearing. One of the petitioners, 26-year-old H膩wane Rios, told Civil Beat after the hearing聽that when the Land Board approved the permit for the telescope in 2011, she lost hope in the system.

鈥淭oday I feel like I鈥檓 regaining some of that hope,鈥 she said.

An Illegal Process?

In 2011, the state Board of Land and Natural Resources approved the University of Hawaii鈥檚 permit for the TMT on the condition that the university wait until after the contested case hearing before starting construction. The board approved the permit again in 2013 after receiving a recommendation to do so from the hearings officer who conducted the contested case hearing.

UH attorney Jay Handlin speaks to the justices.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

When several justices questioned Handlin about whether the board violated the law, the attorney insisted the final approval wasn’t given until April 2013 and that the project didn’t move forward until the contested case hearing was resolved.

鈥淲e have an agency that needs the flexibility to interpret its own rules,鈥 he said of the Land Board.

But Pollack pointed out that there isn鈥檛 anything in the Land Board’s rules that would have allowed it to revoke the 2011 permit if the university had lost the contested case hearing.

He questioned whether a rejection of the permit after the contested case hearing was even a real possibility, and referenced a letter from the Sierra Club protesting the 2011 vote.

Justice Paula Nakayama said that nothing in the Land Board’s rules allows a preliminary decision, and Justice Michael Wilson quoted from testimony criticizing the vote: “It seems like a done deal by the time you get to these hearings.”

Later, China hesitated after McKenna asked her when the Land Board started the practice of approving a permit before the contested case hearing.

Julie China in the courtroom.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

鈥淚 couldn’t find any reported cases where this process had been followed,鈥 said McKenna in a second attempt to ask the question. 鈥淭hat’s why I’m asking, when did the board start adopting this process?鈥

鈥淚 can’t recall. I’m sorry ma’am,鈥 China said.

鈥淒o you think the process that BLNR followed here furthers public confidence in the system?鈥 she asked.

China said she thought so, sparking cries of opposition from the courtroom audience.

‘Unclear’ Calculations

Meanwhile, Wilson questioned the logic behind the TMT Observatory Corp.’s assertion in its environmental analysis of the project that the telescope would have only have an 鈥渋ncremental鈥 adverse impact on the mountain’s cultural resources.

If built, the telescope would be the 14th observatory built on the mountain since the 1960s.

A visitor takes a photograph of telescopes on the summit of Mauna Kea last April.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The university did an inadequate job of managing the mountain’s environment and cultural resources for several decades, a 1998 state audit found.

The for the TMT acknowledges that the cumulative impact of telescope development on Mauna Kea鈥檚 cultural resources is 鈥渟ubstantial, significant, and adverse.鈥

Wilson quoted from the analysis: “The project will add a limited increment to the level of cumulative impact, but would not tip the balance of any specific cumulative impact from a less than significant level to a significant level.”

Richard Wurdeman speaks for TMT opponents inside a packed courtroom.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

鈥淗ow did they calculate this tipping of the balance? It’s a little unclear,鈥 Wilson asked Handlin. The attorney replied the analysis focuses on what harm the project would cause existing resources.

Wilson also asked Wurdeman, the TMT opponents’ attorney, about the project’s potential impact on the mountain.

Wurdeman argued that telescope development on Mauna Kea has gotten out of hand.

鈥淢auna Kea is more than a mountain, is the embodiment of the Hawaiian people,鈥 Wurdeman said. 鈥淯nfortunately given that tremendous significance… Mauna Kea has really become an absolute mess.”

Former Gov. George Ariyoshi speaks to Princess Abigail Kawananakoa, a descendent of King Kalakaua, before the hearing.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

“We can’t incrementally continue to build and build and build up there,” he said. “This is a conservation district, this is not an industrial district.”

Under questioning from the justices, he suggested that the Board of Land and Natural Resources rehear the TMT’s permit application and consider imposing conditions such as the required decommissioning of telescopes.

The Supreme Court is also weighing a decision on the Daniel K. Inouye telescope atop Haleakala on Maui, which deals with similar issues regarding due process and the use of a conservation district.

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