Lawmakers Shrug Off Election Year To Propose ‘Bold’ Ideas
Leaders called for converting commercial leasehold lands to direct ownership, building a methane biodigester on Maui and giving a bigger slice of the hotel tax to counties, among other ideas.聽
Leaders in the Hawaii Legislature moved beyond generalities on housing, homelessness and fiscal order to identify specific聽priorities in their opening-day speeches Wednesday.
While more details await legislation and committee work, the ideas聽include a biodigester on Maui that could help the Valley Isle聽produce biofuels and natural gas for vehicles. That could serve as relief for an island suffering the recent closure of its last sugar mill.
Leaders also promised to push to take better care of seniors by providing medical training to caregivers once patients聽return home from the hospital, and to make sure聽all Hawaii doctors treat patients who rely on federal social safety nets.
And lawmakers expressed a lot of aloha for colleagues and former colleagues who are struggling with personal health issues.
Take That, Political Pundits!
House Speaker Joe Souki jabbed gently at political pundits, saying that conventional wisdom holds that, this being an election year, representatives won鈥檛 do anything to upset voters.
Not necessarily, said Souki in his speech: 鈥淚 am not asking you to upset voters, but to be bold in this election year and do what needs to be done for the greater good. We cannot lose the momentum we have built up.鈥
To that end, the Maui lawmaker dropped a few bold ideas.
Topping the list is the conversion of commercial leasehold lands in Hawaii to fee simple status. Leaseholders can use property for a fixed period, but not own it; fee simple status is the most common form of direct, private land ownership.聽
鈥We can level the playing field and change for the better the business landscape across the state if we are willing to re-invent the rules that govern commercial leasehold lands,鈥 he said.
Souki said Hawaii had implemented a fee simple conversion before, with lands that support single-family and multi-family homes. Doing so, he argued, gave 鈥渢he ordinary working person鈥 a shot at true homeownership.
The speaker threw out some other bones with meat on them as well: the requiring all doctors in Hawaii to treat Medicare and Medicaid patients (鈥渢o help our kupuna鈥), and raising the counties鈥 share of the hotel tax (to 鈥渉elp us support our No. 1 industry, tourism鈥).
On the second proposal, the House may find collaborators in the Senate, where a new bill calls for a sizable increase in the amount transient accommodations tax聽revenues that the counties would receive.聽Senate President Ron Kouchi, who represents Kauai, introduced 聽at the request of the state auditor. How well that will sit with the chairs of the House and Senate money committees, who are both from Oahu, remains to be seen.
鈥楳omentum On Our Side鈥
Speaking of kupuna (elders), Souki insisted that a bill that failed last year 鈥 one calling for medical training for caregivers when older loved ones come home from the hospital 鈥 be passed this year. Members of , wearing their familiar red T-shirts, applauded enthusiastically from the gallery.
Souki鈥檚 ideas, many of which have run into legislative walls in recent sessions, are sure to attract opposition. But he seemed game for the fight, and he pointed out that previously unimaginable legislation 鈥 allowing, for example, medical marijuana dispensaries, a public-private deal for Maui hospital, or encouraging the use of solar panels for home electricity 鈥 had become reality.
Souki also used a sports analogy: Texas Christian University in the Alamo Bowl earlier this month.
鈥淚 believe we are on a roll, with momentum on our side,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd that is not a small thing.鈥
Souki also reiterated the House and Senate鈥檚 oft-cited push for more affordable housing and more help for the homeless; tighter scrutiny of state contracts; modernizing education infrastructure; paying down unfunded liabilities; and fine-tuning the medi-pot clinics. But he offered few specifics during his speech or聽in a House leadership meeting with press afterwards.
Souki said that legalizing recreational marijuana was not on the table this session. Vice Speaker John Mizuno said he wasn鈥檛 holding his breath that a lottery bill would be approved, either, though he noted the interest in wake of Powerball mania. The key for such legislation would be to make sure the revenue from a lottery went to education and public health programs, he said.
For her part, Minority Leader Beth Fukumoto Chang said her caucus looked forward to working closely with Souki and Majority Leader Scott Saiki. She said that she would not criticize any measure on the House floor 鈥渨ithout also articulating an alternative solution to the problem the introducer is trying to address.鈥
鈥淚t’s not about us,鈥 she said, with Souki nodding appreciatively from the podium. 鈥淚t’s not about our titles. It’s not about our names on a bill.鈥
Takai Misses The Old聽House
Opening day in the House started on an emotional moment when U.S. Rep. Mark Takai delivered the invocation.
Takai, who spent 20 years in the House before his election to Congress two years ago, told his former colleagues, 鈥淚 really miss you guys.鈥
He also said, 鈥淚 am doing well,鈥 without noting that he is undergoing chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer. But he didn鈥檛 have to, as everyone in the chamber knew. Takai posed for lots of photos afterwards.
There was also some drama in the House, when a kupuna rose from her seat in the gallery to chant. She said she represented a sovereign nation and was there to give notice that the Legislature is an 鈥渋llegal entity.鈥
鈥淭hank you very much,鈥 said a surprised Souki, who immediately order House Sergeant-At-Arms Kevin Kuroda to intervene.
鈥淚 have the right,鈥 said the woman. 鈥淢y country, not yours.鈥
The moment ended peacefully, but the House quickly called a recess to restore some order.
‘Embracing Dissent’
Kouchi gave a succinct primer on democracy in his opening day remarks on the chamber floor.
鈥淭he function of democracy is to embrace dissent and minority opinion,鈥 he said, noting the importance of fostering an environment in which people are unafraid to express their views.
鈥淏ut the majority must carry the day,鈥 he said.
Kouchi spoke for 12 minutes in his first opening day speech since becoming president at the end of last session, taking聽a moment to recognize his predecessor, Donna Mercado Kim. Senate factions realigned in a way that forced her to pass the gavel in May to Kauai鈥檚 sole senator.
He quickly moved through priorities for the 2016 session, including a biodigester for Maui, a focus on making quality health care affordable statewide and steps to address homelessness throughout the islands.
Related
With the collapse of Hawaii鈥檚 last sugarcane plantation in January, several hundred Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company employees lost their jobs on the Valley Isle. Alexander & Baldwin owns the 36,000-acre plantation.
For several years, Kouchi said, the state has been working to try to get a biodigester sited on Maui. He said the digester could produce biofuels, natural gas for vehicles and with the correct additives, hog feed at half聽the cost that ranchers are currently paying. He said there鈥檚 an opportunity here that the Legislature should support.
Kouchi鈥檚 statements were admittedly a 鈥済eneral statement of where we鈥檇 like to go,鈥 but he said specifics of how to achieve these goals and others will be forthcoming in the next few days as bills are introduced.
The deadline to introduce non-administrative bills, grants and subsidies is Friday. Gov. David Ige聽is set to deliver his State of the State address Monday, the same day聽the administration聽must also submit its own bills. The cutoff for all other legislation comes Wednesday.
Kouchi聽said Sen. Jill Tokuda will put forward a comprehensive package aimed at homelessness. He also said that health care 鈥 while not cited in recent polls as a top priority among the public 鈥 is 鈥渙ne of the most important issues facing us,鈥 particularly in rural communities on the neighbor islands.
‘We Don’t Change’
For Sen. Sam Slom, the chamber鈥檚 lone Republican, the can be summed up in one word: accountability.
鈥淭he Legislature must be more accountable for unfulfilled promises, wasted tax money, poorly written contracts and unenforceable legislation,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Legislature is accountable for failing to penalize poor performance by government and/or excusing individual bad or corrupt behavior.鈥
Slom said the state鈥檚 $26 billion biennial operating budget is 鈥渂loated鈥 and in deficit-spending mode, not to mention the $28 billion unfunded liability in pension benefits promised to public workers.
鈥淲hile we talk of change, we don鈥檛 change,鈥 he said. 鈥淧roblems of a decade ago 鈥 or even longer 鈥 are still problems in Hawaii today: back-breaking taxes, homelessness, the high cost of living, diminishing economic diversity, replacing our aging infrastructure, cooling our classrooms, among others.鈥
‘Dignity And Humility’
Kouchi also set the tone for how he expects lawmakers to conduct business, pointing at Sen. Breene Harimoto as the model.
Harimoto, a first-term senator and former Honolulu City Council member, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July.
Kouchi said when he first saw Harimoto, he thought he looked like someone he would鈥檝e taken his lunch money from growing up. But after seeing 鈥渢he strength and the courage鈥 in his battle against cancer, he said he doesn鈥檛 think he would have prevailed.
鈥淚t has been troubling to me that in the public meetings that have been occurring from Kauai to the Big Island, that the public discourse has not been civil. People seem to think that we need to yell and scream louder than the next person, and that by name calling we can be successful,鈥 Kouchi said.
鈥淚f we can conduct ourselves with the dignity and humility and strength that has been exhibited by Sen. Harimoto since he鈥檚 been fighting his battle with cancer, then we can achieve the kind of heart-to-heart and civil discourse that we all aspire to live up to when conducting the people鈥檚 business.鈥
While Harimoto was present, Sen. Gil Kahele was absent. Kahele was at Queen鈥檚 Hospital undergoing medical tests, but Kouchi said he is in good spirits and hopes to be released soon.
“Our thoughts and well wishes go out to Sen. Kahele and his family,” Kouchi said. “His family requests privacy at this time. Sen. Kahele would like to say 鈥楳ahalo nui loa鈥 for the support, thoughts and prayers and he looks forward to returning to his Senate duties.鈥
Sights and sounds of opening day at the 2016 Hawaii Legislature. Read more here: http://bit.ly/1Pq70MR
Posted by on Wednesday, January 20, 2016
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .
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