Category Archives: Planning

Hawaii Supreme Court opinion appears to undercut full public access to government records

Thanks to Honolulu attorney Rebecca Copeland’s “Record on Appeal” blog for calling my attention to a recent Hawaii Supreme Court case with unsettling implications for public access to government documents (“County has no legal duty to maintain records“).

Here’s her mini-summary of the case:

The case involved property on the Big Island. Molfino purchased the property intending to subdivide it. Molfino’s search of the County of Hawaii’s records revealed that the property had never been granted a subdivision for more than two lots. He sought a determination from the planning director, Yuen, for the approval of a seven-lot subdivision, but was denied. He then sold the property since he was unable to develop it. After he sold the property, Yuen approved the new owner a seven-lot subdivision. Later, Molfino learned that the property had, in fact, been approved for a six lot subdivision, but the record of the approval was not in the subdivision records when Molfino reviewed them on several occasions before he sold the property. He sued the County for negligence in failing to maintain proper records.

Here’s a slightly longer version lifted from the Supreme Court’s opinion in the case.

Molfino wanted to create a subdivision on the property. He visited the Planning Department and made copies of the property’s TMK file. Based on the property’s zoning classification, Molfino
understood that his property might consist of only two pre- existing lots. Allegedly missing from the TMK file at that time was an April 2000 letter from a realtor to the former Planning Director, which requested a pre-existing lot determination, and the former Planning Director’s May 2000 response letter, which stated that the property consisted of six pre-existing lots.

Mollify sued the county after he sold the property and only later learned of the key documents that had been missing from the file. In his lawsuit, he alleged the county “breached a legal duty to use reasonable care in maintaining the TMK file, and that this breach caused Molfino monetary damages.”

The lawsuit pointed to county rules, and later to the sate public records law, Chapter 92F HRS, and argued the county had an obligation to make all records available to the public.

The rules state, in part:

All public records shall be available for inspection by any person during established office hours unless public inspection of such records is in violation of any other state, federal, or county law….

Similarly, Chapter 92F provides:

All government records are open to public inspection unless access is restricted or closed by law.

The county argued that although the law required public inspection, it did not require the county to “maintain” any specific records.

The circuit court agreed and found in the county’s favor.

It ruled, in part:

4. If a duty and liability is to be imposed upon the County to maintain Planning Department records with unerring accuracy, it should be imposed by a legislative body. A legislative body is the proper entity to determine whether [to spend] the County’s scarce resources on such a duty and is capable of providing additional economic resources which may be necessary;

5. The Planning Department owes no duty to keep its records accurate and complete for persons who seek information regarding the degree to which real property may be capable of subdivision.

The case was appealed to the Intermediate Court of Appeals, which affirmed the decision, and then on to the Supreme Court.

The Hawaii Supreme Court also affirmed the decision in the county’s favor.

From their opinion:

Molfino’s sole support for his claim that the County owed him a legal duty to maintain accurate Planning Department records was Rule 1-8, which requires only that “[a]ll public records shall be available for inspection by any person,” and contains no express duty to maintain these records in “accurate, relevant, timely, and complete” condition.

The bottom line for the court apparently was that the public records law, known as the Uniform Information Practices Act (or UIPA), requires disclosure of public records and prohibits disclosure of confidential personal records, but does not explicitly require government agencies to keep complete records. As a result, the government does not face any liability for damage caused by missing documents which may, as in this case, have caused monetary damages.

The court took this position even though the Hawaii County Planning Director had confirmed that their policy is to retain all records as public records essentially forever.

This is worrisome, because documents can go missing as a result of routine misfiling or temporary removal from a particular file during a specific internal use, but they can also go missing as a result of deliberate efforts to conceal information from the public. Without a duty to maintain those records, and some means of holding agency officials and employees accountable, the public can’t trust that requests for public records will be honestly complied with.

In the absence of a legal duty to maintain public records in good order, the public can’t trust that requests to inspect public records will provide a true look at the agency’s actions. It necessarily weakens the public’s right to know.

Perhaps there’s some separate legal angle, not mentioned in this opinion, that can provide accountability without liability for damages of the type that were at issue in this case. Perhaps others will know.

The Supreme Court seemed to recognize that the lack of a statute requiring records to be kept and maintained in good order may be problematic, but took the position that this requires a legislative remedy and not a judicially-imposed fix.

So it looks to me like another item to go onto a legislative wish-list of things that would strengthen the public’s right to know.

New evacuation zones announced for potential “extreme tsunami”

The city is updating its tsunami evacuation maps in order to take into account the potential of an “extreme” tsunami that is more powerful than anything in Hawaii’s recorded history. This is being referred to as a “low probability but high impact” event.

New evacuation maps have been drafted and are now available online in draft form. In addition, the city has scheduled a series of community meetings to be held around the island to discuss the new “extreme tsunami” plans.

Here’s the city’s explanation. Click here for the list of community meetings, and to see the new maps in draft form.

Extreme Tsunami Evacuation Zones

Click here to skip down to a link to all of the DRAFT Extreme Tsunami Evacuation Maps.

O‘ahu residents are invited to attend a series of free public information outreach workshops for a preview of new Extreme Tsunami Evacuation Zone maps. These maps represent an unlikely worst-case scenario and do not replace the current, standard tsunami evacuation maps. Rather, they add a second evacuation zone for an Extreme Tsunami event (Magnitude 9+ earthquake and tsunami).

Newly released scientific and geological information suggests that sometime in the past 500 years, a massive 9.0 earthquake in the eastern Aleutian Trench may have generated a tsunami that far exceeded the inundations known to have occurred during tsunami events throughout recorded history in Hawaii. An event of this magnitude, referred to as an Extreme Tsunami has a low probability but high impact.

In response to these findings, the city, in conjunction with state, federal, and non-government stakeholders, have developed a new set of O‘ahu Extreme Tsunami Evacuation Zone maps, refuge areas, and evacuation routes to complement the current tsunami evacuation maps.

Seventeen outreach workshops will be held in coastal communities around O‘ahu this month and next. Each workshop is designed specifically for that particular community.

Representatives from the city’s Department of Emergency Management will be on hand to present the new maps, discuss the implications for Oahu residents, and answer questions.

Can urban density done right work for Honolulu?

A Seattle Times columnist reviewed a book on urban design over the weekend, and it adds a useful perspective to our noticeable popular aversion to urban density, illustrated by the opposition to dense development in Kakaako (“Ingredients that make a happy city/Urban density done right makes for happy cities, advocate says“).

The columnist, Jerry Large, spoke to Charles Montgomery, author of “Happy City: Transforming Our Lives Through Urban Design.”

Studies show that social connection is at the heart of human happiness and well being, he said, and it’s hard to find that in a sprawling city or suburb, or sitting alone on a long commute by car, or walking beside the unbroken walls of large buildings.

Montgomery said that because his neighborhood in Vancouver, B.C., is densely populated, he can easily walk to all kinds of shops and amenities and doesn’t have to look at a schedule when he wants to take transit because a bus will always be along in a few minutes….

In a happy city, government isn’t spending lots of money on new roads or extending utilities to far reaches. Mass transit can be efficient because people are clustered together, people can drive less, which reduces pollution and the tension of long commutes and saves them money. Cities take in more money than spread-out suburbs. He said studies of productivity found that a high-density, multiuse acre in a city can bring in 100 times more sales and property taxes than an acre in a spread-out suburb. And that city acre can produce 20 times the number of jobs.

I recommend the column, and although I haven’t read the book, it looks like a perspective worth considering.

Of course, Montgomery’s romantic urbanism is not without serious critics. I’m just reading through a two-part assessment by John Muscat which appeared in New Geography (“The Illusions of Charles Montgomery’s Happy City“).

In any case, Montgomery does present a good case for urban density when done right.

We have lots of experience with density that doesn’t offer much of what Montgomery finds most appealing. Makiki is a good example, I would think. Plenty of density, not much in apparent in the the way of amenities, social resources, and good planning.

Could you retrofit Makiki with the things that Montgomery finds important? That would be an interesting experiment.