One passage in Gov. David Ige鈥檚 2016 State of the State address dealt with the聽problem of sweltering and unbearable conditions in our public school classrooms.

尝补蝉迟听year the media often brought this to our attention during the long hot summer. The governor proposed to deal with the problem in what seems to be an innovative manner:

To start, we will use $100 million of Green Energy Market Securitization聽funds to immediately install energy-efficiency measures and air conditioning units聽in classrooms where our children need it the most.

By using existing GEMS聽program dollars, the Department of Education and its energy-efficiency partner,聽OpTerra, can quickly access affordable financing for a large portion of its cost to聽air condition our classrooms.

GEMS is a financing program that is聽supposed to provide loans at a low interest rate to finance alternative energy systems聽and other clean energy improvements for those who might not be able to get financing聽by other means.

Waialae Elementary school  Hawaii Honolulu education. 1 feb 2016. photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat
The Department of Education needs to prioritize 鈥 and pay for 鈥 climate control in classrooms such as this one at Waialae Elementary School. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Apparently GEMS is an attractive target for raiding because a 2014 bond issue聽raised $150 million for the program and little, if any, capital has been deployed to date.

But three things need to be remembered: First, it鈥檚 a financing program, not a grant聽program. Second, it鈥檚 been established for specific purposes. Third, it is funded by all聽users of electricity through a 鈥済reen infrastructure fee鈥 on our electric bills.

Let鈥檚 drill down on this some more. The first point, that it is a financing program聽rather than a grant program, means that if we are using GEMS money we are borrowing聽it. If we use this $100 million of GEMS money, we need to pay it back in the future.

The Legislatures of tomorrow, then, will need to appreciate and provide for payment of聽this debt. Some would call this 鈥渒icking the can down the road.鈥

The second point is that the financing program is for green infrastructure costs.聽Specifically, this means clean energy technology like solar and wind; demand response聽technology; and energy use reduction and demand side management infrastructure.

罢辞听fund the program, $150 million was borrowed on the bond market. Now it is proposed聽that two-thirds of this, $100 million, be used to cool the schools. Existing investors聽bought into the program to support saving the planet, and now we are tweaking the聽program so that most of the money goes to save school kids.

Can you say 鈥渂ait and聽蝉飞颈迟肠丑鈥?

We can expect investors to be hopping mad even on a good day.聽Finally, the principal and interest on the GEMS bonds are being paid by a聽surcharge on utility bills.

Does being an electric company customer have anything to do聽with classroom conditions in the public schools? Absolutely not!

If this is a problem聽affecting taxpayers in general, then it should be funded by a general tax, not by a raid聽on electric customer money. And let鈥檚 not forget that we already spend more than one聽out of every five state dollars on education, to the tune of $1.5 billion dollars a year.

Why isn鈥檛 that enough to keep our children from roasting?

Perhaps the better thing to do would be for the Board of Education to conduct a聽thorough investigation on what has caused this tragedy, for the results of the聽investigation to determine how many heads will roll, and to focus the many good, hardworking聽people in our educational system on managing infrastructure competently.

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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