Retired Hawaii Island Circuit Court Judge Riki May Amano聽 as the hearings officer to conduct a new contested case hearing regarding the proposed Thirty Meter Telescope project atop Mauna Kea, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources announced Friday.

Last December, the state Supreme Court聽vacated the permit allowing the TMT project,聽concluding the DLNR聽violated due process when it approved a permit for the $1.4 billion project in 2011 prior to holding the first contested case hearing.

That decision was a victory for many Native Hawaiian activists and their supporters who successfully prevented the beginning of telescope construction last year through protests and vigils on Mauna Kea. Dozens were arrested for blocking construction on the mountain, where 13 observatories have already been built.

An artist’s rendering of the proposed Thirty Meter Telescope. Thirty Meter Telescope

Faced with the considerable delay resulting from the Supreme Court ruling, TMT officials have begun considering other potential sites for the telescope, including Chile, the Canary Islands and India.

In a press release issued Friday, the DLNR said Amano was the first choice of a聽selection committee that included聽James Duffy, a retired Supreme Court justice; Deputy Attorney General聽Stella Kam; and聽Christopher Yuen, a member of the state Board of Land and Natural Resources.

“Any comments on and objections to this appointment shall be filed no later than April 15,” the release stated. They should be sent to the DLNR Administrative Proceedings Office, 1151 Punchbowl St., Room 130, Honolulu, HI 96813.

“Judge Amano will determine the schedule for the contested case hearing,” the release stated.

Amano served as a judge in state district and circuit courts from February 1992 until her retirement in April 2003. She now resides in Honolulu.

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