Numbers aren’t always as definite as you might think.

Numbers are rhetorical representations. They are easy to solidify into appealing forms and to manipulate to cover all sorts of questionable concepts. Reader (and ) , who as a certified public accountant, has been looking closely at the numbers on Honolulu鈥檚 elevated rail project, and she has many听 in which those numbers are being kept, described and shared with the public.

Many of us, like Iwasa, have been aghast over the past few weeks, as the board of the听听revealed its ridiculous bookkeeping, projections and cost-control practices. As Honolulu Star-Advertiser reporter documented, board members repeatedly asked each other and staff members how the agency鈥檚 numbers, especially during the past two years, so听.

This decal, on HART’s first delivered rail car this spring, shows rail line stops that may never come to be. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The estimated cost of the project in May, for example, was $6.9 billion. But a few weeks later that estimate had grown to more than $8 billion. Then, last week, those .

A one-month increase of nearly听$3 billion? Astonishingly, Dan Grabauskas, the agency鈥檚 executive director, shrugged the shifting numbers off as 鈥渂ad luck,鈥 based on rising real estate prices. That seems just like the kind of laissez-faire blather that would allow rampant out-of-control spending.

A Bill For What?

Now, $3 billion seems sort of small, when written in that Associated Press-style way, but looks a bit different when you put in all of the zeros: $3,000,000,000. With in the state, that would equate to each听of us, including children, getting slapped with a new bill this month for $2,143 (or a household of four finding an $8,571 bill on its听doorstep), with no explanation of what, now, we are getting for our money. Therefore, the biggest and most unanswered journalistic question is: For what? Bad luck?

That鈥檚 not an answer that should make Hawaii journalists content.听Civil Beat’s Nick Grube, with assistance from special correspondent Bob Porterfield and others, has been听setting an example of the听kind of work that needs to be done here with their ongoing series called “Off Track.” But more journalists need to join this pursuit and find out what’s going on.

Iwasa, for her part, pinpointed many poor accounting practices within the agency. She illustrated her assessment with one head-scratcher moment in a recent HART slideshow when the presenter did not even add up projected revenues correctly. That slide claimed HART had accumulated $6.827 billion in revenue, but the organization provided a more detailed list of the revenue on the same slide that actually showed an income of $6.828 billion.

The line by line numbers in this HART presentation don’t quite match听the top-line revenue estimate. HART

Iwasa also wondered why the federal grant was listed in this slide at $1.551 billion, when by all other accounts, including HART鈥檚 own, it ? Maybe this solves the mystery of the missing million ($1,000,000!), or that million is going to appear soon (hooray!), or maybe the revenue already has been lost and HART simply hasn鈥檛 told us about that yet (awww!).

But how confident do you feel, at this point, that HART is managing the public鈥檚 money properly, if it can鈥檛 even keep its most basic numbers straight in this or the many other cases that Iwasa documents?

Why Journalists Need Numeracy

Iwasa succinctly pops the 鈥渂ad luck鈥 balloon with her numerical criticisms. Her strategy of focusing on the numbers should provide a lead for local journalists to investigate this story more thoroughly through the accounting ledgers. But more needs to be done; it鈥檚 just not sufficient to say a budget is $3 billion higher without saying why.

“Facts are stubborn, but statistics are more pliable.” — Mark Twain

The number-crunching tools that journalists need to pick this budget apart and find out where the money went are readily available. Computer-assisted reporting has been a part of journalistic practices for decades, but new digital systems enable听powerful kinds of . In this case and others, journalists would benefit from a better understanding of , including basic and .

Without numerical literacy, they are vulnerable to all sorts of statistical manipulations, based on erroneous, or misleading 听迟丑补迟听can be tossed aside as 鈥渂ad luck.鈥 Journalists can’t find the real stories behind听this blunder without understanding how the numbers were created and getting past the facade many of those figures听present.

Numerical literacy 听journalists to expose and disrupt political, corporate and societal corruption by bringing statistical truth to light and getting accurate information to their audiences. Without it, they are helpless puppets in the hands of the statistical manipulators.

Figure Out Your Starting Point

To begin to orient this story based on numbers, though, we need to know where to start the analysis. We could start at the place recommended by , the chair of the University of Hawaii鈥檚 . That would be 2004, when newly elected mayor Mufi Hannemann proposed 34 miles of rail for $2.7 billion. Prevedouros has kept track of , as he saw them, in a timeline.

Or, we could begin with a slightly contracted and more expensive starting point. Honolulu City Councilwoman Ann Kobayashi summarized her understanding of the origins in an article last year听by 听magazine,听offering a 听of the morphing costs and scope of the project.听At the point Kobayashi bought in, the train was going to cost about $3.5 billion and connect the west side to Salt Lake and Waikiki And it was going to alleviate the traffic bottleneck in downtown Honolulu by providing a line up to the University of Hawaii Manoa (also serving large nearby schools, such as Punahou and Mid-Pacific), addressing some听of the worst traffic concerns on the island.

A , though, estimated the cost at $3.7 billion (Civil Beat reader 鈥淏ig Daddy鈥 pointed out), with project consultant warning that estimate could be 鈥渁nywhere from 30 percent too low to 25 percent too high.鈥 That means costs for this project should have ranged roughly between $2.78 billion to $4.81 billion.

Accounting For Inflation

Using an inflation calculator provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the high end of that number would be about dollars, which is roughly what the general public had in hand as a cost estimate when it last had something of a say on this rail issue in 2012听by choosing pro-rail candidate Kirk Caldwell for mayor of Honolulu. So 2012 seems to be the turning point of this issue financially and a reasonable place to begin an investigation.

As Civil Beat鈥檚 Nick Grube reported at the time, the rail was going to cost $5.26 billion and be completed in 2019, connecting east Kapolei with the Ala Moana Center. (The UH line dream already had been dropped, but that鈥檚 another story.)

From there, under Caldwell鈥檚 watch, this project appears to have gone financially haywire. As Civil Beat鈥檚 Anita Hofschneider reported earlier this month, between 2012 and now, the rail costs ballooned first to $8.1 billion, then $10.8 billion; and the timeline was lengthened to 2024 before the rail line connects to, well, who knows where at this point? Middle Street?

Sometime during all this — The past month? The past two years? Since 2012? — this project financially derailed. And if you鈥檙e waiting for the HART board to figure out what happened and let you know, in detail, you might as well be loitering at the site of the ill-fated UH Manoa stop.

What, Me Worry?

This is the same local government culture that allowed more than 100,000 gallons of raw sewage to spill into the waters of Waikiki and the surrounding areas during a storm last year because of听鈥渕颈蝉肠辞尘尘耻苍颈肠补迟颈辞苍.”听And the director of the city鈥檚 Department of Environmental Services, Lori Kahikina, shrugged the mistake off with an apology and a promise to hold a meeting to talk about ways to improve departmental communication.

When major screwups happen that affect public health and finances, public servants need to be accountable for more than a 鈥渟orry about that!鈥 If you are waiting for them to own up to the mistakes, I鈥檒l see you on the first train trip to Ala Moana. This is where journalists need to dig deeply and find out what happened. We need you, journalists!

When a public agency somehow miscalculates about $3 billion in public costs in a month and tries to deflect blame to 鈥渂ad luck,鈥 journalists are the only people left standing who can help us by doing the math, figuring out where the money went and uncovering the stories of what really happened. To understand the issue with escalating real estate prices along the rail, for example, journalists might want to follow Civil Beat鈥檚 Nick Grube鈥檚 lead and question Colbert Matsumoto.

The openings for great data journalism clearly are there in this fiasco, including the conflicting accountsof where the money has gone听and a exposing all sorts of compelling questions. Citizen journalists, like , can create openings on these issues, of course, but we cannot expect them to do it all.

Professional journalists in this community: It鈥檚 your turn to find out what exactly happened, to share that with the public, to force public accountability and to finish the job.

Support Independent, Unbiased News

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.

 

About the Author

  • Brett Oppegaard

    Brett Oppegaard has a doctorate degree in technical communication and rhetoric. He studies journalism and media forms as an associate professor at the University of Hawaii Manoa, in the School of Communications. He also has worked for many years in the journalism industry. Comment below or email Brett at brett.oppegaard@gmail.com.

    Reader Rep is a media criticism and commentary column that is independent from Civil Beat鈥檚 editorial staff and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of Civil Beat.