Wednesday, January 9, 2013
TO SERVE MAN
TO SERVE MAN: A post
in Civil Beat's "The Beat" blog regarding our newly elected
2nd CD Congressperson Tulsi Gabbard's first visit to Kauai after
being sworn-in later this month had us scratching our head today.
The lede sounded promising for those
who thought they would have a chance to meet with her and give her
their mana'o. It said:
Hawaii’s newest representative in
Congress has scheduled her first week of official Hawaii meetings.
She’ll be meeting with officials
and constituents throughout the 2nd Congressional District to discuss
issues and her recent assignments to the House Homeland Security and
Foreign Affairs Committees.
Meeting with constituents? Well maybe
not so much. The schedule for Kaua`i?:
Sunday, January 13: Kauai
At the Kaua’i Veterans Center in
Līhuʻe, Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard will hold a series of five
meetings today related to her committee work and issues before the
Congress. She will meet with community organizations, transportation
officials from the airport and harbors divisions, native Hawaiian
organizations, local businesses and other elected officials.
Seems like Ms Gabbard knows who butters
her bread with meetings scheduled for every kind of special interest
group leaving no time to sit down with the average consistent.
With the estimated million dollars a
day needed to run for re-election did we expect anything different?
Another Civil Beat article
today, this one from Ian Lind about the Ombudsman's office, also
caught out eye. The headline says it all: "No Teeth For
Ombudsman But 'We Can Gum Them To Death'"
The interview with Ombudsman Robin
Matsunaga is a case study in how oversight agencies shouldn't work.
It describes how they quietly nudge the offenders until they are on
the verge of being exposed and then allow them to quietly comply.
It's what allows abuse of process to
continue unabated. Knowing there are no consequences to misbehavior
encourage that misbehavior to continue.
The offenders know they can offend and
offend and offend and if one case finally gets so bad they are about
to be exposed they can just say "okay- we'll comply in this one
case but we'll never change our attitude toward compliance with the
rules or law." This rewards abuse of those the offending agency
is supposed to serve but is, rather, ignoring.
Anyone out there who hasn't experienced
the typical runaround has never tried to deal with the local
bureaucracy. The "Hawai`i way" of doing things explains why
nothing ever changes even when violations of law are blatant on the
part of these agencies.
It's the Minotaur syndrome; they'll do
what's wrong as long as they can- and then there's no penalty because
the oversight agency thinks its job is to get compliance that one
time rather than to change the culture. That's why Marion Higa has
been successful and the ombudsman’s office hasn't.
But you knew that, didn't you?
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1 comment:
If you look at who she's meeting with (on Maui Kahului Harbor, Homeland Security, Coast Guard, Vet organization) This is obviously a working trip for her committee assignments on Homeland Security and Veterans Affairs.
So rather than diss her, I'd praise her for going above and beyond on her due diligence.
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