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Ian Lind • Online daily from Kaaawa, Hawaii

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Some good midweek political reading

May 16th, 2012 · Campaigns, Media, Politics

Here’s a mid-week cache of good political reading. Have fun!

Money Unlimited
How Chief Justice John Roberts orchestrated the Citizens United decision.
by Jeffrey Toobin, The New Yorker.

Pro Publica
The Best Watchdog Journalism on Campaign Finance

WisconsinWatch.org
Walker’s official work time declines as national fame grows (a three part series based on Gov. Scott Walker’s official calendars), By Kate Golden and Amy Karon.

CaliforniaWatch.org
With campaign donations, bond underwriters also secure contracts
Will Evans

Critics struggle to end ‘pay to play’ in school bonds
Will Evans

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Reapportionment court hearing on Friday, primary battles shaping up on Windward side

May 15th, 2012 · Campaigns, Politics

A three-judge federal panel will hear the case challenging the state reapportionment plan that excludes nonresident military and dependents beginning Friday morning, May 18, at 10 a.m. Civil Beat’s Nanea Kalani has been approved to live blog from the hearing.

For those interested, here’s a link to the state’s legal memo in opposition to the plaintiff’s request for a preliminary injunction. It has a lengthy and detailed history that tracks the political and legal development of the current plan. Very interesting.

With the candidate filing deadline just three weeks away, there is obviously a lot of pressure on the court to quickly render a decision that allows the elections to go forward.

If the current reapportionment plan stands, there are two interesting races shaping up out on our side of the island.

Jessica Wooley, who currently represents Kaaawa and the rest of House District 47, now lives just inside the boundary of the newly redrawn District 48 and has taken out papers to run in the new district, where she will apparently face House Majority Leader Pono Chong in the August Primary Election. Former Republican Rep. Colleen Meyer, who was defeated by Wooley in 2008, has also taken out nomination papers.

Senate District 25, already in the news because of the internal flap in the Democratic Party over former Lingle cabinet member Laura Thielen to run as a Democrat, looks to be heating up even more.

In an email to friends this week, Nancy Caraway solicited campaign support for Levani Lipton, who has already filed to run in the 25th Senate District.

Here’s what Caraway, who is married to Gov. Neil Abercrombie, said about her friend, Lipton.

Raised windward, Harvard Kennedy School
Directs int’l development aid organization
Levani is the most authentic, committed, smart young leader in Hawaii today!
That is saying a lot. And she’s even more
This is her first run for public office.

Former Senator Fred Hemmings has also taken out papers to run in the district. I guess Fred found out that retirement wasn’t all that much fun.

Incumbent Sen. Pohai Ryan has not yet taken out nomination papers.

None of the potential candidates have held a fundraiser to date, according to a check with the Campaign Spending Commission’s database.

So election districts are still subject to change, candidates are already campaigning, and everything could change depending on the court’s decision on Friday.

Sounds like exciting times ahead!

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Fears about bill amending sunshine law and public records law are overblown

May 14th, 2012 · Legislature, Politics, Sunshine

At the end of this year’s legislative session, SB2858 became a public rallying point for openness advocates who opposed its passage.

SB2858 had been proposed by the Office of Information Practices and incorporated into the Governor’s package. It was passed as SB2858, SD1, HD2, CD1.

From the bill’s official description: “Creates a process for an agency to obtain judicial review of a decision made by the Office of Information Practices relating to the Sunshine Law or the Uniform Information Practices Act, and clarifies standard of review.”

Here’s what opponents had to say in a letter to legislators and in a Civil Beat commentary.

• Opponents called it the “most serious erosion” in the 24-year history of Hawaii’s Freedom of Information Law.

The problem with this claim is that the bill makes no change in any of the the definitions of public information or public records, or in requirements for open meeting or records. It doesn’t take any type of information or government record and move it out of public view. Over the 24-years since Chapter 92F was passed and the OIP created, there have been other amendments that certainly diminished the public’s right to know.

For example, the exemption allowing meetings with a board’s attorney originally allowed private discussions only of matter involved in actual or potential litigation, as I recall. Section 92-5 was later amended to its current expanded form, which allows a closed meeting “(4) To consult with the board’s attorney on questions and issues pertaining to the board’s powers, duties, privileges, immunities, and liabilities.”

That’s certainly a greater threat to openness. And how about the provision regarding investigations of misconduct by public employees? If I recall correctly, the law originally required disclosure of information in any case resulting in disciplinary action. But it was amended to allow public disclosure only when the discipline resulted in suspension or dismissal of an employee, and there is no requirement for public disclosure in a case involving a police officer unless it results in the officer’s discharge.

So does anything in SB2858 actually reduce the public right to know as much as these and other substantive changes that have occurred over the past 24 years? In my view, the answer is, “no way.” The rhetoric was way overheated.

• Opponents describe the bill as creating “a complex, cumbersome process allowing a government agency to appeal to already overburdened courts an official decision mandating disclosure of a record to which the public is entitled.”

The problem is that having to appeal to the courts is already part of the process. Openness advocates have had to go to court many times under the existing law in order to enforce OIP opinions, which are not self-enforcing. If SB2858 had been voted down, it wouldn’t have eliminated the need for requesters, whether private individuals or the media, to go to court.

• They say it would “weaken OIP’s powers, waste limited resources of OIP and other agencies, and make it even more difficult for citizens to obtain government records in a timely manner.”

Again, the problem here is that OIP itself believes the bill will strengthen its powers and allow it to more efficiently allocate its limited resources. It’s hard for critics to argue that they know better than the agency what the impact will likely be.

• And bill opponents commented positively on opposition expressed by county officials. “Three members of the Maui County Council, including the chair and the vice chair, and Kauai’s county attorney testified against the bill as did Honolulu’s Managing Director Douglas Chin.”

Pay close attention here. Why did the counties opposed SB2858? Because they all testified it would give OIP more power, and take away county discretion in applying the sunshine and open records requirements of the law.

For example, this is from testimony submitted by the Honolulu Managing Director: “We believe the bill does not give proper weight to the privacy and public policy interests recognized in statute that limit the application of the Sunshine Law and the Uniform Information Practices Act.”

Maui County Council Member Riki Hokama testified in opposition because the bill “would establish the OIP as a ‘judge and jury,’” and allow OIP to “dictate to an elected county council how to conduct business before the community it serves and is accountable to.”

All of the county testimony was based on their understanding that the SB2858 strengthened OIP’s powers and authority, and would require more openness at the county level.

And isn’t that what openness advocates actually want?

• And, finally, opponents said the bill “would permit—perhaps even invite—litigation.”

That’s certainly possible. However, the sunshine law already allows court challenges to be brought by agencies. Has that somehow opened the floodgates to litigation? I think it would be hard for anyone to look at the actual record and say that the law resulted in excessive litigation and the overall blocking of public access to meetings, minutes, etc. Based on the actual 24 years of experience, it appears that the fear of “inviting litigation” is overblown.

It should also be noted that the bill was amended to incorporate additional protections for the public suggested in testimony from the League of Women Voters.

It’s fair to say that this wasn’t a bill that independent openness advocates would have proposed. But, in the end, neither is it the “end of the world” measure portrayed in the closing days of the session, especially after looking more closely at arguments made against it.

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Mother’s Day 2012

May 13th, 2012 · General, History, Kaaawa, Photographs

We’re just back from our daily walk to watch the sunrise from the beach in Kaaawa. It was a beautiful morning, just an edge of cool when we left the house, but that quickly faded as the sun appeared. After a cup or two of coffee, I’ll have to shift into gear and proceed with preparations for our special day. My mother’s 98th birthday is on Tuesday, and we’re celebrating it in conjunction with Mother’s Day, with a Honey-Glazed Ham, a nice birthday cake (I asked the Safeway clerk if she see’s many #98 cakes), my homemade potato salad, some flowers picked from our yard, a bottle of nice New Zealand white wine, and sundry additional yummies added by my sister, Bonnie. We’ll pack up our car and head over to my mom’s house mid-morning. Lot’s to do, and the cats aren’t going to be any help at all!

Mother’s Day begins in Kaaawa:

Swanzy Beach Park

Kaaawa Beach Park

More for Mother’s Day…I’m sure most of you probably saw Laura Kacere’s column, “Radical History of Mother’s Day” that’s be flying around the past couple of days.

Mother’s Day began in America in 1870 when Julia Ward Howe wrote the Mother’s Day Proclamation. Written in response to the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War, her proclamation called on women to use their position as mothers to influence society in fighting for an end to all wars. She called for women to stand up against the unjust violence of war through their roles as wife and mother, to protest the futility of their sons killing other mothers’ sons.

The Feminist Peace Network has posted the original Mother’s Day Proclamation. And there’s more history here (“The Founder of Mother’s Day Later Fought to Have It Abolished“).

From the Huffington Post, there’s something special about Mother’s Day this year:

In a state of shared disbelief, this nation learned that the leader of the free world had publicly announced his full support for the signature civil rights issue of our time: full recognition of the freedom to marry for all Americans, gay and straight alike. As the son of a same-sex couple from Iowa, and one of the first children born to an openly lesbian parent in the Midwest, it is with a sense of awestruck bewilderment that I realize I am now represented by a sitting U.S. president who publicly supports the marriage shared by my two moms, Jackie and Terry.

And, in case you missed it, from the Washington Post, “Obama is his mother’s son.”

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Reactions to Romney, billionaires and elections, and Russel Brand on drug policy

May 12th, 2012 · Politics

Prowling the web on a Saturday morning.

Don’t miss this haunting essay by Steve Almond concerning GOP Presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s reaction to accounts of his high school attack on a fellow student (“THE WEEK IN GREED #6: To Behave Like the Fallen World“). I was going to pull a quote or two, but finally decided you really need to read it in context.

Also check attorney Wayne Parson’s blog post, “Justice in Hawaii: storm warning from Florida Supreme Court election.”

In Florida, powerful corporate right wing interests are pouring money into retention elections and targeting justices whose prior decisions have gone against these powerful money interests. Retention elections in Florida have been historically uncontroversial as long as the Justice has behaved ethically. But now the anti-justice corporate billionaires, are picking on Florida Supreme Court Justices who have no ability to match the money power coming into the state from these corporate sources.

You may also be interested in Russell Brand’s testimony to the UK Parliament on drug policy.

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Hawaiian Homes Commission discontinues college scholarship program

May 12th, 2012 · Education, Politics

The Hawaiian Homes Commission is ending its college scholarship program, according to a request filed with the State Procurement Office.

The scholarship program, which has been administered by the Hawaii Community Foundation for at least eight years, will be terminated as soon as the remaining $140,000 is spent. Of that amount, $126,000 will be available to distribute to scholarship program applicants. The scholarships cover tuition, fees, books, supplies, and cost of living allowances.

The most recent annual report of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (2011) has this brief item regarding the scholarships:

The Hawaiian Homes Commission Scholarship Program (HHCS) made awards to 93 eligible students enrolled full-time in post-high school educational institutions with demonstrated financial need and/or academic excellence. In FY 2011, the HHCS average award was $1,747.

I didn’t find any indication of the scholarship program termination on the DHHL web site.

It is worth noting that DHHL finally started making Hawaiian Homes Commission minutes available online in September 2011, but many minutes have not been posted for every meeting, and the most recent set of minutes is for a meeting on February 21, 2012. So far, I haven’t found minutes where termination of the scholarship program was discussed. Maybe someone in the know will point me in the right direction.

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Burlingame, Mizutani leave journalism

May 11th, 2012 · Media, video

Belated congratulations to former Star-Bulletin writer Burl Burlingame, who packed up his stuff and left the Star-Advertiser newsroom last week for a new job as curator of the Pacific Aviation Museum. Good on you, Burl.

And Ron Mizutani made some interesting comments as he prepares to leave the broadcast news business again,this time for a new job at Communications Pacific. His comments came during an appearance on PBS Hawaii’s Leahey & Leahey Wednesday night (by the way, it’s a local program I highly recommend).

Here’s the show–you can jump forward to Mizutani’s appearance, which begins about 15 minutes into the program.

One last media bit. Hawaii News Now reported yesterday on the critical tone that has slipped into Gov. Abercrombie’s talking points on rail. They referred to it as an “exclusive.”

Governor Abercrombie has been a staunch supporter of rail for four decades and fought for Congressional funding for years, but in an interview on Hawaii News Now Sunrise, he raised questions about the project’s current form.

“The difficulty right now is that the rail that’s proposed right now has nothing to do with what was stated before, going to the university, going into Waikiki, the transit-oriented development,” says Mr. Abercrombie.

The interview might have been exclusive, but the news certainly wasn’t.

Abercrombie’s rail criticism was reported here almost a month ago.

Here’s what I wrote back on April 18:

Then there’s the strange ambivalence of the administration. At the same time that the administration is gung ho for development, Gov. Abercrombie told people in a recent informal conversation that he backs both Ben Cayetano’s mayoral bid and Cayetano’s opposition to rail.

Abercrombie said he had favored the original rail plan for a system that would link Kapolei with Waikiki and the University of Hawaii’s Manoa campus, but that isn’t the system that is now being built, according to two people who were present.

Neil has sidestepped the public rail debate, but I think he could make a difference if he privately backs Cayetano.

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Mr. Romeo announces another Feline Friday (photos)

May 11th, 2012 · Cats, Photographs

Mr. RomeoThis was Mr. Romeo as he made his rounds yesterday afternoon. I like this picture, because it captures how big and handsome he is. That wasn’t always the case. He showed up hiding under our house on January 1, 2005, after lots of fireworks the night before. He smelled. He was kind of a wreck. We trapped him, tried to clean him up, got him snipped, and he turned into just about the perfect pet.

Did I mention that his YouTube video is now over 885,000 views? One million, here he comes!

So Romeo welcomes you to another Feline Friday.

–> Just click here to see the rest of this week’s photo gallery.

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