(Editor’s note: The writer is a candidate for trustee-at-large in the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.)

The state Office of Hawaiian Affairs is angling for a 鈥渃o-trusteeship鈥 of an expanded Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument.聽But a聽from former U.S. Sen. Daniel Akaka and former state Govs. Ben Cayetano and George Ariyoshi point out, 鈥淭he proposed expansion will impact the state’s ability to continue its trust responsibility to native Hawaiians.鈥

I agree.聽Papahanaumokuakea expansion would put money in OHA鈥檚 pockets at the expense of Hawaii鈥檚 local food supplies and native Hawaiian fishermen.聽Unfortunately, Papahanaumokuakea is not the only place where OHA鈥檚 interests are diametrically opposed to those of native Hawaiians.聽In fact, it鈥檚 the latest example of a long-running pattern.

According to Trustee Lei Ahu Isa, OHA聽wasted $33 million on its failed effort to impose federal tribal recognition on native Hawaiians 鈥 $33 million that could have done wonders to ease homelessness and other issues plaguing native Hawaiian communities. But this money was directed instead toward Washington lobbyists and a handful of politically connected OHA insiders pushing an agenda opposed by thousands of Hawaiians at last year鈥檚 Interior Department hearings.

From left, OHA Trustees Dan Ahuna, Robert Lindsey and Colette Machado at a 2015 community meeting on Molokai. The writer contends the OHA board has a pattern of interests that are “diametrically opposed” to those of Native Hawaiians. Office of Hawaiian Affairs

To keep its spending secret, OHA has amassed the worst transparency record of any state agency.聽For years, OHA lawyers argued that OHA was not even subject to state laws.

OHA鈥檚聽ceded lands litigation began in 1994 with a lawsuit against a plan from the Gov. John D. Waihee administration to build affordable housing projects in Lahaina and Kailua-Kona.聽OHA鈥檚 lawyers got paid for 15 years of futile litigation from 1994 to 2009.聽Meanwhile, Native Hawaiians are leaving Hawaii because we can鈥檛 afford to live here anymore.

OHA trustees in 2007聽聽from constructing a juvenile residential drug treatment facility near the Hanapepe Salt ponds. Nine years later, Kauai County is still struggling to find a location to build this badly needed facility.聽Thanks to OHA, hundreds of Hawaiian and non-Hawaiian children on Kauai are not getting the help they need to get off methamphetamines and other drugs.

To keep its spending secret, OHA has amassed the worst transparency record of any state agency. For years, OHA lawyers argued that OHA was not even subject to state laws.

OHA鈥檚 interest in Mauna Kea consists entirely of the collection of rent money.聽Trustees are now threatening to sue because the $1 million per year rent deal they originally signed isn鈥檛 good enough anymore.聽The lawyers will profit, but Hawaii will lose the Thirty Meter Telescope and the jobs and science education opportunities that come with it.

OHA will also lose聽its聽$1 million per year.聽Native Hawaiians gain individual self-determination by participating in education and scientific exploration.聽TMT is being thrown away in OHA鈥檚聽quest for more rent money.

OHA鈥檚 excessive spending came to the attention of auditors who in 2015 reported, 鈥淥HA will run out of funds鈥 because the OHA Trust Fund has been drained by amounts ranging from $5 million to $30 million per year every year since 2005.聽OHA has little to show for its Kakaako Makai properties, except expensive drawings produced by politically connected architects.聽Other OHA properties, such as Waimea Valley, have been placed into limited liability companies with little to no transparency.

Instead of cutting wasteful spending on Cook Island junkets and padded crony contracts, OHA is looking for ways to extract money from other organizations鈥 projects.聽Proportionally, no one suffers more from OHA鈥檚 disruption of聽Hawaii鈥檚 economy than native Hawaiians.

We all need to ask ourselves whether OHA really embodies the state鈥檚 trust responsibility to native Hawaiians.聽Without OHA transparency, how can anybody claim it does?

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a current photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org.聽The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.

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