Ask House Speaker Scott Saiki how this year鈥檚 legislative session went and he鈥檇 probably say swimmingly.聽Ask Senate President Ron Kouchi, however, and he鈥檇 compare his chamber to a canoe, with paddlers all stroking the water in different directions.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been incredibly difficult,鈥 Kouchi said from his lectern Thursday, moments before the Senate adjourned its 2019 session.聽
He said the Senate, where 24 of 25 members are Democrats, were deeply divided on some major issues.聽“Clearly everybody feels like everybody鈥檚 paddling in a different direction,” he said.
The disparate reactions by the Legislature鈥檚 leaders as session closed on Thursday highlighted the divide between how the two chambers approached some of Hawaii鈥檚 most pressing issues like minimum wage and taxing illegal vacation rentals in the last days of the legislative session.
Kouchi鈥檚 statements before the close of session also topped off a tense several weeks for the Senate that saw itself at odds over several high-profile gubernatorial nominations, and most recently, a vote to tax vacation rentals that split the Senate.
The House forced the Senate’s hand on聽聽by refusing to negotiate during conference committees.
A Different Way Of Doing Business
Senate Majority Leader J. Kalani English took issue with the House鈥檚 inactions on several measures during conference committees. Typically, the House and Senate send negotiating teams to talk over their differences on bills in the last two weeks before the end of the session.
But the House didn鈥檛 send negotiators to the table on several measures.
鈥淲e understand you may not like the bill, but you passed a version, now come and negotiate your version,鈥 English said. 鈥淎t least show up. If negotiations fail, they fail. But at least we tried.鈥
, the bill to tax illegal vacation rentals, was one of those bills. The House did not come to the table on that bill or a similar one, , forcing the Senate to take the House鈥檚 position on SB 1292.
House Finance Chairwoman Sylvia Luke told reporters Thursday morning that the House鈥檚 draft of SB 1292 had language backed by the state Department of Taxation, and that it鈥檚 up to the counties now to find the illegal vacation rentals.
The Senate wanted stricter enforcement by the state over hosting platforms like Airbnb and HomeAway along with potential tax revenue of $46 million a year that could come with it. The current version of SB 1292 would still collect the tax revenue, but makes the hosting platforms the tax collector, effectively shielding the location of the rentals.
鈥淭he theory is, a half loaf of bread is better than no loaf of bread,鈥 English said regarding the Senate鈥檚 concession to聽the House.
The take-it-or-leave-it tactics also worked on , a catch-all measure that keeps the administrative authority of state-funded pre-K under the Executive Office of Early Learning, sustains funding for 18 existing public charter school pre-K classrooms, adds funding for 10 new public pre-K classrooms and provides more than $10 million in appropriations to DOE programs like its Early College program.
The House refused to negotiate, and with an April 25 deadline looming, the Senate took the House鈥檚 draft.
While the Senate faced several major bumps in the road since January, English said that this has been one of the smoother sessions he鈥檚 seen.
鈥淥verall, I think we鈥檙e ending on a nice note. Everyone鈥檚 not too happy and not too sad,鈥 English said.
The two chambers were also able to find compromise on a number of measures that Saiki highlighted Thursday including聽all-mail voting, decriminalizing a small amount of pakalolo聽and implementing criminal justice reform.
Saiki also touted the House’s lead on implementing the state’s zero-based budget system, an effort to drill down into how and where state departments spend their money.
Kouchi struck a more somber tone in his closing remarks to the Senate, saying that, while the senators may share vast differences, they all 鈥渞an to make a difference, to make a better Hawaii.鈥
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About the Author
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Blaze Lovell is a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blovell@civilbeat.org.