Two Maui residents are asking a court to return a former state water official to his previous job.

A controversial Hawaii official in charge of water resource management was illegally removed from his position by the chair of the Board of Land and Natural Resources, a lawsuit filed Monday in state court in Honolulu alleges.

The key question facing the court is whether transferring the water official from his position was an action that needed to occur during an open public meeting where people could have testified about the personnel change.

A building continues to smolder after a wildfire destroyed Lahania town Thursday, Aug. 10, 2023, in Maui. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2023)
A building continued to smolder days after a wildfire destroyed Lahania town in Maui. The fire has reopened debates about water use on the island. (Kevin Fujii/Civil Beat/2023)

The complaint was brought by two Maui residents who allege BLNR chair Dawn Chang was required to follow Hawaii鈥檚 , known as the Sunshine Law, when 鈥渞e-deploying鈥 Kaleo Manuel from his position as deputy to the chair of the state鈥檚 Commission on Water Resource Management, in charge of implementing the state water code, to another position within DLNR.

As the BLNR board chair, Chang also serves as chair of the Commission on Water Resource Management, with the authority  with approval of a majority of the commission. But the lawsuit notes that , including the power to 鈥渁ppoint and remove agents鈥 and to 鈥渉ire employees.鈥

In this case, the suit says, Manuel鈥檚 removal from his position as commission deputy to another job needed to be done in an open meeting, with opportunities for people to testify. 

Two Maui residents, Kekai Keahi and Jennifer Kamahoi Mather, say they want to testify concerning the commission鈥檚 actions removing Manuel and that they weren’t allowed to because Chang violated the law by reassigning Manuel herself. Among other things, their suit asks the Hawaii court to void Manuel鈥檚 transfer within DLNR and determine that the Sunshine Law applied to Manuel鈥檚 redeployment.

In a statement responding to the complaint, the Attorney General’s Office pointed to the statutory provision stating that Chang appoints the deputy.

鈥淲e have reviewed the complaint and find it wholly without merit,” the office said. “A simple review of the statutes cited in the complaint itself demonstrates that it is the chairperson who appoints her own deputy — a position which is called in law 鈥榙eputy to the chairperson.鈥欌

The AG’s office said it will file a motion to dismiss.

Official Was Criticized For Commission’s Delay Releasing Water

As the deputy in charge of water resource management, Manuel came under criticism after the commission delayed for five hours a request by West Maui Land Co. to divert stream water to reservoirs south of Lahaina owned by the company on Aug. 8, as the fires that eventually destroyed Lahaina were spreading. By the time the commission granted approval, West Maui Land Co. later said, spreading fire had blocked off equipment needed to divert the water.

Although the water from West Maui Land Co.’s reservoirs are not connected to Lahaina’s fire hydrants, the company was able to use water from its reservoirs to help prevent the fire from spreading to its communities, including residential developments, West Maui Land Co. executive Glenn Tremble said in a text message. The company suffered no significant property damage in the fires.

In a letter to Manuel after the fires, Tremble acknowledged the company 鈥渃annot know whether filling our reservoirs at 1:00 p.m. (as opposed to not at all) would have changed the headlines when dawn broke on our weary first responders and heartbroken community.鈥

Critics of West Maui Land who defend Manuel and the water commission’s delay releasing the water to West Maui Land have said the water very likely would not have been used to fight the Lahaina fire because high winds were keeping helicopters grounded, and that was the only way to get the water to the fire. They say the company is using the fire to gain “cheap advantage” in longstanding conflicts over the use of water in West Maui.

Still, Chang later granted West Maui Land鈥檚 request to provide 鈥渙ngoing authorization鈥 to fill its reservoirs when fire has been reported in the area. 

Lance Collins, a Maui lawyer representing the plaintiffs, declined to weigh in on the broader questions of the reason for Manuel鈥檚 reassignment.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the problem with having things done behind closed doors,鈥 Collins said. 鈥淓verything is reduced to rumor and innuendo.鈥

Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.

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