CNBC鈥檚 recent rankings of 鈥淎merica鈥檚 Top States for Business鈥 pegged Hawaii at No. 50聽overall, despite a No. 1 rating for quality of life.

One factor that led to Hawaii鈥檚 rock-bottom聽position was the condition of its roads and bridges. A big contributor to this state of affairs is聽that the state and counties aren鈥檛 clear on which roads they own. They don鈥檛 want to maintain聽them if they don鈥檛 know that they own them, and so there are a number of roads that are not聽getting maintained.

Welcome to 鈥淩oads in Limbo.鈥

When governments can’t agree on who has jurisdiction, roads can go unmaintained.

When Hawaii was a kingdom, there were no counties; all roads belonged to the people聽through the sovereign. The counties were established in 1905, and while the counties were given聽certain rights and duties with respect to the roads in the following years, the division of roads聽into territorial and county highways did not happen until 1947.

The law now defining state聽versus county highways, which dates back to 1963, refers to state highways as those acquired by聽or under jurisdiction of the Department of Transportation, and county highways as all other聽public highways. The law also mentions private roads that are surrendered or dedicated to the聽government and clearly says that in that context the government鈥檚 legislative body (such as the聽county council) needs to accept the dedication before the government takes over the road.

The big question left open by these provisions is what happens to roads that were never聽private, but were originally government roads. Is the state allowed to say, 鈥淗ey, county, this聽road is in miserable, substandard condition so it鈥檚 now yours, you now bear the responsibility of聽fixing it, and by the way, if an accident happens on that road because of the dilapidated condition聽it鈥檚 in, the liability is now yours as well?鈥

The state says yes, that is in fact what the law says;聽the counties say that the State has no right or power to do that, and besides, that it is聽tremendously unfair. The result is that neither side wants to maintain the roads, other than聽perhaps sporadic 鈥渉umanitarian gesture鈥 patching when people complain loudly, for fear of聽inheriting the road and the responsibilities and liabilities that come with it.

The problem is not a聽small one. On the Big Island alone, the County Department of Public Works has identified over聽122 miles of existing roads in limbo. Other counties have less clarity around where the roads in聽limbo are.

In 2012, the Legislature directed the Department of Transportation to convene a state-county聽working group to hash these issues out. That group was unable to reach agreement and聽was thinking of asking its respective attorneys if there was a way to fight it out in court or in a聽similar kind of forum.

Earlier this year when the extension of the Honolulu County rail surcharge was being聽considered, lawmakers were thinking of attaching a provision that would force counties to accept聽roads in limbo. Apparently lawmakers were thinking that it would be a small price to pay for the聽opportunity for counties to swell their coffers by adopting (or continuing) a general excise tax聽surcharge.

That provision didn鈥檛 make it to the final version of the bill.

Folks, this 鈥淎fter you, Alphonse鈥 mentality can鈥檛 be allowed to continue. The longer we聽wait, the worse the roads get, the more expensive they are to fix, and the tougher it gets for either聽the state or county to accept them. Repair and maintenance costs come out of taxpayers鈥 pockets聽in any event, and when the two governments fight we pay them both and repair nothing.

So it鈥檚聽in all taxpayers鈥 best interests to get the matter put to bed, and soon. Let鈥檚 get that working聽group together again, this time with people who have fiscal authority. We suggest that the state,聽which has more funding mechanisms at its disposal, should pick up the slack, and let鈥檚 get the聽problem dealt with.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a current photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org.聽The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.

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