Honolulu city law prohibits peddling in city parks.

But a small group of individuals 鈥 some of them operating out of a ramshackle residence in Waialua 鈥 appears to have found a way to get around that law.

They sell soda, chips and other snacks along with T-shirts piled high on their makeshift kiosks in city parks around the island. Their tables can be found daily at high-use locations such as Kailua Beach Park, and Waimea Bay and Ehukai parks on the North Shore.

Biplab Biswas with his T-shirt inventory at Ehukai Beach Park. The shirts for sale don’t carry a mention of the charity he says he represents. Denby Fawcett

鈥淚t is basically just a scam,” says Kailua community activist Lisa Cates, a longtime advocate of keeping Oahu鈥檚 public parks commerce-free.

The city allows qualified nonprofit organizations to set up informational tables in certain parks after they鈥檝e been issued what鈥檚 called a First Amendment permit.

Those permittees currently are allowed at eight Oahu parks including Kailua Beach, Hanauma Bayand Sandy Beach.And on the North Shore at Haleiwa Alii,Waimea Bay, Pupukea Beach, Sunset and Ehukai.

The bar appears to be set very low for any organizationto qualify asa nonprofit seeking the permits.

The citys rules say a nonprofit must show that it听would听qualify for tax-exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service, not that the organization听does听qualify for the status.

And that鈥檚 where it gets shaky. Only the IRS has the expertise and听 authority to determine who 鈥渨ould qualify鈥 for听tax-exempt status听and to grant that status. Not just this city but any city听lacks the expertise and the authority to determine who would quality for the federal tax-exempt status.

The city鈥檚 intention with First Amendment permits is to give nonprofits the opportunity to distribute their literature and freely express their views.听

In the mid-1990s, the city won a lengthy court battle to rid Kalakaua Avenue sidewalks of a large group of T-shirt vendors who had argued they were exercising their First Amendment rights.

Soon after, in 1996, the Parks Department created rules to allow carefully regulated free speech activities in certain parks rather than on sidewalks of the Waikiki tourist district.

But the Parks Department seems lax in its enforcement of the rules permittees are required to follow to avoid permit revocation.

The mayor鈥檚 information officer, Andrew Pereira, says, 鈥渢he city’s parks permits manager does check for current nonprofit status, insurance, and food permit (if a person or group is selling food).”

Vendor Madhumala Biswas, left, with customers at Waimea Bay Beach Park. Denby Fawcett

Recently, there have not been any permits revoked.

A check of the records of the State Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs, where non-profits must register, shows three of the groups with current city First Amendment permits are 鈥渘ot in good standing.鈥

The organizations are Neighbors In Action, Project Need, and Open Art International.

DCCA spokesman William Nhieusays that means they are registered with the DCCA but they have not kept their non-profit incorporation papers current.

Two other nonprofits with permission to set up tablesin parks, Siri Guar Nitai and Gathering Place of Gods Ministries, are shown not to be registered at all with the state.

Michelle Nekota, director of the Department of Parks and Recreation, said she has not yet gone out to the parks to see First Amendment permit holders in action.

鈥淚 have been to the parks but not when the vendors are set up,鈥says Nekota.

Lani-Kailua Outdoor Circle board member Claudia L. Webster says, 鈥渢he parks department has not done its due diligence on the groups which claim First Amendment rights.鈥

Community activist Cates says,鈥淐learly a small group is profiting from this rule.They have used it to set up illegal rent-free store fronts in our parks.鈥

Instructions on the permits prohibit the sale of food and drinks, but the vendors鈥 tables offer Pringles, corn chips, sodas, bottled water, coffee drinks and other packaged snacks. At a vendor鈥檚 table I visited in Kailua,听the operator was selling rubber slippers for $10 a pair with Walmart tags still on them.

鈥淭hey are selling food and items at outrageous prices. The same things you could buy down the street at Kalapawai Market for half the price,鈥 says Webster.

Under the rules, permit holders are allowed to distribute 鈥渟anctified foodstuff鈥 in exchange for 鈥渕onetary contributions.鈥

The city was unable to provide a definition of “sanctified foodstuff,鈥 but I am not persuaded that Pringles potato chips and bottled Starbuck鈥檚 coffee drinks qualify.

Some of the “sanctified foodstuff” on sale at Kailua Beach Park. Denby Fawcett

The rules say any merchandise the non-profits distribute must be printed with a message directly related to the group鈥檚 purpose.

Yet when I visited vendors at Kailua, Waimea and Ehukai parks last week, the messages on the T- shirts piled up on their tables featured vague messages such as 鈥減rotect and preserve鈥 and 鈥減rotect our oceans 鈥 鈥 sayings you might routinely see onT-shirts in Waikiki shops; messages clearly unrelatedto the Hindu charities the vendors鈥 permits say they are representing.

Biplab Biswas, a vendor whose permit says he represents the Siri Hari Society,told me,鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter. It can be any message on the shirt.鈥

Biswas said he was unfamiliar with the regulation mandating thatthe merchandise for sale must 鈥渂ear a message which is inextricably intertwined with the purpose and activities of the permittee 鈥︹

The messages on the shirts don’t match the stated missions of the nonprofits. Denby Fawcett

A woman vendor at Kailua Beach Park was telling tourists the money they spent on T-shirts with the message 鈥減rotect our oceans鈥 would go to the homeless, and then when I askedher about that message she simply said her group was dedicated to protecting the ocean.听

Permits are supposed to be visible at all times at First Amendment tables, but her group鈥檚 was not posted. She said her nonprofit was affiliated with the Iskcon Hindu Temple in Nuuanu. But Iskcon Hawaii is not registered with the city for a First Amendment permit.

鈥淭hey are just hawking goods to tourists. This is not the right way to use our parks,鈥 says state Rep. Cyththia Thielen.

Thielen met with City Parks Director Nekota on March 18 tourge her听to stop the illegal commerce at Oahu parks.

鈥淎nd to enforce the current rules which provide very specific terms for the permits. Vendors should not be selling T-shirts and sodas.They should not be allowed to be there in the parks every day,鈥 says Thielen.

Nekota says the Parks Department will instruct the police to step up enforcement. But Kailua resident Cates says the Parks Department, not HPD, should be in charge of enforcement because it understands what constitutes a violation.

鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult for police to know the many different restrictions the city imposes on permit holders,鈥 says Cates.

Nekota says the Parks Department will draft new rules for First Amendment park permits.

鈥淭he rules are 20 years old. We have to bring them up to date,鈥 says Nekota.听

City rule-making can be a lengthy process involving draft revisions and public hearings.

鈥淭he permits of the violators should be revoked now,鈥 says Cates.

A review I did with Cates of the registered permit-holders for March shows nine of the 15 non-profits with permits list the same address:67-446 Puuiki St., Waialua 96791.

Park vendors in state filings for park vendor permit holders list this residence in Waialua variously as a yoga center, place of public worship, a food manufacturer and a book distribution center. Denby Fawcett

Eight of those Waialua organizations list as their director either Dipak Sarkar or Narayani Sarkar.Another non-profit atthe same Waialua address lists Bishnu Sarkar as its agent.

In state filing papers, their Waialua address is listed variously as a yoga center, a place of public worship, a sanctified food manufacturer, and a book distribution center.

When I drove to Waialua to check out the 67-466 Puuiki St. address, I found a small, rundown house with two old recreational vehicles parked in front and with cinder-block supports.Dipak Sarkar was not home, but a man living in one of the seemingly immovable RVs 鈥 he said his name is Ranjit Sarkar 鈥told me they sold T-shirts but he said there was no church or yoga center on the premises ora sanctified food facility. He said if I was looking for a church,there was a Christian church down the street.

I called DipakSarkar later to ask him moreabout the purposes of the many charities run by him or Narayani Sarkar out of his Waialua address.I also wanted to ask him if was registering a single charity under nine different names to circumvent the city鈥檚 rule that allows only one First Amendmentpermit a month to each nonprofit.

Dipak answered my call, but after I started asking him about his charities he said he was driving and couldn鈥檛 talk. He made an appointment to talk to me at noon Sunday. I called him many times Sunday but he didn鈥檛 answer the phone or return my phone messages later in the day.

Interestingly, Dipak Sarkawas served with a by the Hawaii Attorney General鈥檚 office in December 2011.

That was when Dipak and and another man named Jahav Balaji were selling 鈥淚 climbed Diamond Head鈥 certificates inside Diamond Head crater. the 鈥渄onations鈥 they collected were going to the Diamond Head Preservation Society.

The Attorney General’s office said that there was no such group in the state.

Rep. Thielen says she鈥檚 hopeful the city will soon put a stop to what looks like a few vendors taking advantage of the city鈥檚 First Amendment permit system for their own personal gain rather than for the charitable good of the community.

Here is a list of the nonprofits granted First Amendment permits for March 2016:

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