“We have a draft for you, Mr. Chairman,” said Hee, referring to Rep. Mark Nakashima, the House’s lead conferee on Senate Bill 2609<\/a>. “We took your advice on the CD1. We threw it in the rubbish can.”<\/p>\n
The House conference draft, floated late last week, would allow employers with fewer than 100 employees<\/a> \u2014 most employers in the state \u2014 to delay implementing a wage increase, which hasn’t budged from $7.25 an hour since 2007.<\/p>\n
Sen. Clayton Hee and Rep. Karl Rhoads confer after a conference committee hearing Monday.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
Conference committee time at the Hawaii Legislature<\/a> has been likened to a form of kabuki theater, a drama \u2014 or comedy \u2014 distinguished by highly stylized actions and exaggerated gestures.<\/p>\n
Supporters of an increase struck positive notes after reviewing Hee’s CD1.<\/p>\n
“After the discussion from the House last week, this is much more in line with the hopes of the working people of Hawaii,” said Drew Astolfi, state director of Faith Action for Community Equity<\/a>, a faith-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit. “It feels like we are seeing a willingness to agree on the $7.”<\/p>\n
“It’s a significant step forward,” agreed Jenny Lee, an attorney with the Hawaii Appleseed Center on Law and Economic Justice<\/a>, another nonprofit. “It keeps the tip credit at the current level and lets workers keep the gratuities they earned.” <\/p>\n
In the meantime, final conference votes on scores of bills could not be made Monday because the budget conference committee \u2014 chaired by House Finance Chair Sylvia Luke<\/a> and Senate Ways and Means Chair David Ige<\/a> \u2014 has not yet signed off on the $12 billion overall state budget. Bills that require state funding can’t move forward until the two sides agree.<\/p>\n
Rep. Sylvia Luke, left, speaks with Sen. David Ige and Sen. Jill Tokuda after a budget conference committee meeting Monday.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
In another key decision, the conference committee opted to accept the Senate position and give the Department of Public Safety 10 officer positions and $260,000 for 24-hour suicide watch at Halawa Correctional Facility. <\/p>\n
The House draft of the budget didn\u2019t include any funding for a problem that has made headlines regularly since May 2013 when Public Safety Director Ted Sakai declared his agency had a crisis on its hands<\/a> after an inmate killed himself.<\/p>\n
He said the department is certainly thankful for the funding it has received, but is anxiously hoping a big chunk of money is approved for a comprehensive plan to protect Hawaii\u2019s watersheds<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The budget conference committee is set to reconvene at 10:15 a.m., Wednesday, at the Capitol.<\/p>\n
Contact Chad Blair via email at cblair@civilbeat.com or follow him on Twitter at @chadblairCB<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n
Contact Nathan Eagle via email at neagle@civilbeat.com<\/a> or Twitter at @NathanEagle<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"