天美视频

Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2019

About the Authors

Jim Howe

Jim Howe, a former beach lifeguard on Oahu, later served as chief of Ocean Safety and as director of the Department of Emergency Services for the City and County of Honolulu.

Linda Howe

Linda Howe is a retired public relations professional. She and husband Jim Howe met in high school and raised their family in Kailua鈥檚 Coconut Grove.

Dear council member Esther Kiaaina and Mayor Rick Blangiardi: We need some help.

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As our elected representatives, we believe you are in the position to help find a solution to a matter with which we are struggling. And we are certainly not alone.

Over the last two years, from 2021 to 2023, the property value assessment for the house we own in Kailua’s Coconut Grove, which is in a long-term rental, increased 43%. This is extraordinary and unanticipated.

But wait! Our property taxes have not increased 鈥渙nly鈥 43%. Nope, as a result of being pushed into Residential A rates in 2022 with an initial, whopping 31% increase in value assessed, those property taxes more than doubled from $266 a month to $545 a month, and it appears they are set to increase another 9% this coming year, based on another $107,700 increase in theoretical value.

We raised our children in this home for more than 20 years. In fact, we all lived in it as we built it 鈥 it took us six years!

When we became empty nesters we decided to move into a smaller house. We also built our second home, which allowed us to offer the Coconut Grove property to a local extended family that has been there for the past 12 years.

Regretfully, we have notified them that their rent would increase due to the increased property tax valuation as the property moved into the Residential A category in addition to the 31% increase in valuation. This was a difficult decision as we have maintained it at less than market rate, providing long-term stability for our tenants.

We carefully followed and supported the Residential A property tax legislation when it was put into place but did note the concern, expressed by then-council member Ann Kobayashi, regarding the $1,000,000 valuation threshold as a possible future impediment to maintaining long-term rentals at rates that would support local families.

Indeed, this situation is now occurring. We are asking the City Council and Blangiardi administration to readdress this issue.

Taxes Doubled

With the Residential A threshold valuation threshold remaining unchanged as property valuations have risen dramatically in just two years, many properties that support workforce rentals are becoming more and more difficult to maintain at reasonable rental costs.

This scenario has essentially ensured that all rental properties in the Coconut Grove area of Kailua, and other workforce communities across the City and County of Honolulu, are increasing in cost to renters. This impact is contrary to the goal of maintaining affordable rentals for local working families.

In real life, the tax increases mean our long-term tenants in Coconut Grove are potentially subject to the type of unexpected rent increases we have sought to avoid as we sacrificed our profits over the years to keep their rent 25% lower than market: aka 鈥渁ffordable.鈥

Should we pass along the more-than-doubled tax bill to our tenants? Will that push them into homelessness? How does this tax scheme benefit our tenants and others similarly impacted?

Meanwhile, we also must absorb increased state excise and state income taxes on any higher rent collected. This at the same time our own primary residence property taxes are increasing significantly.

We have both 鈥65-and-over鈥 and 鈥渙wner-occupied鈥 property tax exemptions, but neither the 鈥65-and-over鈥 nor 鈥渙wner-occupied鈥 exemption values have been adjusted as property valuations have increased. Put all this together and the significant increase in property valuation is straining local families from both ends.

Who benefits from this financial squeeze on residents? First, the City and County of Honolulu, and second, the state. Not us. Not our tenants.

We believe the City Council has the power and responsibility to:

  1. cap property tax increases year-over-year for owner-occupied residences
  2. reduce the tax rates based on valuation increased beyond a certain threshold and/or
  3. commensurately raise the threshold for Res A homes to reflect increased valuations.

You and your colleagues on the City Council have the ability to correct this situation as it affects housing costs for all residents. The mayor and his administration also have the ability to address this issue and keep local renters in their homes as federal funds become less available to support affordable rentals.

Thank you for you attention and support in addressing this issue.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Authors

Jim Howe

Jim Howe, a former beach lifeguard on Oahu, later served as chief of Ocean Safety and as director of the Department of Emergency Services for the City and County of Honolulu.

Linda Howe

Linda Howe is a retired public relations professional. She and husband Jim Howe met in high school and raised their family in Kailua鈥檚 Coconut Grove.


Latest Comments (0)

What I would call the "People's Experience" - PX has not risen relative to the rise in taxes. I am willing to pay taxes if I see an equivalent improvement in my community. I don't. The roads are junk, houseless situation just gets shuffled from neighborhood to neighborhood or from night to daytime. DPP gets busted for bribery. Police not trusted due to things like the Kealohas and other pilau. What am I getting for the additional money I am paying? Rail? What are we getting for our additional taxes? Imagine having to eat at the same mediocre lunch place everyday and the prices only go up but the food doesn't change and the service is horrible. It is a simple ask of the City and State in that show us what you did to improve "our" PX - Dah PeePoh's experience and let us decide if we got our money's worth. I ask other readers what Yelp score would you give our City and State Government?

markenomoto · 2 years ago

I rent to a multi generation family (6 people, grandma, grandpa, mother, father and two children) at below average rent. I wait for rent from them as rental aid is never on time. With the increase in taxes I no longer can do this. Eviction and a rent increase is going to be necessary for me to continue renting, therefore we will have six more people added to our homeless population.

bc · 2 years ago

Maybe the fix would be to tax out of state residence not filing state residency in Hawaii another tier??? How about making multi million dollar condo owners pay their fair share?

2cents · 2 years ago

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