Hawaii is an island state that is home to a unique set of flora and fauna. It鈥檚 vulnerable to invasive species not only from foreign countries but also from the mainland United States, and our Department of Agriculture has traditionally worked hard to keep the bad stuff out.

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Little fire ants? Brown tree snakes? We don鈥檛 want them, but we do want tons and tons of goods from the mainland and from foreign lands.

That鈥檚 why DOA has had in place a rigorous inspection program to scrutinize those shipments and, hopefully, catch any undesirable hitchhikers before they have a chance to damage our island ecosystem.

In 2008, our lawmakers thought, sensibly enough, that the importers of freight should defray the costs of these inspections. They passed a bill imposing a fee of 50 cents per thousand pounds of freight (increased in 2011 to 75 cents) that goes into a special fund called the 鈥淧est Inspection, Quarantine, and Eradication Fund.鈥

The fee is paid by the shipper, collected by the transportation company, and then paid over to the state. The fund pays for operating costs of pest inspection, quarantine, eradication, and monitoring programs and related purposes.

But the fee is collected only on shipments by water.

Why?

Coqui frogs are an invasive species. Is the state doing enough to screen against their arrival here? U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Southeast Region

In mid-2010, the Air Transport Association sued in federal court and petitioned the U.S. Department of Transportation to rule that the inspection fee was preempted by federal law, specifically the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, 49 U.S.C. 搂41713, and the Anti-Head Tax Act, 49 U.S.C. 搂40116.

(Because of the latter act, the U.S. Supreme Court felled the Hawaii Public Service Company Tax in 1983 as it applied to income from air transportation of passengers and cargo.)

In 2012, that the inspection fee was indeed preempted. The state settled with the airline industry association and refunded the fees that had been collected. But then it looks like the state just gave up on the fees as they related to air freight.

The USDOT ruling, however, suggested that it might be possible to structure the fees to fix the problem. An article published in 2013 in the American Bar Association鈥檚 Air and Space Lawyer, furthermore, outlined one possible fix.

The fee would have to be 1) imposed by the airport operator, in this case the state; 2) wholly used for airport or aeronautical purposes; and 3) reasonable, nondiscriminatory, and not unreasonably burdensome to interstate commerce.

Element 1) is already satisfied. Element 2) can be satisfied if a separate air cargo inspection program, different from the marine cargo inspection program, is established and paid for by the air carrier fees. DOA already has the air cargo inspection program in place, so establishing a separate fund to pay for it would seem to be an easy fix.

Element 3) should be achievable if the DOA doesn鈥檛 get too greedy and periodically adjusts its fee levels to match costs. The (page 24) observed that the balance in its special fund for these operations has been slowly creeping upward, so some tweaks may be necessary to ensure that revenues and expenses are in balance.

Lawmakers should give serious consideration to performing the fixes and working with USDOT and the airlines to pass and implement a legitimate inspection fee.

Invasive species need to be caught and eliminated regardless of the means by which the species hitchhikes to Hawaii. It doesn鈥檛 seem fair that only one part of the transportation industry is paying to protect our islands while another part gets a free ride.

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