BE THERE SATURDAY
Showing posts with label Hunananiho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunananiho. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Labels:
Aloha Aina,
Free Hawaii,
Haleakala,
Hawaiian Kingdom,
Hunananiho,
Kahuku,
Kalaeloa,
Ku Kiai Mauna,
Mauna Kea
Friday, March 17, 2023
Labels:
Aloha Aina,
Free Hawaii,
Haleakala,
Hawaiian Kingdom,
Hunananiho,
Kahuku,
Kalaeloa,
Ku Kiai Mauna,
Mauna Kea
Saturday, April 11, 2020
SENDING BULLDOZERS TO BURIAL SITE - KIRK CALDWELLʻS BIGGEST GAFFE YET
People are getting sick, some have died, businesses are closed down, kids can’t go to school, families are shut in their houses, afraid and bored and climbing the walls. Everybody is worried about basic survival stuff, and Honolulu’s mayor decided to roll out the bulldozers on his controversial pet project.
That could be the biggest gaffe of Caldwell’s gaffe-filled administration. Can’t say for sure, though. There’s still time for him to top it.
There are missteps that people forgive and forget, and those that are so convoluted that it’s hard to get worked up about it after enough time passes and campaign season rolls around again. Gaffes that are hard to sum up in a short phrase or require too much backstory to explain, or the ones that are achingly human and relatable, don’t tend to be fatal flaws.
But then there are those misdeeds — like this misdeed — that defy explanation, can’t be chalked up to “I’ve done that, too,” and can be described in a short sentence, like this: Caldwell sent out bulldozers to dig up an ancient burial ground when those who have opposed the project were locked down because of a pandemic. That’s memorable. That’s indelible.
Just about every day since the new coronavirus took over our lives, Caldwell has been hosting his own news briefings, parsing out exactly what you can and can’t do and where you can and can’t go on Oahu beaches, emphasizing that everyone needs to hunker down and focus on what really matters, peppering his scolding with, “We’re all in this together.”
To spew all of that hectoring and then send out a construction crew to dig up land that people have been insisting contains ancient burials is … I don’t even know the word. Some have called it sneaky. UH law school professor Ken Lawson called Caldwell crooked. Lt. Gov. Josh Green, Caldwell’s most feared competitor in his quest to be Hawaii’s next governor, called it “a really bad call.” It’s tone-deaf and irresponsible.
When he announced the resumption of construction, Caldwell said it was essential to keep county crews working. Uh, don’t they have storm drains to clear or park restrooms to clean? Another implausible explanation from the mayor, revealing his utter disdain for the public’s intelligence.
And then a bone from an ancient burial was found on the site, just like protesters kept saying would happen, and Caldwell was forced to backtrack. He didn’t apologize, though, or say that maybe his timing was off, and he used the squishy word “pause” to describe shutting down work on the project.
Calling out the bulldozers on Sherwoods during an islandwide lockdown may be one of the bigger missteps of the Caldwell years, but he still has a few months in office to stubbornly mess up even more. And who knows? He might outdo himself and — burials be damned, protester safety be damned, political career be damned — send the bulldozers out to Sherwoods again.
Tuesday, April 07, 2020
HONOLULU MAYOR BLASTED FOR PULLING FAST ONE THEN PUTS PROJECT ON HOLD
ACTION ALERT: Call Mayor Caldwell At (808) 768-4141 & Tell Him To STOP Construction PERMANENTLY At Hunananiho (Sherwood Forest) Or Email Him - mayor@honolulu.gov
Hawai`i Nerws Now - April 7, 2020
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell announced Tuesday that he’s putting construction of a controversial park project in Waimanalo on hold, saying that the risk of protests is too high during the pandemic.
He said he would “pause” the project as the city consults with the Oahu Burial Council and others.
“I continue to believe this is a project that can be valuable to the future of the Waimanalo community. I urge everyone to continue to follow the stay-at-home order to keep yourselves and your family safe."
Construction resumed at the project Monday, triggering a small protest. But n the wake of the discovery of the bone, believed to be iwi kupuna, some were anticipating larger protests at the site in the days to come.
ACTION ALERT: Call Mayor Caldwell At (808) 768-4141 & Tell Him To STOP Construction PERMANENTLY At Hunananiho (Sherwood Forest) Or Email Him - mayor@honolulu.gov
Hawai`i Nerws Now - April 7, 2020
Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell announced Tuesday that he’s putting construction of a controversial park project in Waimanalo on hold, saying that the risk of protests is too high during the pandemic.
The announcement comes a day after a small human bone fragment was found at the site.
“I greatly support the First Amendment rights of all members of our community,” Mayor Kirk Caldwell said, in a statement. “But I am greatly concerned with gatherings during this time.”
He said he would “pause” the project as the city consults with the Oahu Burial Council and others.
“I continue to believe this is a project that can be valuable to the future of the Waimanalo community. I urge everyone to continue to follow the stay-at-home order to keep yourselves and your family safe."
Construction resumed at the project Monday, triggering a small protest. But n the wake of the discovery of the bone, believed to be iwi kupuna, some were anticipating larger protests at the site in the days to come.
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