Monday Memo: Regulating Medi-Pot, Martin’s Potential Run, Iran Deal Politics
Why is the Health Department moving so slowly on marijuana dispensary rules? Martin for mayor in 2016? And how will the Iran deal shake out for Schatz, Hirono?
MEDI-POT? NO RUSH. Dec 30 鈥 that鈥檚 the Department of Health鈥檚 self-imposed deadline for publishing administrative rules concerning how Hawaii鈥檚 medi-pot industry will be regulated, as Civil Beat鈥檚 Anita Hofschneider reported last week. That means 4陆 more months of regulatory silence for this complicated new economic sector, which is expected to be open for business in 11 months.
Why the foot-dragging? Efforts have been underway for 15 years to legalize medical marijuana dispensaries and grow operations, and everyone knew coming into 2015 that the issue would loom large in the legislative session. It鈥檚 difficult to understand why months after legislation was passed, the Health Department only now seems to be kicking into gear.
Transitioning marijuana from an illegal substance to a medical commodity has not been without controversy. A last-minute release of regulations 鈥 dispensary applications are due less than two weeks after the Dec. 30 deadline 鈥 may create suspicions of rigged processes, depending on who get the licenses and what the new rules call for.
Further complicating the timeline, lawmakers are rightly calling for public comment to be heard on the rules. Why that wasn鈥檛 provided for already is a mystery. Everyone knew this rollout would be a regulatory sprint to the finish line, but this looks more like a casual stroll while potential business owners struggle to make big, costly decisions about how their dispensaries would work.
State Health Secretary Virginia Pressler and her department need to move more quickly to complete the rule-making process, if the public鈥檚 trust in the state鈥檚 oversight of this new industry is to be maintained.
Ernie Martin plans to challenge Mayor Kirk Caldwell if/when Caldwell stands for re-election in 2016. Martin has played coy on the matter for the past year, but when he appeared last Wednesday on Hawaii New Now鈥檚 Sunrise News with Grace Lee, she without putting his cards on the table. Sort of.
CANDIDATE MARTIN? It鈥檚 been widely speculated in recent months that Honolulu City Council Chair鈥淏ut you didn鈥檛 answer the question,鈥 said Lee, doubling back after a windy Martin evasion. 鈥淎re you planning to run for mayor? Next year?鈥
鈥淚鈥檒l run for mayor 鈥 whether it鈥檚 next year or succeeding years,鈥 said Martin. 鈥淚 mean, ultimately there鈥檚 a lot on the plate for the City Council to deal with. To be focused on any political office at this point in time would be a disservice to those who elected me.鈥
Coyness aside, Martin鈥檚 been acting more and more lately like someone who intends to run. When Caldwell turned away his proposal to convert the vacant Hilo Hattie property on Nimitz Highway into a huge homeless shelter, Martin essentially went over the mayor’s head, pushing the proposal to Gov. David Ige, whose Leadership Team on Homelessness is now considering it. Both Caldwell and Martin are team members.
More recently, he took the novel step of hiring his own housing coordinator 鈥 political operative Peter Boylan, who previously served as an aide to Big Island Mayor Billy Kenoi, the late Sen. Daniel Inouye and former U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa, as well as spokesman for her unsuccessful U.S. Senate race last year. And beyond housing and homelessness, there are Martin’s comments on the pending rail tax discussion, which he promises will be no day at the beach for Caldwell, rail鈥檚 biggest proponent.
As Civil Beat鈥檚 Chad Blair reported recently, Caldwell had a commanding cash advantage at the end of June 鈥 $1.5 million to Martin鈥檚 $428,000. But that may not be as important as one might think in a state where Ige didn鈥檛 surpass the $500,000 mark last year until two weeks before a primary in which he beat the incumbent governor by 30 points.
Civil Beat doesn鈥檛 endorse in political races, but we do encourage competition. Other potential candidates whose names keep coming up include Hanabusa, who gave up her House seat when she ran for Senate last year, and former Mayor Mufi Hannemann, though lackluster performances in the three races he鈥檚 run since stepping down as mayor in 2010 to run for governor have lowered his stock. We鈥檙e likely to hear more possibilities as summer turns into fall.
Daunting issues in Honolulu鈥檚 near future 鈥 would you want to take on homelessness and the Honolulu rail project? — plus Caldwell鈥檚 big early money advantage may tamp down interest.
Honolulu, however, deserves a real competition over who will be its CEO. So whether it’s Caldwell vs. Martin or a field of contenders, we鈥檙e rooting for a spirited race.
IRAN DEAL. As the Obama administration lobbies to secure support for a veto of Congress鈥 expected rejection of the Iran nuclear deal, the position of Hawaii鈥檚 senators looms large, with the president making the Senate his lobbying focus.
U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz announced his support early, and emerged last week as a leading voice on the deal, as the number of announced Senate supporters grew to 20 鈥 14 short of the necessary 34.
Sen. Mazie Hirono will disclose her position Monday, her staff told Civil Beat last week.
Supporting this hard-fought diplomatic deal to sharply limit Iran’s nuclear options for the next decade (at minimum) is the right call, but we鈥檙e eager to see how the politics shake out for both senators.
Schatz is bucking the leadership of close colleague Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the lone Senate Democrat who has announced opposition to the deal, but is likely to be the party鈥檚 next leader in the Senate. Schatz is instead lining up with Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin, who is leading the charge for the agreement. If the deal survives the Senate, Schatz may stand to gain influence there as well as with the White House in President Obama鈥檚 final 15 months.
Hirono has been more cagey on her position, but with the focus now on getting the final 14 votes for passage, we鈥檇 be surprised if additional enticements haven鈥檛 been offered to leverage her support. The longtime legislator knows her way around a deal.
How this one ends is anyone鈥檚 guess. But Hawaii鈥檚 minority party senators not only have the challenge of making the best call on a major question of conscience, but on negotiating the best possible arrangement for their state when their two votes have rare, oversized importance.
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
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.