Gov And LG Need To Get On The Same Page On Major Public Statements
Once again, Hawaii’s governor and lieutenant governor are confusing us all when it comes to what’s happening with the state’s recovery plans and projections.
The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board are Pierre Omidyar, Patti Epler, Nathan Eagle, Chad Blair, Jessica Terrell, Julia Steele, Lee Cataluna, Kim Gamel and John Hill. Opinions expressed by the editorial board reflect the group’s consensus view. Chad Blair, the Politics and Opinion Editor, can be reached at cblair@civilbeat.org.
Clear, consistent communication from government officials during a health crisis is essential to the public鈥檚 safety and well-being. It’s also important right now to keep up public confidence as the economic recovery Hawaii desperately needs is starting to blossom.
Yet, we are receiving conflicting information about COVID-19 and important decisions from our two top elected officials.
The two have been delivering contradictory messages about what people can and should expect in coming months as the state issues new policies to deal with the pandemic. But the clearest example of the break in communication can be seen watching their appearances on the Honolulu Star-Advertiser’s live interview show.
First, on Feb. 15, Lt. Gov. Josh Green appeared with Ryan Kalei Tsuji and Yunji de Nies.
Green, a medical doctor who plays a key role in the state鈥檚 vaccine rollout and Safe Travels program, enthused that Hawaii could well resume graduations, weddings and other large gatherings by summer while schools could reopen by mid-May.
The lieutenant governor also said he is 鈥減ushing hard鈥 to begin inoculating residents age 65 and older in March, 鈥渃ontingent upon the federal government approving Johnson & Johnson鈥檚 one-shot vaccine,鈥 as the Star-Advertiser .
Green said as well that Safe Travels could be amended to allow arrivals to bypass testing with what鈥檚 known as a vaccine passport, as long as travelers can show they have received the second dose of a vaccine at least two weeks before arrival.
And the lieutenant governor expected that, by March 1, critical infrastructure workers exempt from some travel requirements would be able to journey under the new rule, while all interisland travelers could do so by April 1 and all mainland travelers by May 1.
鈥淭hat will really mean that by the summertime we can have lots of safe travelers, and remember the more important part is that we will be safe,鈥 he told Tsuji and de Nies, suggesting a return to 鈥渟ome type of normalcy鈥 just months from now.
Sounds great, right?
Six days later, appearing on , Gov. David Ige poured cold water on the notion that the state would soon be lowering the vaccine age from 75 to 65. Rather, he said Dr. Libby Char, the health director, wanted to draw the line at age 70 first to avoid jamming up vaccine distribution sites.
The Star-Advertiser, reporting on the same 鈥淪potlight鈥 program , said Ige was also 鈥渘oncommittal鈥 to amending Safe Travels to create a vaccination passport, although he said work had begun on a pilot program with the CommonPass travel health app. The governor said he was still waiting on guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and that 鈥渃hallenges鈥 remained in verifying that someone has been inoculated.
And Ige would not pledge to a timeline for reopening all public schools to in-person learning, arguing, 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 really make sense to set arbitrary deadlines.鈥
As for a tourism rebound 鈥 and thus an economic recovery 鈥 beginning in summer, the ever-cautious Ige said he did not expect Hawaii to return to what he calls 鈥渁 new normal鈥 before the end of the year.
Huh?
We appreciate that both the Gov and LG are sincere in their efforts to engage with the public and keep them apprised of developments regarding the pandemic.
Ultimately, policy and implementation are Ige’s call. And Green, who has all but officially declared his hope to succeed Ige when the governor鈥檚 final term ends next year, is no doubt eager to campaign as a successful COVID-19 crusader.
But it is a tremendous disservice to issue contradictory updates on the virus because it erodes public confidence in our government as well as efforts to get our economy back on track.
This is not the first time there has been a major disconnect between our leaders since the coronavirus first surfaced almost a year ago in the islands.
While things have improved, it鈥檚 far past time for the governor and lieutenant governor to speak with as unified a message as possible on what is still the greatest crisis of our time.
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The members of Civil Beat’s editorial board are Pierre Omidyar, Patti Epler, Nathan Eagle, Chad Blair, Jessica Terrell, Julia Steele, Lee Cataluna, Kim Gamel and John Hill. Opinions expressed by the editorial board reflect the group’s consensus view. Chad Blair, the Politics and Opinion Editor, can be reached at cblair@civilbeat.org.
These two have been fighting since day one.聽 The Gov should choose his own running mate, not someone he cannot get along with.聽 green should show more "Aloha" and respect the position. If green gets in, what goes around, comes around.Ige should never have been gov,聽 It was just a bad fit and he just couldn't do the job.聽 But party rules.聽 聽
Localgal16·
3 years ago
Please, guys, get this figured out. I'm 65, diabetic with cardiac issues, and my wife has asthma and other respiratory. The vaccination efforts here on Maui seem completely disorganized to me, and only God knows when we will be eligible for vaccinations, even with these health conditions. GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER. Please.
Chris_Profio·
3 years ago
This editorial leaves out an important point: The reason Ige doesn芒聙聶t yet endorse a travel passport for the vaccinated is that scientists don芒聙聶t know yet whether vaccinated people can still carry the virus and spread it. I am grateful that Ige is following the science.
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