Tag Archives: Hawaii

Still waiting for the waves

[text]The students at Kaaawa Elementary School hold regular tsunami drills where they walk from the school to the upper part of Kaaawa up by our house, safely out of the tsunami inundation zone.

Many Kaaawa residents did the same thing today, driving up and setting up camp along Olohu Road with their kids, dogs, cats, at least a couple of birds. Engine 21 from the Kaaawa Station evacuated to the corner at the lower end of Olohu. We moved seven of a friend’s eight cats to a temporary cat shelter on our street.

We watched and waited for a chance to see a tsunami, while in the background we worried about what might happen if a big wave actually hit.

It was hot. It was too early in the day for beer to flow. Radios reported news from Hilo and Maui.

We spotted a few whales, watched some nice surf, talked with friends and neighbors, but I don’t think we ever saw anything that could be attributed to the tsunami.

Everyone kept repeating, “nothing happened, and that’s good.”

Everyone also knew, though, that they didn’t completely mean it. At some level, we wanted to see a tsunami from a safe vantage point.

In any case, click on the photo for a look at our little corner of Kaaawa during today’s tsunami evacuation.

Surfer in 1947 Waikiki Beach photo identified

Thanks to Keone Downing (DowningSurf.com) for identifying the man in these photos posted here earlier as Harry Robello.

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Robello was one of Waikiki’s famous beachboys during the post-WWII period.

[text]A Google search turns up quite a bit of information, including the photo (below) with Duke Kahanamoku from a 1963 recording session. Robello is behind Duke’s right shoulder (behind and to the left in the photo).

According to a 2008 Star-Bulletin story, the Robello family still offers beach services in the same section of Waikiki Beach.

Here’s the story of those 1947 photos as recounted by the woman’s son, who now lives on the mainland but earned a Ph.D. from UH-Manoa

“My mother is from Santa Barbara, so she grew up on the beach. The photo was taken during a trip she took to Hawaii following graduation from high school. She went on to UCLA, got married and raised five children while living on both the West and East coasts. My father passed away in 2001, she remarried in 2003 and move back to Santa Barbara, where she still lives.

This picture resurfaced this past Christmas as I brought my own family (wife and five children) back to Hawaii (we lived here from 90-94 when I earned my PhD from UH). My oldest daughter is 18 and at the last minute I thought it would be fun to have her recreate the scene from the 1947 photo for my mother’s 80th birthday. I went to Waikiki on Christmas day and talked to the folks who run the surfing concession there. The folks on the beach couldn’t think of anyone there at Waikiki who would be up for the job.

I told them about the photo but didn’t have a copy with me at the time. They were trying to speculate as to who it could have been as they didn’t think there were many surfers giving tandem rides back then.”

But now, mystery solved.

Capitol computer system links aren’t working, ACLU suggests private prisons improperly extend sentences to increase profits

I went looking for testimony this morning on SB2533, which I had read earlier in the week. I couldn’t remember the bill number, so instead did a text search for relevant terms. Nothing turned up. Finally I took word that would have to be found: “hawaii”

Here’s the system’s response:

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Conclusion: The text search function isn’t functioning, at least not this morning.

As I kept looking, it turns out more parts of the legislative system seem to be out of order. From the status page of SB2533, links to testimony and committee reports aren’t working, although I can find the committee report by going directly to the detailed document directories. Same thing with testimony.

It’s a good thing that there’s some redundancy built into the system.

In any case, I tracked down the available testimony on SB2533 in the document directories and found what I was looking for–disturbing section allegations buried in a section of the ACLU’s testimony.

The bill calls for an audit of the state’s contracts with the Corrections Corporation of America and the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu.

ACLU provided testimony regarding conditions of CCA facilities, then went on to related issues. This section caught my attention.

We have also received several reports suggesting that CCA may be keeping inmates longer than necessary; because Hawaii pays CCA per inmate per day of incarceration, the longer inmates are held, he more money CCA receives. For example, we have received several complaints of inmates being granted parole by the Hawaii Paroling Authority, then being held for four months or more by CCA (based on vague and unsubstantiated reasons for ignoring the Paroling Authority’s orders). We have also received numerous reports that CCA-Saguaro inmates have been written up for spurious rule infractions shortly before their parole eligibility dates–thus making them ineligible for parole pursuant to Hawaii Paroling Authority’s rules–even though these inmates have never before received a write-up. One month of additional incarceration at CCA can easily cost the State and the taxpayers nearly $2,000–Money that is sorely needed for other programs like drug rehabilitation, mental health care, and education–and the Legislature need not (and should not) allow these reports to be ignored.

It definitely deserves follow-up.

And if you’re looking for information on human needs in this budget climate, check out the grant-in-aid applications considered at a joint Finance/Ways and Means hearing yesterday.

These “island fruit” look a lot like gambling

[text]Someone suggested I wander over to Ala Moana Center and check out Fun Works. You enter on street level next to McDonald’s, and it looks like a typical video arcade featuring late model games, but the real action is in a section way in the back of the store.

That’s where a dozen or more “Island Fruit” game machines sit on long desks separated by dividers into individual cubicles that shield the machines from the view of casual observers. While the main part of the store had only a couple of customers, it was busy there in the back, and the vibe is different.

It felt a lot like low-rent Vegas, with a number of people who looked like they couldn’t afford it shoving quarters into the machines.

These “Island Fruit” machines look quite similar to other fruit machines featured on gambling sites, Internet casinos, etc.

Is there gambling going on back there? Prominent signs pronounce: “This is a game of skill”.

But other signage sure make these games of “skill” sound like gambling.

Rules posted with each game console prohibit players from “holding” machines when they are not actively playing, except to use the restroom, paying for parking, or when “withdrawing cash or redeeming skill tickets”.

One small sign, taped to the front of the Island Fruit consoles, says simply:

Skill tickets of $600 or more will be paid via check issued from our Main Office in 3 to 5 business days.

So does that mean winnings of up to $599 can be taken in cash on the spot?

Claims that these games require “skill” to earn payouts doesn’t appear to be sufficient to avoid being considering gambling under state law.

Hawaii’s gambling laws are spelled out in Section 712-1220 HRS, where gambling is defined, and continue through Section 712-1231, which defines legally permitted “social gambling”.

Additional legal commentary can be found in HRS as well, following each section of the statute.

The law defines gambling, in part, as risking “something of value upon the outcome of a contest of chance”. And a “contest of chance”:

…means any contest, game, gaming scheme, or gaming device in which the outcome depends in a material degree upon an element of chance, notwithstanding that skill of the contestants may also be a factor therein.

And “social gambling”, which is allowed, cannot take place in certain areas, including “any business establishment”, meaning that whatever goes on back there in Fun Works cannot be considered simply “social gambling”.

(4) It is not conducted or played in or at a hotel, motel, bar, nightclub, cocktail lounge, restaurant, massage parlor, billiard parlor, or any business establishment of any kind, public parks, public buildings, public beaches, school grounds, churches or any other public area;

Fun Works is a trademark registered by Fun Factory Inc., which also owns the trademark to “Island Fruit Games”.

Last year, Big Island blogger Damon Tucker called attention to a store in Hilo with walls of slot machines and people playing them.

The Honolulu Police Department lists video games among the most common types of illegal gambling in Hawaii.

Whether or not the machines and gaming practices in the back corner of Fun Works would pass an HPD review isn’t known, but they certainly appear to this casual observer to fall within the definition of gambling prohibited by state law.

So what’s up?