Environmental activist Fern
Anuenue Rosenstiel's campaign for the North Shore (14th district)
State House of Representatives seat got an unintentional boost last
Saturday when her opponent, former Councilmember and assistant to
Mayor Bernard Carvalho, Nadine K. Nakamura published an inexplicable
letter
to the editor asking voters to "be sure and get the facts"
regarding her supposed "longstanding support for small farms
and local food sustainability," revealing what she claims was "a
telephone campaign from a Mainland group that is misrepresenting my
position."
The facts are that, as a councilmember, Nakamura was instrumental
in "watering down" and trying to indefinitely defer Bill
2491 (Ordinance 960) during what was known as "Text-gate"
and later, as Mayor Bernard Carvalho's top lieutenant, supporting and
engineering his veto of the bill as reported
in 2013 by PNN.
In her LTE Nakamura didn't identify the supposed "mainland
group" and didn't address her support for the chemical
companies, nor did she discuss actual local food production
agriculture or small, "healthy food" or organic farms,
referring instead to her support for the corporate "Value Added"
and "Kaua`i Grown" programs.
Rosenstiel is an environmental scientist who was one of the
leaders in creation and passage the Ordinance 960 requiring chemical
companies on Kaua`i to disclose specifics regarding the types,
locations and amounts of Restricted Use Pesticides (RUPs) and
experimental genetically modified organism (GMO) crops used and the
maintenance of modest buffer zones, especially around schools,
hospitals, waterways and residences. Rosenstiel's testimony on the
bill can be seen here.
Rosenstiel, who was born and raised on Kaua`i, has been a staunch
supporter of the healthy food/sustainability movement. Her platform
calls for "Food Production Agriculture" saying "(i)t's
important to our entire community and our ongoing survival that we
put our attention to supporting food production agriculture, farmers
and food security. We must support food production agriculture
parcels and programs and projects to get farmers initiated and
self-sustaining."
The divisive use of the "dog whistle" term "
Mainland group" has been at the heart of an often divisive
split in the community between the Chamber of Commerce crowd and
employees of chemical giants like Syngenta, BASF and Dow on one side
and members of the community who have battled for years for
disclosure of and protections against the use of RUPs and GMOs on the
other.
The term is actually a misnomer because many of the families
affected are multi-generational former plantation families, some of
whom sued and won a settlement against Pioneer for damages to their
homes due to wind-blown "drift."
The story behind Nakamura's attempt to parse and re-write her
record was reported
by PNN shortly after the Oct 16, 2013 marathon
county council committee ,meeting (see newspaper report) and
poat-3 a.m. vote on the bill. As a councilmember Nakamura was been
observed discussing strategy with and taking directions from
Carvalho's then chief political advisor, Beth Tokioka, with whom
Nakamura- along with Councilmember JoAnn Yukimura- had been texting
all day on the 15th and into the night of the 16th during the
meeting.
Following the passage of the bill Tokioka quit her long-time
county job as confidant to three different mayors and went to work
doing PR for Syngenta and right after the bill passed Nakamura was
appointed County Manager, Carvalho's "deputy mayor," where
she backed his eventually overridden veto of the bill. Tokioka was
recently appointed to the county Board of Water supply
Syngenta has sued the county over the bill and the matter is
awaiting a decision by the Federal 9th Circuit Appellate court.
The oddest part of this is Nakamura's decision to publicly repeat
allegations about her lukewarm- or even lack of- support for small
farms and sustainable or organic local food production, countering it
the claim by citing her promotion of things like "value-added
products" and the "Kaua`i Made" programs when most see
the real issue as centering around promoting actual food production
for local use vs experimental "seed" production which
supplies no food whatsoever- a subject that has, due to the LTE, now
been raised to the forefront in District 14 which has thus-far
avoided having experimental pesticides and GMOs grown there.
For the full details of the "Text-gate"
story go to
http://parxnewsdaily.blogspot.com/2013/11/mayors-political-advisor-tokioka-caught.html
The primary election is on August 13 and walk-in voting begins on
Aug. 1 while absentee mail-in ballots are currently being delivered
to voters' mailboxes.
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Thursday, July 21, 2016
ACCOUNT-A-BULL-ITY
"Stop us before we appropriate again?"
The now-defeated proposed Kaua`i charter amendment to put 1% of real property tax revenue was an incredibly blatant political move to protect the Kaua`i County Council from itself and allow them to shirk their decision-making responsibilities so they can't be held accountable.
The whole problem is that visitors do not pay their fair share of taxes and vehicle fees especially without our fair share of the Transient Accommodation Tax (TAT) from the legislature.
So why not raise property taxes on resort-zoned properties and other visitor accommodations? Gee- you don't think it's because the tourism industry sector is the biggest campaign contributor do ya?. Or the fact that we couldn't even pass a decent lobbyist law (such as the one Councilmember Hooser proposed before the rest of the council watered it down to irrelevancy).
We are being robbed blind by the visitor industry. Not only does that keep real property taxes on homeowner-occupants high but keeps residents' fees unfairly high for instance when car rental companies register their vehicles in Honolulu.
And those "jobs jobs jobs" they create are predominantly low (if not minimum) wage putting even more financial stress on residents and the system in general.
God forbid, since the state legislature won't do it, we pass a $15 minimum wage at the county level- something not forbidden under the state's $10,10 minimum wage law. An island like this is the perfect place for a $15/hr minimum wage because people can't just go to a neighboring county for goods and services negating the business' usual (fallacious to being with) arguments against it.
It seems like the concept of progressive taxation has never occurred to the council’s Tea Party majority who want to raise vehicle registration and weight taxes... much less real property taxation where resort and speculative visitor accommodation don't pay their fair share when compared to what they are costing us all.
There's your $100 million in road repairs- a figure that was seemingly plucked out of thin (hot) air - in the first place.