Trisha Kehaulani Watson is a Kaimuki resident, small business owner, and bibliophile. She holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Hawaii and J.D. from the William S. Richardson School of Law. She writes about environmental issues, cultural resource management, and the intersection between culture and politics. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views. You can follow or contact her on Twitter at .
It was hard watching the state Senate informational briefing last week.
At a time when government should be most cooperative and transparent, the administration seems resolved to be difficult and uncooperative. The fact that the Senate had to go so far as to grant itself subpoena powers during the recent session is a very telling indicator of just how uncooperative Gov. David Ige and his staff have become.
The cabinet should be displaying an eagerness to work with lawmakers, especially the Legislature, for the betterment of the state. They have instead chosen to make an already difficult situation that much worse.
In my opinion, people have been overly critical of the Legislature鈥檚 decision to bank money in the 鈥渞ainy day鈥 fund, where it is at least safe from the governor. Some wanted the Legislature to do more, but it would have done so without critical information being released this week by the State Council on Revenues, which forecasts tax revenues. It meets Thursday and where we are today in May is a significant distance from where we were in March, the last time it met.
Should the council update its economic forecast, which is likely, and paint a far grimmer picture of revenue coming into the state, the Legislature should have that information before deciding where best to use the state鈥檚 dwindling financial resources.
Meanwhile, small businesses and an unemployed workforce continue to suffer. People are increasingly worried about feeding their families. And while I鈥檒l be the first to admit that the is a good, clear, concise public health presentation — it is not an economic recovery plan.
There is literally nothing in the plan about economic recovery. It鈥檚 entirely about reopening the state. It speaks to when businesses can reopen, but there is nothing about loans, capital, grants or any other means of providing businesses the financial resources to 1) start back up and 2) address potentially catastrophic economic losses that resulted from the shutdown.
Reopening a business is not as easy as flicking on a light switch. You have to bring your workforce back on board. You need to purchase goods or supplies. Social distancing measures may require new expenditures. And if the state isn鈥檛 being 鈥渙pened back up,鈥 there is the high probability that many businesses will operate at a loss, if they are even able to reopen.
No tourism means the loss of millions of consumers and their spending. High unemployment means residents aren鈥檛 spending. People aren鈥檛 traveling here to spend their money, and those here don鈥檛 have money to spend.
This is not a recovery plan, because it fails to even mention that consumer spending has come to a screeching halt in some sectors and will likely stay that way for the foreseeable future. The majority of the gross domestic product in the United States is driven by consumer spending.
So how are restaurants or hotels supposed to recover when consumer spending has been knee-capped? How do you tell businesses to open back up when there鈥檚 no state plan for restoring spending or otherwise providing income to businesses to jumpstart cash flow? No sane business owner is going to take on expenses, like payroll, with no predictable means of paying them off.
I鈥檓 not necessarily advocating flinging our doors wide open, but I am imploring the Ige administration to do better. I am begging it to cooperate with the Legislature. I am hoping the administration will ask for the help it obviously needs.
I am asking for a real plan, one that offers help with tangible, financial solutions for business owners and the thousands of workers who count on these businesses to succeed.
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Trisha Kehaulani Watson is a Kaimuki resident, small business owner, and bibliophile. She holds a Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Hawaii and J.D. from the William S. Richardson School of Law. She writes about environmental issues, cultural resource management, and the intersection between culture and politics. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views. You can follow or contact her on Twitter at .
Thank you Trisha, we'll said. The State definitely needs a real plan to salvage the state economy. I wish they'd strongly consider implementing covid testing before anyone from mainland and other countries get on plane to Hawaii. It would be insanity to do it upon arrival. Also, consideration of waiving quarantine for anyone with positive antibody test. The State can't keep the 14 day quarantine for ever!
alohaqb·
4 years ago
Appreciate info! State Gov did well in keeping us healthy. Now for business.Yes, work together, use local consultants.聽Share a Multilingual business芒聙聶 guide & Fed$to help reopen safely. Increase quality & qty of restaurant take-outs.Brainstorm new services: Uber grocery delivery, drop off merchandise, increase quality/qty of local online buying all kine聽Use Federal Funds to pilot programs.Try market to rich tourist, if they spend more, need fewer to come, save our environment.Try seasonal tourists to allow locals exclusive access to beaches etc during off tourist times. Upgrade few properties to attract them, cut-back budget hotels. Market HI as a truly Safe Isle vacation (let芒聙聶s we stay this way!)Create efficient service hubs re all the above.
Star·
4 years ago
Ige did appoint the "navigator" who spent $1M on him and his staff, and $9M to a consultant.聽 And like that $10M budget gone!Seriously, the lawmakers/governor and local business leaders need to come together and create a plan.聽 Problem is lawmakers are used to letting other people do the work, and none of them work together.聽 It will also mean working longer than a session permits if that's what it takes.聽 None of this we'll reconvene next month stuff.
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