The last time voters had a direct say on Honolulu rail was in 2008 when a slim majority approved the project.

Now that the project costs much more than projected, and with public听officials talking about stopping it at Middle Street before finding the funds to build all the way to Ala Moana Center, a new group proposes that voters weigh in once again.

Leaders of a hui called 听launched a campaign听Tuesday to gather the necessary signatures to have听a ballot question before voters as soon as possible.

鈥淭oday, Oahu鈥檚 taxpayers take control of our city government鈥檚 increasingly unaffordable听rail project, taking it away from the politicians听who got us into this mess, away from the politicians who repeatedly lied to the public to push this project along for the financial听benefit of their听campaign听contributors,” said Eric Ryan, the group’s campaign manager who was involved with听the Stop Rail Now campaign听eight years ago.

Make Rail Affordable’s central Oahu coordinator, Emil Svrcina, at left, speaks to media at the Middle Street bus terminal during a press conference Tuesday. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

He added, “Despite听the听avalanche听of bad news, these politicians听and the rail cartel somehow think that people听are just going听to somehow sit back and take it. We鈥檙e not. They’re wrong. The fight starts today.鈥

Ryan said Make Rail Affordable would go door to door, online and through social media to sign up 45,000 people, which he said would put the question on the听2018 general election ballot.

Better yet, he said, is the goal听of 79,000 signatures, which he said could lead to a special election in early 2017.

The ballot question would call for revising city ordinances to shorten the rail line to Middle Street, which is where Make Rail Affordable held its press announcement.

Otherwise, warned Ryan, the cost of the project could grow to $30 billion, once the full project is built out to West Kapolei, Waikiki and the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Meanwhile, traffic congestion is likely to worsen.

Marissa Kerns, a Leeward resident helping coordinate the campaign, said,听鈥淭he city and the Council, the mayor, the governor, the state Legislature and everybody in Washington, D.C., know that taxpayers听are still going to be on the hook.”

础肠办苍辞飞濒别诲驳颈苍驳听迟丑补迟听贬辞苍辞濒耻濒耻 by not allowing changes to taxes, spending, salaries or union agreements, Ryan said, “The ordinance we seek to change has no dollars attached to it.It is simply a route.Naturally, we expect Corporation Counsel, PRP and others to whine.But the ordinance has nothing to do with spending or taxes.It鈥檚 just the route.”

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