Sara Kay describes her experience lobbying state Rep. Henry Aquino as “frustrating.”
The Punahou School junior聽has called and emailed Aquino and even showed up at his Capitol office.
But Aquino, chairman of the House Transportation Committee, hasn’t made himself available to Kay and her friends, who want him to hear an anti-smoking measure.
“Honestly, it’s very frustrating,” Kay said Tuesday before launching another round of calls and emails to Aquino. “It’s his job to represent the people, and considering that we gathered more than 70 youth and others from around Oahu to rally in support, he should listen to us and do his job.”
The legislation聽in question is , which would ban smoking in cars and trucks when a person under 18 is present.
It passed the Senate 24 to 1, with the state聽Department of Health, the Hawaii County Police Department, the Hawaii Public Health Institute, the聽American Heart Association and the Hawaii Children’s Action Network testifying in support.
In her committee report on SB 261, Ways and Means Chairwoman Jill Tokuda said children need to be protected from secondhand smoke, “particularly when they have no choice but to ride in a vehicle with a parent or other person who chooses to smoke in the confines of the vehicle.”
Hawaii County and Kauai County already have聽similar聽laws in place, as does聽Arkansas, California, Louisiana, Maine, Oregon, Utah, Vermont and Virginia.
But, as of Tuesday, Aquino and House Health Chairwoman Della Au Belatti had not scheduled a joint hearing on SB 261. Barring a last-minute development, the legislation will die for the session if not heard this week.
Aquino and Belatti did not respond to Civil Beat’s inquiries Tuesday.
“I’m surprised to the extent that Aquino has tried to avoid a hearing,” said Trish La Chica, policy and advocacy director for the nonprofit聽. “It’s not a controversial issue.”
La Chica said she met recently with the representantive, who appeared to suggest such a law should be at the county level rather than the state. She said Belatti indicated a similar concern.
But La Chica聽said that not having a statewide prohibition would leave many kids vulnerable.聽
“He could at least let us know his concerns to give advocates a chance to address it,” she said. “I just don’t understand why he’s trying really hard not to address it.”
Meanwhile, Sara Kay and her young colleagues are聽not giving up.
“I聽understand聽politics can get confusing聽and such, but our main focus聽should be protecting聽our聽generation from this rising聽threat,” she said. “We are in these cars, and it breaks my heart that this bill could聽die and still children are聽trapped in these聽cars.”
In addition to the smoking prohibition, SB 261 would require聽the聽Department of Health to report on the enforceability of the聽act.
As Civil Beat has reported,聽Altria Client Services and its tobacco affiliates often rank high in terms of聽lobbyist spending in Hawaii. Contributions include $2,000 to Aquino in 2015 and 2016.
On Monday, the聽Coalition for a Tobacco-Free Hawaii (a program of the聽Hawaii Public Health Institute) held聽its聽annual Kick Butts Day youth rally at the Capitol to urge state legislators to prohibit smoking in motor聽vehicles when keiki are present.
First Lady Dawn Ige and state Sens. Rosalyn Baker, Will Espero, Josh Green and Karl Rhoads were among those in attendance. The senators are sponsors of聽SB 261.
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About the Author
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Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .