Danny De Gracia: We Need More Than A Restaurant Cash Card For The Jobless
State and local officials should consider lining up discounts for all Hawaii residents for necessary products and services, like groceries, gas, even furniture.
October 5, 2020 · 5 min read
About the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Long before the pandemic, Hawaii residents were already struggling to make ends meet by razor-thin margins. Between high costs of living and wealth inequality, not only living in Hawaii,聽but staying planted in Hawaii聽was a supreme test of endurance.
And then, early this year, the coronavirus found its way into Hawaii and turned everything we knew upside down. Even as infections started to spread and fears of overwhelming the health care system started to flash, many people and businesses didn鈥檛 want to shut down or stay home, even if it meant risking severe illness or death.
The desire to 鈥渙pen up, no matter what鈥 is completely understandable. We鈥檝e grown somewhat accustomed to the spinning hamster wheel economy of Hawaii, where sleeplessness is the highest in the nation, where individuals work multiple jobs, and where entrepreneurs have an all-or-nothing, bet-the-farm approach to staying in business.
Most claim that they are working for money, others say that they鈥檙e working for their children鈥檚 future, but I鈥檝e always believed that for most of the local population,聽we鈥檙e almost working just for the sake of working.
The truth is 鈥 and I wish my fellow conservative Republicans would get this 鈥 is that both locally and nationally,聽聽as some of us claim, not only would we be able to buy more with less, but most importantly,聽, rather than constantly having to obsess over profits and consumer spending.
That, however, is all water under the bridge in October 2020. Electoral reprisals can come in November, but in the meantime, we still have the task of beating the coronavirus while also聽聽for our local population. When the government says you can鈥檛 work because it鈥檚 not safe, the correct action is for the government to provide for the population, not to force people to endanger themselves to provide for themselves.
顿别蝉辫颈迟别听bungling the processing of unemployment claims听补苍诲听taking forever to figure out how to spend CARES Act money, the State of Hawaii is at last finally acknowledging the concept that the best way to help people is to put something in their hands that allows them to get what they need.
Last week,聽, which will allow some 100,000 unemployed residents to have cards worth $500 to spend as they please in local restaurants, was a good sign for struggling families. Not only does this allow hungry people to eat, it helps local restaurants to stay in business and pay employees. Since we won鈥檛 be getting a second round of economic stimulus this year, every little bit of help that locals can get will make a big difference.
This being said, our local government needs to do so much more to help local people. Unemployed people are not the only ones who need help in Hawaii; there are many people who are at work now but couldn鈥檛 work for weeks who had to eat into their savings to pay the bills and continue to buy food, clothes, cleaning supplies for COVID-19, and many other vital needs.
One thing that our state and county leaders should consider is the possibility of negotiating for all Hawaii residents some kind of statewide discount program that covers certain products or classes of services. As it stands, whenever the state engages in procurement of certain items for official business 鈥 say for example, computers, office supplies, gasoline, even furniture 鈥 a聽聽exists where these things may be purchased at a discount rate.
Our local government needs to do so much more to help local people. Unemployed people are not the only ones who need help in Hawaii.
The idea behind this concept is that businesses that are part of this arrangement are able to get regular customers and those who use their services are given preferential prices. If a similar arrangement were made on a statewide scale for all locals to get groceries, clothing, household goods and so on at a discounted rate, this would stimulate the economy by giving locals incentive to buy cheaper products, and it would help businesses see more customers.
Say for example that a single mother needs to purchase a laptop for her daughter to take classes online. Instead of her needing to spend hours looking for the best possible deal, she could just refer to a negotiated 鈥渒amaaina list鈥 provided by the state and go with a certain local company that has agreed to provide laptops of a certain class of specifications for a fixed, discounted price.
The same could apply to residents for purchasing fruits and vegetables, disposable paper masks, toothbrushes, blankets, or anything else they might need on the list. All one would have to do is show their current Hawaii driver鈥檚 license or state identification card, and voila, they could buy whatever they needed. This is an idea that our local government should strongly consider.
It鈥檚 not clear how long the economy will be affected by the continuing pandemic, but in the meantime, having the ability to purchase necessities at low prices will be critical for our local population. If I had my way, the entire CARES Act money given to Hawaii would have simply been converted into , but since that day will never come, at least find a way to lower the cost of the things we need most in the islands.
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ContributeAbout the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Latest Comments (0)
聽negotiated "kamaaina list" provided by the state and go with a certain local companyWhat is simply marvelous idea! It would really prove to their constituents that they care about them by doing something like this. Who wouldn't Benefit? Big Business? Well so what! Keep the money here on the island.聽 It's simple economics.However since most of our politicians are sold out to Big Business, good luck getting that.
Scotty_Poppins · 4 years ago
Completely agree Danny, the state and city need to do much more to help all local citizens.聽 A $500 gift card is nice, but what about everyone working hard to make ends meet that are excluded?聽 What about landlords that are need to pay their mortgage and for some reason, property taxes to the city?聽 Bottom line is government has an obligation to directly help it's tax paying base, not with round about gift cards that only some people get, but through direct subsidies and tax relief.聽 Government also needs to stop doing business with itself.聽 Pouring $30M to toys and OT for police to give out Covid citations is a small example.聽 Instead of appropriating $175M to airport security, how about half that, so there can be more direct tax payer support?聽 And if the government can't do that they can always provide tax relief, no GET on food and medicine, no property taxes for a year, etc.聽 Get off the status quo wagon and help the people that keep the state going.聽
wailani1961 · 4 years ago
聽I work as a business manager for a locally owned business and everyone is asking for a discount.聽 But there's a problem we are paying more to offer the same services at a discount.聽- Price of PPE and sanitizer- Staffing to enforce and for extra cleaning- Less sales, same fixed costs- Costs to maintain labor due to the fluctuating demands and City/State's wishy- washy re-opening attitude.We already offer low pricing and discounts drive us to not even break even just to maintain the customers we have and stay in the market.
surferx808 · 4 years ago
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