By almost all measures, the 2017 legislative session deserves a report card dominated by F’s.
Instead of rising to the occasion, the Hawaii Legislature is closing its session wallowing in the abyss of failure, well beyond the low end of mediocrity.
While a few bones were tossed out and crumbs dribbled here and there, legislators聽failed to move forward any meaningful positive agenda in support of environmental, economic or social justice.
They聽failed to cap interest rates on 鈥減ayday lending,鈥 failed to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour, failed to regulate restricted-use pesticides, failed to ban聽polystyrene foam聽single-use containers, failed to protect the vital aquifer at Red Hill, failed to deal with the issue of quiet title to kuleana lands, failed to act on domestic violence, failed to prevent discrimination in healthcare access, failed the captive laborers in our fishing fleets, and failed in many, many other areas.

They could not even agree to set clean energy goals for transportation 鈥 goals mind you, not a mandate.聽 Instead they caved in to the auto industry and climate deniers.
With a Trump administration in Washington aggressively working to reduce environmental protections, shred the social safety net and take away rights of the already disenfranchised, some of us actually hoped that 2017 would be a time for bold action by our Hawaii legislators.
But instead of bold action we received the same excuses that are delivered at this same time year after year. The phrases are so predictable that journalists can pre-write their stories with 鈥渋nsert phrase here鈥 and just drop in the appropriate 鈥淲e ran out of time,鈥澛爋r聽鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have the votes,鈥澛爋r聽鈥淲e will keep working on this during the interim, 鈥 or 鈥淚t was a bad bill,鈥 ad nauseam.
To be clear, the problem is not a 鈥渂ad bill.鈥 If a bill is bad, they should fix it or come up with another solution that they can support. The purpose of the Legislature is not simply to pass and kill bills, but rather to solve problems.
If the Legislature 鈥渞uns out of time,鈥 it they can and should extend deadlines and do the work needed to protect the public interest. Failing to ban the restricted-use pesticide chlorpyrifos is an unconscionable act of neglect. Used widely in Hawaii on all islands, chlorpyrifos is a neurotoxin known to inhibit brain development in children and there is no safe level of exposure for a fetus.
The pre-Trump Environmental聽Protection Agency recommended banning this dangerous chemical from use聽on聽food crops, but the post-Trump EPA director has reversed his own agency鈥檚聽recommendation and refused to ban the substance. Instead of stepping up to protect children, the legislative response is: 鈥淟et鈥檚 wait until next year and take this up again.鈥
Payday聽lending is an industry that is allowed, by Hawaii law, to charge in excess of 400 percent (interest/fees)聽on the loans made primarily to low-income workers living paycheck to paycheck.
For the past 12 years聽a聽bill聽has been聽introduced each session聽that attempts to cap the interest rate at 18聽percent聽(or sometimes 32聽percent). Each year the industry prevails and the聽bills die and the excuse is, 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have the votes.鈥澛燳et there is rarely any vote actually taken and, consequently, the public never really knows who is in support and who is not.
On the surface, the membership in the House and Senate appear to be completely dominated by the Democratic Party. But it is clear from their actions that a majority of those serving are essentially Democrats In Name Only. Most choose the Democrat label as a matter of convenience and give only lip service to party values and platform.
The Democratic revolution of 1954 that took control of Hawaii鈥檚 government from the 鈥淏ig 5鈥 sugar plantation and land-based corporations created a wave of progressive political and policy reform. New candidates ran for office and were elected by a newly inspired electorate. As a result, many bold policy reforms were instituted in support of worker rights and environmental protections.
Somewhere along the way, Hawaii鈥檚 political leadership lost its way. There are solid progressive legislators in both the House and the Senate, but their effectiveness is hamstrung by a corporatist-centered leadership unwilling to buck the powers of Bishop Street.
It鈥檚 time for a new political and policy revolution in Hawaii.
Fortunately new leaders, some spawned by the Bernie Sanders movement and others simply called by the urgency of the moment, are starting to step forward. As these new individuals begin to test their mettle, both in the elections process and in the general area of public policy advocacy, a new wave is being created.
The momentum for change is building. Thursday marks the close of the 2017 legislative session but also marks the birth of a new movement for change.
This is a movement where people once again take ownership of their government, demand accountability from their legislators and support and empower those new leaders willing to stand up to the corporate and establishment powers now in control.
Please join with us Thursday from 7 to 8:30 a.m. along Miller Street to express our extreme disappointment with those at the Legislature who have failed us so miserably this year.
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