Recently, there has been fierce debate over Bill 42 before the Honolulu City Council. Here鈥檚 the background:

In 2007, the city passed Ordinance 07-001, which says that the Honolulu rail project would be funded only with proceeds of the general excise tax surcharge and federal money.

鈥淲e鈥檒l never touch the real property tax to build rail,鈥 the politicians said at the time.

Bill 42 basically repeals 07-001 to open up other funding sources, like real property tax.

For a long time, I was wondering what the authors of 07-001 were smoking.

Mayor Kirk Caldwell walks out before presser discussing where his administration is going to find the $44 million tor rail in their plan,
Mayor Kirk Caldwell at a recent press conference announcing where his administration is going to find $44 million for rail. Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2018

For a little while since 2007, the rail project seemed to be on track. Mr. Mayor was out telling all of us that the project will be built on time and on budget.

But then, a little later when the project was being planned and costed out, Mr. Mayor started becoming a frequent visitor to the Legislature. With hat in hand.

鈥淲e need just a small kine extension of the surcharge,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 permanent extension would be nice.鈥

This, of course, started to drive the Legislature nuts. Several legislators wondered out loud why they needed to stick their necks out to extend or increase taxes to bail out the city from its projected cost overruns when the city could just hide behind 07-001 and say to voters, 鈥淏ut we protected your property taxes.鈥

More Bailouts

As time went on, more and further bailouts were needed. Not only was the general excise tax surcharge extended multiple times, but 2017 legislation added an additional percentage point to the transient accommodations tax to build rail.

Some of the bill drafts contained language that would require the city to repeal 07-001 if they wanted a state bailout, but that language didn鈥檛 pass. At the same time, the state reduced its skim off the surcharge proceeds from 10 percent to 1 percent, freeing up millions more for rail.

Then, the debate turned to whether real property tax, thus protected, was too low. The Hawaii State Teachers Association and others started arguing that low property taxes exposed the soft underbelly of our real estate market to nasty, rotten, foreign speculators.
The solution? Enact a surcharge on property taxes to increase funds for education.

If the city wanted to build this project, it needed to be committed.

That conversation, which started in the 2017 session, rose to prominence in the 2018 session, and then dominated the public鈥檚 attention while a proposed constitutional amendment to do that was on the ballot. Mercifully, that amendment was dealt a death blow by the Hawaii Supreme Court.

Amid all that, the Federal Transit Administration, which was supposed to be contributing $1.5 billion to the effort, grew increasingly dissatisfied with the city鈥檚 skin in the game and threatened to crater the project unless more money was immediately made available to it. Ordinance 07-001 was in the way. It needed to go.

In effect, the feds were saying that they were not going to dance the same way that the state did; the city needed to show its commitment. Hence, Bill 42 was necessary.

Was Bill 42 a manifestation of promises made and betrayed?

I think of it more as a realization that 07-001 represented a promise that was unrealistic from the beginning. If the city wanted to build this project, it needed to be committed; if it weren鈥檛, reality would catch up with it eventually.

And by committed I don鈥檛 mean the commitment that the chicken makes to give you your bacon and eggs breakfast; I am talking about the commitment that the pig makes.

More and further bailouts, by the state, the feds, or the electorate, won鈥檛 happen without consequences. Our city officials need the resolve to make this project work within its means if they hope to avoid those consequences.

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