North Shore Landowner May Donate Her Property To Avoid Environmental Fines
The proposed deal with the state follows extensive native bee habitat destruction and the killing of a nesting albatross at Marconi Point last year.
The proposed deal with the state follows extensive native bee habitat destruction and the killing of a nesting albatross at Marconi Point last year.
One of several Oahu landowners facing hefty fines and, potentially, criminal charges for a spate of recent environmental violations on the North Shore looks to donate her multimillion-dollar property there to conservation efforts in exchange for immunity in those matters.
The state鈥檚 Board of Land and Natural Resources will weigh whether to approve that settlement deal with popular Chinese-American television personality when it meets on Friday.
The agreement would transfer Kan鈥檚 4.7-acre parcel at Marconi Point to the , a nonprofit that works to restore and conserve natural habitat in the area. Kan鈥檚 attorney, Eric Robinson, put the value of the parcel at $5 million.
Adam Borrello, the land trust鈥檚 executive director, called the potential deal a 鈥済ame-changing鈥 opportunity to pursue more conservation at , on the North Shore鈥檚 eastern end.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate what鈥檚 transpired,鈥 Borrello said of recent incidents at Marconi. 鈥淭hat said, the North Shore Community Land Trust is always happy to be part of any positive solution.”
The proposed settlement with Kan stems from the decimation in October of a 2-acre stretch of naupaka brush and heliotrope trees along the coast at Marconi that served as some of the last significant habitat on Oahu for the endangered Hawaiian yellow-faced bee.
The violations also included the installation of an illegal iron fence on Kan鈥檚 property that contributed to the death of a nesting Laysan albatross in December. State investigators determined that a grounds worker hired by Kan killed the bird, known as Ho鈥檕kipa, when he threw a rock at the bird鈥檚 head.
The other property owners at Marconi, including tech mogul Sushil Garg, would not be covered by the Kan settlement. Benjamin Lassary, a groundskeeper hired by Garg and implicated in the bee habitat destruction, would not be covered by it either.
The state鈥檚 Department of Land and Natural Resources would still pursue approximately $3 million in fines and, potentially, criminal actions against those parties even if the Kan deal is approved Friday.
Garg declined to comment Wednesday through his attorney, Kalani Morse.
When Garg met with state officials after the plants had already been destroyed, he 鈥渆xpressed a concern about the dry brush and fire鈥 and said that he 鈥渄id not know about the importance of the vegetation,鈥 according to a DLNR report.
However, one of Garg鈥檚 former landscaping and nursery workers at the site, Henry Fong, said Monday that he had previously advised Garg and his wife, Lorene King Garg, that they could not cut down the coastal plants because they lay in a state conservation area.
Fong said that the Gargs told him they intended to cut down the plants anyway because they were blocking the view of the ocean, according to Fong.
鈥淪ushil was the one who authorized the labor to do it,鈥 Fong said.
Fong, a Hawaiian lineal descendant of the land at Marconi, also submitted that account in testimony to the BLNR.
Robinson, meanwhile, said the proposed settlement showed Kan鈥檚 鈥渃ommitment to philanthropy and conservation鈥 because the property is worth substantially more than whatever portion of the $3 million fine she would have to pay.
鈥淭his is a way for her to give back and to make sure that the conservation is going on,鈥 he said.
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org