天美视频

Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022

About the Authors

Sterling Higa

Sterling Higa serves as executive director of Housing Hawaii鈥檚 Future, a movement creating opportunities for Hawaii鈥檚 next generation by ending the workforce housing shortage. He is a member of Gov. Josh Green’s Building Beyond Barriers Working Group.

Damien Waikoloa

Damien Waikoloa is a chapter lead of Hawaii YIMBY, a chapter of YIMBY Action, a national alliance of local housing affordability advocacy groups. He lives in Manoa with his partner, parents and dog.

Matt Popovich

Matt Popovich is a chapter lead of Hawaii YIMBY, a chapter of YIMBY Action, a national alliance of local housing affordability advocacy groups. He lives in Kaneohe with his wife and son.

Our islands cannot survive if our middle class is hollowed out.

The debate over how to solve our severe housing affordability crisis and finally create a Hawaii affordable for local people has recently been marked by both hope and despair.

Hope in Gov. Josh Green鈥檚 emergency proclamation, which could deliver the abundant, affordable housing that politicians have been promising for generations. And despair as tenants threatened with displacement by housing development voiced their struggles before the Honolulu City Council.

The easy answer is to turn to developers and demand they solve all these problems for us at once. But it鈥檚 the role of our political leaders to ensure we maintain strong tenant protections without compromising efforts to reverse our housing supply shortage. It鈥檚 time for them to step up.

We are leaders of advocacy groups dedicated to the dual mandate of expanding our housing supply and supporting strong tenant protections to guard against the harms of high rents and displacement. Our organizations have recently testified in favor of measures to protect and support low-income tenants.

These include state legislative bills like , to expand eviction mediation and keep people in their homes, and , to reduce the financial burden of rent on the working class.
But each of these bills failed to pass during the legislative session. And that鈥檚 emblematic of a larger problem.

Harm To Families

At the last Honolulu City Council meeting, tenant advocates expressed anger at developers for displacing existing tenants and building housing for middle-income families rather than only 鈥渢ruly affordable鈥 housing for low-income families. We hear and understand their anger, but we think halting construction of middle-income housing would do more harm than good 鈥 including harm to low-income families.

Too often in the debate over affordable housing, advocates invoke the phrase 鈥渢ruly affordable鈥 to criticize the construction of middle-income workforce housing. These advocates are especially offended by the waivers and subsidies that support middle-income housing development.

It鈥檚 truly appalling that our housing crisis has worsened to the point that local middle-class families can鈥檛 afford the median home price. But unfortunately, that鈥檚 where we are.

If we regress to only supporting housing for families in the lowest income brackets, the harms of losing our teachers, our firefighters, our nurses, and other essential workers will continue to accelerate. The effects of their departure on the essential services that impact our health, our safety, and our children’s education will fall disproportionately on low-income families.

In other words, if we try to create a future where only 鈥渢ruly affordable鈥 housing is supported, and where only the highest- and lowest-income families can afford to stay in Hawaii, we will not succeed. Our islands cannot survive if our middle class is hollowed out.

It鈥檚 undeniable that increasing our housing supply will require rebuilding some existing developments with more density. Hawaii, and especially Oahu, has neither the available land nor the political inclination to sprawl endlessly into green space, so we will need to build up instead, which will inevitably mean some smaller buildings will be replaced by larger buildings.

In other words, we must make the city 鈥渃ity鈥 to keep the country 鈥渃ountry.鈥

Tenant advocates are right: our protections for displaced residents are inadequate, especially compared to other progressive states. But halting badly needed housing development in response is not the answer. Stopping housing construction will worsen the severe housing crunch already devastating families across the islands.

We must find a way for expanded housing development and stronger tenant protections to coexist.
The voices demanding displacement protections, both elected officials and tenant advocates, have largely focused their demands on developers. In a state with deeply progressive values, why are we content to push responsibility for vital social safety net protections onto private industry?

We must make the city 鈥渃ity鈥 to keep the country 鈥渃ountry.鈥

It鈥檚 time for our state and local government to step up. We are heartened by the governor鈥檚 bold action on housing. Our mayors, state legislators, and county council members need to match it with bold action to protect vulnerable renters from the harms of displacement. It鈥檚 a hole in our social safety net we have long neglected patching, and one that will become more important as we build much-needed housing at a faster pace.

If we don鈥檛 act, we will face more outcries from residents displaced by infill development and failed by our lack of government protection 鈥 and rightly so. This won鈥檛 just harm displaced tenants, it will slow the process of plugging the gap in our housing supply.

No one should face homelessness because the cost of housing is too high. And no one should face homelessness because they鈥檝e been evicted and can鈥檛 find a new place to live. It鈥檚 our kuleana to build toward that vision of a better Hawaii.

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

Sterling Higa

Sterling Higa serves as executive director of Housing Hawaii鈥檚 Future, a movement creating opportunities for Hawaii鈥檚 next generation by ending the workforce housing shortage. He is a member of Gov. Josh Green’s Building Beyond Barriers Working Group.

Damien Waikoloa

Damien Waikoloa is a chapter lead of Hawaii YIMBY, a chapter of YIMBY Action, a national alliance of local housing affordability advocacy groups. He lives in Manoa with his partner, parents and dog.

Matt Popovich

Matt Popovich is a chapter lead of Hawaii YIMBY, a chapter of YIMBY Action, a national alliance of local housing affordability advocacy groups. He lives in Kaneohe with his wife and son.


Latest Comments (0)

The cost to private landlords for tenants on subsidized housing programs is too much to bear. They all proclaim "it's guaranteed rent", but that is simply NOT the case. Most programs usually require tenants to pay a percentage of their income toward the rent, out of pocket. The program might pay 67%, and the tenant pays 33%. Great. Until the tenant stops paying their 33%. "Tenants will pay their fair share out of fear of losing the benefit" BS. You cannot get blood from a stone. The Housing office will not make up the difference, instead they remove the tenant from the program, leaving it to the LL to evict and remove them from premises. This results in multiple months of no rent, plus outrageous attorney costs, which, only an amount equal to 25% of any unpaid rent is allowed to be collected/judgement entered against tenant. Now the LL has to make repairs, forced to use licensed contractors for work over $1500, which doubles or triples the repair cost. Then, to start this cycle all over again, LL accepts another subsidized tenant, leaving the unit vacant for 6 weeks or more while inspections and paperwork are completed by Housing. NOT sustainable for average mom and pop investors.

808Beachbum · 1 year ago

Don't forget landlord's rights as well. Neglecting those can also lead to loss of rental housing. I've heard of some local landlords, who held onto a property or two as residential rentals as they moved out and into other homes, considering selling their rentals because of losses suffered during the pandemic and the eviction moratorium, or more generally because of the time, effort, and risk of dealing with bad tenants. Such local landlords, as a group, are a significant source of rental housing. If they sell, buyers could take those houses out of the residential rental market, for example, by turning them into AirBNB rentals.

Rob · 1 year ago

Glad to hear that you get it, especially given Sterling's position on Gov. Green's working group. There are probably a significant number of tenants currently occupying 'affordable' rentals, e.g., living below their means while saving to buy their own homes, who would move into some of the middle income housing currently being built and planned, which would then free up some affordable housing. Similarly, even higher priced homes can free up moderately priced homes, which then free up more affordable housing, as long as the higher priced homes are actually used for housing for local people moving up, not for someone's vacation home or for AirBNB rental.

Rob · 1 year ago

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