In 2010, Scott Wallace bought almost 7 acres of agricultural land in Haleiwa聽intending to convert it to homes.

Almost seven聽years later, the fate of his rezoning request from agricultural to urban or residential rests with聽the Honolulu City Council. Council members are scheduled to聽vote聽Wednesday on the first reading of two bills,听 and , to rezone the land.

Some North Shore residents oppose the proposed development, arguing it would shrink agricultural land while increasing traffic in an already congested area. It’s also opposed by the Honolulu Planning Commission.

Increasingly congested streets make North Shore residents wary of more development. Anthony Quintano/ Civil Beat

鈥淭he community as a whole doesn鈥檛 want this project,鈥 said North Shore Neighborhood Board member Thomas Shirai. The board 聽in October opposing the effort to rezone the land.

In March, the Planning Commission, a nine-member advisory board, recommended that the City Council . As a result, the proposal would need a supermajority of six council votes to pass.

The land is along Achiu Lane, just off Kamehameha Highway makai聽of the .

The developer wants to divide聽the land into 29 lots and sell each for an estimated price of $175,000 to $200,000. The average size of the lots would be 5,500 to 6,000 square feet. The zone change would allow for up to 35 homes.

鈥淲hat this project is all about is working class housing,鈥 said Wallace, who also 聽the nearby Haleiwa Plantation Shop and runs Wallace Theater Management Corp.

City law requires that 30 percent of lots be made affordable to people earning not more than 140 percent of area median income, which was聽$98,560 for an individual . Ten percent of the lots must be made available to people earning 80 percent or less of AMI, which was $56,320 or less for an individual in 2016.

The developer said he would allow residents of Kilioe Street, the lone road that runs through the adjourning residential neighborhood of about 17 houses, the first chance to purchase the properties.

Scott Wallace’s land sits just off Kamehameha High Way near the North Shore Marketplace. Google Maps

Two years ago, Wallace said, Kilioe Street residents had the opportunity to fill out a card indicating their interest in purchasing the land.

鈥淎lmost half of the people on that street were interested,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen it goes to market they鈥檒l be the first told, so they can come purchase first if they so desire.鈥

Residents expressed concern over disappearing farmland on Oahu.

鈥淚f you allow this type of development you鈥檙e setting a really dangerous precedent,鈥 said North Shore resident Malia Evans. 鈥淥thers will come in and scoop up more ag land for development.鈥

Shirai, the neighborhood board member, compared the project to the Hoopili development, which is turning聽nearly 1,300 acres of agricultural land into a planned聽11,750-home聽development in West Oahu.

Wallace said his land is unfit for farming. A study of the soil found it had too much clay, he said.

Some residents disagree. Evans, an聽anthropologist who聽studies traditional land use in Hawaii, said the land is聽ideal for farming taro.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚聽 classifies Wallace’s land and surrounding properties as聽鈥減rime farmland if irrigated.鈥

Scott Wallace purchased the Haleiwa property in 2010 with the intention of converting it into a residential development. Courtesy of Malia Evans

Shirai said聽Haleiwa residents have been on alert about attempts聽to convert agricultural land to other uses since nearby landowner Kamehameha Schools announced on agricultural land.

鈥淲e need to keep as much ag land as we can,鈥 said Bob Justice, another neighborhood board member.

City Councilman Ernie Martin, who represents the North Shore, did not respond to a request for comment about the proposal.

He’s one of seven council members who has received campaign donations from Wallace.聽In the last 10 years, the movie theater executive has donated more than $55,000 to the candidates in Hawaii, according to from the state .

About $33,000 of Wallace’s donations went to current City Council members. Martin received the most, $5,000 since 2006.

Civil Beat reached out to each of the council members who have聽received more than $1,000 from Wallace in the last 10 years.

Outgoing Honolulu City Council Chair Ernie Martin. 3 jan 2017
Councilman Ernie Martin serves the area where the new housing is proposed. Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Council members Ikaika Anderson, Ron Menor, Trevor Ozawa and Kymberly Pine did not respond to requests for comments.聽

Brandon Elefante said he plans to file a disclosure of interest statement for these bills, and said he plans to consult the city鈥檚 ethics commission for guidance.

Elefante said he doesn鈥檛 foresee this situation calling for a recusal because campaign contributions are lawful and he has no direct financial stake in the property鈥檚 development.

鈥淚 never look at who donates to me,鈥 said Councilwoman Ann Kobayashi. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 effect me at all. I just go with what I think is right.鈥

Kobayashi said she would likely follow Martin’s lead on the Haleiwa proposal.

I usually go with the council member from that district,” she said. “I really didn’t like Hoopili聽because that was really prime ag land, but the (council member from that聽district) was supporting it so I supported it with reservations.”

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