UPDATED 12/2/2016: Nearing its one-year anniversary, a program in Kalihi that helps Micronesians connect to health, social, education and employment services has now served more than听2,000 people.

But it听has also come in for some criticism lately.

The Halau Ola One-Stop Center, at St. Elizabeth鈥檚 Episcopal Church on North King Street in Honolulu, was established to assist citizens of three Micronesian nations who have immigrated to Hawaii.

Those numbers have grown to well over 15,000 people in just a few decades, thanks to impoverished conditions back home and a treaty with the United States that allows for easy travel to and from the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands and the Republic of Palau.

鈥淚 think the center is going very, very well, and it鈥檚 not just my opinion,鈥 said Josie Howard, program director of , the nonprofit organization that administers the center. 鈥淚 am echoing the opinion of the community. A lot of people come in and are thankful that there is a place, a program that is focused on our people, not only in terms of services but also staff from the culture who understand the cultural background of the clients and speak the language.鈥

We Are Oceania, Partners in Development with staff, left Kathy Martin, Case Manager and right, Social Service Manager Keola Diaz. 28 june 2016
We Are Oceania staff members Kathy Martin and Keola Diaz at the Halau Ola One-Stop Center in Kalihi. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Howard鈥檚 views are indeed echoed by government figures, including the top federal official dealing with U.S.-Micronesia relations in Washington, D.C. The center is supported by $500,000 in federal funding.

Its performance, as well as that of a sister resource center in the U.S. territory of Guam, is the subject of a blistering opinion piece published in and a similar opinion piece in Guam鈥檚 .

Maximizing Dependency?

The articles by Neil Mellen, a South Carolina resident听who served as听a Peace Corps volunteer in the Micronesian state of Yap, fault the for spending 鈥渉undreds of millions in American tax dollars to advance social, political and economic development in Micronesia and the Marshalls.鈥

Mellen wrote in the Star-Advertiser:

The failure is startling. Leaving stagnant, semi-cash, local economies for better lives on Guam or Hawaii is no longer just a rational choice for many FAS migrants; it is virtually axiomatic.

FAS stands for Freely Associated States and is another name for the three nations that are party to the , a 30-year-old agreement with the United States that allows for visa-free travel from those Micronesian countries to live and work in the U.S. and its territories.

Mellen singled out Interior鈥檚 , arguing that it has 鈥渞eacted to its own blunders by further micromanaging the hundreds of millions in aid that it is obligated to provide.鈥

Mellen then provided an example:

OIA is now training migrants to maximize their dependency on taxpayer-funded services in Guam and Hawaii. This disastrous policy includes awarding grants to so-called 鈥淥ne-Stop Centers.鈥

Caseworkers at these centers are trained to immediately sign up migrants for entitlements, equipping them to aggressively cash in on the vast number of benefits available.

Esther Kiaaina, who heads the U.S. Office of Insular Affairs,听strongly disagreed.

鈥淲hile I welcome his right to free speech, I am saddened that someone who professes to care about the issue would rather do it publicly as opposed to having the common courtesy and decency to come and say, 鈥橧s there any way that I could help?鈥欌 the assistant secretary said in an interview in Washington, D.C., earlier this month.

The one-stop centers were developed under Kiaaina, a Native Hawaiian from Hawaii who has lived in Guam. Her boss, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, is responsible for coordinating federal policy in Guam and the compact nations.

Esther Kiaaina portrait Washington DC Interior Bldg. 8 june 2016
Assistant Secretary Esther Kiaaina defended government efforts to assist Micronesian immigrants during an interview at the U.S. Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C., earlier this month. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Kiaaina said Mellen is not 鈥渙bjective鈥 because he was rejected for an Interior grant to help fund his own proposed work in Micronesia relating to migration.

鈥淚s his proposal meritorious like a lot of the other proposals that we reject? Yes it is, because it is meritorious for us to consider preparing people when they leave,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it is our discretion to determine what the needs are and the prioritization of those needs.鈥

Kiaaina said Mellen used a request to obtain information about use of Interior funds.

鈥淚 was aware of that, and that is his right, but to just attack the Office of Insular Affairs as well as the intent of the one-step centers is regrettable, because if he truly cared about the Micronesia people, he would work with us as opposed to throwing spears,鈥 she said.

鲍辫诲补迟别:听Mellen said Kiaaina 听either 鈥渕isspoke or was in error鈥 regarding the proposal, stating that the particular grant work in question 鈥渋s not within our mission.鈥 A DOI spokesperson, however, says the department stands听by the report.

Cost To Taxpayers

Kiaaina said she did not think Mellen was thinking about 鈥渢he larger issue of empowerment in these communities where some face discrimination. Let鈥檚 just acknowledge that.鈥

What the assistant secretary was referring to 鈥 and what Mellen has tapped into 鈥 is resentment on the part of some local residents in Guam and Hawaii that COFA citizens are abusing social services at the expense of taxpayers.

We Are Oceania, Partners in Development. 28 june 2016
We Are Oceania’s banner hangs outside the one-stop center at St. Elizabeth’s Episcopal Church. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

As Civil Beat chronicled in its series The Micronesians: An Untold Story of American Immigration, the discrimination is real and painful, even though many Micronesians are contributing to their new communities听and听paying taxes themselves.

Their migration听is not without financial costs.

The federal government provides Hawaii $11 million a year and Guam $16 million a year for Compact-Impact Aid, but it falls far short of what is needed. For example, in 2014 Hawaii spent $163 million to support COFA migrants with social services, education and health care.

The COFA nations also currently receive almost $200 million a year in direct U.S. aid. Government audits show that the money has not always been spent wisely.

Empowering Micronesians

Mellen argued that the one-stop centers are contributing to out-migration and dependency on the U.S. Others have argued听the centers are empowering Micronesians.

Doctoral students Bradley Rentz of the University of Hawaii Manoaand Josh Levy of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign wrote in a Civil Beat Community Voice article June 14听that听the center in Honolulu is addressing critical community needs.

鈥淭hose needs may be as diverse as basic translation services, guidance in locating legal assistance, help dealing with employers or landlords or assistance enrolling in health insurance,鈥 they wrote. 鈥(We Are Oceania) helps Micronesians adjust to their new homes by providing the skills they need to navigate American society: acculturation training, pre-employment training, census enumeration and service referrals.鈥

We Are Oceania, Partners in Development with staffers left, Julie Johannes, Senior Community Family Marketplace Outreach Specialist and right Rina Livae, Community Family Marketplace Outreach Specialist. 28 june 2016
Julie Johannes, left, and Rina Livae help听Micronesians enroll in health care services at the one-stop center. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

While acknowledging the 鈥渋mportant work鈥 done by听Mellen鈥檚 own nonprofit, the , Rentz and Levy wrote that Mellen鈥檚 opinion piece 鈥渕issed the point鈥 of the Interior Department鈥檚 work and the history of Micronesians.

We Are Oceania was granted $250,000 from the federal government in August 2015 to start the center, while Big Brothers Big Sisters of Guam received about the same听to start that island鈥檚 Micronesian resource center.

鈥淭his is not customer service but what we consider 鈥榮ervice with humility.'” 鈥擩osie Howard, We Are Oceania

In April, another $250,000 in federal funds went to We Are Oceania while the Guam group received an additional $210,000.

Howard, the We Are Oceania program director, is from Chuuk. She said the center employs three staff members 鈥斕齢erself, case manager Kathy Martin, also from Chuuk, and social services manager Keola Diaz, who is a mix of Japanese, Korean, Chamorro and Palauan.

There are also eight certified people on call to help enroll COFA citizens in , the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), as well as five volunteers and four student interns.

‘Vacuums Of Service’

During the last health care enrollment period in February, the center served more than 20 people a day 鈥 sometimes many more. On average the center is currently helping more than听10 Micronesians daily, primarily as a connector service to health, language and job training programs.

鈥淭his has been something that is very important in terms of the Micronesian community鈥檚 success and sustainability in Hawaii and the U.S.,鈥 said Jan Hanohano Dill, president of the nonprofit , a organization focused on at-risk groups within the Native Hawaiian community, which awarded the Interior grant to We Are Oceania.

鈥淚t鈥檚 obvious that there are tremendous pressures and vacuums of service in Micronesia that really can鈥檛 be backfilled economically, and so consequently people will come to Hawaii and to the U.S. seeking medical and economic and educational help,鈥 Dill said.

Josie Howard. 9 feb 2015
Josie Howard in Kalihi in February 2015, helping enroll COFA citizens in health care services. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Rachael Wong, the director of the state听, agreed. She was among those in attendance when the one-stop center听opened last summer.

鈥淚 really appreciate that the center exists,鈥 she said, crediting Interior, U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono, local leaders representing the COFA nations and especially Howard and Jojo Peter, We are Oceania鈥檚 community advocacy manager. 鈥淚t is a place that is inclusive, that is connected, and that can alert me ahead of time about issues that we should be aware of so we can know what鈥檚 coming down the pipeline and be proactive.鈥

Wong added, 鈥淭he people of the Compact nations in Hawaii have specific and unique challenges. It has really been impressed upon the federal government what those needs are, and I don鈥檛 know if that would have happened without the strong voices of Josie and Jojo.鈥

‘Holy Ground’

The one-stop center鈥檚 funding is not permanent. Dill said there are efforts to get financial support from the COFA nations and groups in Hawaii. The goal of Partners in Development Foundation is for We are Oceania to be able to operate independently听by August 2018.

A visit to the center Tuesday revealed a casual setting that might feel familiar to people from Micronesia, a heavily Christian region.

A half-dozen women in long flowing dresses sat at tables, while crosses, crucifixes and a list of the 10 Commandments adorned the walls. A small poster entitled 鈥淩ules鈥 listed 鈥渘o fighting鈥 and 鈥渘o swearing on Holy ground.鈥

In another room there were Micronesian handicrafts and a huge map of the region. Signs advertised flu shots, cell phone services and voter registration.

鈥淭his is not customer service but what we consider 鈥榮ervice with humility,’鈥 Howard said. 鈥淚n our culture, that is really important. It鈥檚 like how the chief of an island is not a controller of the community, he is a servant of the community. That is what We are Oceania is to the people. In a short period, even before one year, we have done tremendous work to help our community needs.鈥

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