Tag Archives: Hawaii Superferry

Saturday…Superferry saga continues, State DOT gets suicide bomber detection system, and a Toby update

Well, the Superferry Alakai and its sister ship are now docked in Virginia waiting a possible lease deal with the Navy, according to the Virginian-Pilot.

But even that deal apparently isn’t straight forward.

Legal issues with the maritime administration related to its loan guarantees to build the ferries and operate them commercially would have to be resolved, Stiller said.

“If a transfer were to be made, those would be issues,” Clark said in an interview Friday. “Our purpose is to support the merchant marine.”

Meanwhile, the public still paying the bills for the ships. There’s the bill for the $40 million in harbor improvements that the state now will have to foot the bill for. There was the $125,000 emergency contract to move the barge left behind by the Superferry in Kahului Harbor before it caused serious damage. According to the state’s written justification of the emergency request, “any slight increase in swell and surge may lead to uncontrollable collisions between the barge and the pier”. To protect the harbor, the barge was moved to Honolulu Harbor’s more protected waters.

Then there’s the $1,187,930 for a “suicide bomber detection system” and other security upgrades for the Harbors Division.

This project was conceived back in 2006 when the state projected expanded Superferry operations and hefty cruise ship traffic, prompting concerns about security.

A terrorist attack or violent attack on Hawaii’s busiest harbor or cruise ship lines could have a devastating economic impact on Hawaii’s tourism and could paralyze the shipping industry, imports and exports from the harbor.

The state successfully applied for a Port Security Grant from the Department of Homeland Security to install these suicide bomber detection systems at all state passenger terminals.

The bomb detection system includes a both a handheld detector and a “walk-up radiation free passive-millimeter wave imaging system”. According to the documents,

All of Sago’s products show the exact shape and location of a suspicious object–metallic and non metallic guns and knives, IEDs, sheet metal, liquid in containers, etc–taking the guessing out of current methods and removing the “pat down” that takes place at current security checkpoints.

The grant required the system to be purchased from Sago Systems.

And what a small world it is!

Back in the Spring of 2005, a press release announced the appointment of retired Admiral Tom Fargo, former Commander in Chief Pacific, as chairman of Sago Systems.

That’s the same Tom Fargo who became a managing director of J.F. Lehman & Company, the primary owner of the Superferry, and took over as Hawaii Superferry’s president and CEO in April 2008.

I haven’t put all the dates together in a timeline yet, but that’s a powerful bunch of coincidences.

Another part of the Homeland Security grant was $725,579 to procure a Hawaii Homeland Security Command Information System. According to the documentation, the grant was reduced to remove certain items, including unmanned aerial vehicles and infrared sensors. Apparently the Harbor Police wanted their own Predator drones, which could have been deployed against Superferry protesters.

Think about that on this overcast Saturday morning.

TobyJudy T. wrote yesterday to ask what happened to Toby, the only one of the eight cats of our household who didn’t appear in yesterday’s Feline Friday photo gallery. I just want reassure her, and anyone else who caught the omission, that Mr. Toby is just fine. He just missed the photo shoot. I caught up with him late yesterday afternoon out on the front deck, where he was cleaning up and waiting for dinner.

Wednesday…City rail symposium disappoints, and documents from furlough lawsuit and Superferry bankruptcy

How time flies. I “knew” it was Wednesday because the crew arrived at 5:30 a.m. to pick up our trash. But my brain still let a “Tuesday” headline into the original version of this entry. An early morning short-circuit!

[text]There was a lot of traintosterone at Blaisdell Center yesterday at the city’s rain transit symposium, which wasn’t designed to explore the serious issues but rather to serve as a pep rally for Mufi’s transit team.

It’s a shame, though, because the speakers flown in at substantial public expense had quite a wealth of experience, most with transit systems using exactly the more flexible type of technology that Honolulu is refusing to even consider as a theoretical option in its environmental impact statement.

That’s right. Among the cities represented were Denver, Charlotte, Seattle, and Phoenix, all of which use flexible light rail trains that can run on elevated tracks or, when appropriate, at ground level or even in tunnels.

But for some reason Mufi is adamant that we’re going to ram through a different, most costly, and more intrusive type of train.

It would have been very interesting to free up the speakers present yesterday to talk about this decision.

I would have wanted to ask each one: “Do you think that Honolulu should at least consider the kind of flexible light rail technology that your city has chosen?”

I would have been very interested to hear the answer.

In any case, that opportunity was lost. It’s a shame. While Mayor Hannemann says that he’s confident that the right choices have been made, his insistence on avoiding a real discussion of alternatives conveys a very different message, perhaps a fear that some of those alternatives would be persuasive. But why should that be threatening if it moves the rail project forward? Again, I don’t know.

There was some useful discussion of elevated systems vs. those running at ground level. Some of the cities run their trains on the ground on tracks in protected coridors, some on the street in traffic. Most have at least some sections on elevated tracks.

There seemed to be agreement that street level access is popular with the people in surrounding communities but management is much more difficult because of the disruption of street life and business while construction is ongoing. So there are tradeoffs in trying to keep the train on the ground.

On the other hand, in response to a question about the feasibility of using tunnels in Honolulu, one of the speakers said the issue is cost. If it costs $1 to be at ground level, and an elevated track costs $4, going to a tunnel system would run $9-$15.

I wonder if that 4-1 cost ratio of above-ground to street level is really in the ballpark? If so, no wonder our projected cost is so much higher than mainland systems have been.

Noted: The League of Women Voters of Honolulu devoted a portion of their June newsletter to the rail issue.

The day was also interesting for providing a glimpse at the vendors lining up to bid on parts of the project. Check out this consortium which boasts its own Honolulu web site.

And, of course, keep in mind that none of these companies have lobbyists registered with the city, and most never have. How is that possible? I don’t know.

Here are a few more documents to prowl through. First, yesterday’s motion for a temporary restraining order filed by the Hawaii State Teachers Association and United Public Workers in the latest move in their attempt to derail the Lingle furlough plan, along with their motion to bring a San Francisco law firm into the case on behalf of the unions.

Then a few tidbits from the Hawaii Superferry bankruptcy case: The State of Hawaii’s motion to move the case back to the islands, a copy of the Superferry’s security agreement with the Federal Maritime Administration, and an affidavit by the corporate secretary filed for the opening bankruptcy hearing spelling out the company’s financial structure.

For those following the cases, these source documents will be interesting.