Developers may soon need to present project proposals to neighborhood boards in Honolulu before submitting a permit application for coastline development following frustration from North Shore residents and others seeking more public input in the process.
The City Council that says developers may submit a special management use permit application to the Department of Planning and Permitting if the neighborhood board approves an applicant’s written notice or fails to respond within two months.
A special management area use permit is designed to manage uses and activities . It also regulates operations on land and water in compliance with the 1975 Shoreline Protection Act.
鈥淭his is hopefully a way to get the community and developer on the same page instead of having so much division and tension within the communities,鈥 said Honolulu City Councilmember Heidi Tsuneyoshi, who co-introduced Bill 27 with Councilwoman Esther Kiaaina.
Tsuneyoshi said any developer who skips this process would face no consequences because neighborhood boards operate as advisory groups. However, it’s an extra step for community engagement and input on local project proposals.
North Shore resident Joe Wilson, who is also a member of the , said community concerns have been long-standing, citing the encampment of food trucks聽across Kamehameha Highway from Sharks Cove, a Marine Life Conservation District that鈥檚 protected by the state.
A coalition of environmental groups and individuals filed a lawsuit in 2019 鈥 which settled in February 鈥 against the developer of the property, Hanapohaku LLC, and DPP, complaining that the city issued a special management use permit without a review of the project and failed to enforce violations.
鈥淭oo often communities and residents are left to fight these battles one-by-one, and on their own and when it’s often too late,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淭he project should go before the communities first before it ever has a chance to submit a permit application, and then, residents should be able to count on agencies like the DPP to do the job that they are mandated and entrusted to do in the public interest.鈥
DPP Director Dean Uchida, who supports the bill, said that the department had a process asking developers to reach out to neighborhood groups for public input on projects, but efforts were halted 鈥渂ecause it wasn鈥檛 a legal requirement鈥 but rather a recommendation.
鈥淲e support the bill because that鈥檚 what we prefer to happen 鈥 that they (developers) go and talk to the community before they come to us with the application,鈥 Uchida said.
Last year the State Legislature passed , which requires more coastline properties 鈥 affected by sea level rise, or impacted by waves, storm surges, high tide or shoreline erosion 鈥
Uchida said the department is expecting to see an increase in permit applications.
Bill 27 is set for a final vote before the full City Council on Wednesday. If it鈥檚 approved, it will go to the mayor鈥檚 office. So far, all written testimonies are in support of the measure.
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