Hawaii taxpayers are on the hook for almost $200,000 for lost dentures at a hospital, missing property at a prison, potholes damaging vehicles and a school ceiling falling on a student, among dozens of other small claims over the past year.
Unlike larger claims that first go through the 聽and then to the Legislature, where final approval is given during public hearings, claims settled for amounts under $10,000 are quietly handled within the .
The process lets the state comptroller, Douglas Murdock, write checks to settle the claims. The public has limited access to see where tax dollars are going for these claims until they are the subject of an annual report that just itemizes the expenses.
The , for fiscal year 2016, which ended June 30, was filed Thursday with the Legislature.
There were 535 claims and 10 lawsuits in all, requesting a total of $10.7 million. But the department鈥檚 28-page report shows it reduced that to 165 people receiving a combined $197,057. That鈥檚 similar to prior years.
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The state risk management office decides on a case-by-case basis which claims should be approved.聽The office has to determine if the state was negligent or not, and if so, to what degree.
Kitae Kim is receiving聽the maximum $10,000聽to settle a Dec. 10, 2015, claim involving a student who was聽injured by a falling ceiling at Kapiolani Community College.
Michele Hoke gets聽a check for $3,250 after a patient’s聽dentures were lost at Maui Memorial Hospital on June 11, 2014.
Inmates are to receive thousands of dollars for claims ranging from chain saw and fire injuries to lost personal property.
Among them, Benjamin Ortiz gets $10,000 after he was injured by a chain saw while working on a land clearing project on March 12, 2013, and聽Michael Ortiz gets $3,500 after he was injured during a fire at the Hawaii Community Correctional Center on Nov. 18, 2011.
Residents聽filed dozens of claims for damages their vehicles sustained from potholes and weed whackers that sent聽rocks flying.
Read the full report below.
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .