The criticisms were loud and biting last spring, as David Ige, Hawaii鈥檚 brand-new governor, sought to recover from his ill-advised nomination of developer lobbyist Carleton Ching to head the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.

Ige鈥檚 no friend of the environment, shouted critics. He wants to hand the state over to developers!

After realizing Ching’s nomination was headed for defeat, Ige grudgingly pulled it at the last second and put forward longtime Nature Conservancy of Hawaii leader Suzanne Case. She earned unanimous confirmation and applause from an environmental community that only weeks before had been eviscerating the governor.

What a difference a year makes.

Gov. David Ige and Suzanne Case share a moment after a press conference at which Case was announced as his new appointment to lead DLNR.聽 Cory Lum/Civil Beat

One year to the day after nominating Case, Ige has completed a year-long turnaround on environmental matters. In his聽 for a Western Governors鈥 Association conference in Honolulu on conservation and the federal Endangered Species Act, Ige focused on resolving the tensions between protecting rare species and enrgy development in the Hawaii islands.

A year ago, when the Senate Committee on Water and Land’s voted against Ching鈥檚 confirmation, Ige聽dismissed the committee聽as 鈥渦sually filled with people who are conservationists and protectors of the environment.鈥

One assumes that鈥檚 a verbal gaffe he wouldn鈥檛 commit again.

From Grudging To Engaged

But there are other signs that Ige is taking a stronger interest in and showing more leadership on the environment:

  • His budget for fiscal year 2017 requests $138.3 million for the state Department of Land and Natural Resources, a proposed increase of nearly $15 million over FY2016 for the chronically underfunded agency. Among the beneficiaries: State recreational and natural resources ($3 million), sustainability projects in the ($2 million), six new full-time staff lines for the state Historic Preservation Division and increased acquisition funding for the Legacy Land Conservation Program ($1.7 million).
  • Ige nominated seven new members to the state Environmental Council early this year, ensuring the body’s ability to meet quorum and to fulfill its responsibility to help the state make sound environmental policy. Earlier in Ige鈥檚 term, the group had so few members it had to cancel meetings for an embarrassing lack of quorum. All seven new nominees were confirmed unanimously by the Senate on March 14. Ige will have more vacancies to fill when three more members鈥 terms expire at the end of June.
  • Last October, Ige named former Sierra Club Hawaii Chairman Scott Glenn to head the Office of Environmental Quality Control. Responsible for implementing laws and rules relating to environmental impact statements, the office has major authority over the environmental, social, economic and cultural impacts of construction projects on lands within conservation districts, shoreline areas and historic sites. Ige personally vetted Glenn for the position, earning points by those familiar with the process as much for the depth of his questions as for his selection of Glenn.
  • Ige’s DLNR budget request included $4 million to host the huge World Conservation Congress this September in Honolulu. Held every four years, this massive gathering of the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s 1,300 member organizations had 10,000 participants from 157 countries when it was last held in Jeju, Korea. Its Hawaii meetings are expected to draw even more people and shine a global spotlight on conservation issues in the Aloha State.
  • By hosting the Western Governors鈥 Association鈥檚 conservation conference, Ige put Hawaii environmental perspectives and concerns in front of the representatives of 19 Western states and three U.S. territories: Fourteen Hawaii speakers, including Ige, took part in roundtable discussions and overviews on issues such as marine protected areas and integrating climate change considerations into the Endangered Species Act framework. The association’s report, based in part on the conference, will guide its lobbying work in Washington, D.C.

In an editorial board meeting last week with Civil Beat, WGA senior leaders noted the governor鈥檚 engagement on the environmental workshop. When they recently went to the Capitol for a pre-conference meeting, expecting to meet with a few aides, they were surprised at their reception.

Ige at an editorial board meeting at Civil Beat last December. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

鈥淗e had his entire Cabinet there. He wanted to make sure they all knew, 鈥榊ou need to engage, we need to get involved with this,鈥欌 said WGA Communications Director Joe Rassenfoss. Ige also pushed the group to 鈥渞each out aggressively鈥 to encourage other coastal states to participate in the event. 鈥淗e鈥檚 been really terrific on this.鈥

Cynics might wonder whether such an approach is motivated by political considerations. In a state where environmental concerns are widely shared and deeply felt, it would be a bad idea to go into a possible re-election campaign in two years trailed by lingering doubts regarding commitment and values.

Others contend Ige’s moves over the past year simply show his true colors, which always included a healthy stripe of green.

Either way, the environmental community seems to be learning to like Ige on the merits, swayed by a consistent pattern of actions since last spring鈥檚 appointment of Case.

Ulalia Woodside, who replaced Case at the Nature Conservancy last December, noted that while the criticisms of Ige have quieted, that could change if the governor鈥檚 changes聽course. But she鈥檚 among a growing number who are increasingly hopeful they can work with the Ige administration on matters of environmental importance to Hawaii.

鈥淚t does seem a much more inclusive approach,鈥 said Woodside. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about conservation versus development, but of inclusion, voices being heard and what it means for Hawaii.鈥

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