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The Net of Light Wednesday, February 5, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
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Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HOUSE ADVANCES MANDATORY RATE REDUCTION
Three House committees today advanced a bill that would force island
auto insurance companies to slash their premiums by at least 25 percent.
The measure calls for a mandatory 25 to 35 percent rate reduction on
basic insurance policies, which are required by state law. Offsetting the
rate reduction is a proposed $5,000 deductible, which requires that the first
$5,000 of any award won in a lawsuit goes to the insurance company.
House Consumer Protection Committee Chairman said the bill would reduce
costs and discourage frivolous lawsuits.
Nu`uanu Rep. Quentin Kawananakoa said the rate reduction might not be
worth the tradeoff.
"It's a big concern," Kawananakoa told KGMB. "The public needs to
understand that while we may be bringing savings to their premium costs,
they're not getting the same coverage because of the very large deductible."
In addition, state officials said health insurance costs may rise by
about 3 percent if the bill becomes law.
Insurance industry officials said the plan will ultimately backfire.
""We don't believe there's going to be significant savings off this
bill," State Farm Insurance spokesman Rick Tsujimura told KITV.
"In fact, if you talk to other industry leaders, they'll confirm our
position and that is there will be an increase for working families."
In all, 32 state representatives voted in favor of the bill, which will
return for its second hearing before the full House within the next week.
The state Senate, meanwhile, is working on its own version of a bill
aimed at lowering insurance costs in Hawai`i.
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Subject: MAJOR LEAGUE TEAM EYES ISLAND ENGAGEMENT
If "they" will come, Honolulu may host three Major League series games
in April, KHNL reported today.
Representatives of the San Diego Padres are in town this week, gauging
the island market and inspecting Aloha Stadium to determine whether the Major
Leagues will get a major response from the people of Hawai`i.
"We're broadening our range from our market in San Diego," Padres Vice
President Bob Wells said. "We want to head west."
"My understanding is that baseball is the number one sport in Hawai`i,"
Wells said.
Wells said the team is looking for a playing field, since its own
stadium is scheduled to undergo major renovations later this year. He said he
suspects the national pastime will get a warm welcome in the islands.
If the team decides to play at Aloha Stadium, KHNL reported, it will
play three games against the St. Louis Cardinals between April 18 and 20.
In addition to fulfilling the fantasies of local baseball fans, stadium
manager Eddie Hayashi said hosting the Major Leagues will help all sectors of
the Hawai`i economy.
"I would like to think that Hawai`i would support three nights of major
league baseball," said local sports scout Pat Eldredge. ""I think it would be
thrilling to have Major League baseball here."
He said such a move would be just as big as the recent Pro Bowl, which
according to visitor industry officials brings massive publicity for the
islands and pumps millions into the state economy.
"We're not talking exhibition games here," Eldredge said. "We're talking
about season games -- games that would actually count on their record."
Team representatives will be in Honolulu for another few days, but as of
yet they have made no decision on whether to play ball in Hawai`i. KHNL
reported Gov. Ben Cayetano is preparing to make an announcement regarding the
possibility later this week.
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Subject: COUNCIL QUESTIONS MEAGER CITY STORE ROLLS
Thirteen months after it opened, the Honolulu City Store in Ala Moana
Shopping Center has barely brought in 20 percent of what it was expected to,
and city councilmembers said they are growing impatient.
According to city officials, the City Store has raised about $14,000
toward the general fund since it opened before Christmas 1995. When it was
first pitched to the City Council, Mayor Jeremy Harris' administration
projected annual profits of $80,000.
Budget Director Malcolm Tom told the council today that the store --
which sells souvenirs ranging from "high surf" highway signs to city
lifeguard T-shirts -- is still a promising source of revenue.
The money generated by the store was to be committed toward hiring more
police officers, the amount to matched by the federal government in a
nationwide crime package.
Tom said his department is working with the private contractor hired to
run the store to find ways to improve sales.
"We're very optimistic and very confident of the concept," Tom said,
"And we'll work with them or any other person to realize its potential."
Councilmembers were unconvinced, however, criticizing the Harris
administration for dragging its feet on coming up with a concrete plan to
promote the store.
Councilman John Henry Felix said the city seems to have a "smug
attitude" about the presumed success of the City Store.
Last year, the council urged Harris to create an economic development
office, which would coordinate marketing for the store, as well as TheBus,
the Honolulu Zoo and other revenue-generating city attractions.
Tom said the administration has been working on the proposal, and that
the office could be established as soon as early March.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
MAUI police have charged a 28-year-old man with attempted murder after he
stabbed a Utah woman and her two sons during a botched robbery attempt last
week. The suspect allegedly broke into a room at the Maui Sunset Hotel in
Kihei and stabbed Mary Paulson ten times before struggling with her sons,
ages 24 and 26, who were also injured. Mary Paulson remains in stable
condition at Maui Memorial Hospital; the men were treated and released.
Police tracked down the suspect, reportedly an employee at a Maui dive shop,
through a loaded gun left at the scene. Although his sailboarding plans were
nearly derailed by tragedy, Jeff Paulson said he still likes the islands...
STRONGER measures will be used against motorists who fail to pay parking
tickets under a bill approved today by the House Transportation Committee.
Rep. Ken Hiraki said the state has accumulated $1 million in unpaid parking
tickets over the years. If passed, the bill would authorize police to use
steel boots to immobilize vehicles with three or more outstanding tickets.
Hiraki told KHON-TV2 that the boots, which are clamped onto wheels and
locked, have been proven effective on the Mainland. "Believe me," he said.
"It gets people very motivated to pay their parking fines." The measure now
moves to the Judiciary Committee...
COMEDIAN Kaui Hill, also known as Bu La`ia, was fined $300 yesterday for an
altercation with security guards at Honolulu International Airport. Hill, 30,
pled no contest to charges of third-degree assault. On March 20, Hill
allegedly assaulted a security guard who tried to restrain him while he was
illegally skateboarding on airport property. The prosecution dropped two
terroristic threatening charges, and Circuit Court judge Fa`auga To`oto`o
deferred acceptance of Hill's plea. As a result, Hill's record will be
cleared if he stays out of trouble for a year...
BROOK Lee, 26, was crowned Miss USA tonight in Shreveport, Louisiana, winning
over $170,000 in cash and prizes and earning the right to represent the U.S.
in the Miss Universe pageant in May. A graduate of Kamehameha Schools and
Chaminade University, Lee prevailed through the interview, swimsuit and
evening gown portions of the national pageant. Her brother, Brandon, told
KITV that she had competed for Miss Hawai`i three times before winning the
crown last year. "She's worked so hard for so long for this," he said. "She
really deserved it..."
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 81/72, Kaua`i 80/69, Moloka`i 82/70, Maui 81/70, Hilo 83/67
CASTS: Sunny and clear, trades to 15MPH; North shore surf to 8 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 2:42 p.m.; Low 9:42 a.m.
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The Net of Light Tuesday, February 4, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: LIBRARY BOOK BUYER FACES FEDERAL LAWSUIT
After an 18-month investigation, the U.S. Department of Justice has
joined a lawsuit against the company recently hired by the state to buy all
books for Hawaii's public libraries.
North Carolina-based Baker & Taylor is now accused of bilking clients
across the country of nearly $200 million.
"This raises our eyebrows," Sen. Avery Chumbley said yesterday.
"We will take a closer look at what Baker & Taylor is doing," Chumbley
said. "The Attorney General should be alerted so she too could look at
joining the suit," Chumbley said.
The lawsuit claims Baker & Taylor failed to pass publishers' discounts
on to its 15,000 clients, 90 percent of which are public libraries. State
officials believe they may have been overcharged as well.
"The justice department is saying this is a widespread practice of
stealing from public libraries across the country," said Rep. David
Stegmaier, chair of the House Education Committee.
"We have to look in terms of whether the state of Hawai`i has been
cheated," said Sen. Rod Tam, who heads the Senate's education panel.
Board of Education member Wynston Sakurai said he believes the state
should join the lawsuit.
State Attorney General Margery Bronster said a independent lawsuit is an
option, but said time was needed to examine the specific allegations.
Today, Bronster said federal investigators have asked for records
documenting the state's five-year, $11-million contract with Baker & Taylor.
A public hearing will be held within the next two weeks to discuss the
matter, Tam said. He said a separate investigation of state Librarian Bart
Kane -- who hired Baker & Taylor -- is a possibility.
Hawai`i is the only state that allows a private vendor to control all
book purchases for its library system.
According to the contract, the company chooses which books and how many
copies each library receives. Under the "unit pricing" plan, every
publication -- whether a hardcover novel or a pamphlet -- costs the state
exactly $20.94.
Kane`ohe librarian Norman Fitzpatrick told KHNL that Baker & Taylor sent
the state 690 copies of a book no one wanted, but only sent one copy of a
best-seller that now has a waiting list of 214 people.
Fitzpatrick said it would cost about $254 to buy a stack of 90 paperback
books at any bookstore. Under Baker & Taylor's contract, however, he said the
price tag would be $1863.
Fitzpatrick also said his library only received three books in January
-- all Christmas oriented.
"This is a appalling waste of taxpayer money," Fitzpatrick said.
At a recent Senate Education Committee meeting, Baker & Taylor came
under fire from librarians complaining about duplicate, excessive or unwanted
book purchases. Tam called for an audit of the company.
"We will be having a financial investigation and we ask for your
cooperation," Tam said at the time. "Otherwise, quite frankly, we will not
fund your contract."
Kane had apologized for the problems, but told the committee that he
didn't anticipate canceling the contract.
"I am discouraged and saddened that employees have as many concerns
about the system as they still do," he said.
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Subject: BILL AIMS TO TEMPER PASH RULING
A capacity crowd was on hand today as lawmakers heard testimony on a
bill that would curb rights of native Hawaiians established two years ago by
the state Supreme Court.
In 1995, the court ruled in favor of Public Access Shoreline Hawai`i, a
Big Island group that sued for access to a private stretch of shoreline in
order to conduct native Hawaiian rites.
Legislators are considering a bill that would require groups to obtain
permission from the state before crossing into private property. The bill has
the support of landowners and developers who said the court ruling has called
their deeds into question.
Big Island project planner Peter L'Orange told lawmakers that a
developer's loan application was turned down last year because the PASH
ruling makes it impossible to guarantee his land title.
"It's a serious problem," L'Orange said.
Others who testified said the intent of PASH is a good one, but that its
implications are too vague.
"There's no question that the Hawaiian culture is a valuable asset,"
said Hawai`i Realtors Association spokesman Keahi Pelayo. "However there are
real jobs being lost in this state due to the effect of PASH."
"It's affecting both Hawaiians and the rest of Hawai`i," Pelayo said.
Opponents argued that the bill unfairly targets native Hawaiians.
"This bill imposes on one group, defined by race, a burden to register
their rights," said UH law professor Williamson Chang. "The last time that
occurred was in World War II when Jews were asked to register because an
economic crisis was blamed on them."
Sierra Club spokesman Kimo Frankel also testified against the bill. The
Sierra Club supported PASH in its case two years ago.
"This bill proposes to steal Hawaiian rights to accommodate the greedy
demands of developers and foreign corporate interests," Frankel said. "It is
the most egregious bill considered by the legislature this year."
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Subject: STATE MULLS PRIVATE PRISON OPERATORS
The state House is considering a bill that would let private companies
build and operate prisons in the islands.
Puna Rep. Robert Herkes introduce the measure, which would speed the
construction of a new prison in Hawai`i County by privatizing much of the
operation.
"If we build a prison on the Big Island, the objective is to do
something about the high unemployment rates," Herkes told KHON-TV2.
Les Gay, who represents a company that runs several prisons on the
Mainland, told lawmakers that privatization will take some of the burden off
of the state's prison system.
"We see it as a positive, constructive and do-able solution," Gay said.
"Hawai`i can and should utilize the private sector in order to help eliminate
the current and projected overcrowding."
State labor officials, however, said privatization would be a mistake.
"We believe it is clear that the goals of the supporters of
privatization are to make their friends rich and to be anti-union," said Gary
Rodrigues, head of the state United Public Workers union.
Public Safety Director Keith Kaneshiro said privatization is an option,
but that the state needs time to consider the matter thoroughly.
"This bill ties the hands of public safety," Kaneshiro said. "We're not
able to deal with the prison problem and the issue of privatization if this
bill is passed."
If the state decided to privatize the prison system, it could do so
without changing existing laws, Kaneshiro said.
Last year, Gov. Ben Cayetano announced plans to add 1,000 beds to
Hawai`i prisons within the next two years. The state already has 300 inmates
incarcerated at private prisons on the Mainland.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
TEMPERS flared in the state Senate today after some members claimed the
Judiciary Committee rushed to pass a domestic partnership bill. Kailua Sen.
Whitney Anderson, who opposes domestic partnerships, said Committee Chair
Matt Matsunaga didn't tell him a vote was going to be taken. Anderson wasn't
present when the committee passed controversial bills concerning same-sex
marriage. "I think it's unfair, unjust to every person that was there,"
Anderson said. "It's simply wrong, wrong, wrong to complain when you don't
get what you want and the rules were indeed followed," Matsunaga replied.
Sens. Mike McCartney and Malama Solomon also exchanged a few barbs. The full
Senate will consider the issue on Thursday...
TRIAL began today for an 18-year-old man in the stabbing death of his 51-
year-old lover. Prosecutors believe Jeremy Salvador and Terry Caldwell were
in a relationship when Salvador and a friend attempted to ransack Caldwell's
Waikiki apartment in December of 1995. A kitchen knife is believed to be the
murder weapon. "Terry Caldwell suffered a violent and a painful death at the
hand of Jeremy Salvador," said Deputy Prosecutor Thalia Murphy. "Armed with a
steak knife he stabbed her multiple times." Salvador is also on trial for
criminal solicitation, when -- while in custody -- he allegedly asked a
friend to kill someone who witnessed Caldwell's death...
VOLCANO watchers again can see most of the exhibits and trails at Hawai`i
Volcanoes National Park, but the new eruption near Napau Crater has subsided.
A 50-foot curtain of fire was created after the summit of Kilauea collapsed
early Thursday morning. By Friday morning, however, the show was over.
Geologists believe the normal flow of magma was constricted somewhere upslope
from Pu`u O`o, where the majority of activity had been observed for the past
14 years. Scientists said nearby Makaopuhi Crater began to swell, and the
pressure made fissures in the rock that eventually reached the surface. The
Kilauea summit has now begun re-inflating, and Hawai`i Volcano Observatory
officials said eruptions may resume at Pu`u O`o within the next few weeks...
ELIZABETH Savage, 31, was sentenced to a year in prison and five years
probation for multiple counts of forgery and theft. A former Honolulu police
officer with six years of service to the force, Savage said her actions were
spurred by severe drug problems, . In Circuit Court yesterday, Savage
apologized to the police department and to members of her family. Savage may
earn an early release if she qualifies for a drug treatment program. She
resigned from the force in March, and pled guilty to theft charges in
October. While released on bail and awaiting sentencing, Savage was arrested
again and charged with additional felony counts...
DAMAGE to a dry cleaning warehouse near Ke`ehi Lagoon is estimated at $2
million after a fire raged through the Al Phillips the Cleaner on Lagoon
Drive last night. Company officials said the facility is the largest of their
14 locations, and that it was housing 1,000 articles of customer clothing and
an additional 6,000 uniforms at the time of the blaze. Fire Department
Investigator Art brown said initial signs show the fire started in two
locations, which could indicate arson. The official cause of the fire is
expected to be determined tomorrow. All three firefighters injured while
battling the fire have been released from the hospital...
GOVERNOR Ben Cayetano today appointed former state Sen. Rey Graulty as the
State Insurance Commissioner. Graulty was defeated in the November general
election after four years in the Senate. Prior to that, he served four years
as a state representative. Last year, Graulty joined Cayetano in opposing
proposed changes to the state's no-fault insurance system. Graulty replaces
former commissioner Wayne Metcalf, who was appointed last month to finish the
term of retired Hilo Sen. Richard Matsuura...
CORRECTIONS: The costs involved for a people-mover system proposed for
Honolulu were incorrect in the Jan. 30 edition of Ka `Upena. Honolulu
Monorail President Ron Watson said he has amassed $600 million in private
funding, and said the system will cost approximately $60 million per mile to
build. Also, the name of former city prosecutor George Parker's wife was
wrongly reported in yesterday's Ka `Upena. Her name is Doraine Parker.
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/70, Kaua`i 79/69, Moloka`i 81/68, Maui 81/69, Hilo 83/67
CASTS: Partly cloudy, trades to 15MPH; North and West shore surf to 12 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 2:42 a.m.; Low 9:42 a.m.
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The Net of Light Monday, February 3, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: SENATE COMMITTEE BACKS SAME-SEX BENEFITS, MARRIAGE BAN
The Senate Judiciary Committee today approved two measures tackling the
controversial same-sex marriage issue, advancing an apparent compromise that
would ban same-sex marriages but provide legal benefits for domestic
partners.
Lawmakers heard more than five hours of testimony, and more than 100
people were on hand for the afternoon hearing.
Rev. Marc Alexander, representing the state's Catholic churches, spoke
against same-sex marriages. He said gay rights advocates mischaracterize the
opponents of same-sex marriage.
"The 75 percent of the people of Hawai`i who want marriage to be
marriage can hardly be compared to southern white racists of the 50s and 60s
or religious bigots," Alexander said.
Attorney Dan Foley, who represented three-same sex couples in their
lawsuit against the state last year, said the issue is one of basic civil
rights. He said the state's main claim against legalizing gay and lesbian
marriages was proven to be unfounded.
"Same sex marriage will cause no harm to the state and will in fact will
benefit women and children," Foley said.
Although the court ruled against the state's ban on same-sex marriage,
the decision is on hold as it is appealed to the Hawai`i Supreme Court.
Committee members linked a bill for a constitutional amendment banning
same-sex marriage -- similar to one recently passed by the state House -- to
another measure that establishes limited rights for same-sex couples.
Aiea Rep. Bob McDermott testified against the Senate's domestic
partnership plan, telling the seven-member committee that it would still go
against the view of most Hawai`i residents.
"They don't want same-sex marriage, and they don't want domestic
partnership," he said.
"Now gentlemen, I'd advise you not to send over a bill to the House
loaded up with domestic partnership garbage because it's going to die,"
McDermott said.
Last year, the Senate advanced a domestic partnership bill while the
House focused on a constitutional amendment. Neither made it out of
committee, however.
This year, the state House tackled the same-sex marriage issue in the
first week of the session. In addition to the proposed constitutional
amendment, representatives passed a bill that would assure "reciprocal
benefits" for same-sex couples.
The senate's domestic partnership bill, introduced by Sens. Matt
Matsunaga and Avery Chumbley, is said to include more benefits than the House
version.
Former state Insurance Commissioner Wayne Metcalf, appointed by Gov. Ben
Cayetano to replace retired Sen. Richard Matsuura, broke a potential deadlock
when he voted in favor of domestic partnerships.
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Subject: PARKER DENIED BAIL, WIFE APOLOGIZES
A federal judge ordered George Parker III held without bail today, and
decreed the former city prosecutor spend a month at an Illinois federal
medical facility for mental evaluation.
Parker, 35, held police in an eight-hour standoff in downtown Honolulu
on Thursday, one day after he was convicted of three federal charges
including money laundering and obstruction of justice.
SWAT team members fired low-lethality foam and wood rounds to subdue
Parker when he rushed at them from an Alakea Street alley.
"He's not just a danger to himself, he's a danger to others," U.S.
Attorney Steve Alm told KHON-TV2. "It clearly shows the danger that the
public would be facing if Mr. Parker were not incarcerated."
"The fact that he did posses firearms heightens it a notch, because he
is familiar with weapons," Alm said.
Parker faces 35 years in prison for his convictions on three federal
charges, all stemming from a 1994 investigation of drug kingpin Ronald Moon.
Distraught over the ruling, Parker walked out of the federal courthouse
Wednesday afternoon and never returned. He was declared a fugitive and a
bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
According to his wife, Lorraine, Parker had already attempted suicide
well before police were arriving on the scene.
Lorraine Parker appeared in court today and apologized to Honolulu
residents for the inconvenience her husband caused Thursday morning.
She told judge David Ezra that her husband left messages on their
answering machine telling her he would not be coming home. She said he then
bought 96 tablets of an over-the-counter painkiller and some rat poison from
nearby stores and ingested them.
She said Parker fell unconscious, but woke up shortly before 3 a.m. He
was on his way to buy more drugs when he was spotted by a security guard.
She also said Parker deliberately held his cellular phone as if it was a
gun when he charged police, hoping that snipers would shoot and kill him.
Alm said he understood Parker's distress, but said the standoff still
put lives at risk.
"It was a tragedy from Mr. Parker's point of view, but it was a real
dangerous situation for everybody else involved," he said.
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Subject: STATE JOINS NATIONWIDE TOBACCO SUIT
Hawai`i is now one of 20 states suing America's leading tobacco
companies for unfair trade practices.
The 150-page lawsuit aims to recover millions of dollars spent for
medical costs resulting from tobacco-related illnesses, and also asks tobacco
companies to stop targeting children in their advertising campaigns.
Like those filed by other states, the Hawai`i lawsuit also demands the
release of studies conducted by tobacco companies on their own products.
Everyone in the state has had to pay the price for the thousands of
people now addicted to nicotine, said state Attorney General Margery
Bronster.
"What we have found is absolutely ample support -- both in the facts and
the law -- to show that the tobacco industry has been engaging in unfair and
deceptive trade practices with respect to the sale of tobacco and improperly
targeting the youth in this state," Bronster said.
In announcing the lawsuit today, Gov. Ben Cayetano said cigarette smoke
is Hawaii's deadliest killer.
"Smoke-related diseases kill more people in Hawai`i every year than
AIDS, suicide, alcohol and murders combined," Cayetano said.
Bronster said a trial date would be at least two years away.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
SALDY Marzan, 29, was ordered to stand trial for murder today in the Jan. 27
shooting death of his 24-year-old wife, Arlene. According to HPD Det. Stephen
Dung, Marzan argued with his wife over the phone before going to his
brother's Kalihi Street apartment, where his wife and their three children
had spent the night. Marzan, who was violating a temporary restraining order,
struggled with his wife for the gun. When she fell and began calling for
people to call police, Marzan shot her, Dung said. Marzan faces four felony
charges, including second-degree murder and firearms violations. If
convicted, he faces life in prison with the possibility of parole. He remains
in custody tonight, unable to post $320,000 bail. Trial is set for Feb. 13...
REVEREND Claude Du Teil, who founded the "Peanut Butter Ministry" 20 years
ago with five volunteers and a tray of sandwiches, was remembered this
weekend for his devotion to helping Hawaii's poor and homeless population. Du
Teil, 76, died Jan. 22 of complications related to Parkinson's disease.
Colleagues called Du Teil a "wounded healer," comparing him to Father Damien
and Jesus. According to his wife, Roberta, Du Teil had to overcome alcoholism
before devoting his life to helping others. Du Teil's shelter now serves
hundreds of people, providing health care and job placement assistance. The
Institute for Human Services is now working to raise $1.1 million to build a
second shelter, this one dedicated to helping women and children...
LANCE Alstodt, an investment banker from Roslyn, N.Y., booted his way to $1
million prize during yesterday's Pro Bowl at Aloha Stadium. Before a sell-out
crowd, Alstodt, 26, made a successful 35-yard field-goal kick as part of a
Hershey's promotion. Company officials said Alstodt's candy wrapper was
picked from among over 200,000 entries. For a chance at the "Million Dollar
Kick," Alstodt had to beat three other contest finalists in a kicking
competition last month. Alstodt said $1 million will go toward wedding
expenses -- his fiancee came with him to Honolulu to witness his triumph --
and savings. NFC kicker John Kasay coached Alstodt before the moment of
truth. "I told him not to give up his day job," Kasay told the _Honolulu
Star-Bulletin_. "He still made more money than I did this year..."
ROMAN Perez, 66, took the stand in his own defense this morning in Circuit
Court and testified that he shot his wife by accident during an argument last
year. On July 26, Perez fired at his wife in broad daylight, chasing her down
a Kaka`ako street and into the Hawai`i Newspaper Agency building where she
worked. Perez told the jury he was under severe stress at the time, and was
just trying to stop her from running away because he wanted to confront her
about their joint bank account. Perez said he believed his wife was having a
lesbian affair and was stealing money. Perez faces two charges of attempted
murder and two counts of reckless endangering...
NINE fire units are battling a blaze tonight near Ke`ehi Lagoon. The three-
alarm fire was reported shortly after 7 p.m. at the Al Phillips the Cleaner
on Lagoon Drive. The Fire Department's hazardous materials team closed
several streets, fearing chemicals in the building would release toxic fumes.
HPD spokesman Carter Davis said no chemicals appear to be burning, but the
synthetic materials used in some clothes may still pose a threat. Three
Honolulu firefighters required medical attention, and were taken to Kuakini
Medical Center. Al Phillips executive Roy Miyamoto told KHNL that he
anticipated thousands of dollars in damages, adding that the site was also
used to store hundreds of rental uniforms...
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 81/70, Kaua`i 79/69, Moloka`i 80/68, Maui 81/69, Hilo 82/68
CASTS: Cloudy, trades to 15MPH; North and West shore surf to 10 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 1:45 p.m.; Low 7:24 p.m.
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The Net of Light Thursday, February 30, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: ATTORNEY SUBDUED AFTER EIGHT-HOUR STANDOFF
A former city prosecutor convicted in a federal drug case held police at
bay for 8 hours in downtown Honolulu until being taken down with a
specialized weapon shortly before noon today.
Honolulu police fired low-lethality foam and wood rounds to subdue
former city prosecutor George Parker III, who was apparently distraught after
being convicted yesterday for obstruction of justice and money laundering.
Parker, 35, faces up to 35 years in prison for conspiracy, obstruction
of justice and money laundering in connection with a 1994 investigation of
drug kingpin Ronald Moon.
Yesterday afternoon, Parker walked out of a downtown federal courtroom
during a recess and disappeared. A bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
Shortly before 3 a.m., a downtown security guard reported seeing a man
with a gun in a narrow alley behind the Hawaiian Telephone building, near the
1100 block of Alakea Street.
Police identified the man as Parker, and quickly cleared the area.
Police said Parker was still wearing the same clothes he wore in court
yesterday.
Negotiators lowered a phone to Parker, and he was allowed to listen to
recorded messages from his family. Parker was very agitated and threatened to
kill himself, police said.
"He said to get the snipers ready," police negotiator Karen Kaniho said.
At about 11:45 a.m., Parker reportedly charged at police. SWAT team
members fired two foam rounds and one wood round, which knocked Parker to the
ground.
"He gave us every indication he was armed," HPD spokesman Keith Pocock
said. "He indicated earlier that he was going to use the gun on himself."
Although police believed he was armed, only a cellular phone was
recovered.
Parker was taken to Queen's Medical Center, and police said he was in
good condition and talking.
The standoff closed streets and several nearby buildings, throwing
downtown Honolulu into chaos. The incident also closed the District Court
building, forcing clerks to set up desks outside to reschedule some 700 cases
that were set to be heard today.
"There was absolutely no indication that anything like this would
happen," said U.S. Attorney Steve Alm. "I'm sad to see this happen to Parker
and I'm sad to see this happen to a former prosecutor."
City Prosecutor Peter Carlisle told the _Honolulu Star-Bulletin_ he used
to play basketball with Parker, and described him as an intelligent,
confident attorney.
"I hope everything turns out okay," he said.
Parker's friend, Myles Breiner, told KHON-TV2 that Parker's life started
turning sour two years ago. Parker recently divorced and was separated from
two children, Breiner said, and lost his license last September in an
unrelated case.
Parker visited Moon in Halawa Prison several times in 1994, accepting a
$20,000 bribe from drug dealer William Batkin. Batkin wanted Parker to
convince Moon to not implicate him in a federal investigation.
During the trial, prosecutors said they believed Parker spent most of
the bribe on a trip to Paris.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KILAUEA ERUPTION HITS NEW STRIDE
The ongoing eruption of Kilauea entered a new phase yesterday, when lava
began fountaining over 50 feet in the air near Napau Crater, which is about
two miles west of Pu`u O`o.
"All of a sudden the summit of Kilauea began to deflate," Hawai`i
Volcanoes National Park Ranger Mardie Lane told KHON-TV2. "The magma welled
up, it split open the earth, the lava fountains began to dance and we were on
to a full on eruption."
The eruption began early this morning, after a series of earthquakes
were detected Wednesday night. Park officials said Pu`u O`o -- which had been
the focus of surface activity for 14 years -- collapsed, and the lava flow to
the ocean stopped.
Three fissures opened up near Napau Crater, which had seen only moderate
activity in the past. A huge curtain of fire was observed, and geologists
recorded several earthquakes, the strongest measuring 3.4 on the Richter
scale.
A Wyoming couple that had been camping near Napau Crater found
themselves about half a mile from the new eruption. Both were employees at
Yellowstone National Park, and said they awoke at about 3:30 a.m. to a glow
they first thought was coming from Pu`u O`o.
When they saw the lava fountaining over the next ridge, they said they
knew it was a new eruption.
Stephen Dobert, 47, compared the red and yellow lava to fireworks.
"Explosions after explosions -- a constant roar," Dobert said.
"We did see the lava flowing and the spouts looked like fire to me,"
said Sandra Snell-Dobert. "We felt several earthquakes -- nothing that shook
us out of our tents, but we could feel the shaking."
The couple was rescued at about 4 a.m.
Most park trails and roads have been closed, including Chain of Craters
Road, which allowed visitors to view the lava flow at the shoreline. Since
the flow has subsided, however, Lane said there is little to see.
"That's our security blanket -- that's our big draw," Lane told KHNL.
"Visitors come to the island hoping to see the steam plume, hoping to see the
lava flow after dark, and right now that's not a reality."
Until scientists have time to study the new eruption, Chain of Craters
Road will be closed until Saturday, she said.
Park officials said the flow from the new eruption may also threaten
archaeological sites, including a field of ancient petroglyphs.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: DEVELOPER OFFERS STATE RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEM
A private company wants to build a fixed-rail people-mover system
through the economic heart of O`ahu, and has offered to do so at no cost to
taxpayers.
Honolulu Monorail -- which made a $4.5 million bid to build a proposed
mass-transit system that was eventually killed four years ago -- is back at
the Capitol, but this time president Ron Watson said he has secured $600 in
private financing.
Watson told lawmakers yesterday that the only thing his company needs
from the city and state are the permits needed for construction along the
proposed route.
The proposed people-mover, which Watson compared to the monorail at
Disney World, would run from Aloha Tower Marketplace through Waikiki to the
new Convention Center.
Watson said the system would cost about $60 per mile to build.
With the support of the state, construction could be underway by Summer
of 1998, with the system fully operational within another two or three years,
Watson said.
Although Rep. Romy Cachola said there is clearly a need for mass transit
in Honolulu, he said the proposal will take lots of work before ground can be
broken.
"It's not as easy as that," Cachola told KHON-TV2. "There are questions
of right-of-ways and condemnations of land along the route."
Gov. Ben Cayetano also expressed doubts.
"It's probably not cost effective," Cayetano said. "I think it's a
mistake to believe that it will have no cost impact to the taxpayer."
Cachola said the state should consider building the people-mover
instead.
Studies have shown a transit system along the proposed route would be
profitable, and Cachola said the state could float bonds to pay for
construction rather than using general funds.
A larger system is not out of the question, he said.
"There will come a time when there is a need for a mass transit system,"
Cachola said. "Hopefully by that time the people mover will be linked to the
mass transit system later on."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
ATHEISTS have taken aim at a 35-foot-tall cross on the grounds of Schofield
Barracks, claiming its presence violates the Constitutional separation of
church and state. The cross, which stands at the foot of Kolekole Pass, was
built in the early '60s. The Hawai`i chapter of American Atheists has
demanded that the army remove the cross, which Army officials said was
apparently built for use during annual Easter services. The group's
president, Mitchell Kahle, said Army records show the cross cost over $4,000
of taxpayer money. Army officials said they are consulting legal experts and
are preparing an official response...
WEEKS before resigning his position as director of the city's botanical
gardens, Michael Kristiansen reportedly took a job as head of a private
garden in Beverly Hills, Calif. The _Honolulu Advertiser_ reported today that
Kristiansen accepted the director's position at the 6-acre Virginia Robinson
Gardens on Nov. 4, while he was on extended sick leave. Kristiansen
officially resigned on Jan. 15. Managing Director Bob Fishman said there was
no reason to believe Kristiansen wasn't ill. Meanwhile, Robinson Gardens
Assistant Director Mary Schwei told the _Advertiser_: "He certainly wasn't
sick or stressed when he came here..."
KONISHIKI, born and raised in Wai`anae as Salevaa Atisanoe, shared his aloha
with a group of 35 sixth-graders with an all-expenses paid trip to Japan this
week. The 600-pound sumotori collaborated with corporate sponsors to fly the
kids to Japan, where they visited Tokyo Disneyland and attended the final
night of the Grand Sumo Tournament. Selected on the basis of written essays,
the students -- representing five Leeward Coast elementary schools -- also
received jackets as souvenirs. They returned to Hawai`i today, and are
expected to report on their trip to the Board of Education next month...
VOLUNTEER patrols will begin fining Honolulu drivers who wrongfully park in
handicapped stalls this weekend. A bill passed by the City Council last year
allowed the Honolulu Police Department to begin the pilot project, which will
help the city and state enforce their parking laws without draining valuable
money and manpower. The patrol, consisting of about 20 volunteers, will begin
fining drivers $150 for handicapped parking violations...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/71, Kaua`i 79/68, Moloka`i 80/71, Maui 81/70, Hilo 80/68
CASTS: Partly cloudy, trades to 15MPH; North and West shore surf to 10 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 7:57 a.m.; Low 3:02 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, January 29, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: COUNCIL TO RECONSIDER SMOKING BAN
A bill that would ban smoking in all Honolulu workplaces -- including
restaurants and bars -- was shelved by the City Council today after
opposition by local businesses kept the measure from being veto-proof.
The decision to defer came after more than three hours of testimony both
for and against the smoking ban, with strong opposition voiced by the Hawai`i
Hotel and Restaurant Association.
"The current language may have the purpose of saving your constituents
from lung cancer, but you may be creating ulcers, heart attacks and poverty
in the process," said restaurant owner Richard Botti.
Councilman John DeSoto said councilmembers were 5-4 in favor of the ban.
At least six votes would be needed to override a veto by Mayor Jeremy Harris.
A similar measure passed in 1995 was vetoed by Harris.
Councilmember Steve Holmes, who co-authored the bill, said it will now
go back to committee. He said Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris has proposed a
change that may make it more palatable to restaurateurs.
"I'm certainly disappointed that the floor draft didn't have sufficient
votes," Councilman Steve Holmes told KHNL, "but I'm very pleased the mayor
stepped in to bring the parties together to work out a compromise."
The mayor has consistently opposed an all-out ban.
"I don't think it's right for big government to dictate to small
businesses and say there shall be no smoking," Harris told KHON-TV2.
The mayor has proposed allowing smoking in restaurants only if the
building is configured to have separate rooms for smokers and non-smokers --
each with an independent ventilation system.
Some restaurant owners said the compromise plan is still unacceptable,
saying the cost of building such a partition would be too high.
Holmes also said the idea needs some work.
"Every restaurant is configured a little bit differently," he said.
"Each situation is going to be unique, which makes it very hard to legislate
a one-size fits all bill."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: LAWMAKERS CLAMP DOWN ON JUVENILE CRIME
Children as young as 14 years old could be tried as adults under a
measure approved today by the House Judiciary Committee.
The vote came after Representatives heard testimony from the mother of a
woman whose teenage son, Anthony Gomes, was fatally stabbed in August 1995 by
a 14-year-old boy.
"Can any of you live with yourselves knowing that each and every one you
could make a difference, each one of you might protect a family out there --
maybe even your own?" Luy Rafael said.
Instead of a murder charge, Rafael said, Gomes' killer only faces a
handful of years in a youth correctional facility.
"I think everyone in this room would think differently if this was their
child, their only son, stabbed by someone who was under 16," Rafael said.
Legislative leaders have listed tougher juvenile crime laws as one of
their primary goals of this session. Social service officials, however, said
putting youth in adult prisons will only turn them into career criminals.
Adult prison facilities don't have educational programs, said Deputy
Public Defender Susan Arnett, who argued against the bill.
State Child and Family Service spokesman Rob Welch told the committee
that lowering the juvenile crime age in Florida has led to an increase in the
seriousness of subsequent crimes committed there.
Currently, suspects must be at least 16 years old before Family Court
can waive its jurisdiction.
Opponents questioned why the state would pay to incarcerate teenagers
rather than investing in youth programs.
Meanwhile, the committee also considered a bill that would open Family
Court records to the public. Presently, names of juveniles involved in
criminal cases are kept confidential.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS BACK DARE EXPANSION
Police chiefs from all four Hawai`i counties are calling for an $8.5
million boost and a wider scope for the Drug Abuse Resistance Education
program, or DARE.
Now in its tenth year, DARE teaches elementary school children to shun
drug use and resist peer pressure. Last year, more than 20,000 fifth graders
"graduated" from the program.
"The key is prevention, and law enforcement in this state believe in a
balanced approach," Honolulu Police Chief Michael Nakamura said at a joint
press conference. "We believe not only in enforcement and early intervention,
but also education and prevention strategies."
Supporters are proposing that DARE be expanded to include middle- and
high-school students. The City Council was to vote today on increasing the
DARE budget by $8.5 million for the next five years.
"This is an area that I feel we can impact the future of this state by
expanding the DARE program -- by following up," Nakamura said.
"The time when they need more guidance is when they're a little older,"
he said. "This is where we're lacking."
The police chiefs said DARE has had a noticeable impact on juvenile drug
problems in the state.
"We've experienced a tremendous improvement and a special type of
awareness over the past few years that I'd like to see fostered," Big Island
Police Chief Wayne Carvalho said.
"We're saying this is the best program we know that's proactive and has
a chance of success," said George Freitas, Kaua`i County Police Chief.
Howard Tagemori, Maui Police Chief, said: "If we can pull this off, I
believe we can and will make a difference."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
MOMENTS after being convicted for conspiring to obstruct justice, obstruction
of justice and money laundering, 35-year-old George Parker walked out of a
federal courtroom today during a recess and didn't return. Parker, a former
city prosecutor, was accused of accepting $20,000 from drug dealer William
Batkin to persuade island drug kingpin Frank Moon not to implicate him in a
federal drug investigation. Prior to his disappearance, Parker said he
planned to appeal the decision. U.S. District Court Judge David Ezra declared
Parker a fugitive and issued a warrant for his arrest. Honolulu Police are
still combing the streets of downtown Honolulu tonight...
GRADUATES of Hawaii's high schools lack basic social skills required to
survive in the real world, Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris said today. A special
Board of Education committee heard testimony pushing for a stronger "work
ethic" curriculum and more classroom discipline. The committee was formed
after an October survey of island business executives found widespread
dissatisfaction with the quality of new hires. The survey was conducted by
BOE member Lex Brodie. "Graduates of our school system are not capable in
many areas that they should be," Harris said. "They have to come to work on
time, they have to have a work ethic, they have to be neatly dressed..."
AFTER months of heated debate, the City Council today unanimously voted to
reject a settlement proposal that would have allowed Bishop Estate to develop
a hotel and golf course along the Ka Iwi coastline. Bishop Estate offered to
drop eight lawsuits pending against the city in exchange for permits that
would allow development of the area between Sandy Beach and Makapu`u Point.
In voting to end negotiations with Bishop Estate, the council sends the case
back to the courts. Last year, Gov. Ben Cayetano proposed purchasing the land
to use it for a wildlife preservation park...
POLICE divers believe they have found the gun used to kill 24-year-old Arlene
Marzan. A .38-caliber revolver wrapped in a plastic bag was pulled from the
waters off Pier 10 near Aloha Tower this afternoon. Investigators believe 29-
year-old Saldy Marzan shot his estranged wife at a Kalihi apartment on
Monday. He turned himself in to police yesterday morning. Today police
charged Saldy Marzan with second-degree murder and a firearms violation. He
remains in custody tonight, unable to post $320,000 bail...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/68, Kaua`i 80/66, Moloka`i 78/64, Maui 79/63, Hilo 84/68
CASTS: Cloudy, cool, gusty trades to 25MPH; North Shore surf to 8 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 8:51 a.m.; Low 3:48 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, January 28, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: MAN HELD FOR SHOOTING WIFE, ABUSE HISTORY UNCOVERED
A 29-year-old Kalihi man with a history of domestic violence is in
police custody tonight after police say he shot and killed his wife yesterday
morning.
According to witness accounts, Saldy Marzan arrived at a second-floor
Kalihi Street apartment shortly after 9:30 a.m. and began arguing with his
estranged wife, 24-year-old Arlene Marzan.
Arlene Marzan, who had moved out of a family shelter two days prior,
reportedly started shouting that her husband had a gun.
Fernando Marzan, Saldy Marzan's brother, told the _Honolulu Star-
Bulletin_ that a struggle ensued. Arlene Marzan fell to the ground, and the
gun went off.
The Marzans' three children, ages 2, 4 and 6, had just gone downstairs.
Saldy Marzan fled, and Arlene Marzan was taken to Queen's Medical Center
where she died of a gunshot wound to the chest.
Saldy Marzan turned himself in to police this morning. He was taken to
St. Francis Medical Center for treatment of unspecified injuries.
Arlene and Saldy Marzan had been married for 8 years, but according to
police records there were numerous problems. Neighbors said there were
frequent domestic disputes for which police had to be called.
In fact, Saldy Marzan has been convicted three times for abuse, each
time receiving probation. The case, which stretches back to 1993, has
prompted criticism of the court system and has pushed domestic violence to
the forefront of local issues.
"If somebody has already gotten probation and is given a lesser plea
once, then asks for it again and asks for it a third time -- that's
intolerable," City Prosecutor Peter Carlisle said today.
On April 14, 1993, Saldy Marzan had a restraining order issued against
him after he threatened his wife's life one month prior. According to court
documents, he also used various drugs, including marijuana and crystal
methamphetamine.
Then, Saldy Marzan was arrested April 23 of last year for third-degree
assault. He pled no contest and received one year of probation.
On Sept. 16, another restraining order was issued for terroristic
threatening. Under the order, which was to stand for three years, Saldy
Marzan was to stay away from his wife except for limited child visitation.
Saldy Marzan allegedly violated the order, however, calling and
threatening his wife.
Arlene Marzan failed to appear at a Jan. 6 court hearing for her
husband's violations, however, and he remained free.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STUDY DISPELS SEX ASSAULT MYTHS
People have more to fear in their own living rooms than on dark streets,
according to a preliminary report released this week by the state Attorney
General's office.
Hawai`i prisons currently house 545 sex offenders, the report states,
and in the last three years there were over 1,000 people arrested for sexual
assault.
According to the report, victims knew their attackers in more than 85
percent of cases investigated between 1993 and 1996. That figure jumps to
more than 90 percent in cases involving victims 18 years old and younger.
"So many victims and alleged offenders knew one another, very often
lived in same home, or were neighbors or acquaintances," Paul Perrone,
spokesman for the state Attorney General's office, told KHNL.
"A lot of people cling to the myth of a lurking stranger in the bushes,"
Perrone said. "Not to say that doesn't occur, but I don't think that's the
best way to characterize sexual assault."
The report also found 10 percent of those arrested for sexual assault
had prior arrests for similar offenses, and one out of four was unemployed.
Also, of all ethnic groups, Caucasians made up the largest portion of
alleged sex offenders -- 27 percent.
The report, in its final form, will be used to lobby the state
Legislature for tougher sexual assault laws, Perrone said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HISTORIC HOTEL DEAL IN THE WORKS
If Hilton has its way, it will control all but two hotels along the
Waikiki waterfront.
In a plan announced yesterday, Hilton is amassing a $6.5 billion hostile
takeover of ITT Sheraton, a move that will put over 10,000 Hawai`i hotel
rooms under the Hilton-Sheraton conglomerate.
Hilton will reportedly pay half in cash, and pay the other half in
Hilton shares. The company will also assume $4 billion in ITT Sheraton debt.
In the islands, Hilton currently controls 4,200 hotel rooms while ITT
Sheraton hotels has 6,000 rooms.
Put together, the deal will surpass Outrigger -- which manages 9,000
rooms in 20 hotels -- as the largest hotel company in the state.
If the Hilton takeover succeeds, the Outrigger Waikiki and Outrigger
Reef will be the only beachfront hotels not under Hilton's control.
Hilton officials said they will keep the Sheraton name on the acquired
hotels, and contract HFS Inc. -- which also holds the names Days Inns and
Howard Johnson -- to manage them.
Nationally, Hilton runs 240 hotels and 16 casinos, while ITT Sheraton
runs 420 hotels and 14 casinos.
ITT Sheraton executives have said they will advise their shareholders
within the next week.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
SPORTS fans aren't the only ones excited about Sunday's Pro Bowl football
game. Tourism industry executives are hoping the contest, which will be
broadcast to an estimated 10 million viewers nationwide, will bring more
snow-bound travelers to the islands. Four years ago, the state paid $1.7
million to host the bowl game, and officials estimate considerably higher
bids when the contract comes up again next year. Paul Casey of the Hawai`i
Visitors and Convention Bureau told KITV-4 the advertising campaign could be
improved. "We'd like to see more and more pre-game announcements of games and
video clips of the destination to whet people's appetites..."
COMMITTING a crime against a tourist would mean mandatory prison time under a
bill approved today by the House Tourism Committee. The proposal, prompted by
concerns that island crime is hurting Hawaii's prime industry, would make
robbing or attacking visitors a special crime class. City Prosecutor Peter
Carlisle testified against the bill. "If it's a resident being burglarized or
if it's a tourist in Waikiki, all of us our suffering," he said. "The crime
that happens in Hawai`i Kai and the crime that happens in Waipahu does affect
tourism." The bill now goes to the House for discussion...
MONTHS after a massive landslide caused over $1 million of damage to a
Wai`anae condominium complex, city officials yesterday unveiled a plan to
prevent future damage. City officials are proposing to build screen barriers
behind the Makaha Valley Towers to bring more stability to the muddy
mountainside. Some residents criticized the length of time it took for a plan
to be drafted after a second landslide hit the complex earlier this month.
City officials said the barriers would only be a temporary measure while
engineers consider more extensive improvements in area drainage...
WHILE the City Council considers a bill that could ban smoking in all
Honolulu restaurants, bars and workplaces, the Hawai`i Hotel Association
today released the results of a survey of over 200 visitors from Japan. The
survey found 55 percent of Japanese tourists identified themselves as
smokers. Even so, nearly half -- or 49 percent -- said they agreed with the
proposed ban on restaurant smoke. About 40 percent disagreed. The proposed
ban goes before the full council tomorrow...
DEAN Mara, 30, was arrested last night in Makaha. Mara is the prime suspect
in the Jan. 15 shooting of Stella Jensen, who was killed while getting into a
car in Nanakuli. Jensen's companion said he was the intended victim. Although
he has yet to be charged in Jensen's murder, Mara was moved to the O`ahu
Community Correctional Center for a previous parole violation. Mara has
several prior arrests, including sexual assault, kidnapping, burglary and
driving under the influence...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 81/69, Kaua`i 81/67, Moloka`i 79/63, Maui 80/62, Hilo 81/63
CASTS: Some showers, trades to 20MPH; North Shore surf to 8 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 7:58 a.m.; Low 2:17 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, January 24, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HILO SENATOR MATSUURA STEPS DOWN
Battling chronic pain from cancer, Sen. Richard Matsuura will end his
16-year run in the state Senate next Friday.
Matsuura, 64, was on hand for the Jan. 15 opening of the state
Legislature, but said he was only able to attend after taking extra
painkillers.
In his resignation letter, delivered to Gov. Ben Cayetano yesterday,
Matsuura said: "By continuing in the Legislature, I will be doing more harm
to myself and the electorate of the 2nd District as I am unable to give my
last full measure of devotion to the people of Hawai`i."
Matsuura was diagnosed with cancer of the pancreas in December.
Subsequent surgery found the cancer inoperable, and that it had also spread
to his liver.
"I'm not going to look for the cure," Matsuura told the _Honolulu
Advertiser_. "I don't have too much time to live, but I'm going to make the
most of it."
Last week, Matsuura said he wanted his son David to finish his term in
the senate. Reportedly citing his inexperience in state politics, however,
Gov. Ben Cayetano said he would not make the appointment.
David Matsuura, 33, is currently managing his father's office at the
state Capitol.
Cayetano flew to Hilo Wednesday night to speak with Matsuura, who was
resting with his wife, Ruth, and other family.
In his resignation letter, Matsuura named three other potential
successors: Hawai`i State Teachers Association President June Motokawa,
former Hilo High School Principal Donna Saiki and former state Sen. Stanley
Hara.
Motokawa has since said she would decline the nomination because of her
commitment to public school teachers.
Matsuura said he has already lost three loved-ones to cancer, including
his sister, brother-in-law and a longtime secretary, who he helped care for
until her death.
Although he is leaving the senate, Matsuura said it will be hard to lose
enthusiasm for politics.
Matsuura said he would like to see a pipeline built between Hilo and
Kona to bring rainwater to west Hawai`i, as well as more funding and a
permanent home for the UH-based Spark Matsunaga Institute for Peace.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ARENAS FOUND GUILTY OF WIFE'S MURDER
After one day of deliberations, a Circuit Court jury yesterday convicted
Jaime Arenas, 49, of murder in the stabbing death of his wife.
According to prosecutors, Arenas had previously threatened the life of
33-year-old Jocelyn Arenas, and eventually followed through last March when
she told him she was leaving him and returning to the Philippines.
During the trial, Arenas said his wife's death was accidental. She had
threatened him with a knife during an argument in their van the evening of
March 6, he said, and sustained a wound to her neck during a scuffle.
Although the van -- stained with blood matching Jocelyn Arenas' blood
type, was discovered by police -- no body was found.
Three months after the stabbing, however, Arenas was arrested trying to
buy a plane ticket to the Philippines. He later led police to Jocelyn Arenas'
body, which he had placed in a wood coffin and buried in the yard of a
Crestview home.
Earlier this week, prosecutors presented a videotaped confession -- in
which Arenas described how he stabbed his wife -- to the jury.
Deputy prosecutor Chris Van Marter commended police detectives for their
perseverance in the case, and said the conviction was a blow against domestic
violence.
"This is a person who has a history of domestic violence -- not only
against Jocelyn Arenas but against a former girlfriend," Marter told KHON-
TV2. "It's about time that he be held to answer for his abuse against women."
Jack Tonaki, Arenas' attorney, said he would appeal.
When sentenced March 14, Arenas could face life in prison with the
possibility of parole.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TAHITIAN LANAI AUCTION TOMORROW
Nostalgic islands-lovers will have a chance to go home with a grass hut
tomorrow, and a piece of history.
When the new year began, an era of local camaraderie and music came to
an end. The Tahitian Lanai, one of Waikiki's landmark restaurants, closed its
doors for good on Dec. 31.
The restaurant had already survived two close calls with bankruptcy in
the last year.
Everything in the restaurant -- from carved tikis to bar stools to the
kitchen sink -- will go up for public auction tomorrow.
Kermit Rydell, spokesman for the auction company, said the huts have
received a lot of attention. A group of Girl Scouts plans to bid on some
tikis, he added.
Umbrellas, chairs, utensils and kitchen appliances will also go on the
block -- enough equipment to open another restaurant, Rydell said.
He said a crowd of more than 500 people may attend tomorrow's auction --
many of them former employees hoping to keep a piece of their home away from
home.
On Wednesday, while members of the public had a chance to look over the
items that will go to the highest bidder, friends and former employees of the
Tahitian Lanai gathered at the piano bar.
The Singing `Ohana formed a human lei around the piano and sang, just as
they have for years.
"The togetherness, the songs, the people themselves -- everybody just
enjoys singing," singer Pat Ashley told KHON-TV2. "Nobody's professional --
it's all from the heart."
James Souza, who's played the piano for the Tahitian Lanai singers for
three decades, said he will be leaving with treasures no money can buy.
"I will take some great memories -- cherished memories," Souza told
KITV-4. "I'm the only one that can truthfully say that I'm blind and have
collected a lot of pictures to make a scrapbook."
Souza said for him, the Tahitian Lanai was a place to make and meet
friends, and try out new songs with no fear of rejection.
The Singing `Ohana hasn't sung its last tune, however. Its members have
secured a new gig at La Marianas, a Sand Island piano bar.
--------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
CHARGES of rape and terroristic threatening are only the beginning for 31-
year-old Lawrence Montalbo, who was arrested Tuesday morning after allegedly
sexually assaulting a 33-year-old woman, stealing her car, robbing attendants
at a gas station and injuring a police officer during a Chinatown chase.
Police said Montalbo was on probation and had 61 prior arrests. Police
officer Craig Miki, who was thrown from his Cushman when it was struck by the
stolen car, has been released from the hospital. Charges stemming from the
robbery and Miki's injuries will be filed later this month...
LIBRARY patrons can pay their outstanding late fees by Feb. 16, or face a
collection agency. State Librarian Bart Kane announced this week that a
collection agency has been hired to help the state collect an estimated $3
million in unpaid fines. Kane said the arrangement will also save
administrative costs. The proposal was put on hold last year, until it was
approved by the State Attorney General. After the Feb. 16 deadline, Kane
said, library records will be turned over to the collection agency...
MANSLAUGHTER, not negligent homicide, is the charge facing a man police say
killed three people in a head-on collision on Farrington Highway. Two
sisters, ages 24 and 22, and their 1-year-old niece were killed when an
oncoming car crossed the center line and collided with their vehicle near
Kapolei on Jan. 7. The defendant is in prison tonight, unable to post
$300,000 bail. The manslaughter charge carries a potential 20-year sentence,
compared to the 10-year sentence for negligent homicide...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 79/65, Kaua`i 79/63, Moloka`i 80/64, Maui 80/65, Hilo 78/63
CASTS: Sunny and cool, trades below 10MPH; North shore surf to 10 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 5:28 p.m.; Low 12:11 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, January 23, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: BOARD APPROVES QUARANTINE REDUCTION
Only the governor's signature stands between Fido and an early release
from quarantine, after the state Board of Agriculture unanimously approved a
proposal to cut the length of animal internment to one month.
The 30-day alternative to the existing 120-day quarantine requirement
could be available to pet owners as early as May.
Several people were on hand today for the board's decision, including a
number of veterinarians who said the 80-year-old policy is the only way to
guarantee a rabies-free state.
Opponents also argued the proposal was politically motivated.
Supporters of the reduction said the length is excessive and is a major
obstacle to people moving to Hawai`i -- especially military families.
State veterinary officials backed the proposal after reviewing new blood
tests that they said are more effective at detecting rabies.
Presently, dogs and cats brought into Hawai`i must spend four months at
the state's Animal Quarantine Station in Halawa. Owners must visit and groom
their pets at the facility.
The proposal, approved today in a unanimous vote, would allow pets to go
to their new homes after 30 days, provided certain conditions are met.
To qualify for the reduced-length quarantine, pets must receive a rabies
vaccination and be implanted with an identification microchip 90 days before
arriving in the islands. Pets must also be certified by the state, and be
tested for rabies 60 days after being released.
The proposal now goes to Gov. Cayetano for final approval. Cayetano
earlier expressed support for the quarantine reduction.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: UH FACULTY APPROVE CONTRACT
University of Hawai`i President Kenneth Mortimer said he was "delighted"
that 92 percent of voting faculty members approved the state's latest
contract offer.
UH faculty have been without a valid contract since June 1995.
If ratified by the University of Hawai`i Professional Assembly, the
proposed contract would provide for two 4 percent salary increases over the
next two years.
The contract also addresses intellectual property rights, splits patent
royalties between faculty members and the university, and opens discussion on
tenure review procedures -- primary concerns of the union.
Although the contract, which is retroactive to June 1995, does not
include pay raises for the last two years, UHPA President Alexander Malahoff
said the union understands the state's fiscal limitations.
"The faculty realizes everyone is in dire straits," Malahoff said. "We
can't satisfy every group."
The fact that the contract better protects faculty members is what
counts, Malahoff said.
An unprecedented number of ballots were sent in for the vote, said UHPA
executive director J.N. Musto. Out of 1,617 ballots received, $1,474 were in
favor of accepting the proposed contract, he said.
Only last month's strike authorization vote -- which found 82 percent of
faculty members in support of a strike -- had a larger return, Musto said.
The strike vote was a key reason the state came forward with the
proposed contract when it did, Malahoff said. Without the threat of a strike,
he said, Gov. Ben Cayetano would not have taken UH faculty needs seriously.
The faculty union will now turn its attention toward pressuring Cayetano
and the state Legislature to better fund the university, Malahoff said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HOUSE WANTS SAME-SEX MARRIAGE IN PUBLIC'S HANDS
The state House today passed a bill that would let Hawai`i voters decide
whether to ban same-sex marriages.
Barely a week after the legislative session opened, representatives
voted 44-7 in support of a measure that would amend the state Constitution to
define marriage as the union between one man and one woman.
"No one can seriously claim that when the voters of this state adopted
our constitution they wanted the state to issue marriage licenses to same-sex
couples," Rep. Terrance Tom told KHON-TV2.
Tom said the House wanted to get the issue out of the way in order to
tackle other issues.
In their haste to resolve the issue, however, senate leaders heard harsh
words from Democratic opponents who disagreed with Rep. Cynthia Thielen's
call for a vote before all representatives were able to speak.
The senate, meanwhile, is preparing its version of the bill, which would
provide for domestic partnership rights. Senate leaders hope the provisions
will exempt the state from charges of discriminating on the basis of sexual
orientation.
Sen. Avery Chumbley said he will introduce the bill tomorrow.
"It will embrace a constitutional amendment -- giving the people the
opportunity to vote on the issue and have final say -- but it will also
package a rights bill so that we do not discriminate on the basis of sex,"
Chumbley said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TEACHERS' UNION DISRUPTS UH, BOE MEETING
Public school teachers took a break from a rally at the state Capitol
today to bring their call for a new contract to fellow education leaders.
A group of about 30 people interrupted a summit between the UH Board of
Regents and the state Board of Education this afternoon to deliver a petition
urging the state to settle contract negotiations with the Hawai`i State
Teachers' Association.
Fearing more deadlocked talks, HSTA members are planning a strike
authorization vote in February.
HSTA officials said they were happy for the UH faculty in its apparent
contract settlement, but said school teachers have gone without a pay raise
for three years.
Hawaii's teachers are the lowest paid in the nation, they said, making
teacher recruitment and retention a major challenge.
Although the group acknowledged the school board has no authority over
teachers' salaries, they asked for support in their cause.
"You can at least pay us what we're worth," said HSTA Honolulu president
Inga Park-Okuna. "If we're forced to strike, we will."
The time has come to put pressure on the governor to come up with an
acceptable offer, Park-Okuna said, adding that quality education is in the
best interests of everyone.
HSTA members said the petition carried 50,000 signatures, all of which
came from members of the general public.
After the unscheduled HSTA appearance, the joint BOR/BOE board assembled
a number of proposals to be recommended to the governor and Legislature this
year, including $1.6 million to team experienced educators and UH faculty
with new teachers in a mentoring program.
The boards also called for $400,000 to fill vacancies in the UH College
of Education and $300,000 for scholarships. The scholarships would encourage
future teachers to specialize in math, science, Hawaiian language -- areas
currently underrepresented in public schools.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 78/63, Kaua`i 77/62, Moloka`i 78/63, Maui 79/62, Hilo 77/63
CASTS: Mostly sunny, trades to 20MPH; North shore surf to 12 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 4:47 p.m.; Low 11:41 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, January 22, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HOUSE MOVES ON SAME-SEX MARRIAGE BILLS
Less than a week into the new legislative session, the state House has
advanced two bills concerning the controversial same-sex marriage issue.
"It was our intent to do it quickly,, expeditiously, and get it out of
the way," House Speaker Joe Souki told the _Star-Bulletin_.
The House Judiciary Committee yesterday approved a measure that would
propose a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. The measure
would let Hawai`i voters decide whether the definition of marriage should be
limited to one man and one woman.
Today, the committee passed a second bill that would allow for
"reciprocal beneficiaries." Although it is aimed at providing benefits for
same-sex couples, its provisions -- including inheritance, joint property
ownership and hospital visitation rights -- would be available to any
unmarried couple.
The committee passed the constitutional amendment bill in a 12-1 vote,
which drew heated debate yesterday from about 200 people who submitted
testimony. The benefits bill passed 13-0 without fanfare this morning.
Both measures were informally approved by the full House today, and are
expected to win official approval within a week.
The constitutional amendment bill was passed by the House last year, but
was later rejected by the Senate.
The measures come despite last year's Circuit Court ruling that the
state's refusal to issue marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples is
unconstitutional. Judge Kevin Chang has issued a stay while the state appeals
its case to the Hawai`i Supreme Court.
Committee chairman Terrance Tom said the court ruling was "foolhardy and
dangerous," and said the judiciary should not be making decisions concerning
public policy.
In entering the sole dissenting vote, Rep. Ed Case said the spirit of
the constitutional amendment bill goes against the intent of the constitution
itself, which he said aims to protect the minority from the majority.
The issue should be decided by the courts, Case said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: LAST DEFENDANT SENTENCED IN MARINE'S MURDER
Life in prison was the sentence handed down yesterday to Lance Cpl.
Alejandro Soto, 22, after he pled guilty to first-degree murder in the May 7
death of 20-year-old Juan Guerrero, a fellow Marine.
Under military law, Soto will have his earliest chance at parole after
serving 10 years of his sentence.
Last May, Lance Cpl. Guerrero was assaulted with a stun gun and beaten
at a Marine Corps Base Hawai`i quarters before being bound with duct tape and
driven to Nu`uanu Pali Road.
Guerrero was shot in the head, his body then dumped into a ravine.
Soto's guilty plea was offered in an attempt to avoid capital
punishment. The judge in yesterday's trial, however, said he would not
recommend clemency for Soto.
Soto is the last of four Kane`ohe Marines to be sentenced for Guerrero's
murder, which was apparently prompted by Guerrero's failure to show proper
respect for one of his assailants.
Lance Cpl. William Baer, 20, was sentenced over the weekend for his
involvement in the murder, pleading guilty to second-degree murder and
ordered to serve 25 years in prison.
Two other Marines, 22-year-old Lance Cpls. Darryl Antle and Michael
Pereira, were sentenced to life terms last year after pleading guilty to
first-degree murder.
Today, members of Guerrero's family said they were dissatisfied with the
military's sentences, and that all four Marines should have received the
death penalty for the murder.
"We wanted capital punishment for all four," said Adriana Guerrero-
Pestonji, Juan's sister. She said they should be killed the same way her
brother was -- "like an animal."
Adriana, who flew to Hawai`i with her mother and father for the trials,
vowed they would return to fight any parole requests.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: RAPE SUSPECT FLEES POLICE, INJURES OFFICER
A Chinatown police officer remains in fair condition today at Queen's
Medical Center after his Cushman scooter was struck by a stolen car yesterday
morning.
Police said the 31-year-old suspect was picked up by a 33-year-old woman
driver, who offered to give him and a friend a ride to Waikiki.
The suspect refused to get out of the car, however, and allegedly
sexually assaulted the driver. The suspect then drove away in the victim's
car, leaving her off N. Nimitz Highway near Pier 38.
A man in a car matching the victim's description was reported 30 minutes
later at a Pu`uhale Road gas station, where he allegedly threatened two
attendants with physical harm.
At about 4:30 a.m., officers spotted the car on King Street near
Dillingham Boulevard. The suspect fled police, crashing into the Cushman at
the corner of Hotel and Smith streets.
Officer Craig Miki was thrown from the Cushman and sustained several
injuries, police said.
The suspect also reportedly tried to ram several other police vehicles.
The suspect continued to evade police, taking off down Beretania Street
and heading west on the H-1 freeway. Police officials said the suspect drove
for miles despite losing a tire.
The chase finally ended in `Aiea, where police briefly tussled with the
suspect before subduing him.
Police officials said the suspect had more than 60 prior arrests.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
UNIVERSITY of Hawai`i faculty will announce the results of a contract
ratification vote tomorrow morning. The proposed contract, which covers July
1995 to July 1999, includes two 4 percent step raises over the next two
years. It also splits patent profits equally between the faculty member and
the university, and provides for faculty retention of intellectual property
rights, family leave and parking permits. After reaching the tentative
agreement with the state earlier this month, the faculty union called off a
strike that could have disrupted the first week of classes...
JAPAN Airlines yesterday announced it would add five new flights to Hawai`i
by August of this year. Three new flights to Honolulu would be added in June,
and two flights to Kona would be added two months later. The news comes less
than a week after the Hawai`i Visitors and Convention Bureau projected zero
growth in the number of Japanese tourists this year. The bureau previously
predicted a 6 percent increase. Airline spokesman Gil Kimura told the
_Honolulu Advertiser_ that the request for the new routes was submitted two
years ago, and only recently won regulatory approval...
GOVERNOR Ben Cayetano said this week he is willing to entertain a bill to
repeal the state's no-fault insurance system, but only if it will slash
insurance premiums by 25 percent. The plan would also freeze insurance rates
for a year. As eliminating no-fault would loosen restrictions on lawsuits
filed for accident injuries, Cayetano wants to deduct $5,000 from any court
award. Presently, $13,900 in medical costs must be incurred before a driver
can sue. The proposal, which would mean a conversion to a tort-based system,
is similar to one that failed to make it out of the legislature last year...
KANE`OHE residents are up in arms over a proposed elderly housing complex,
saying the two-story, 81-apartment condominium would destroy the
neighborhood's quiet character. Most of about 20 people who testified on the
plan at a neighborhood board meeting earlier this week opposed it, and a
petition signed by nearly 100 residents was also presented. Developer Zane
Development Group wants city approval to exceed the 25-foot height limit on
the 3-acre Mahinui Road parcel. Another hearing is scheduled for tomorrow...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 78/67, Kaua`i 78/64, Moloka`i 80/67, Maui 79/65, Hilo 79/67
CASTS: Partly cloudy, gusty trades to 25MPH; North shore surf to 8 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 4:14 p.m.; Low 11:14 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, January 21, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CAYETANO UNVEILS TAX PLAN, WANTS HOTEL AID
The state will find the money to lighten the burden on Hawaii taxpayers
and boost and diversify the Hawai`i economy, Gov. Ben Cayetano vowed today,
unveiling a major tax package during his annual State of the State address.
"We have accounted for every proposal, dollar for dollar, in our
financial plan," Cayetano said.
The governor proposed seven initiatives, amounting to $50 million in tax
breaks, that he said will bring relief to almost every resident.
"There is something this year for everyone -- for our taxpayers, for our
state workers and for our people," he said.
Recalling his own experiences with his father, Cayetano proposed a
$50,000 tax deduction for those providing qualifying long-term health care to
family members.
"I have been long concerned over the extraordinary expense endured by
those caring for their loved ones," Cayetano said.
A $5,000 deduction for those paying college tuition would also be
available under Cayetano's plan.
In addition, a 2 percent income tax credit would be offered to first-
time home buyers, and a 25 to 100 percent tax reduction would be made for
residents earning less than $22,000 a year.
Cayetano said he wants to make out-of-state work exempt from excise tax
collections, in the hopes of helping island contractors better compete on an
increasingly wider field.
Taxes would be lifted altogether for residents and businesses on
Moloka`i and Kaua`i, he said, offering an 18-month reprieve for those hardest
hit by the state's money crunch.
In order to cover these initiatives, Cayetano wants to repeal the
current $27 food tax credit, hike the tobacco tax, downsizing the state's
retirement system and absorbing the rental car surcharge in full.
The governor also wants to take a bigger bite out of the hotel room tax,
reducing the portion currently shared by Hawaii's four counties from 5 to 4
percent.
Cayetano also outlined his vision for public education, proposing a 10-
day extension to the school year. Hawaii's 180-day school year is the
shortest in the nation, he said, which puts the state's children at a
disadvantage.
The governor expressed support for a pay raise for teachers, rehiring
retired teachers and converting from an elected school board to one appointed
by the governor.
On crime, Cayetano advocated tougher sentencing and said he plans to
meet his goal of adding 1,000 beds to the state's overcrowded prison system
by 1999.
In order to turn the tide of the state's declining economy, Cayetano
wants to give hoteliers an incentive to rebuild their property. If hotel
owners renovate, he said, the state should give them an income tax credit
equal to the excise tax incurred by making improvements.
Cayetano also called for a $10 million emergency injection for the
Hawai`i Visitors and Convention Bureau.
"I have submitted a $1 billion capital improvement projects budget for
the next two fiscal years," Cayetano said. "We will open the Convention
Center on time. We will dredge and improve the Ala Wai Canal."
The governor also proposed a new shopping center and a world-class
aquarium in Kaka`ako.
"There has been criticism that we can't afford to do it," he said. "On
the contrary -- we can't afford not to do it."
In reaction to the governor's State of the State address, city officials
expressed concern over his planned cut in the counties' share in hotel room
tax revenues.
Any reduction in funding would threaten the city's most basic public
services, including the police and fire departments, said Honolulu City
Council Budget Chairman Duke Bainum.
Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris, meanwhile, said Cayetano's plan gives
hotels a boost at the expense of residents. Harris said the governor's plan
would mean $20 million less for Honolulu, Maui, Kaua`i and Hawai`i counties.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TEEN SURVIVES CLIFF FALL, SIX DAYS ON MOUNTAIN
A 16-year-old Aina Haina boy was plucked off the side of the Pali
Lookout yesterday, six days after falling 300-feet through trees and brush
and subsisting entirely on stream water.
Gabriel Robinson, a sophomore at Iolani School, remains in fair
condition tonight at Queen's Medical Center after fire rescue crews airlifted
him from a small ledge about 200 feet from the cliff bottom.
Meanwhile, Honolulu police are still working to identify a set of human
remains discovered during the rescue effort.
Robinson was last seen Jan. 14, when a friend dropped him off at the
lookout to be picked up by another acquaintance, police said. He had
apparently had a fight with his mother the previous Sunday and was going to
stay at a friend's house.
Friends realized something was wrong only after Robinson's family called
to speak to him. He was reported missing last Saturday.
Police officials said it was Det. Larry Self who called for a search of
the Nu`uanu Pali area, going only on a hunch.
The search effort began yesterday morning, fire officials said they were
minutes away from calling it off when Robinson was found.
"He didn't even look like a person at first -- I thought he was a pile
of rubbish," rescuer Jefferson LaCates told the _Honolulu Advertiser_. "Then
I thought he was dead."
Rescuers said Robinson was conscious, but in a lot of pain and
apparently unaware of how long he'd been on the mountainside.
Robinson suffered numerous injuries, including a broken arm and a
punctured lung.
Considering the boy was only wearing shorts and a T-shirt and didn't
have any food, however, Self said Robinson was fortunate to have survived.
According to police, Robinson said he climbed over the railing at the
lookout when his friend was late in picking him up. When he slipped, Robinson
said he pushed away from the cliffside to avoid hitting rocks below.
Robinson did not intend to jump from the lookout, Self said.
Robinson told rescuers he managed to crawl about 10 feet a day, until
reaching the stream. He survived gusty winds, cold nights and heavy rains.
Moments after Robinson was airlifted from below the lookout,
firefighters discovered human remains in a nearby area.
Today, police officials said the unidentified victim was a woman, and
died more than a month ago. The report ends suspicions that the bones
belonged to two other O`ahu hikers who are still missing.
The cause of death has not been determined.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TEACHERS' UNION REBUFFS STATE OFFER
Officials with the Hawai`i State Teachers Association today said they do
not agree with apparent provisions attached to the state's latest contract
proposal.
State negotiators have reportedly offered teachers a 4 percent pay raise
this and next year, but the proposed contract also calls for adding five days
to the 1997-98 school year and another five days the following year.
"No other unit has been offered an extension of their work in order to
get a salary increase," HSTA spokeswoman June Motokawa told KITV-4.
Hawaii's 11,000 public school teachers are continuing with informational
pickets across the state this week, as union members draw closer to a
possible strike vote scheduled for Feb. 6.
If a strike is authorized, classes for over 180,000 students could stop
abruptly as early as Feb. 18.
HSTA leaders said they will continue to encourage teachers to vote in
favor of a strike until the state presents an acceptable deal.
The latest proposal does not include pay raises retroactive to June
1995, when the last contract expired.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
QUARANTINE officials could decide as early as Thursday on whether to endorse
a proposal to reduce Hawaii's three-month animal quarantine to 30 days. The
state Board of Agriculture will meet to review testimony collected during
recent public hearings, and may advance the proposal to the governor for
approval. Island veterinarians expressed concern that the state's rabies-free
record could be threatened by reducing the amount of time cats and dogs spend
in quarantine, but many pet owners insist the current 120-day internment is
excessive. Supporters said new test procedures make rabies detection easier
and other conditions set in the proposal provide adequate safeguards...
SAME-SEX marriage was the issue of the day before the House Judiciary
Committee as lawmakers considered two separate bills -- one calling for a
referendum on whether same-sex marriages should be legal and another
establishing benefits for same-sex couples similar to those currently granted
for marriages. Nearly 200 people submitted testimony for today's public
hearings, most of the conflict centered around the proposed public vote.
Today's proceedings unfolded independent of a court ruling last year that
found the state's refusal to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples was
unconstitutional. The state is appealing that decision...
SEWAGE spills kept Honolulu health officials on their toes yesterday. Two
unrelated incidents were reported, one near Ke`ehi Lagoon along Nimitz
Highway and the other at Kahala Beach. Warning signs were posted at both
locations this morning warning of possible water contamination. The first
spill occurred underground in a federally-owned pipeline, which Army
officials said handles as much as 2 million gallons of sewage a day. The
amount of sewage released cannot be determined until the area is excavated,
officials said. The Kahala spill was caused by a clogged municipal line,
releasing about 1,000 gallons of sewage before repairs were completed...
JAIME Arenas took the stand in his murder trial today, telling the jury he is
not responsible for the March 1996 death of his 33-year-old wife, Jocelyn.
Arenas, 49, testified he and his wife had an argument in their van, and that
his wife struck him with a piece of wood and threatened him with a knife. He
said they struggled and fell, and that he later noticed a wound on her neck.
Arenas said he never held the knife that fatally wounded his wife.
Prosecutors are pushing for a murder conviction, last week presenting a
videotaped confession in which Arenas described how he stabbed his wife,
later building a coffin and burying her body in a client's yard...
HEAVY rains Sunday night brought on a $70,000 case of deja vu for Makaha
Valley Towers residents. A landslide brought rocks and mud into the
condominium's parking lot, rekindling memories of a Nov. 14 storm that
flipped, buried or crushed dozens of cars. Although only a few cars were
dented this time, several buildings lost power and elevator service. With
several disabled tenants, many people were still left stranded in their
apartments yesterday. Residents were critical of city officials, claiming no
improvements were made to area drainage despite last year's incident...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 79/66, Kaua`i 78/65, Moloka`i 80/68, Maui 81/65, Hilo 81/67
CASTS: Some showers, trades to 20MPH; North shore surf to 5 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 3:36 p.m.; Low 9:03 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, January 16, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HAWAI`I PUBLIC SCHOOLS RECEIVE LOW MARKS
Hawaii's schools have the fewest nationally accredited teachers in the
country, are second-worst in funding and rank low in campus climate,
according to a national education journal.
Education Week, a trade newspaper, recently issued report cards to
America's public schools, and Hawaii's public school system received many
weak marks.
In its "Quality Counts" report, Education Week commended Hawai`i schools
for its equitable system of distributing funds to different schools. Hawai`i
got an "A" for its centralized school system avoids the limitations of
regional systems funded by property taxes.
By contrast, Hawai`i received a "D-" for the amount of money spent on
public schools. The state's per-pupil spending was $4,724, compared to the
national average of $5,541, Education Week reported. Hawai`i ranked second-
worst in the country, one of only four states where funding -- when adjusted
for cost of living -- declined over a ten-year period.
Education Week gave Hawai`i a "C" for the allocation of money it did
receive. The state got praise for passing 62 percent of its education budget
into classrooms, but was hurt by a high number of schools in need of repair.
Hawai`i got a "B" for having statewide standards in assessing student
performance and for issuing annual reports of test scores, but received a
"D+" for overcrowded schools and large classes.
More than half of Hawaii's teachers have classes of 25 students or more,
according to the report.
Hawai`i came in last in teaching quality, receiving a "D" for having the
largest number of unlicensed teachers and educators teaching outside their
field of expertise.
Education Week used the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher
Education as its benchmark for quality instruction.
Danielle Lum, spokeswoman for the public school teachers' union, told
the _Honolulu Star-Bulletin_ that Hawaii's rank was low because most Hawai`i
teachers come from UH, which is accredited but not by NCATE.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HARRIS BLASTS STATE, WANTS TO FIX TAXES
Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris called for tougher sentencing, more
construction, more police and a freeze in property taxes during his annual
"State of the City Address" today.
The mayor said he was keeping his promise of not raising property taxes,
but said some sacrifice is needed in order to keep the city running.
"If people want police officers on the street, if they want the sewer
system to work, if they want the fire company to be able to respond, we have
to be able to pay the bills," he said.
"While we won't raise taxes, we also can't afford to cut taxes."
Harris proposed freezing property taxes at last year's level. As a
result, residents would pay the same amount even if the value of their
property declined.
Property values on O`ahu fell $3 billion in the last year, Harris said,
which would mean a $12 million drop in tax revenues if tax rates were
adjusted accordingly.
Harris also said he wants to hire more police officers, give them state-
of-the-art equipment and build a new police station in Kapolei. For things to
improve for residents, however, Harris said the state has to get its act
together.
"If we're going to stop crime, we have got to first stop the revolving
door on our state prison system," Harris said. He said the state has been
slow in relieving its overcrowded prison system.
Harris also emphasized tougher prison sentences. Earlier this week,
Harris introduce his "Safe Streets" crime plan, which called for mandatory
sentences for repeat offenders and would require convicts to serve a minimum
portion of their prison sentences.
Harris also said the state has failed to adequately manage its welfare
and mental health systems, worsening the homeless problem.
"The failure of the system to deal with these problem impacts the city
on a daily basis," he said.
Two world-class recreation centers are also on Harris' wish list. The
mayor said he wants to build a 350-acre field sports complex at Pearl Harbor
and a 270-acre park in Central O`ahu.
Harris also wants to double the city's construction budget, investing
$400 million in public works projects in the next fiscal year.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SUSPECT SOUGHT IN FATAL DRIVE-BY
A 39-year-old Nanakuli woman was killed last night by a bullet meant for
someone else, police said.
Witnesses said Stella Jensen was using the pay phone outside Yuen
Grocery on Farrington Highway when five shots were fired from a Wai`anae-
bound car shortly after 7:30 p.m. last night.
Jensen suffered a gunshot wound to the head and died hours later at
Wai`anae Coast Comprehensive Health Center.
Police investigators said Jensen's companion, 28-year-old Gary Akopian,
was the intended target of the shooting.
Akopian identified both occupants of the attacker's vehicle, and
reportedly named former Halawa prison cellmate Dean Mara, 30, as the gunman.
Both Akopian and Mara are convicted felons, currently out on parole.
Mara is now wanted by police for questioning in the case.
This morning, police found the charred remains of the vehicle believed
to be involved in the shooting in Wai`anae Valley.
The registered owner of the car, 30-year-old Cynthia Rabellizsa, later
turned herself in at the Wai`anae Police Station. She was booked for second
degree murder.
Meanwhile, friends and family members mourned Jensen's death, describing
the mother of two as a warm-hearted woman that was in the wrong place at the
wrong time.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
STUDENTS of the UH law school won't be seeing double after all. In a surprise
move, the Board of Regents today deferred a proposal that would have hiked
tuition at the law school over the next four years from about $4,800 to
$9,072. The proposal was aimed at making the law school more self sufficient
and less dependent on state funds. Regents questioned figures presented by
school administrators, however, and said the school didn't appear ready to
deal with the potential drop in enrollment as a result of the tuition
increases. UH President Kenneth Mortimer later withdrew the motion...
HONOLULU Police Chief Michael Nakamura said its latest report refutes
critics' claims that the department is soft on punishing its own. As required
by state law, county police departments must disclose the number of police
officers suspended or fired each year. In Honolulu, 59 officers were
suspended and five were dismissed last year. Although the number of firings
has gone up, department officials said it demonstrates they are serious about
discipline. On Kaua`i, three officers were dismissed in 1996, all in
connection with events following a prostitution sting...
INSURANCE reform tops the agenda for Hawai`i lawmakers, after two years of
heated debate have failed to prompt any changes in the state's no-fault
system. The Senate Consumer Protection Committee today picked up where it
left off last year, in part considering "pure no-fault" legislation that
would force automobile insurance companies to lower their rates by as much as
35 percent. Several of Hawaii's 113 insurance carriers earned an 18 percent
profit in 1995, the second highest in the country...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 78/59, Kaua`i 75/57, Moloka`i 77/60, Maui 73/59, Hilo 81/60
CASTS: Sunny and clear, trades to 25MPH; North shore surf to 6 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 11:18 a.m.; Low 5:43 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, January 15, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: STATE HOUSE, SENATE SET TONE FOR 1997
Island lawmakers were joined by local musicians and celebrities today,
marking the opening of the new legislative session with a broad committment
to outdo the last.
In the House, Democratic and Republican representatives identified key
issues that they both sides say must be resolved this session.
House Republicans stressed that there could be no stalemates this year.
Rep. Gene Ward, House Minority Leader, said his colleagues have declared
a state of emergency concerning four issues "to prevent history from
repeating itself."
The House should commit to passing legislation concerning same-sex
marriage, automobile insurance reform, prison overcrowding and their own
"High Three" pension package within the next 20 days, Ward said.
House Speaker Joe Souki, meanwhile, had some sobering words concerning
the state's ongoing fiscal woes.
Despite a commitment to fighting tax increases in the name of Hawai`i
businesses, Souki said, "I cannot absolutely, nor responsibly, promise 'No
new taxes.'"
Gov. Ben Cayetano, who was on hand for today's opening ceremonies, told
reporters that he hopes to unveil a budget strategy that he said could bring
relief without raising taxes.
The money plan could also allow the state to give "modest" raises to
various public employee unions now negotiating with the state, he said.
The details are expected to be announced during Cayetano's State of the
State address next week.
In the senate, Senate President Norman Mizuguchi said the 1997 session
will make juvenile crime a top priority.
"We have juveniles on drugs peddling drugs," Mizuguchi said. "We must be
tough on juveniles who commit such crimes so they understand there will be
consequences -- even adult consequences -- for their acts."
Mizuguchi also called for renewed effort in streamlining and downsizing
state government, and suggested at least partially privatizing its operations
at the Hawai`i Convention Center and island airports.
Until more consensus is reached on the Hawaiian sovereignty issue,
Mizuguchi said the Constitutional Convention --narrowly authorized in
November by Hawai`i voters -- should be delayed until after the year 2000.
As for legalized gambling, Mizuguchi said he didn't anticipate there
would be enough interest in either the Senate or House to revive the issue
this year.
Among those present to help legislators ring in the new year were kumu
hula Chinky Mahoe, UH Wahine volleyball coach Dave Shoji, musical groups
Makaha Sons of Ni`ihau and Na Leo Pilimehana, and 3-year-old bone-marrow
transplantee Alana Dung.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: MURDER TRIAL CONTINUES FOR ARENAS
A Circuit Court jury today watched a videotape of Jamie Arenas, 49,
explaining to police how he killed his wife last year, built a wood coffin
and buried her in a Crestview yard.
Arenas, who worked as an independent repairman, is on trial for murder.
He was arrested last March trying to buy a plane ticket to the Philippines.
Earlier that month, police had recovered the couples' van, the interior
covered with blood stains that matched the blood type of Jocelyn Arenas, 33.
Jamie Arenas was questioned several times, but no body had been recovered.
In the videotape, Arenas initially insists he didn't know what happened
to his wife.
Then, Arenas is asked how many times he stabbed his wife.
"Only one time," Arenas replied.
In the taped confession, Arenas said the incident took place in their
van while it was parked outside the Ala Moana Zippy's, where Jocelyn Arenas
worked. He said they had argued after she said she wanted to leave him and
return to the Philippines.
Jaime Arenas went on to describe how his wife was stabbed, explaining
that he built her a small coffin out of plywood and buried it under a slab of
concrete he poured in the yard of an unwitting customer.
Arenas later led police to the Crestview home where his wife's body was
recovered.
While the defense admits Arenas killed his wife, he claims it was done
in a rage and does not qualify as murder.
In addition, Arenas will reportedly testify Jocelyn Arenas threatened
his life shortly before she was killed.
The trial moves into its fourth day tomorrow.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HAWAI`I TO LEAD NATION IN AIRLINE REVOLUTION
Vice President Al Gore today announced the dawn of a new age in air
travel, and named Hawai`i as one of two states that will serve as the testing
ground for a state-of-the-art, sattelite air traffic control system.
The Federal Aviation Administration, working with the commercial airline
industry, will convert airplanes and airports in Hawai`i and Alaska to
"advanced avionics."
"This is probably the leading edge of change to the whole air traffic
control system," FAA spokesman Tom Rea told KHON-TV2.
Nearly 600 planes will have to be fitted with the new technology, and
dozens of air traffic controllers will need to complete training in the use
and management of the system, according to the FAA.
The key component of advanced avionics is its use of satellites and
ground stations to exactly pinpoint an airplane's position.
As a result, a plane's flight path can be left more to the discretion of
individual pilots rather than set routes that require substantial manpower to
monitor.
Planes will also be able to take off and land in shorter intervals and
fly closer together, minimizing distance and fuel consumption.
For the airline industry, officials said, the new system will mean
increased safety and more reliable technology. For Hawai`i travelers -- and
eventually all airline passengers -- it means fewer delays.
Officials said they hope the system will be place by mid-1999.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
ANOTHER demonstration by UH faculty members was held today, but this time the
message was "mahalo." About thirty faculty and supporters stood along
Dillingham Boulevard and waved signs thanking the public for their support
during recent contract talks. A settlement was proposed last Friday, and
faculty union members are now voting whether to accept the new contract
through next Wednesday. The proposed contract includes step salary increases
over the next two years and provides for faculty retention of intellectual
property rights and 50 percent of revenues generated by research...
AFTER spending $20 million to upgrade its Big Island system, GTE Hawaiian Tel
has found rural customers aren't rushing to install individual phone lines as
expected. Since residents have been slow to give up the earlier party-line
system -- in which several homes share one phone line -- GTE has filed a
request with the state to increase its surcharge by 37 percent. The increase,
which would raise the surcharge paid by all customers statewide to 89 cents
per month, is needed to cover an estimated $10 million shortfall...
POLICE tonight are investigating the death of a woman in Nanakuli, a victim
of an apparent drive-by shooting. According to intial reports, one car pulled
alongside another while driving along Farrington Highway at about 7:20 this
evening. Shots were fired, apparently with a .45-caliber handgun, and a
female passenger was struck in the head with a bullet. The victim was taken
to Wai`anae Medical Center, where she later died. According to KHON-TV2,
Honolulu police are on the lookout for two suspects...
RESCUE missions are not uncommon for the Navy. Whale rescues, on the other
hand, are. Last week, a Navy helicopter spotted a 30-foot humpback whale off
Kaua`i and a two-person boat crew nearby was alerted. Navy men Louis Llena
and Geoffrey McPhereson arrived on the scene to find the whale caught in a
tangle of fishing line apparently designed to catch crabs. The pair cut the
lines and the whale escaped. The whale rescuers then tracked the buoys to a
fisherman in Alaska, who said he'd lost them months ago...
HILO Senator Richard Matsuura, a self-described "samurai" of state politics,
said today that he may resign his seat in the legislature for health reasons.
The 64-year-old Big Island lawmaker has been battling pancreatic cancer,
which has been spreading since it was first detected last month. Should he
leave the senate before the end of his term, according to KHON-TV2, Matsuura
has suggested Gov. Ben Cayetano appoint his son, David, as his successor...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 81/70, Kaua`i 80/69, Moloka`i 81/68, Maui 81/68, Hilo 81/67
CASTS: Partly cloudy, some rain, trades to 20MPH; North shore surf to 6 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High 10:08 a.m.; Low 4:51 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, January 14, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: HARRIS WANTS TO SHUFFLE CITY, STATE SERVICES
Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris today unveiled a plan that would
substantially change the way the state and city governments manage revenues
and provide public services, which he said will save money and streamline
things at both levels.
The proposal, which came as a surprise to many legislators, calls for
county governments to take over several responsibilities currently split with
the state. They would also forfeit their share of the hotel room tax, which
brings in about $100 million each year.
Those revenues, as well as state subsidies for county services, would
then be supplanted by a share of the general excise tax.
"I think it's a plan whose time has come," Harris said. "We've talked
for many years about the inefficiency between the city and the state -- the
duplication of effort -- and I think it's time we took some action on it."
Under Harris' plan, counties would be responsible for maintaining all
state roads and parks; programs for aging, jobs and crime; and emergency
medical services such as ambulance coverage.
As it is, Harris said, the city already cares for some state property.
He said the changes called for in his plan are long overdue.
"It makes a lot more sense than having two sets of crews filling two
sets of potholes right next to each other," he said. ""It will give us far
more efficiency and ultimately it will save taxpayer dollars."
Besides centralizing public services, the plan would mean the difference
between splitting a portion of the $100 million hotel tax and the $246
million excise tax.
As a result, Harris said, the counties could expect to get more money.
Some lawmakers said the plan was unveiled too late to make it through
the upcoming legislative session, which opens tomorrow.
"I'm awfully cautious about the proposal," House Finance Chairman Calvin
Say told KITV-4. "If he was sincere, then I would think he would've talked
about it during the elections or even during the interim."
Mayors of other counties, meanwhile, only heard of Harris' plan today.
Many officials expressed concerns that neighbor island governments may not
fare as well as Honolulu would under the proposal.
Harris said it would take some time to work everything out.
"This wouldn't help us at all in the next several years, but we think
over time we are going to be able to save money and cut costs," he said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HAWAI`I KAI ZONING DEAL REJECTED
The Honolulu City Council is expected to kill a proposal to allow
developers to build homes, a hotel and a golf course at Queen's Beach in
Hawai`i Kai, after the zoning committee unanimously voted to reject it today.
The measure was part of an out-of-court settlement that would allow the
landowners -- which include Bishop Estate and Kaiser Aluminum -- to develop
the shoreline in exchange for dropping various lawsuits against the city.
Opposition from area residents and environmental groups has been strong
throughout the two years the proposal has been on the table.
"The feeling of having this development crammed down our throat, with 12
different zoning changes thrown together, is just appalling," said Hawai`i
Kai resident Wayne Levy, who testified before the committee this afternoon.
Councilmembers were critical of Mayor Jeremy Harris, who introduced the
proposal and later said he opposed it. Harris vowed last year that he would
veto any settlement the council passed.
"Quite frankly, I'm sick and tired of the mayor putting us in a position
where we are always looked upon as the bad guys," said Councilmember Mufi
Hanneman.
"It should have been stopped earlier if in fact that's the position of
the city," said Councilmember Donna Kim. "It's just sad that it went on this
long."
Kevin Kupchak, attorney for the landowners, said he was equally
frustrated.
"If we'd been told the project would be vetoed, we would have stopped a
long time ago," Kupchak said. "We've spent over 3 million dollars pursuing
this in reliance on the city."
If the full council officially kills the settlement when it next meets
on Jan. 29, city officials said the battle will return to the courtroom.
Last year, Gov. Ben Cayetano proposed buying the land with federal funds
to build a public park and nature preserve at Queen's Beach. Harris,
meanwhile, also advocated purchasing the property and other adjacent parcels
for public benefit.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: WORKPLACE SMOKING BAN ADVANCES
Smoking would be prohibited in most Honolulu workplaces -- including
restaurants -- under a bill approved tonight by the City Council Environment
Committee.
Prior to today's meeting, restaurant owners had asked that the bill be
amended to allow smoking in eateries that installed filtration systems. The
committee rejected such a compromise.
In fact, the bill's scope may be broadened before it goes before the
full council later this month.
Councilmember Steve Holmes, who introduced the bill, said he wants to
see nightclubs and bars included in the smoking ban.
Small business advocate Dick Botti, however, testified the bill would
unfairly hurt establishments.
"I do not feel that the solution is to go after punishing innocent
businesses because of a habit that somebody else has," Botti said.
The bill was opposed by Councilmember Mufi Hanneman, who said it was too
discriminatory.
Meanwhile, Honolulu resident Frank Deam, who said he is battling cancer,
said smoking should be targeted.
"I'm here to show you, as well as tell you, that tobacco smoke is
dangerous," Deam said. "It can change your lives, radically, and it's a
killer."
The last time a bill banning smoking in restaurants was passed by the
city council, it was vetoed by Mayor Jeremy Harris.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
MASS transit resurfaced as a topic of discussion today, this time before the
House Finance Committee. According to a report by KITV-4, Rep. Nathan Suzuki
told the committee he has been in contact with an unnamed private company
that wants build a people-mover system at no cost to the government. The
system would run between Waikiki and Aloha Tower, where wheeled vehicles
would travel along a concrete track. Suzuki asked Harris whether the city
would support it, and suggested a 1998 completion date. "That's absolutely
impossible," Harris said, and said he'd never heard of the proposal. Suzuki
said the Cayetano administration had received the details...
CONTAMINATION of island waterways is increasing, according to a report
released this week by the state Department of Health. A recent study covering
more than 80 streams and over 120 miles of shoreline found rising pollution
levels and identified four waterways "severely impaired" by chemical
contaminants. They are the Ala Wai Canal and Kapa`a, Kawa and Waimanalo
streams. Gov. Ben Cayetano has asked the legislature for $19 million to
dredge the Ala Wai and beautify the area. State Health Director Bruce
Anderson noted that Hawaii's streams are still the cleanest in the nation...
NEIL Abercrombie this week gave up one of the last remaining vestiges of his
early political career. When Abercrombie appeared at a Kane`ohe
groundbreaking ceremony, his signature pony tail did not. He said his long
hair has been a longstanding target of his political opponents. "If you take
a look at the top of my head, you see that god is going all the way with me
eventually," he told reporters. He said he kept a lock of hair for his wife,
and added that he'll be keeping his beard for the time being...
GOVERNOR Cayetano was on hand today to dedicate the state's newest affordable
housing project. Only residents earning less than half Hawaii's medium income
will be able to rent a unit in the 56-apartment cluster in Kapolei. Housing
officials said rent for a two bedroom apartment at Kekuilani Gardens can be
as low as $150 for qualified applicants. The apartments are the first
affordable housing project built in part with federal funds...
LAWSUITS have been filed against the city and the Korean National Baseball
Team by a woman who said she was hit in the head with a baseball while
walking near Ala Wai Park last February. Josephine Baker said a member of the
Korean team hit the ball that struck her, and sued the city for negligence in
allowing the team to play at the field. According to KITV-4, Baker said the
city should have known players could hit a ball out of the park...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/71, Kaua`i 79/68, Moloka`i 80/71, Maui 81/70, Hilo 80/68
CASTS: Partly cloudy, some rain, trades to 25MPH; North shore surf to 8 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 9:04 a.m.; Low 4:04 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, January 13, 1997
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Aloha a Hau`oli Makahiki Hou! As I return to classes, Ka `Upena returns to
the net. Over the next few days, I'll be experimenting with format and length
to balance providing sufficient news with getting sufficient sleep. Please
pardon my inconsistencies, and feel free to share any comments. Enjoy!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: UH SPARED FACULTY STRIKE, CONTRACT VOTE UNDERWAY
Spring semester classes for University of Hawai`i students began as
scheduled today, the faculty union and state negotiators apparently satisfied
with their new year's resolution.
After weeks of negotiations, the University of Hawai`i Professional
Assembly announced on Friday that a tentative settlement had been reached.
Pending approval of the proposed contract by union members, a potential
strike that could have begun today was called off.
The UH faculty has been working without a contract since June 1995.
Union members will be voting over the next two weeks whether to accept
the proposed four-year contract, which would be retroactive to June 1995.
The contract calls for no pay raises for the last two years, but
includes a 4 percent salary increase in July 1997 and 1998. It is expected to
cost the state an additional $12 million.
The proposed contract also addresses many non-cost issues, which were of
primary concern to the faculty union.
Faculty members would retain full rights to intellectual property under
the contract, which includes materials prepared for classroom use and
televised and recorded material prepared for distance-learning programs.
In addition, royalties or other revenue generated by faculty research
would be split evenly between faculty members and the university.
The university also agreed to initiate a review of various instructional
policies, such as those involving tenure reviews and equivalencies.
University officials say they are confident the contract will be
approved, and that the chances of a strike are remote. Even so, UHPA
executive director J.N. Musto said yesterday the final decision is now in the
hands of the faculty.
Representatives on both sides of the bargaining table praised the
settlement.
Gov. Ben Cayetano, who was the primary target of criticism that the
state was stalling the negotiation process, said the proposed contract will
be fair to both the faculty and the residents of Hawai`i.
UH President Kenneth Mortimer and UHPA President Alexander Malahoff both
expressed relief that a strike was averted, which Malahoff said would be
"Armageddon" for higher education.
Voting on the new contract will conclude Jan. 21.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: LEGISLATORS, MAYOR UNVEIL ANTI-CRIME PLANS
Convicts would spend more time in prison and more juveniles would be
tried as adults under proposals announced today by a coalition of state and
city law enforcement officials.
The State Attorney General's office, in conjunction with police
officials and city prosecutors, presented legislators with 10 potential bills
aimed at toughening up Hawaii's crime laws.
The 1997 legislative session opens Wednesday.
Attorney General Margery Bronster said the key measure would be a "Truth
in Sentencing" bill, which has had strong support from law enforcement
officials in the past.
Under the proposed measure, convicts would be required to serve at least
85 percent of their sentences. Presently, judges only set maximum prison
terms, and the parole process allows many criminals to serve only a small
fraction of their sentences before being released from prison.
Another proposal would subject any juvenile facing prosecution for a
serious crime to be tried as adult. Currently, defendants under 16 years of
age are solely under the jurisdiction of the family court system.
The coalition hopes to broaden the definition of first-degree murder,
making any homicide subject to a sentence of life in prison without parole. A
robbery charge would also be more inclusive.
Defendants with three prior theft offenses would automatically face
higher felony charges under a "Four Strikes" law proposed by the coalition.
In addition, convictions for misdemeanors would carry a mandatory sentence.
Assaulting a police officer would carry an automatic maximum 5 year
prison sentence, and manufacturing drugs such as crystal methamphetamine (or
"ice" would mean 10 years behind bars.
The coalition also called for a variation on "Megan's Law," which would
require convicted sex offenders to register with the state and provide for
public notification.
Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris unveiled his own crime package today, which
included several proposals put forth by the coalition.
Harris' "Safe Streets" package also advocated minimum prison stays,
mandatory sentences for repeat offenders and adult jail times for juveniles
convicted of committing adult crimes.
"I think the legislators have heard the message loud and clear," Harris
said. "I think we're going to get a warm welcome when we go to the
legislature this year."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: DISNEY KICKS OFF MOVIE RUSH IN HAWAI`I
It isn't Africa, but local film industry leaders are still glad George
has made himself at home in the islands.
Shooting is slated to begin for Walt Disney Pictures' forthcoming motion
picture "George of the Jungle." Disney executives have chosen to set their
story against the lush backdrop of Waimea Falls Park on O`ahu.
"We found such a versatile shooting site that we really couldn't pass it
up," Disney spokesman David Linck told KHON-TV2.
The Disney crew -- elephant in tow -- was warmly received by those in
Hawaii's growing film industry.
"Every state is looking to lure more pictures to their area," said
Georgette Deemer, who works with the Hawai`i Film Office. "Film makers drop a
lot of money into their economy in a very short time and it promotes their
state."
Deemer said movie makers -- ranging from upstart cable television
ventures to major Hollywood studios -- bring as much as $50 million into the
state annually.
"Our best year was after Waterworld back in 1994," she said. "We did
close to a hundred million dollars that year."
Linck said he'd put in a good word for Deemer and her peers.
"I would definitely recommend Hawai`i to any film crew," he said. "You
have a film studio and a film commissioner very cooperative with film
makers."
"Not only do you have cooperation but you have beautiful filming sites,"
Linck added.
Despite the substantial revenue brought in by film crews, however,
Deemer said the real payoff comes from the exposure Hawai`i receives among
moviegoers worldwide.
Films made in Hawai`i bring visitors, she said.
According to KHON-TV2, two other Hollywood productions are eyeing the
state as likely locations -- both with a jungle theme. They are "Mighty Joe
Young," a movie in the style of "King Kong," and a remake of the classic
"Creature from the Black Lagoon."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
IRRADIATING papayas and other tropical fruits is the best way to control
fruit fly infestations and bolster the agriculture industry on the Big
Island, according to Hawai`i County Mayor Stephen Yamashiro. Yamashiro is
preparing to propose a plan to build a $2 million irradiation facility in
Hilo. The _Honolulu Star-Bulletin_ reported today that a Vermont-based
environmental is vowing to start a nationwide campaign to discredit Hawai`i-
grown produce should they be exposed to radiation. Proponents maintain the
process has been deemed safe by national health organizations...
CLASSIFIED Navy documents were accidentally released to the public on
Saturday when they were blown from a military van as it drove along the H-2
freeway. Brisk winds blew a cloud of paper and microfiche files across the
freeway and over the overpass near the Mililani Technology Park. Military
personnel canvassed the area and retrieved the documents, but would not
disclose their nature nor where the van was headed. According to the
Associated Press, Navy officers stopped one civilian motorist who had
reportedly grabbed a document that had stuck to his windshield...
LES Boynton, a well known Waikiki musician, died yesterday in a kayak
accident on the North Shore. The 55-year-old singer and bass player was
fishing off the reef at Pounders Beach when the kayak he was riding in
overturned shortly after 1 p.m. Witnesses said Boynton tried to hold onto the
reef but was overcome by a large wave. He was taken to Kahuku Hospital where
he was pronounced dead. A resident of Laie, Boynton recently performed at the
Polynesian Palace with the band "Alan Naluai and Friends..."
ISLAND-BOUND mail order shoppers may soon be subject to Hawaii's 4 percent
sales tax. Technically, all purchases -- including those from out-of-state
catalog companies -- are subject to the tax. According to KITV-4, state tax
officials are working with several catalog companies, adding Hawai`i to the
growing list of states on order forms which require sales tax. Tax director
Ray Kamikawa said the change could pump millions into the state's general
fund. Even so, he said, implementation would take at least two years...
ZOOKEEPERS are celebrating the birth of a howler monkey, which became the
newest resident of the Honolulu Zoo last week. Zoo officials only found out
yesterday that the infant monkey was male because his mother, Lucy, has been
extremely protective of the newborn. A contest will probably be held later
this year to give the new monkey a name, officials said. The baby's father is
eight-year-old Onyx. His arrival marks the first successful birth for Lucy,
who is six years old...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 82/72, Kaua`i 81/69, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 83/70, Hilo 83/69
CASTS: Sunny, southerly trades to 20MPH; North shore surf to 8 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 8:10 a.m.; Low 3:15 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, December 10, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: BAINUM AIMS TO REGULATE WAIKIKI STREET PERFORMERS
They sing, dance and play drums, violins and guitars. While some
visitors and residents say they add color and energy to busy Waikiki
sidewalks, others say they're a nuisance and a barrier to business.
Honolulu City Councilman Duke Bainum today unveiled a bill that would
restrict when and where street performers can entertain in the resort
district.
Bainum said the performers -- often drawing crowds, applause and
substantial tips -- have a place in Waikiki, but said that place cannot be
the high-traffic areas currently favored by artists.
"It's not like we're eliminating street performances," Bainum said.
"They can be very charming," he said, "but there's nothing very charming
about having to step over an amplification cord, or being pushed into the
street by a number of drummers."
"It's not charming at all to be woken up in the middle of the night by
someone playing saxophone at 80 decibels," he said.
Bainum said the bill was prompted by several complaints from both
Waikiki residents and businesses. He said retail stores have complained the
presence of street performers on their doorsteps hurts their business.
Under the proposal, street performers would be confined to 10 specific
areas in Waikiki. Three are small grass parks on the west end of the resort
district and seven are street-side locations.
The majority of designated areas are along Kalakaua Avenue, where most
street artists currently perform.
Street performers would also have to obtain permits authorizing them to
perform in three-hour shifts between 11 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.
Anyone performing without a permit or after hours would be fined $250.
Bainum said First Amendment concerns -- such as those that drove a
recent court battle over Waikiki T-shirt vendors -- don't apply.
"What we're saying is you have every right to do this, but we'll just
designate the time and place," Bainum said.
Bainum's proposal comes on the heels of another bill that would
regulating how parrot-toting picture vendors conduct their business in
Waikiki. Bainum said both are part of a series of proposals aimed at keeping
Waikiki an appealing place for visitors.
City officials said the bill will likely not go before the full council
until mid-January. If it passes its first hearing, public hearings will then
be scheduled.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STATE BREAKS GROUND FOR KAPOLEI CIVIC CENTER
A $49 million Civic Center in Oahu's "second city," which will house
seven state departments and about 1,000 government employees, will be built
in only two years, according to state officials.
Groundbreaking ceremonies were held today on the 50-acre site in
Kapolei, and Gov. Ben Cayetano credited the state's deal with a private
contractor for its expected swift construction.
Under an agreement with landowner Campbell Estate and contractor Bert
Kobayashi, the center -- to be privately built and owned -- will be
constructed at no cost to taxpayers.
State officials said money will change hands only after the state moves
in, in the form of lease payments that will eventually transfer ownership
from Kobayashi to the state.
"It's more like paying a mortgage," state comptroller Sam Callejo said.
"While we're paying lease in downtown buildings, in this case the building
becomes ours."
Ultimately, Callejo said, the arrangement will cost taxpayers about as
much as it would have for the state to borrow money to build the center
itself. The benefit is avoiding substantial up-front costs, he said.
Callejo said Kobayashi offered to finance construction of the civic
center after the state committed to leasing the building.
At today's ceremonies, Cayetano called Kobayashi a close friend who
above and beyond to help the state.
"Without Bert's perseverance, and his commitment to working with
Campbell Estate and the state to make this a reality, this would not have
happened," Cayetano said.
Campbell officials said the center will generate construction jobs for
the present and provide valuable services in the future.
The state office building is only the first phase of the center's
construction. A courthouse and juvenile detention center has been proposed
for the site, and the city has planned to build a $22 million county office
building there as well.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HONOLULU TRAFFIC CONGESTION 12TH WORST
Despite being confined to an island, daily commuters on O`ahu experience
among the worst traffic in the country.
According to an annual study by civil engineering researchers at Texas
A&M University, Honolulu has the 12th most congested commuter corridors out
of 50 major U.S. cities. New York ranked 11th.
The Texas Transportation Institute has been collecting information on
traffic for nearly a decade. The latest traffic congestion report covers data
compiled through 1993.
Much of Honolulu's traffic problems, according to the report, stems from
O`ahu residents' reluctance to carpool. The institute found 80 percent of the
vehicles on Honolulu highways on any given day only had one occupant.
The Leeward O`ahu Transportation Management Association said there are
about as many cars on the island as there are people.
LOTMA spokeswoman Darrlyn Bunda said the report only confirms what the
group has been saying all along.
"All day long traffic is getting worse and worse, and it's not going to
get better," Bunda said. "People have to use other modes of transportation."
LOTMA recently backed a plan to build a three-lane suspended viaduct
along Nimitz Highway that would be limited to carpools and high-occupancy
vehicles.
All ideas should be considered, Bunda said.
Former state Department of Transportation director Rex Johnson told
KHNL-8 that Honolulu employers could play a key role in relieving Oahu's
traffic woes.
"Staggered work hours is probably by far the one that is most palatable
to the public," Johnson said.
Other possibilities include alternating the days residents can use
freeways and reviving plans for a mass-transit system.
The top five most congested cities in the U.S. are Chicago, Miami, San
Francisco, Washington D.C. and Los Angeles.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/71, Kaua`i 80/69, Moloka`i 81/70, Maui 82/69, Hilo 79/68
CASTS: Cloudy, trades to 20MPH; North, West and East shore surf to 5 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 4:35 p.m.; Low 11:50 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, December 9, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: UH FACULTY STRIKE VOTE ADVANCES
The 3,300 members of the University of Hawai`i faculty union will begin
voting this week on whether to authorize the union's board of directors to
call for a strike.
On Saturday, the University of Hawai`i Professional Assembly decided to
mail ballots to UH faculty members statewide. The decision comes after two
recent rounds of negotiation between UHPA and the state and a number of
faculty and student demonstrations.
The result of the vote, expected Dec. 20, will decide whether the board
of directors will declare a strike and whether such a strike will be limited
or involve "all out indefinite action."
UH faculty have been working without a contract for over a year.
UHPA held an open forum on Friday to allow union members to discuss the
situation and identify their options. About 150 people attended the event.
Nearly everyone who spoke was in favor of a strike should negotiations
remain deadlocked, although the general consensus was that such a move should
remain a last resort.
Several faculty members said the state has continuously demonstrated a
total lack of regard for higher education in Hawai`i.
"Our university is going to hell in a handbasket," said UHPA president
Alexander Malahoff. "I refuse to be dragged down the drain by people who have
very little compassion and who have no passion for education."
He agreed, however, that a strike would hurt everyone at the university,
especially students.
"We're headed toward a catastrophe if we strike," Malahoff said.
Should a strike occur in the Spring, university officials said classes
may have to be rescheduled to stretch into the summer. A strike would also
affect graduation plans and summer school classes.
According to UHPA officials, a recent survey found nearly two-thirds of
the UH faculty supporting some type of strike action. Of those favoring a
strike, over half favor a limited strike on Jan. 15 and 16, and nearly 50
percent would support "all out indefinite action."
The survey also found three-fifths of the total faculty also support
continuing with regular informational pickets at various university campuses
and events.
The last UH faculty strike was in 1983. The strike, which was prompted
by unfulfilled salary increase demands, canceled classes for two days.
The last round of talks between the University of Hawai`i Professional
Assembly and state negotiators were held Friday night.
Although the meeting lasted six hours, UHPA officials described the
encounter as "disappointing."
Gov. Ben Cayetano today said the union's publicity efforts -- including
demonstrations and television commercials -- are spreading misinformation
about the contract dispute.
In speaking to students at Kaua`i Community College, Cayetano said UHPA
has refused to listen to the state's reasons for delaying a contract offer.
In addition to several non-cost issues including tenure and intellectual
property rights, the faculty union is asking the state for a salary increase
on par with those recently granted to other government employees.
Cayetano said he will not know until January whether the state can
afford a pay raise for UH faculty.
Meanwhile, the UH Student Caucus held a press conference over the
weekend to criticize both the faculty union and the state for the lack of
progress and for failing to identify points of contention more specifically.
Caucus member Kalani Kahalepau`ole said the two sides have been
disorganized in its efforts to negotiate a contract. While students have
shown substantial support for faculty in their quest for a contract, he
added, UHPA hasn't demonstrated much support for student concerns.
"Students will not tolerate being held hostage by the state of Hawai`i
or UHPA in their ongoing and undefined negotiations," the caucus stated in a
press release. "Students also demand that the quality of higher education be
neither a political platform or a sacrificial lamb."
In the event of a strike, caucus members said they may encourage
students to seek tuition refunds en masse.
The deadline to pay tuition is Dec. 20, the same day the strike vote
results are to be announced.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: VICTIM PROTESTS VERDICTS, TOURIST PROTECTION POSED
A Chicago police officer who was severely beaten and robbed on the North
Shore in April expressed outrage at the verdicts handed down to the two men
accused of the attack.
James Boreczky said he has been permanently affected by the beating and,
in a Friday interview with the _Honolulu Advertiser_, lashed out at the jury.
"They sent a message loud and clear: 'Give us your money and get the
hell out of here,'" Boreczky said.
"If you're a tourist [in Hawai`i], you're dirt," Boreczky said. "I hate
Hawai`i -- the hell with Hawai`i."
A Circuit Court jury found 18-year-old Rodney Balbirona and 22-year-old
Darrell Ortiz guilty of second degree theft and second-degree robbery,
respectively, which carry lighter penalties than the first-degree robbery
charge levied against both.
Instead of facing a 20 year prison sentence for the beating, Ortiz's
conviction carries a 10-year maximum sentence and Balbirona's verdict means
he may be eligible for probation instead of a 5-year maximum sentence.
Deputy City Prosecutor Maurice Arrisgado said the verdicts were
"horrible," and said the evidence presented should have more than proven the
severity of the crime and the guilt of the defendants.
"I'm really puzzled with their verdict," Arrisgado told KHON-TV2. "It's
just not consistent with the facts and the law in this case."
Keith Shigetomi, Balbirona's attorney, said the jury's decision was the
right one. While Balbirona admitted to taking Boreczky's luggage, he denied
the attack and claimed it was Ortiz's idea.
Don Wilkerson, Ortiz's attorney, said his client didn't deserve the
conviction at all. He said Ortiz was not even at the scene and had an alibi
that he was unable to present to the court.
Boreczky said the defense was ridiculous, adding that both men should
have at least been convicted for robbery instead of one being found guilty
only of theft -- which does not imply the use of violence.
"To arrive at second degree robbery is an injustice," Boreczky told
KHON-TV2 today. "But to arrive with a theft conviction for Balbirona is far
more of an injustice because he was just as guilty -- if not more guilty --
than Ortiz."
Boreczky, who now has steel plates in his skull to repair injuries
sustained in the attack, said he now regrets taking leave from his job with
the Chicago police department to fly back to Hawai`i to testify in the trial.
"I just wasted my time going out there," Boreczky said.
"Crime pays once again," he said. "I will never forgive or forget
Hawai`i."
Sen. Matt Matsunaga, who oversees the Judiciary committee, said the
verdict may make it more difficult to prosecute crimes committed against
tourists.
"There's less likelihood they will come back here and testify if the
criminal is caught and prosecuted," Matsunaga said.
Arrisgado also expressed concern over how such cases could hurt the
visitor industry. He said the state should consider classifying crimes
against tourists as special, more severe offenses.
"Tourists could be considered a special class of victim, because they're
unfamiliar with Hawai`i," Arrisgado said. "They've been led to believe this
is paradise."
Although the islands are generally safe, Arrisgado said, some visitors
may have been lulled into a false sense of security.
According to Arrisgado, there are already laws that make crimes against
children, the elderly and the disabled subject to a minimum prison sentence.
Matsunaga said senators will examine whether tourists should be made a
protected class in the upcoming legislative session.
Balbirona and Ortiz will be sentenced in February.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
CHRIS Pablo, 46, is well on his way the path to recovery. Pablo, who was once
in the news for his efforts to encourage Hawai`i residents to join the battle
against leukemia, is a leukemia patient himself. Last month, a compatible
bone marrow donor was found for Pablo, and he underwent the successful
transplant operation a week before Thanksgiving. Today, Pablo is still
recovering at the City of Hope Hospital in Los Angeles, where doctors said
his immune system is getting stronger by the day. While his family plans to
join him in California to celebrate New Year's, Pablo said he is looking to
usher in 1998 from the islands and in perfect health...
ELIZABETH Savage -- already awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty to 10
counts of shoplifting, car theft and check fraud in October -- was arrested
yesterday at Ala Moana Center. She was charged with theft after allegedly
trying to steal two wallets from Liberty House. Savage was released on $400
bail, and will appear before a district court judge on Wednesday. The 31-
year-old former Honolulu police officer confessed earlier this year to a
crystal methamphetamine addiction. Her prior charges carry a total of 82
years in prison and more than $80,000 in fines...
DRIVERS for TheBus will vote this week on whether to accept a five-year
contract proposed by O`ahu Transit Services, the agency charged with running
the island's award-winning bus system. OTS, citing weak revenues, has offered
the 1,300-member drivers' union an unspecified raise but also plans to cut
the number of vacation days for new hires. Some drivers said the length of
the contract is unprecedented, noting that it would mean no more raises until
2001. Company officials said, however, that TheBus drivers are among the best
paid in the nation, earning anywhere between $13-18 an hour...
IOLANI School's Marching Band will be sharing the Aloha Spirit with the
nation on New Year's Day. For the first time in the school's history, the
band will appear in the annual Tournament of Roses parade in California. The
parade, which coincides with the Pasadena Rose Bowl, draws a live crowd of
one million people and an international television audience nearly four times
that. "On the Beach at Waikiki" is one the anthems on the play-list. Band
officials also plan to treat the crowd to hula dancers in haku leis...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
KA `UPENA KUKUI ceases daily publication tomorrow, Nov. 10, with the end of
the fall semester at the University of Hawai`i. As usual, intermittent issues
will be published during the winter break as time and sanity permits (I
will again strive for daily from Dec. 16 on, after final exams). Ka
`Upena will return to its regular publication schedule on Jan. 13 with the
opening of the spring term -- strike or no strike. Thank you for hanging
with me for this second year of after-hours newsgathering. If you have any
questions concerning events or issues, don't hesitate to write to me at
islenews@hawaii.edu -- I'll try to get the information or update you need...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/72, Kaua`i 82/72, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 82/72, Hilo 82/71
CASTS: Cloudy, weakening trades to 20MPH; North Shore surf to 5 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, December 6, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: PAIR CONVICTED FOR BEATING CHICAGO MAN
Two men accused of beating a Chicago police officer earlier this year
were convicted for the attack, but both received sentences lighter than the
one sought by prosecutors.
A circuit court jury found Rodney Balbirona, 19, guilty of second-degree
theft and 22-year-old Darrell Ortiz guilty of second-degree robbery.
Both were suspected of a late-night attack on James Boreczky, who was
visiting his brother at Sunset Beach, while he waited for a bus to the
airport. Prosecutors charged the pair with first degree robbery, which
carried a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
Under the lesser charges, Balbirona and Ortiz face 10-year and 5-year
sentences respectively.
Deputy City Prosecutor Maurice Arrisgado said he was surprised and
disappointed with the jury's decision.
"I think it's a terrible message to send out to our community that
people who engage in this type of vicious behavior, especially against
innocent tourists, can get away with that type of conduct," Arrisgado said.
During the trial, Balbirona admitted to stealing Boreczky's luggage, but
said he never planned to physically assault him. Balbirona claimed the attack
was Ortiz's idea.
Keith Shigetomi, Balbirona's attorney, said he was satisfied with the
jury's verdict.
"They listened to all the evidence and found my client was telling the
truth when he said that he never hit Mr. Boreczky," Shigetomi said. "They
found him guilty of what he said he did."
"He went from the most serious felony to the least serious penalty," he
said, noting that his client is now eligible for probation.
Donald Wilkerson, Ortiz's attorney, said he was less satisfied. During
the trial, Ortiz maintained he wasn't even present during the beating.
"He is happy that he was only convicted of the robbery in the second
degree," Wilkerson said. "However he still maintains that his alibi defense
should have been presented to the court."
Arrisgado, however, said he felt he proved both were equally responsible
for beating Boreczky.
"This is a very vicious beating of an innocent person and the evidence
was quite compelling I thought," he said.
Boreczky, who is now back on the job with the Chicago police force,
required reconstructive surgery to his face as a result of his injuries.
The pair will be sentenced in Feb. 13.
A 14-year-old boy also implicated in the attack has been ordered to
spend 30 days in a youth correctional facility.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: WAIKIKI BIRD VENDORS FACE REGULATION
About a week after the state Supreme Court decisively upheld the city's
ban on T-shirt vendors in Waikiki, a city councilman is introducing a bill to
regulate another breed of sidewalk entrepreneurs.
People walking the streets with exotic birds and parrots on each arm
have become a common sight in the resort district, as they sell tourists the
opportunity to take photos with their feathered partners. Under a bill
proposed by councilman Duke Bainum, they will also have to carry signs
stating their purpose in both English and Japanese.
Bainum said his bill is in response to a growing number of complaints
about the bird vendors, most from Japanese tour operators.
"After they take the pictures, I've heard some won't give the camera
back unless they get a hefty donation," Bainum told KHON-TV2. "I've also had
complaints that when a Japanese visitor holds out money, they'll take more."
Even some bird vendors believe the bill is a good idea, noting that
there have already been instances where their reputations have been hurt by
those that take advantage of tourists.
"It has hurt our business, and it hurts everybody's business," said
vendor Chip Kemp. "I've had some Japanese tourists come up and want to do
business when some person says something and they just take off."
Kemp, who sells parrot photo opportunities outside a restaurant on the
West end of Waikiki, said the bill would help add credibility to those who
run a credible business.
Bainum said more bills to protect tourists and improve the image of
Waikiki are on the way.
"Next week I'll be introducing another bill about street performances,
and I understand the mayor is working on a handbilling bill," he said.
"I think what we're seeing is the fact that we're putting a lot of money
into making Waikiki better, but we have some real problems there in terms of
the bothering of our visitors," Bainum said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SEVERAL CANDIDATES CLOSE ELECTIONS IN DEBT
The person who spent the most did not necessarily win the most votes in
many of the most hotly contested races in last month's General Election,
according to final campaign spending reports filed this week.
In the race for Honolulu mayor, Arnold Morgado failed to oust mayor
Jeremy Harris despite outspending the incumbent by over $110,000. City
Prosecutor candidate David Arakawa failed to keep his Primary Election lead
over Peter Carlisle, even though he spent nearly 15 percent more and is now
left with twice the amount of debt.
In all, more than $3 million was invested in the mayor's race. Harris
raised about $1,357,000 and spent about $1,325,000, closing the contest with
a $101,000 deficit after nearly $2,000 in loans. Morgado amassed about
$1,470,000 and spent $1,453,000, and after nearly $340,000 in loans, is now
about $332,000 in debt.
According to the campaign spending reports, Although both Morgado and
Harris are Democrats, the Hawai`i Democratic Party contributed $1,000 to the
losing candidate's effort. A substantial portion of Harris' debts, meanwhile,
are for food, printing and telephone costs.
Frank Fasi, who was voted out of the race in the Primary Election,
reported a campaign debt of $632 after raising about $1,014,000 and spending
about $813,000. Fasi took out $200,000 in loans.
In the race for City Prosecutor, victor Peter Carlisle raised about
$262,000 and spent about $249,000, and after $30,000 in loans closed the
election with a debt of nearly $17,000. Challenger David Arakawa has a
deficit of over $33,000 after raising about $306,000 and spending nearly
$283,000. Arakawa had nearly $58,000 in loans.
First-time candidate Sam Slom managed to defeat incumbent Sen. Donna
Ikeda, even though she spent roughly nine times as much to hold her seat.
Slom still has over $26,000 left in the bank after raising $55,900 and
spending over $29,000 in the 8th district race. Ikeda, meanwhile, raised
about $297,000 and spent about $261,000, and leaves the senate with over
$36,000 in her campaign war chest.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/71, Kaua`i 81/72, Moloka`i 82/70, Maui 83/71, Hilo 80/70
CASTS: Morning showers, gusts to 35MPH; North and East shore surf to 5 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 1:21 p.m.; Low 8:44 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, December 5, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CITY SETTLES HARASSMENT CASE FOR $1.1 MILLION
A former police officer will receive $1.1 million from the city in an
out of court settlement reached yesterday in her sexual harassment lawsuit
against nine other officers.
Clarissa Barta left the force nearly three years ago, after she said she
was subject to constant and aggressive sexual harassment as the only female
officer on the Honolulu Police Department's airport detail.
Between 1983 and 1993, Barta claimed, fellow officers frequently
verbally abused her, viewed pornographic material in her presence and at one
point physically assaulted her.
Although this week's settlement keeps the case out of court, police
chief Michael Nakamura said he would have preferred a trial.
"That way we get a good balance and we get both sides of the story,"
Nakamura said.
"Right now, all you know is what Ms. Barta has said," he said. "I
believe there's another side to the story -- I believe there's another side
to the coin."
Despite the award, which must be paid within three months, Barta's
attorney said he and his client aren't satisfied with the settlement either.
"All in all we would have much preferred to settle this case with some
firm agreements, including the complete abolition of the code of silence,"
said attorney Mark Davis.
Nakamura said Davis' allegation of departmental secrecy was baseless.
"We don't reinforce any code of silence," Nakamura said. "That goes
contrary to good management -- it goes contrary to trying to build a good
department."
In fact, Nakamura said, it is the silence the department is now bound to
that is most frustrating.
"Under the settlement, the other side of the story will never come out,"
he said. "I think the important thing to realize is that the $1.1 million
doesn't necessarily represent misconduct on the part of the officers."
Even so, he said, it was considerably less expensive to settle than it
would have been to go to trial.
"The primary driving force behind the settlement was economics,"
Nakamura said.
Attorneys for the nine police officers named in the suit said they were
also dissatisfied with the decision to settle.
"(The officers) categorically deny each and every one of the allegations
that were made against them," attorney Lyle Hosoda told KHON-TV2. "The
allegations of Ms. Barta are orchestrated and fabricated."
Mel Miyagi, attorney for one of the officers, said his client
essentially had no choice but to go along with the settlement.
"It was suggested to him that the city might withdraw his defense,
meaning not pay for a lawyer to defend him if he did not agree to the
settlement," Miyagi said.
The city council had earlier approved $500,000 to cover defense costs.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STATE AUDITOR BLASTS DEFENSE OPERATIONS
The office charged with defending the islands from natural disasters
must now defend itself from a report that charges it mishandled funds.
Although the state Department of Defense is almost entirely run with
federal money, officials considered it no less deserving of scrutiny.
According to a departmental audit released this week, the department owes the
state about $600,000 and must streamline its bookkeeping methods.
The defense department is 94 percent federally funded, and primarily
coordinates the Hawai`i National Guard and state Civil Defense.
State Auditor Marion Higa said the department received over $1.7 million
in federal funds over a two year period ending in 1995. She said much of that
money should have been passed to the state government.
"The department has money that came in from the federal government that
should have been returned to the state general fund," Higa said.
Department officials, however, said Higa mischaracterized the way money
was allocated.
"While the auditor calls the money we're talking about reimbursements,
we don't count it as reimbursements because it does not involve the advance
payment of state dollars," said spokesman Jimmy Toyama.
Although most of the money questions have been resolved, Higa said the
department has yet to come up with $600,000 still owed the state.
Meanwhile, defense officials said the audit only pointed out procedural
discrepancies.
"What we are doing is legal and correct," said Maj. Edward Richardson.
"If you look at it, it was all appropriate -- there was nothing wrong."
The auditor's office contracted Grant Thornton to conduct the audit.
Higa said Thornton also questioned items in department records that could
constitute violations of state procurement laws.
Specifically, the audit cited the department's recent purchase of a
tractor lawnmower. Higa said it appeared as if the department filed
requisitions for two lawnmowers separately. Records of the purchase may have
been altered, she said.
"The issue here is parceling, where you split the purchase to bring the
parts under the $10,000 threshold," Higa said.
Under state law, requirements to seek competing bids are less stringent
for purchases under $10,000.
Toyama said an internal investigation into the alleged discrepancies
found no policy transgressions.
"Initially, we had planned to purchase two of those tractors," he said.
"As our cash position became clearer, we found that we weren't able to
support the purchase of those two lawnmowers, so we decided to go in and buy
one lawnmower and buy parts for other lawnmowers that we have on hand."
Also, Higa said the department was late in submitting the reports the
auditor requested.
The audit will go before the upcoming session of the state legislature
next month in determining budget allocations for the next fiscal year.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: PEPPER SPRAY LEGALIZED ON O`AHU
The Honolulu City Council yesterday permanently legalized the sale and
possession of pepper spray, its benefits said to outweigh reports of misuse.
The unanimous vote caps an 18-month trial period in which O`ahu law
enforcement officials were to track use of the sprays. Ultimately, use pepper
spray was reported several times more often in the commission of crimes than
in the prevention of them.
A number of people testified before the council, most of them speaking
in favor of permanent legalization.
Despite the numbers, residents said, the misuse of pepper spray was a
more attractive scenario than the misuse of more dangerous weapons.
"If even one vicious beating or one rape or one murder is prevented, it
will be worth even hundreds of minor cases of misuse per year," said Honolulu
resident Brian Baron.
Councilmember John Henry Felix said the statistics may not tell the
whole story, as use of pepper spray in defensive situations is less likely to
be reported.
"Every time a law-abiding citizen carries pepper spray or pepper foam
they are actually using it," he said.
"Though they haven't activated it, it gives them a sense of security,"
Felix said.
Further, councilmembers said, if the sprays were made illegal, they
would only be used by criminals.
"Its not a perfect solution," Felix said.
Before the vote, councilmember John DeSoto joked that he had a "conflict
of interest" when it came to the issue.
"My daughter carries pepper spray," DeSoto said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
EIGHT-year-old James Asosaeletoitu was awarded the Honolulu Police Department
Certificate of Merit today in recognition of his efforts to save his cousin
from an attack by a neighbor. In October, Celestino Felipe, 63, attacked 2-
year-old Deborah Tuuga with a machete as she and Asosaeletoitu were playing
in a yard. Tuuga sustained a gash on her back, and the boy's arm was cut.
Police still don't know what prompted the attack. Tuuga's neighbor, Joseph
Kupuka`a, also received a certificate. Kupuka`a scaled a fence to disarm
Felipe, and held him until police arrived. The girl's mother, Ramona Tuuga,
said she has forgiven and prays for Felipe's family, but said her daughter
still has nightmares and refuses to play outside...
WHILE fewer tourists are coming to the islands from the U.S. and Europe,
numbers are still rising for visitors from the East. According to the Hawai`i
Visitors and Convention Bureau, nearly 6 percent fewer people came to the
islands last month than in September -- a drop of more than 7 percent
compared to October of last year. That decline is offset, however, by an 11
percent jump in the number of tourists from Japan and the East Pacific rim.
About 221,000 visitors came to Hawai`i in October, setting an all-time record
for that month. October also saw the largest number of visitors coming for
honeymoons -- over 75,000 newlyweds arrived in Hawai`i last month...
JOSEPH Alejado, the last of four officers at the Pearl City Police Station to
face criminal charges for a beating last year, pled not guilty yesterday to
police brutality charges. Three other officers have already pled guilty to
beating Sam Tupuola while he was handcuffed and in police custody. Alejado
was also charged with hindering a federal probe into the incident, allegedly
asking two other officers to not cooperate with FBI investigators. Alejado
has been with the department for 15 years...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 81/71, Kaua`i 81/72, Moloka`i 82/71, Maui 82/71, Hilo 79/70
CASTS: Overcast, light rain, gusts to 30MPH; North Shore surf to 8 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 12:35 p.m.; Low 6:51 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, December 3, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: JUDGE ORDERS SAME-SEX MARRIAGE LEGALIZED
Homosexual couples cannot be denied marriage licenses, a Circuit Court
judge ruled today, issuing a landmark decision in a six year legal battle
that put Hawai`i at the forefront of national debate over same-sex marriage.
Circuit Court Judge Kevin Chang ultimately found the state did not
justify its ban on same-sex marriages, backing the plaintiffs' claim that the
state's marriage law is unconstitutional.
"The judge found no compelling state interest to deny same sex couples
marriage licenses," said Dan Foley, an attorney for one of the three same-sex
couples who first sued the state for the right to marry in 1990.
An expected appeal by the state, however, may reverse the decision.
Chang's ruling came after reviewing evidence presented in September
during two weeks of testimony.
During the trial, the state based its case on the welfare of Hawaii's
children. Children should be raised in the best possible environment, the
defense argued, and that environment includes one mother and one father.
Attorneys for the plaintiffs asserted that homosexuals can make
excellent parents, and framed the case as one of simple civil rights.
Deputy Attorney General Rich Eichor maintained today that the basis of
the state's argument was sound.
"Some will be very critical of it, but I still feel we proved our case,"
Eichor said.
The couples at the heart of the high-profile case -- Ninia Baehr and
Genora Dancel, Joseph Melillo and Pat Lagon, and Tammy Rodrigues and
Antoinette Pregil -- called Chang's decision a long-overdue victory.
"This is such a wonderful day," Baehr said from New York, where she and
Dancel currently reside, in an interview with KHNL. "Six years ago people
told us we weren't going to win, but now we're so close to getting married."
"Genora and I have been in love and engaged for six years," she said.
"It's been a long engagement."
"I'm excited after six years of work to see that it wasn't for naught,"
Melillo said. "we did what we had to do and did it by the book."
"The judge saw that it was pure and simple discrimination," he said.
"I was confident we were going to win," Lagon said.
Gay activist Bill Woods, who helped organize the initial lawsuit, said
he also knew the court would rule in favor of the plaintiffs.
"We're tremendously pleased," Woods said. "This is the best thing that
could happen to the gay community."
While the case was making its way through the judiciary system, Melillo
and Lagon said they obtained certifications from the state to perform
marriage ceremonies.
With today's ruling, the pair said they look forward to joining both
heterosexual and homosexual couples.
They may have to wait, however.
Until the state follows through with plans to appeal Chang's ruling to
the Hawai`i Supreme Court, there was debate this afternoon over when the
decision takes effect.
State Health Director Lawrence Miike said the state Attorney General
today ordered his office not to issue licenses. He said the Attorney General
was awaiting a specific order from Judge Chang.
"There is an injunction," Foley said. "The director is now under an
order not to refuse to issue licenses."
Eichor said, however, that Chang has yet to complete procedural motions
to enforce his ruling at the departmental level.
"No judgment has been entered," Eichor said. "There's no obligation to
comply with the injunction until the judgment is entered."
Chang may issue the judgment tomorrow, but he is reportedly also
expected to hear a state request to postpone any changes until its
forthcoming appeal can be heard.
Foley said it was unlikely Chang's ruling will be overturned.
"When you go through the opinion yourself, you will find much of it is
findings of fact, credibility and expertise of witnesses," he said. "High
courts don't second guess lower courts on those types of findings."
Eichor disagreed.
"It is not unusual for courts on appeal to reverse judges," Eichor said.
"They can and will take into consideration their own view of the evidence and
how it applies."
While same-sex marriage advocates hailed today's ruling, religious and
conservative groups said it was serious mistake.
"The vast majority of people are against legalizing homosexual
marriage," said Mike Gabbard, spokesman for the Alliance for Traditional
Marriage. "This is really going to ferment more anger, bitterness and
frustration that will be directed at the judiciary and at elected
politicians."
State lawmakers will now be expected to wrest control of the issue away
from the courts, he said -- specifically in the form of a Constitutional
amendment banning same-sex marriage.
While such an amendment failed to pass out of the legislature last
session, Senate President Norman Mizugchi said it is already on the agenda
for next year.
"It's back," Mizuguchi said. "This will be another hot button issue that
we will have to resolve."
House Speaker Joe Souki predicted a fiery debate.
"I think you'll find a lot of irate, furious people coming after the
legislature for some immediate changes," Souki said.
According to Foley, however, the legislature may be too late.
"There's a very good change we could have same-sex marriage this year,
or prior to any action the legislature takes," Foley said.
The plaintiffs, meanwhile, said they will wait.
"There are some roadblocks," Baehr said. "But we're certainly hopeful
within the next year and a half we will be able to get married legally in
Hawai`i, and we will come home and do just that."
Sidebar: BOSTON COUPLE'S MARRIAGE APPLICATION REFUSED
Less than three hours after Circuit Court Judge Kevin Chang's ruling
supporting same-sex marriage was announced, a gay couple turned up at the
state Department of Health office to apply for a marriage license.
David Dudley, 53, and Edward Koh, 39, said the Hawai`i court's decision
seemed to come at exactly the right time. The pair happened to be vacationing
in Waikiki when the news broke.
"We saw it on the news on CNN," Dudley told KITV-4 today, "So we thought
we'd come out and do it."
Originally from Boston, Dudley and Koh said they have been together for
ten years. The couple said they were amused to find the application form
called for information for a bride and groom.
"I'm older so I took the groom," Dudley said.
The form was submitted, but when the pair was called for the standard
interview portion of the licensing process, they were told they could not
file to marry this afternoon.
The health department has held off on issuing licenses to gay couples
pending word from the state Attorney General's office.
Dudley said he was disappointed.
"The couple that came after us went in and got their application
approved," he said. "I thought ours should be too."
"I think they're violating our civil rights," Dudley said.
Although an island wedding most likely won't be part of their Hawai`i
vacation this time, Koh and Dudley said they wouldn't give up.
"We'll be back next year if it doesn't happen this year," Dudley said.
SIDEBAR: The Timeline
* September 1990 -- Three same-sex couples file for marriage licenses with
the state Department of Health. Their applications are refused.
* December 1990 -- The couples sue the state for the right to marry. The
case, Baehr v. Lewin (now Baehr v. Miike), is born.
* October 1991 -- The Circuit Court dismisses the lawsuit. The plaintiffs
appeal the ruling to the Hawai`i Supreme Court.
* May 1993 -- The Supreme Court finds the state marriage law is invalid.
The case is returned to the Circuit Court, where the state is required to
prove a compelling state interest in banning same-sex marriage.
* 1994 -- The state Legislature passes a law defining marriage as the union
of one man and one woman. Meanwhile, a commission is created to study the
same-sex marriage issue.
* December 1995 -- The commission finds no compelling reason for the state
to maintain a ban on same-sex marriages.
* September 1996 -- Trial begins in Circuit Court. Judge Kevin Chang hears
two weeks of testimony from expert witnesses on both sides of the debate.
* October 1996 -- Pres. Clinton signs a law excluding gay and lesbian
households from federally mandated marriage benefits.
* December 1996 -- Chang rules the state did not demonstrate a compelling
state interest in refusing homosexual marriages. The state prepares to
appeal the decision to the Hawai`i Supreme Court.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/73, Kaua`i 83/72, Moloka`i 83/72, Maui 83/70, Hilo 84/71
CASTS: Partly cloudy, gusts to 30MPH; North Shore surf to 6 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 10:51 a.m.; Low 5:46 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, December 2, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: WAIKIKI T-SHIRT VENDORS RESTRICTED FOR GOOD
The United States Supreme Court today upheld the constitutionality of
the city's law banning T-shirt sales on Waikiki sidewalks.
"We have decisively won the battle against T-shirt vending in Waikiki,"
Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris said.
With today's ruling, Harris called for a zero-tolerance policy of
enforcing the city's peddling ordinance.
"Any violators are going to be ticketed, cited and ultimately arrested,"
Harris said.
The ordinance, enacted in 1994, places a blanket ban on selling goods
and services on public streets and sidewalks in Waikiki.
That same year, two non-profit groups -- One World One Family Now and
Mhaktivedanta Mission -- sued the city for its two years of efforts to evict
them from the resort district. The vendors claimed the city had violated
their right to free speech.
A Circuit Court ruled against the vendors earlier this year, and today's
rejection of their appeal marks their last court battle.
The Supreme Court agreed that while T-shirts are forums for free speech,
the government nevertheless has the right to regulate where they are sold.
Attorney Dan Foley, who represented one of the two groups, said he
wasn't surprised by the decision, explaining that the high court's decision
reflects a national trend.
"Court decisions were basically going the way of T-shirt vendors
throughout the country," Foley said. "While we were pursuing this with the
U.S. Supreme Court, all of a sudden, decisions started going the other way in
favor of the cities and the municipalities."
"Now it's very inhospitable, and the precedent is not good," he said.
Harris said other cities on the Mainland will likely use the city's
victory over Waikiki vendors and its work to enforce the peddling ordinance
as a model for their own efforts.
Today, T-shirt vendors still operate on low-traffic side streets in
Waikiki where the city relegated them in 1994.
Harris said the Supreme Court ruling clears the way for the city to
begin regulating street performers and other peddlers that have since taken
root along Kalakaua Avenue.
Officials said the two year court battle cost the city over $100,000 in
legal fees for two private attorneys who specialized in constitutional law.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: $600,000 SETTLEMENT TO COVER SANDY BEACH PROJECT
A pilot wastewater recycling project at Sandy Beach Park will be paid
for by two private companies under a settlement announced today, stemming
alleged illegal sewage dumping in the area six years ago.
East Honolulu Community Services and MEPAC Services have settled out of
court with the state, which claimed the companies dumped raw sewage into the
ocean between 1988 and 1990, when they jointly operated the Hawai`i Kai
Sewage Treatment Plant.
The state's case also focused on a major sewage spill that closed Sandy
Beach for several days in January 1990. A separate federal investigation sent
two plant managers to federal prison for the same incident.
Together, the companies have agreed to provide the state with $600,000
in materials and services to establish the Sandy Beach Park Reclaimed Water
Pilot Project.
"The Department of Health has been pushing a goal both in this case and
in a number of other cases of promoting wastewater reuse," said Deputy
Attorney General Larry Lau.
"Done properly, wastewater is a resource and not just something to flush
out to the sea," he said.
In addition to a straight $100,000 cash payment, EHCS and MEPAC will
contribute $350,000 toward the pilot project, including the estimated
$200,000 needed to construct the needed facilities.
EHCS will also have to contribute $150,000 in non-drinkable irrigation
water produced by the facility to further landscape improvements at Sandy
Beach Park, while MEPAC must provide $150,000 in engineering support.
According to the settlement, any money left over after the pilot project
is running will be spent on other environmental projects.
Lau said the cost of the settlement will not increase the burden on East
Honolulu residents, who recently saw an 18% rate increase approved by the
Public Utilities Commission.
MEPAC President James Rispoli said the settlement was "fair," and
positive in that it will benefit both residents and the environment.
State Department of Health officials said EHCS still oversees the
Hawai`i Kai plant, but has since hired a new company to manage it and
upgraded parts of the facility.
While MEPAC no longer operates any wastewater treatment plants in
Hawai`i, EHCS is currently pursuing a lawsuit against MEPAC for an
unspecified breach of contract dispute.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
State: SAME-SEX RULING EXPECTED TOMORROW; APPEALS PLANNED
Circuit Court Judge Kevin Chang is expected to announce his ruling in
the state's controversial same-sex marriage case tomorrow.
Chang presided over two weeks of testimony for and against same-sex
marriages nearly three months ago, as the state was called upon to
demonstrate a compelling interest to support its standing ban on gay unions.
Despite the powerful role the same-sex debate played in local politics
and recent elections, members of groups on both sides of the issue said they
don't expect Chang's decision to have a resounding impact.
"One thing we do know," same-sex opponent Jack Hoag told KHON-TV2, "this
will not bring closure to the situation."
Hoag, who lobbied against same-sex marriage with the group Hawaii's
Future Today during the last legislative session, said the real battle over
same-sex marriage is yet to come.
"Regardless of tomorrow's outcome, both sides have indicated that they
will certainly appeal the case," he said. "This will eventually be at the
Hawai`i State Supreme Court."
In 1993, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the three same-sex couples
who sued the state for the right to marry in sending the case back to Circuit
Court, and Chang's courtroom.
In testimony presented in September, the state claimed that same-sex
marriages should remain illegal primarily in the interests of children raised
by Hawai`i couples.
Attorneys for the couples refuted the state's claim that homosexual
parents were less fit to raise children, and asserted that the existing ban
qualifies as discrimination under the state's own Constitution.
If and when the appeal is heard, same-sex marriage advocates hope the
high court will again rule in their favor.
"The case does not go any further than the Hawai`i Supreme Court," said
Kirk Cashmere, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs. "The Hawai`i Supreme
Court is the final decision."
In anticipation of an appeal, Chang's written ruling will reportedly
exceed 50 pages.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 82/73, Kaua`i 83/73, Moloka`i 83/72, Maui 84/70, Hilo 82/69
CASTS: Mostly sunny, isolated showers, trades to 25MPH; all surf to 4 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 9:58 a.m.; Low 5:16 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, November 25, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: STUDENTS, FACULTY RALLY FOR NEW CONTRACT
Hundreds of demonstrators packed the sidewalks fronting the governor's
mansion and the state capitol today, bringing the lack of a contract for
University of Hawa`i faculty to the streets.
Holding signs reading "Not on Strike Yet," "Support a Contract" and
"Ignorance Yields Crime," the 600 or so UH faculty members and students lined
both sides of Beretania Street at lunchtime, cheering as passing motorists
blew their horns in support.
The rally was the latest in a series of demonstrations backing the
University of Hawai`i Professional Assembly in its quest for a new contract
with the state. The 13,000-member union has been without a contract since
last May.
Organizers said the primary target of the hour-long informational picket
was Gov. Ben Cayetano, who UHPA leaders said is breaking his promise to be
Hawaii's "Education Governor."
UHPA Executive Director John Radcliffe said the demonstrations were a
last resort.
"We've attempted every other which way to get a contract," he said.
If serious talks don't begin soon, the union will hold a strike vote in
a month, Radcliffe said.
"We're absolutely serious," he said. "We're dead serious."
Radcliffe said he was impressed by the student turnout at today's rally,
adding that it's clear students understand the contract issue directly
affects them, and the overall state of higher education in Hawai`i.
Student government president Scott Nishimoto said students are more than
happy to back up their professors.
"I think they have to stand up for what they deserve, and what they
deserve is a fair contract," Nishimoto said.
Mary Tiles, philosophy professor and a member of UHPA's collective
bargaining board, said the union doesn't want to strike, but may have to if
the deadlock continues.
"We're asking that we have a pay settlement which is fair and
equitable," Tiles said. "One that is in line with the settlements that come
out for other unions."
According to Cayetano, It is those other settlements that are holding up
state negotiations with the faculty union.
Cayetano the state is still mired in arbitration proceedings with other
government employee unions, which are also requesting salary increases. As a
result, he said, there's no way to tell how much he can offer UHPA until
other talks conclude.
"Until we have these awards, we will not be able to find out how much
money we have available," he said. "Therefore we're not able to put anything
on the table at this particular time."
Cayetano also said the faculty union is partially responsible for
dragging out the negotiation process.
"At one time not long ago the talks were suspended because they kept on
demanding a pay increase of some kind, and we're not able to do it," he said.
In addition to retaining benefits and strengthening faculty members'
intellectual property rights, UHPA is calling for a 4 percent pay raise.
Cayetano maintained that it was unlikely the state could afford it.
"If they had all the information, I'm confident that they will
understand the state is not able to put any money proposal on the table,"
Cayetano said.
The earliest he'd be able to know how much money the state has to spend
on various pay increases would be late December or January.
By that time, however, the union will most likely have voted on whether
to strike come the Spring semester.
If the strike is approved, it could begin Jan. 13 -- the first day of
classes -- or Jan. 15, the first day of the next legislative session.
The governor said a faculty strike would be counterproductive.
"It will be unfortunate if they went on strike knowing that we are in
this position," he said. "It would seem to me that a strike would not
accomplish what they want us to do."
The last time UH faculty members went on strike was in 1983.
UHPA leaders reportedly met with Cayetano today, but no details on the
meeting were released.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: THOUSANDS IN ISLANDS UNINSURED, GROUP FINDS
A statewide survey released today gave Hawaii's health insurance system
a more somber diagnosis than previously thought.
As many as ten percent of Hawai`i residents may be without health
insurance, according to the Hawai`i State Primary Care Association.
In addition, recent budget cuts and subsequently tightened requirements
for the state's fledgling QUEST program -- established to insure residents
with limited incomes -- may be responsible for putting 25,000 people into the
uninsured category.
According to the report, the poor, immigrants, native Hawaiians, people
with part-time jobs and independent contractors make up the largest groups
living in the islands without health insurance.
The survey's findings could be a rude awakening for the state, which is
said to have one of the top-five highest percentages of insured residents in
the nation.
Although the report show things are getting better overall, association
spokeswoman Elizabeth Giesting said, it's now clear there are several areas
that need improvement.
In its report, the association warns that without more state support,
the increasing number of uninsured residents could overwhelm Hawaii's
community health centers.
"Health centers that never even thought of limits before are suddenly
saying, 'This is all we can do -- we can't possibly take care of everybody,'"
Giesting said.
State Health Director Larry Miike said the community centers play a
vital role in Hawaii's health care system.
Miike also said he agreed with the association's reccomendation that the
state Department of Health ask the state Legislature for a $7 million boost
for its nine health centers.
"If that's not possible, they're going to have to turn people away,"
Miike said.
Miike said trying to insure everyone is not the answer.
"You cannot just take a straight insurance approach," Miike said.
"You've got to augment that with making doctors and nurses and other
providers available to those populations when they need them."
"You're still going to have people who are uninsured," he said. "The
question is how can we meet the medical care needs of most of them."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
GARY Draizen was sentenced to life in prison today, but he was granted the
eventual possibility of parole. Draizen was convicted of murdering his
girlfriend nearly two years ago, stabbing Kaye Ramlow 28 times with a
butcher's knife when she said she was leaving him. Draizen maintained he was
actung under severe emotional distress. "I just exploded," he testified. "I
don't even remember the whole crime, and that's the truth." Prosecutors were
hoping to have Draizen sentenced under a new state law that could withhold
parole hearings from those found guilty of particularly brutal crimes. The
Circuit Court denied the motion, however, stating that the special sentencing
should have been requested when Draizen was first charged...
SIGHT was the early Christmas gift given to 13-year-old Tony Darr, who is
recovering today after a corneal transplant on Saturday. Sonny Darr, Tony's
father, said he knew his son was bothered by his deteriorating vision, but
didn't know how deeply until recently when he listed vision on his Christmas
wish list. Darr waited only a week for a donor, which was found last week in
Missouri. Although the operation has a 30 percent rejection rate, doctors are
hopeful that the Aliamanu Intermediate student will be able to return to
school in three weeks. Vision in Darr's other eye is still fading, however,
and will most likely require a second transplant...
KEVIN Cuaresma, 39, remains in police custody tonight after he was shot in
the knee by an officer while allegedly burglarazing Fujioka's Supermarket in
Haleiwa. Cuaresma pled not guilty to second-degree burglary today, but was
unable to post $20,000 bail. Cuaresma apparently did not have a weapon on him
during the Friday incident, although the officer who shot Cuaresma initially
believed he was holding a gun. The officer is now on paid administrative
leave while the police investigation continues...
FUNDRAISING efforts to build the new Pacific Tsunami Museum in Hilo were
launched today with the help of Gov. Ben Cayetano. Supporters hope to raise
$1.5 million to build a new facility in a new location -- inside the Prince
Kuhio Plaza, Hilo's largest shopping center. The museum is slated to open in
July 1998. Exhibits will cover all aspects of tsunami, but will focus on the
1946 wave that leveled much of Hilo, killing 173 people and causing more than
$25 million in damages. Cayetano said he hopes the museum will also serve as
an international center of tsunami education ans research...
UNITY House, a 20,000-member local labor union, celebrated its 45th
anniversary this weekend during its annual Thanksgiving luncheon. The
organization also wished an early happy birthday to Unity House founder Art
Rutledge, who will be 90 years old in January...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/72, Kaua`i 84/72, Moloka`i 83/72, Maui 84/71, Hilo 82/70
CASTS: Cloudy, windward showers, trades to 20MPH; North Shore surf to 6 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 4:46 p.m.; Low 12:10 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, November 21, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: STATE PRESENTS PLAN TO DOUBLE-DECK NIMITZ
The state Department of Transportation tonight unveiled plans to build a
second tier over a two-mile stretch of Nimitz Highway, reserving three
overhead lanes for buses and carpools.
Proponents say the $200 million project will help alleviate chronic
congestion along the major commuter corridor, where "rush hour" lasts
considerably longer.
"The peak is stretched out pretty much throughout the entire day," said
state highways division head Hugh Ono. "We need some sort of relief."
Ono said on average, the addition of the viaduct will save drivers at
least 15-20 minutes of drive time.
Many present tonight oppose the plan, however, saying the benefits of a
double-decker highway aren't worth the effect it would have on area
businesses.
"We're pretty sure being under a freeway with no parking is pretty much
going to kill our business here," said Silkwood Wholesale owner Greg McCaul.
"There is a distinct possibility it could force us out of business,"
said Brent Hancock, who also owns a company along the proposed viaduct route.
"All they're doing is moving one bottle neck further into town," he
said. "It's not going to alleviate this traffic."
In nearly 40 years of business in the area, Hancock said, the traffic
hasn't gotten worse -- it's always been bad.
Kalihi Rep. Dennis Arakaki said he also opposes the proposal. The
construction period alone, he said, would hurt or destroy local businesses,
and the viaduct would take away valuable open space in Kalihi.
State Transportation Director Kazu Hayashida said the development would
force about 12 businesses to relocate, but said if it goes through, a
compensation package will be assembled for those affected.
The Leeward O`ahu Traffic Management Association backed the plan,
stating that it would encourage ride-sharing and carpooling.
The testimony collected at tonight's public hearing will be forwarded to
federal transportation officials, who will decide its fate.
If the federal government approves the plan, it will likely pay for 80
percent of the total cost. The state already receives about $100 million a
year in federal highway funds.
Construction of the viaduct will take at least three years, and would
begin no earlier than 1999.
The viaduct, which will stand above the landscaped median of Nimitz
Highway, would run from Pu`uhale Road to Libby Street. It would be flanked
on each side by three lanes, widened sidewalks and a bike route.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
MAUI Mayor Linda Lingle has been handed the responsibility to choose the
person to replace the late City Councilman Tom Morrow for the remainder of
his current term. The City Council met last night to hear public testimony on
which of 12 possible successors should succeed Morrow, but after hours of
deliberation the council deadlocked on two. Councilmembers then voted to give
the mayor the choice. Lingle said today, however, that she wants the council
to call a second hearing, adding that she will not make a selection unless
she has to. Her deadline is Nov. 26. Morrow died Nov. 1 in a Moloka`i plane
crash, but was re-elected four days later. Maui leaders have not yet
discussed Morrow's replacement for the full term he won in that election...
WAIKIKI hotels would be able to increase their building densities by 17
percent under a plan approved today by the Zoning Committee of the Honolulu
City Council. The plan was drafted to encourage redevelopment in the Waikiki
area, but opponents charge it would further congest the already cramped
tourist mecca. The plan now goes before the full council next month. Waikiki
Councilman Duke Bainum, who voted against changing the building density code,
said he will be introducing an alternate measure which would still support
urban revitalization in the area, but do so with tax credits instead...
FEDERAL investigators are preparing to indict 36-year-old Andrew Balogh for
downloading child pornography from the internet. Balogh, a cameraman for
KITV-4, was arrested today after a four-month investigation. Law enforcement
officers said they retrieved about 1,700 images from Balogh's home computer,
and customs agents said Balogh earlier admitted to downloading them over an
18-month period. Balogh allegedly corresponded and traded explicit images
with James Miller, an Army man indicted in May for the same crime. KITV said
Balogh has been suspended with pay until the case is resolved...
JIMMY Camingao, 25, is scheduled to be arraigned tomorrow in district court
in connection with the Oct. 10 murder of a known prostitute. Police said 18-
year-old Deborah Clark was found stabbed to death in a Nahua Street apartment
after neighbors reported screams coming from the building, which is said to
frequently host prostitute activities. Camingao has been on parole since
February, after serving two years in prison for auto theft. Days before his
arrest earlier this week in connection with Clark's murder, Camingao was
arrested Tuesday for parole violations...
EDITOR'S NOTE: Having recently sent six editors to a convention in Orlando, I
have been left with considerable additional duties at work. These and other
commitments have made it difficult to prepare these reports on a timely
basis, for which I apologize. I have rushed today's report out, and will
prepare the Nov. 20 issue as soon as possible. I regret that there will also
likely be no edition assembled for tomorrow, Nov. 22. I would appreciate
feedback on which should be a priority -- timely reports with limited
information, or in-depth reports that are occasionally late...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/73, Kaua`i 80/71, Moloka`i 82/70, Maui 83/71, Hilo 82/70
CASTS: Cloudy, cool, trades to 25MPH; North Shore surf to 6 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 1:55 p.m.; Low 8:57 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, November 19, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CAYETANO PROPOSES DOUBLING STATE CONSTRUCTION
In an effort to kick-start Hawaii's lagging economy, Gov. Ben Cayetano
yesterday announced that he was proposing a $1 billion state construction
budget -- more than double the money currently allotted.
Cayetano's proposed capital improvement budget includes money for public
schools, libraries, the University of Hawai`i, state prisons and native
Hawaiians.
The plan would draw $500 million a year over the next two years to go
toward construction projects, compared to the current $200 million annual
allotment.
Although the economy has been recovering, it has been very slow going,
Cayetano said.
"The private sector has really slowed down in terms of investments in
Hawai`i, so there's not much private sector construction," he said. "We hope
to boost that at least for a couple years and turn things around."
The governor said his top priority is lower education, and his
construction budget includes $180 million for Department of Education
projects alone. That's more than twice the current budget, he said.
On the list of projects are four new schools: Kapolei Intermediate,
Kapolei High School, Kaua`i Intermediate and Konawaena Elementary.
In addition, the plan calls for new public libraries to be built in
Kapolei, Nanakuli, Kohala on the Big Island and on the north shore of Kaua`i.
Cayetano's proposal sets aside $10 million for prison space, which
furthers his plan to add 610 beds to Oahu's overcrowded prisons.
The university, meanwhile, would get $125 million -- $37 million of
which is earmarked to build the Manoa campus' long-awaited expansion of
Hamilton Library.
The allocation for UH projects is the largest in recent memory,
according to Jim Manke, vice president for university relations.
Cayetano wants to spend $19 million to dredge the Ala Wai Canal and
beautify the stretch of canal that fronts the convention center.
Also in the proposal, $60 million to go towards the Hawaiian Home Lands
program, which will primarily go toward building homes for native Hawaiian
beneficiaries still waiting for a home of their own.
State legislative officials said yesterday that they could not comment
on Cayetano's proposed budget plan until they've had time to review it.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: NORTH SHORE BEATING VICTIM TAKES STAND
Chicago police officer James Boreczky, 33, came to Hawai`i with dreams
of paradise, but left with a fractured skull that required three steel plates
to repair.
Boreczky took the stand in Circuit Court today to testify in the trial
of two men accused of beating him shortly after midnight on April 22.
The prosecution believes 22-year-old Darrell Ortiz and 18-year-old
Rodney Balbirona violently robbed Boreczky while he was waiting for a bus
along Kamehameha Highway on the North Shore.
Boreczky said the two men, riding bicycles, approached him with a third
companion and asked if he had a light for their cigarettes.
He said he refused, and sensing danger he began walking away.
When the pair approached him again, Boreczky said, they asked for his
suitcase. He was attacked when he tried to run.
"Almost immediately I felt fists and feet hit my face on both sides,"
Boreczky said. "I saw Darrell Ortiz on my left -- he was hitting me with
upper-cuts -- and I saw Rodney Balbirona on my right."
Keith Shigetomi, Balbirona's attorney, acknowledged that his client
intended to rob Boreczky that night, but said Balbirona did not intend to
physically assault anyone.
Shigetomi alleges that the attack was instigated by Ortiz.
Ortiz's attorney, however, said his client wasn't even involved in the
incident.
During the cross-examination, defense attorney Donald Wilkerson asked
Boreczky about Balbirona's appearance that night. Wilkerson said the
prosecution has the wrong man.
Wilkerson said he plans to call Balbirona's mother to the stand, who he
said could provide an alibi for his client.
Shigetomi today requested that Judge Sandra Simms bar Balbirona's mother
from testifying.
Less than six months after the attack, Boreczky said, he was back on the
job in Chicago. He told the court that he could never have expected to be
attacked during his vacation.
"The picture my brother painted of Hawai`i, especially the North Shore,
was one of paradise -- that there was no crime in the area," Boreczky said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: RESTAURANT, WORKPLACE SMOKING BAN ADVANCES
The environment committee of the Honolulu City Council today voted to
support a bill that would ban smoking in restaurants and private workplaces.
A similar bill to prohibit smoking in restaurants was passed last year,
but was vetoed by Mayor Jeremy Harris.
The city has already banned smoking in government buildings and in most
public areas in Honolulu buildings.
While the bill approved today was initially targeted at workplace
settings only, committee chair Steve Holmes amended it to include bars,
nightclubs and restaurants at the urging of other committee members.
"By enacting this type of legislation, including restaurants, we can
prevent people from getting sick and dying," said councilmember John Felix.
"Nobody has a right to poison someone else," he said.
Councilmember Donna Kim also supported including Honolulu eateries in
the proposed smoking ban.
"I think that if there is any time I cannot tolerate people smoking, it
is when I am eating," Kim said.
The bill now goes before the full city council next month. If passed, it
will have to go to public hearings and one final vote before facing the
mayor's approval.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HIT-AND-RUN SUSPECT TURNS SELF IN
A 28-year-old Mililani man turned himself in at the Wahiawa police
station yesterday morning in connection with the Nov. 3 hit-and-run death of
a newspaper photographer.
Luther Niheu Jr. now faces a charge of negligent homicide and another
charge for failing to render aid.
Carl Viti was bicycling along Kamehameha Highway near Wheeler Field when
he was struck from behind by a vehicle.
The driver initially stopped at the scene of the accident, and told
other motorists that he would go for help. He never returned.
Honolulu police Lt. Larry Shiraishi said investigators believe Niheu was
the driver who killed Viti.
Police recovered the vehicle believed to be involved in the accident
this weekend, after it was found at the bottom of a ravine in hills above
Wahiawa earlier last week.
The gray 1982 Honda Accord had its license plates removed, but it
matches the description given by witnesses, police said. Investigators will
use its Vehicle Identification Number to confirm whether it belongs to Niheu.
Niheu was released from police custody pending further investigation. He
left the police station with his head wrapped in cloth, running to avoid
reporters and photographers.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TOUR BUS, CAR COLLIDE IN KAHANA VALLEY
As many as 25 people are believed to have been injured when a tour van
collided with a car shortly after noon today.
The crash forced the Hawaiian Elite Tours bus -- carrying up to two
dozen passengers to the Polynesian Cultural Center -- off the road and onto
the shallow banks of Kahana Stream.
Both the 39-year-old bus driver and the 47-year-old driver of the car
sustained injuries in the collision, and remain in fair condition tonight at
Queen's Medical Center.
A number of passengers on the bus also sustained minor injuries, and
were taken to three separate hospitals for treatment. Most have been treated
and released.
The accident occurred near a curve in Kamehameha Highway that area
residents said is prone to speeding and frequent accidents.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 80/71, Kaua`i 80/69, Moloka`i 82/68, Maui 80/69, Hilo 81/69
CASTS: Cloudy, trades to 30MPH; 6 to 12-foot surf on the North Shore.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 11:22 a.m.; Low 6:14 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, November 18, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: NEW QUARANTINE PLAN DRAWS CROWD
It was standing room only tonight at the first public hearing on a
proposal to reduce the length of Hawaii's animal quarantine requirement from
four months to 30 days.
About 100 people attended the state Department of Agriculture hearing,
and most of those on hand were in support of shortening the length of time
pets must be kept in quarantine when brought into the state.
Several residents testified that special exemptions from the quarantine
requirement should be made for military families, many of which return to
Hawai`i several times.
Navy Adm. Bill McDaniel said he estimates nearly 40 percent of the pets
in the state's Halawa quarantine facility belong to transferred military
families.
Although special provisions for the military would be nice, McDaniel
said, he also supported the current proposal.
The plan currently under review would shorten an animal's stay in
quarantine to one month provided certain conditions are met.
Those conditions include requiring the implantation of identification
microchips and certified examinations and vaccinations 90 days before the
pet's move. After the 30-day quarantine, the animal will have to be tested
again two months after its release.
Hawaii's current 120-day quarantine is part of the state's efforts to
keep the islands free of rabies.
The plan to reduce the length of quarantine came after state officials
looked into a new rabies test that is said to be four times more effective
than those currently in use.
""It all hinged on one particular drug test that we scrutinized, looked
at, and said it's a good enough test for us to adopt," said state
veterinarian Calvin Lum.
After the public hearing phase, which runs through Nov. 31, the
department will make a recommendation to Gov. Ben Cayetano. If he approves
the plan, it could be implemented within a month.
In an effort to bolster the governor's expressed support of shortening
the quarantine stay, a petition was circulated at tonight's meeting to be
sent directly to Cayetano.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: PRESIDENT VOWS $5 MILLION FLOOD AID
Gov. Ben Cayetano announced today that Pres. Bill Clinton has promised
$5 million in emergency aid to help Hawai`i clean up after two weeks of heavy
rains and flooding on O`ahu.
The federal funding will mostly go toward combating health hazards
caused by flood waters that state officials believe is heavily contaminated
with sewage, viruses and bacteria.
Cayetano said he and Clinton discussed the issue during a weekend golf
game in Maunawili.
Civil defense officials estimate the November storms caused nearly $13
million in damages to private and city property, and figures for the neighbor
islands and state property are yet to be compiled.
Investigators with the Federal Emergency Management Agency were joined
by city and state officials in touring some of the hardest-hit areas of
O`ahu, including parts of Wai`anae, Makaha and Waialua.
State officials initiated an aggressive public awareness campaign to
warn Honolulu residents away from standing water and to keep children from
swimming in streams and storm-made ponds.
"We're moving quickly to make sure that young people child do not play
in the water and people don't underestimate some of the health hazard danger
that we have," said Ken Sprague, state director of public works.
The area of deepest concern are on the Leeward side of O`ahu, where
flood runoff from agricultural and livestock farms have likely turned flooded
areas into serious health hazards.
"When kids are swimming in water, they're really swimming in sewage --
raw sewage -- along with whatever might wash off in the area," said state
Health Director Bruce Anderson.
In addition to chemical fertilizers, he said, contaminants could likely
also include E. Coli and Hepatitis A.
Some health problems have already been reported by some residents.
At Wai`anae Elementary today, Principal Nancy Hirahara said she has
canceled recesses until the school's playground is completely free of
standing water.
Anderson said fliers were distributed door-to-door in several
neighborhoods, advising residents to be careful for the next several weeks.
"Many of the bacteria and viruses that are associated with contaminated
water may live for some time," Anderson said.
The Health Department is also advising against fishing in both inland
streams and offshore.
O`ahu Civil Defense also issued a warning yesterday informing businesses
that provide flood control and pumping services that raising prices in a time
of emergency is illegal.
Although the sun has more or less returned to O`ahu skies, many say it
will be some time before things return to normal.
"It may be another day or two before people begin to see the ground,"
Sprague told _The Honolulu Advertiser_.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SUPPORT FOR UH FACULTY STRIKE VOTE GROWS
After two weeks of demonstrations and other activities failed to
generate a satisfactory response from the state, members of the faculty union
at the University of Hawai`i announced today that there is more talk than
ever of a strike.
Plans for a strike vote among all faculty members are moving forward,
said UHPA executive director John Radcliffe.
Unless negotiations within the next few weeks are fruitful, Radcliffe
said, the strike vote will probably be held during the first week of
December.
In anticipation of the strike vote, he said, the union has advised its
board members to schedule no travel during the holiday season.
The union also announced a noon demonstration to be held next Monday
outside the governor's mansion.
Organizers said the informational picket will both address the lack of a
contract for UH faculty, and the overall condition of higher education in
Hawai`i.
UHPA President Alexander Malahoff said UH students are encouraged to
participate in the rally, but added that the union is not looking for the
degree of energy seen at last year's Death of Education march.
Rally organizers said buses will be provided to transport students from
campus to Washington Place.
Union members have been without a contract since June of last year.
Nearly 800 days of negotiations have failed to produce an agreement, and
Radcliffe said the faculty is disturbed by being held in such extended limbo.
"Right now we're working from day to day at the grace of the Board of
Regents," he said, adding that benefits and other contract terms could be
threatened at any time.
The last proposal was put forward by the union in May, Radcliffe said,
but the state refused to accept it.
The proposal did not include salary increases, instead including
provisions calling for future raises to be tied to state revenues, according
to UHPA, and required the state to commit to improving university facilities
and strengthening the tenure system.
UHPA also unveiled two television ads at yesterday's press conference,
which started airing on local stations today. They said two more are being
produced.
If the strike is approved by faculty members, it will likely begin on
Jan. 13, the first day of classes for the spring semester.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: FIGHT BREAKS OUT AT FOOTBALL GAME
It was a contest between two arch-rivals -- the University of Hawai`i
and Brigham Young University. But the events on the field were overshadowed
by a brawl in the stands at Saturday's football game.
It was taunting between Hawai`i fans that set off the fight, witnesses
said, which occurred halfway through the fourth quarter in the seats behind
the Rainbow bench.
Two UH football players quickly jumped into the fray -- starting
quarterback Glenn Freitas and running back Quincy Jacobs.
Moments later, stadium security and Honolulu police disbursed the crowd
with pepper spray.
Freitas told reporters today that his family was the target of some of
the violence, and that he got involved only to protect his parents and
girlfriend.
He apologized for his involvement in the incident.
Jacobs, meanwhile, refused comment.
Jacobs -- who was reportedly seen throwing punches during the fight --
has already been suspended from playing after an incident earlier this year
in which he and another UH athlete assaulted Moses Goods, a men's volleyball
player, near the UH Manoa dormitories.
The UH athletics department is still conducting its own investigation,
and both Athletics Director Hugh Yoshida and Head Football Coach Fred
vonAppen had no comment this afternoon.
vonAppen's wife, Thea, told reporters yesterday that she suffered a cut
lip during the scuffle. Freitas' father was also hit.
UH lost the night's game 45-14.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: JACKSON CONCERT SELLS OUT
In a matter of hours, tickets for Michael Jackson's first solo concert
in Hawai`i sold out Saturday morning.
Honolulu residents camped out overnight at Aloha Stadium, enduring a
chilly night and frequent rain. All 36,000 tickets for the Jan. 3 concert
were snapped up, prompting promoter Tom Moffatt to announce a second concert.
Tickets for the additional show also sold out.
Moffatt said the date for the second Jackson concert hasn't been set,
but that it will likely be on Jan. 4 or 5. He said Jackson himself has ruled
out a third island concert.
Moffatt said the response for Jackson's show, part of an international
world tour, was more overwhelming than anything he's ever presented.
"I've done Billy Joel, the Eagles, Stevie Wonder," he said. "No one has
sold out a show at Aloha Stadium."
Some of the fans who didn't get tickets complained that the token system
used at the stadium box office on Saturday was unfair.
Others complained that large blocks of seats were reserved in advance.
Moffatt said he was sorry some weren't able to buy tickets, but added
that the number of seats held for the concert -- about 10 percent -- is no
higher than usual.
The reserved seats are for Jackson's guests, special holds and travel
packages being sold in Japan, he said, adding that than one percent of the
total seats are reserved for the Japanese tours.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/70, Kaua`i 81/68, Moloka`i 83/70, Maui 83/70, Hilo 80/69
CASTS: Some rain, overcast, 25MPH trades; 8 foot surf on north, west shores.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 12:17 p.m.; Low 6:47 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, November 15, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CLINTON ARRIVES IN HAWAI`I, TO STAY AT BELLOWS
Pres. Bill Clinton is in town, but sightings will be scarce as no
official engagements have been scheduled for his weekend visit.
Shortly after 7 p.m. tonight, Clinton and his wife stepped out of Air
Force One at Hickam Air Force Base. The couple is here for a three-day island
vacation that White House aides said will be strictly rest and relaxation.
Despite the heavy rains that have drenched Honolulu for the last several
days, those among the group on hand tonight said the Commander in Chief was
adamant about one aspect of his visit.
"He was talking about golf," City Managing Director Bob Fishman told
KHON-TV2. "There's no question about it."
"What he and (former) Governor Waihee were talking about was that he
would play in the rain, and that it doesn't stop him," Fishman said.
Clinton passed on a helicopter ride to his private cottage at Bellows
Air Force Base, instead opting for a presidential motorcade.
Although rain began pouring down as he left the airfield, Fishman said
he didn't know whether Clinton had been formally briefed on the flooding and
other storm damage on O`ahu.
Gov. Ben Cayetano is expected to ask Clinton for emergency federal aid
this weekend.
Fishman said there's lots of time, adding that city and state officials
are still trying to gauge the extent of the damage caused by this week's
almost constant deluge (see related story).
The Clintons will be staying in one of the military cabins near Lanikai,
and the public beaches in the area will be closed through the weekend. An
offshore Marine patrol has also been established off Waimanalo.
Although sightseeing isn't necessarily on the schedule, the First Family
will be escorted around the island by several residents.
Students and staff at the University of Hawai`i were among many groups
approached earlier this week to serves as drivers for the presidential
motorcade.
The president is expected to leave on Monday to attend an international
economic summit in the Philippines next week.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: FLOODING WOES CONTINUE, GOVERNOR SURVEYS DAMAGE
Heavy rain continued to fall on O`ahu today, worsening flood conditions
in several areas and prompting health officials to issue warnings.
Residents have seen at least $1.7 million in property damage as a result
of the severe weather, and flooding has caused nearly $10 million in damage
to public property.
The estimates come from civil defense officials, who today issued only a
preliminary islandwide damage estimate. The numbers do not include state
property, nor areas currently inaccessible because of flooding.
With more stormy weather expected over the weekend, officials said, the
figures will likely rise when Honolulu finally has a chance to dry out.
Earlier this week, Mayor Jeremy Harris said he is prepared to declare a
city emergency. Meanwhile, Gov. Ben Cayetano may ask Pres. Clinton tomorrow
to declare parts of O`ahu disaster areas.
Before Cayetano met Clinton at Hickam Air Force Base, he toured some of
the hardest-hit areas today -- including Makaha Valley Towers, the site of a
massive mudslide that threw cars against the building.
Councilmember John DeSoto, who represents the Leeward area, accompanied
the governor on his visit.
"I've lived here my whole life, and I've never seen anything like this,"
DeSoto said. "When you see waterfalls on this side, we know we're in trouble
for sure."
As many as 30 cars are still buried under several tons of mud and
boulders, which state crews began hauling away today. Work also continued on
a drainage channel running the length of the complex, which officials hope
will divert runoff away from the high-rises.
If the rains continue, there may be a need to evacuate residents from
the complex, Cayetano said.
Flooding was particularly severe in Haleiwa today; so much so that O`ahu
Civil Defense has set up a command post in the area and the state Department
of Health is warning the public to keep away.
Of greatest concern, officials said, are the widespread reports of
sewage spills and cesspool overflows.
Fire department crews have been working for several hours to pump water
out of the overflowed area, and health officials have sampled the water to
test it for dangerous bacteria.
High surf has kept many north- and west-facing beaches closed, and city
administrators have closed all Honolulu golf courses at least through Sunday.
Rainfall records for the month of November have been broken in just over
a dozen days of wet weather. More than 15 inches of rain has been recorded at
Honolulu International Airport since the General Election.
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Subject: STUDENT JOURNALISTS WIN POLICE UNION LAWSUIT
The Hawai`i Supreme Court today ruled that the police department must
disclose the names of officers facing disciplinary action or dismissal.
The decision is being hailed as a victory for the University of Hawai`i
chapter of the Society for Professional Journalists, which sued SHOPO, the
state police officers' union, for the names in 1993.
"The student journalists at the university have taken on Goliath and
struck him down," Jeff Portnoy, attorney for the student group, told _Ka Leo
O Hawai`i_.
Portnoy said the decision is a win for both SPJ and the public.
At the heart of the dispute was a state law requiring disclosure of the
records of public employees involved in disciplinary action. SHOPO maintained
that only the names of officers ultimately discharged should be made public.
After SPJ filed its lawsuit, the state legislature passed a measure in
1995 exempting police officers from the public disclosure law.
Portnoy said the ruling affirms the public's right to know and the
importance of keeping government offices under public scrutiny.
As a result of today's ruling, Portnoy said, SHOPO must release the
names of any officer disciplined between 1991 and 1995 within 45 days.
The attorney for the police union, however, said the scope of the ruling
is far narrower.
SHOPO attorney Michael Green said the union only needs to disclose the
names of four officers.
"The supreme court had the right and power to order the disclosure of a
lot more than four," Green told KITV-4. "If he (Portnoy) calls that a
victory, it's a sad victory."
Green said the ruling is a disservice to the people who risk their lives
to insure the public's safety.
"I can't believe the only way to deter police misconduct is to embarrass
or humiliate a policeman and his family," he said.
Representatives from other public employee unions said they're watching
the case, noting that the privacy of its members was traditionally considered
a part of a negotiated contract.
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 84/71, Kaua`i 81/69, Moloka`i 81/71, Maui 80/69, Hilo 79/70
CASTS: Some showers, 15MPH trades; 10-foot surf on north, west shores.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 8:19 a.m.; Low 3:57 p.m.
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