Narrow Council Vote Propels Anthony Aalto Onto The HART Board
No prior board nominee in HART’s decade-long history received the same public scrutiny over qualifications and potential conflicts as Aalto did, reflecting a growing unease with the project.
By a 5-4 vote, the Honolulu City Council appointed documentary filmmaker, investigative journalist and environmentalist Anthony Aalto to join the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation board on Wednesday.
Aalto now officially replaces construction-cost professional Joe Uno to help oversee a struggling elevated rail transit project that鈥檚 endured astronomical cost increases and more than a decade鈥檚 worth of delays since construction started.听
Council Chairman Tommy Waters, along with members Radiant Cordero, Brandon Elefante, Esther Kia鈥檃ina and Calvin Say voted for Aalto鈥檚 appointment.听
Council members Carol Fukunaga, Heidi Tsuneyoshi, Augie Tulba and Andria Tupola dissented and supported a that would have appointed Uno instead. That measure failed along the same voting lines.
Uno was vocal in his desire to remain on the HART board under a new term, and he even testified at Wednesday鈥檚 meeting in a last-ditch effort to stay. He previously called the council leaders鈥 move to replace him with Aalto insulting.
Aalto will fill one seat of the 14 seats on rail鈥檚 volunteer oversight board. He鈥檒l be among its nine voting members, three of whom are appointed by the council. Their duties under the city charter are relatively limited – basically to hire and fire HART鈥檚 executive director, provide budget plans, help set rail policy and to approve bonds for construction.
Nonetheless, the debate over who should fill that seat grew unusually fierce in recent weeks.听
No prior HART board nominees in the agency鈥檚 decade-long history has received nearly the level of public scrutiny over their qualifications and potential conflicts of interest as Aalto did, particularly by rail critics.听
The council received on Aalto鈥檚 nomination for Wednesday, most of it in opposition.
鈥淏eing nominated 鈥 has put me in the crosshairs,鈥 the former Sierra Club Oahu Group chairman acknowledged to the Council on Wednesday. He said he鈥檚 still developing a thick skin to deal with all the scrutiny and criticism, much of it aimed at his ties to pro-rail interests that previously helped fund his documentaries on local issues.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 been very unpleasant,鈥 Aalto said.听
However, Waters, who asked Aalto to join the board, and Cordero, who helped advance his nomination last month, asked the public to give Aalto a chance, saying he would surprise his critics.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 insane in my mind to keep doing the same thing and expect a different result over the last 10 or so years,鈥 Waters said Wednesday. He approached Aalto 鈥渂ecause he is new blood, he is different. He鈥檚 tenacious. He asks good questions … and I鈥檓 asking folks to give him a chance.鈥
The debate over the appointment of a single board seat became a flashpoint in the growing discontent over rail鈥檚 management and direction, as the budget has swelled to an estimated $12.4 billion with an estimated official deficit of around $3.6 billion.听
Uno had served on the HART board for just over a year, filling a vacant seat, but he swiftly stood out. Among the voting members, he was the only one to call on the city to consider alternatives to building rail鈥檚 elevated guideway and stations beyond Middle Street.听听
The idea of stopping remains popular among many on Oahu who are weary of the megaproject鈥檚 growing costs, yet such a move would trim the line from 20 miles and 21 stations to just 15 miles and 13 stations.
Mayor Rick Blangiardi was among several city leaders at Wednesday鈥檚 meeting who said that they鈥檇 met with Uno amid the growing controversy.听
Uno discussed with the mayor the possibility of stopping rail at Lagoon Drive, Blangiardi said.听
鈥淚 don鈥檛 mind a dissenting voice. In fact, I embrace a dissenting voice,鈥 Blangiardi told the Council on Wednesday. But 鈥渉e’s out of touch with where we really are and what we鈥檙e doing.鈥
Blangiardi, a former general manager at Hawaii News Now, told the council that he had worked with Aalto to bring 鈥淩ailroading Paradise,鈥 Aalto鈥檚 2013 film on the debate over rail, to the station. The partnership was so successful that they opted to partner on subsequent documentaries on homelessness and climate change, Blangiardi said.
However, the mayor added Wednesday that he had nothing to do with Aalto鈥檚 nomination to the HART board.
Blangiardi further stated that his administration is working on plans for rail with the Federal Transit Administration but that those plans can鈥檛 be made public yet, echoing comments he made to the HART board last month.
A Change Of Heart
Tulba voted last month to advance Aalto鈥檚 nomination, but he later held a press conference with Tsuneyoshi calling for Uno to stay on board. Tulba also introduced the floor amendment to appoint Uno. He did not give a reason for the turnaround at Wednesday鈥檚 meeting.
Tsuneyoshi, meanwhile, sharply criticized the resolution appointing Aalto because it revised the qualifications needed to join the HART board that the Council had 听
Now, instead of just extensive experience related to transit or a similar discipline relevant to the rail project, the Aalto resolution also allowed expertise related to community engagement, a familiarity with the local rail project and the ability to 鈥渞esearch, analyze, evaluate and weigh the voluminous details鈥 related to Honolulu rail.
Tsuneyoshi said the resolution鈥檚 qualification criteria appeared to be tailor-made for Aalto. She noted that HART recently faced criticism for writing contract specifications that seemed to mirror the qualifications of its former board chairwoman, Colleen Hanabusa.听
鈥淚f anything, we need to learn from our mistakes and not draft criteria for a specific person,” Tsuneyoshi said Wednesday.
Aalto said that in the years since Railroading Paradise was released, he鈥檚 lobbied HART leaders to employ better designs and features along the rail system that could save local taxpayers millions of dollars. He said he pushed for HART to capture energy from the trains鈥 braking, and that he encouraged the agency to create its own micro-grid in order to avoid substantial electricity charges from Hawaiian Electric Co.
He said he would still like to change the rail route past Middle Street if possible, moving it mauka (upland) and out of the island鈥檚 flood plains, possibly tunneling under Beretania Street as previously considered.
That insistence has put him at odds with former Mayor Kirk Caldwell, developers and other rail interests, Aalto said. If they鈥檝e been giving him money hoping he would promote rail interests, then it鈥檚 been 鈥渧ery badly spent,鈥 he added.
Uno, meanwhile, thanked the council minority that tried to keep him on the board.
鈥淚t is not easy for them to go up against the standing powers – the council chair and the mayor – but I am grateful that they voted with their conscience in my favor,鈥 he wrote in an email after the meeting.
鈥淭here are thousands of voters who know that I spoke for them while I was on the HART Board, asking tough questions and holding decision-makers, other board members, the staff and rail vendors accountable.鈥
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org