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    Feds issue ‘targeted’ Jones Act waiver for ship bringing fuel to Puerto Rico

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    The following is a news release that was issued by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii on Sept. 28, 2022.
    __________

    Keli‘i Akina, Grassroot Institute of Hawaii president, welcomes the waiver but said it should be broadened to all ships and extended for a full year

    HONOLULU, Sept. 28, 2022 >> Hurricane-devastated Puerto Rico will receive a temporary waiver from the 1920 federal maritime law known as the Jones Act, according to U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas

    “In response to urgent and immediate needs of the Puerto Rican people in the aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, I have approved a temporary and targeted Jones Act waiver to ensure that the people of Puerto Rico have sufficient diesel to run generators needed for electricity and the functioning critical facilities as they recover from Hurricane Fiona,” Mayorkas stated earlier today.[1]

    The waiver will apply to the GH Parks, a Marshall Islands-flagged tanker carrying 300,000 barrels of diesel fuel from Texas. The GH Parks requested the waiver on Sunday and had been waiting off Puerto Rico’s southern coast for a response.[2] 

    Keli’i Akina, president and CEO of the Grassroot Institute, which yesterday petitioned President Joe Biden for a more general waiver,[3] welcomed the announcement, but said Mayorkas’ order should be broadened and extended.

    Keli‘i Akina

    “We are glad to hear that the Biden administration will allow critical fuel supplies on the GH Parks to reach the residents of Puerto Rico,” Akina said, “but the waiver should be broadened to apply to all ships and extended for at least a full year to be sufficiently effective.”

    Akina said the limited waiver “recognizes that the Jones Act imposes significant economic costs on the island’s residents, especially during times of crisis, such as now with Hurricane Fiona and back in 2017 when the territory was slammed by Hurricane Maria.”

    He said ideally, the exemption should be permanent, to eliminate potentially harmful delays in future relief efforts — as well as to just help improve the quality of life for Puerto Ricans under normal circumstances.

    In his letter to the president yesterday, Akina said, “The people of Puerto Rico will need every spare dollar as they get back on their feet, and a one-year Jones Act waiver would help mitigate the high costs of rebuilding,”[4]

    Mayorkas’ decision to exempt the GH Parks from the Jones Act follows a week of media and political outrage over the Biden administration’s reluctance to waive the 102-year-old law, which restricts shipments between U.S. ports to only ships that are U.S. built and flagged, and mostly owned and crewed by Americans.

    The editorial boards of The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Examiner all called for reform,[5] as did many members of Congress, including U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and U.S. Rep. Nydia Velásquez.[6]

    Earlier this week, Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi wrote Biden a letter asking that the GH Parks be allowed to dock. Pierluisi stated that “A shortage of diesel and other fuel products will have an impact on our ability to provide essential services to citizens in Puerto Rico, thus affecting public health, security and continuity of government functions.”[7]

    Hawaii’s congressional delegation has not been silent on this matter, either. 

    “I’m in contact with the White House, and I’m hopeful that they’ll have this [waiver situation] resolved very, very shortly,” Hawaii’s own U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz told media outlet Latino Rebels earlier today.[8]

    Akina repeated that he welcomes Mayorkas’ “temporary and targeted” waiver for the GH Parks.

    “The Department of Homeland Security made a good call in granting this waiver,” Akina said. “Let’s hope members of Congress look to reform the Jones Act in more meaningful ways in the coming months, to ameliorate the suffering in Puerto Rico and the high costs the law imposes on other coastal areas.” 

    For more information or to arrange an interview with Akina, please contact Mark Coleman at 808-386-9047 or info@grassrootinstitute.org. 
    ___________
    [1] “Statement by Secretary Mayorkas on the Approval of a Jones Act Waiver for Puerto Rico,” U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Sept. 28, 2022.

    [2] David Begnaud and Emily Mae Czachor, “Puerto Rico governor calls on U.S. to allow ships carrying vital diesel fuel to dock at hurricane-ravaged island,” CBS News, Sept. 26, 2022.”

    [3] Keli’i Akina, “Letter to President Biden: Grant Jones Act waiver to Puerto Rico,” Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, Sept. 27, 2022.

    [4] Ibid.

    [5] “Kill the Jones Act,” The Boston Globe, Sept. 24, 2022; “Puerto Rico’s membership in the U.S. should come with free shipping,” The Washington Post, Sept. 26, 2022; “The Jones Act Strands Hurricane Aid in Puerto Rico,” The Wall Street Journal, Sept. 27, 2022; “Save Puerto Rico and repeal the Jones Act now,” Washington Examiner, Sept. 27, 2022.

    [6 Tweet from Sen. Marco Rubio, Sept. 26, 2022; Letter from U.S. Rep Nydia Velásquez, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, et al., Sept. 22, 2022. 

    [7] Syra Ortiz-Blanes and Alex Roarty, “In letter to Biden, Puerto Rico governor requests Jones Act waiver to ease fuel shortage,” Miami Herald, Sept. 27, 2022.

    [8] Carlos Edill Berríos Polanco, “Puerto Rico, US Leaders Seek Jones Act Waiver For Puerto Rico After Fiona,” Latino Rebels, Sept. 28, 2022.

    Grassroot Institute of Hawaii requests Jones Act waiver for Puerto Rico

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    The U.S. territory is again facing a humanitarian crisis after being hit by Hurricane Fiona, but the 1920 federal law is hindering outside aid

    HONOLULU, Sept. 27, 2022 >> The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii today asked that President Joe Biden use his authority to give Puerto Rico a one-year waiver from the Jones Act to assist in recovery efforts after Hurricane Fiona.[1]

    The latest hurricane to hit the U.S. territory smashed into the island on Sept. 18, flooding vast parts of it, killing 21 residents and leaving almost 1 million people without electricity. The disaster threatens to stunt the island’s growth for years to come, especially since Puerto Rico has not fully recovered after Hurricane Maria’s devastation in 2017.[2]

    Keli‘i Akina, president and CEO of the Institute, said, “A one-year waiver from the 102-year-old maritime law is a humanitarian necessity, important to relieving suffering and helping the 3 million people of Puerto Rico rebuild and recover.”

    Akina noted that the Jones Act is often heralded as a bulwark for the U.S. maritime industry and critical to U.S. national security. But its effectiveness at achieving these goals is in serious dispute.

    “If U.S. security really does depend on a privately owned fleet, there must be a more equitable way to pay for such a policy,” Akina said. “Asking the residents of Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, Guam and other areas dependent on ocean shipping to pay for a law that ostensibly benefits the entire country is simply unfair.

    “But more than being unfair,” he continued, “the Jones Act hinders the U.S. military’s ability to provide disaster assistance. Both the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Puerto Rico’s National Guard have mobilized in Puerto Rico, and their ability to effectively respond with supplies from the mainland will be limited by high Jones Act shipping costs.”

    Current law allows the Secretary of Defense to waive the Jones Act in order to “address an immediate adverse effect on military operations,” and the president could direct U.S.Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to do just that.[3]

    The Institute joins an ever-growing group of media outlets, advocacy organizations and members of Congress and local governments who have been calling for Jones Act relief for Puerto Rico.

    Last week, a group of eight congressional Democratic lawmakers called on Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas to grant Puerto Rico a one-year waiver from the law.[4]

    “The island was already suffering financial difficulties when Hurricane Fiona delivered another crippling blow,” the group wrote.

    The New York City Council also weighed in, writing to Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer that, “A waiver for Puerto Rico during this time will allow a faster and cheaper supply of essentials to reach the islands.”[5]

    In the past few days, the editorial boards of The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Examiner have also criticized the Jones Act.

    “Once again, Puerto Ricans are paying the price for an antiquated shipping law that makes food and other goods more expensive on the island,” The Boston Globe said. “The law is inexcusable in ordinary times — and downright scandalous now, when the island is reeling from yet another natural disaster.”[6]

    Said The Washington Post: “The Jones Act has not stopped the long-term decline of U.S. shipbuilding or the rise of Asian and European competitors that now dominate global sealift capacity. But by limiting Puerto Rico’s choices, it has driven up the island’s import costs.”[7]

    In today’s Wall Street Journal, the editors noted that, “Puerto Rico is the home of Fort Buchanan, the U.S. Army’s ‘Sentinel of the Caribbean,’ so perhaps there’s an argument that it harms national defense if the island is in chaos.”[8]

    The Washington Examiner wrote: “In normal times, the Jones Act causes consumers to pay needlessly high prices. In times of crisis, it can have tragic consequences, which is what is happening in Puerto Rico right now.”[9]

    These latest calls for a Jones Act waiver for Puerto Rico come on the heels of the federal government being asked to grant Jones Act relief to the six states of New England. The governors of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont asked in July for a Jones Act waiver so their states could be sure of obtaining enough liquid natural gas during the coming winter.[10]

    Currently there are no Jones Act-compliant LNG tankers in the U.S. fleet to transport LNG to other parts of the country from its source on the Gulf Coast, and even if a U.S. shipyard could build one, it would likely cost up to $500 more than the world price — and certainly not be ready by this winter.[11]

    Earlier this year, Akina wrote the president requesting a Jones Act waiver for Hawaii, which had just been cut off from fuel imports from Russia as part of America’s response to that country’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Hawaii had been importing up to a third of its oil each year from Russia because the Jones Act makes it more expensive to buy oil from U.S. sources. Without access to Russian imports, Hawaii faced significantly higher fuel costs from having to use Jones Act ships, even though U.S. oil might have cost less.[12]

    U.S. Rep. Ed Case of Hawaii also asked for a Jones Act waiver,[13] and in May, so did the Maui County Council.[14] Unfortunately, the Biden administration did not issue one.

    Akina said the latest calls for Jones Act reform confirm that the Grassroot Institute, Case and the Maui County Council were on the right track.

    Just a month ago, on his ThinkTech Hawaii program “Hawaii Together,” Akina interviewed Luis Ponce of Boricuas Unidos en la Diaspora, who explained why the Jones Act poses a permanent danger to the people of Puerto Rico.

    “We don’t have the proper tools, the proper vessels or the proper legislation to actually keep Puerto Rico stocked, keep Puerto Rico safe during an emergency, like with [Hurricane] Maria or an even greater natural disaster, which everybody’s expecting,” Ponce said.[15]

    Akina said that a Jones Act waiver for Puerto Rico would be an important recognition at the highest levels of government of the harms the 1920 law imposes on all U.S. communities, especially noncontiguous states and territories such as Puerto Rico and Hawaii that do not have access to other forms of transport, such as trucks and trains.

    “As the dire situation in Puerto Rico demonstrates once again, the Jones Act is an impediment to economic prosperity in good times and an actual humanitarian threat during times of crisis,” Akina wrote in his Sept. 27 letter to Biden.

    “I sincerely hope you will ignore the small but powerful Jones Act constituency and grant waivers for the greater good of Puerto Rico and all Americans who are being harmed by this anachronistic law.”

    For more information or to arrange an interview with Akina, please contact Mark Coleman at 808-386-9047 or info@grassrootinstitute.org.
    ________________

    [1] Letter to President Joe Biden from Keli’i Akina of the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii,Sept. 27. 2022, copied to U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Hawaii’s congressional delegates: U.S. Sens. Brian Schatz and Mazie Hirono and U.S. Reps. Ed Case and Kai Kahele.

    [2] Joseph Wilkinson, 21 Deaths in Puerto Rico Associated with Hurricane Fiona,” New York Daily News, Sept. 24, 2022; Jaclyn Diaz, “5 numbers that show Hurricane Fiona’s devastating impact on Puerto Rico,” NPR, Sept. 23, 2022.

    [3] “46 U.S. Code § 501 — Waiver of navigation and vessel-inspection laws,” Legal Information Institute, accessed Sept. 27, 2022.

    [4] Letter from U.S. Rep Nydia Velásquez, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, et al., Sept. 22, 2022.

    [5] “In the Aftermath of Hurricane Fiona, New York City Council Calls for Jones Act Waiver in Puerto Rico,” New York City Council, Sept. 26, 2022.

    [6] “Kill the Jones Act,” The Boston Globe, Sept. 24, 2022.

    [7] “Puerto Rico’s membership in the U.S. should come with free shipping,” The Washington Post, Sept. 26, 2022.

    [8] “The Jones Act Strands Hurricane Aid in Puerto Rico,” The Wall Street Journal, Sept. 27, 2022.

    [9]  “Save Puerto Rico and repeal the Jones Act now,” Washington Examiner, Sept. 27, 2022.

    [10] Letter from Govs. Charles Baker, Ned Lamont, Janet Mills, Christopher Sununu, Daniel McKee and Philip Scott, July 27, 2022.

    [11] Colin Grabow, “New England Governors Seek Jones Act Relief as Spike in Winter Heating Bills Looms,” Cato Institute, Aug. 26, 2022.

    [12] “Text of Grassroot Institute request to President Biden for Jones Act waiver for fuel imports,” Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, March 3, 2022.

    [13] “Case Asks President To Waive Jones Act To Facilitate Available and Affordable Shipping Of US Oil From US Ports To Hawaii To Replace Banned Russian Oil Imports,” Press release from U.S. Rep. Ed Case, March 8, 2022.

    [14] Michael Tsai, “Maui County Council asks for Jones Act waiver,” Spectrum News Hawaii, April 1, 2022.

    [15] “How the Jones Act affects Puerto Rico; ‘the uncanny parallels’ with Hawaii,” Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, Aug. 31, 2022.

    Letter to President Biden: Grant Jones Act waiver to Puerto Rico

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    Sept. 27, 2022

    The Honorable Joseph R. Biden
    President of the United States
    The White House
    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
    Washington, D.C. 20500

    Dear Mr. President:

    In the wake of Hurricane Fiona’s destruction, and on behalf of the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, I ask that you grant Puerto Rico a one-year exemption from the Jones Act. 

    A one-year waiver from the 102-year-old maritime law is a humanitarian necessity, critical to relieving suffering and helping the 3 million people of Puerto Rico rebuild and recover.

    Hurricane Fiona hit Puerto Rico on Sept. 18 and drenched the island with 30 inches of rain, causing flash flooding and leaving more than 900,000 people without power. So far, at least 21 people have died as a result.

    Fiona’s havoc exacerbates the damage caused by Hurricane Maria, which in 2017 claimed almost 3,000 lives and caused $40 billion in damage. Five years later, Puerto Rico still has not fully recovered. 

    The Jones Act is partly to blame for this slow recovery. It has long been a drain on Puerto Rico’s economy. Research estimates that the law costs Puerto Rico as much as $1.5 billion annually, with consumers of food and beverages losing as much as $367 million.

    Furthermore, because there are no liquid natural gas tankers compliant with the Jones Act, Puerto Rico must import all of its LNG from foreign sources — even though the U.S. is the world’s largest LNG producer. Without access to cheap U.S. LNG, Puerto Ricans must pay inflated costs for the fuel, which generates more than 40% of the island’s electricity. 

    The people of Puerto Rico will need every spare dollar as they get back on their feet, and a one-year Jones Act waiver would help mitigate the high costs of rebuilding. 

    The Jones Act is often heralded as a bulwark for the U.S. maritime industry and critical to U.S. national security. But its effectiveness at achieving these goals is in serious dispute. If U.S. security really does depend on a privately owned fleet, there must be a more equitable way to pay for such a policy. Asking the residents of Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, Guam and other U.S. communities dependent on ocean shipping to pay for a law that ostensibly benefits the entire country is simply unfair. 

    But more than being unfair, the Jones Act hinders the U.S. military’s ability to provide disaster assistance. Both the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Puerto Rico’s National Guard have mobilized in Puerto Rico, and their ability to effectively respond with supplies from the mainland will be limited by high Jones Act shipping costs.

    As the dire situation in Puerto Rico demonstrates once again, the Jones Act is an impediment to economic prosperity in good times and an actual humanitarian threat during times of crisis. 

    Therefore, on behalf of the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, I ask that you immediately use your executive powers or other legal means to grant a one-year Jones Act waiver to Puerto Rico, in order to provide it with quick access to less expensive materials for cleanup, rebuilding and recovery. 

    We also ask that you quickly approve any and all short-term waiver requests in Puerto Rico.

    I sincerely hope you will ignore the small but powerful Jones Act constituency and grant waivers for the greater good of Puerto Rico and all Americans who are being harmed by this anachronistic law.

    Thank you for your consideration.

    E hana kākou (Let’s work together),

    Keli‘i Akina
    President and CEO
    Grassroot Institute of Hawaii

    CC: U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin
    U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz
    U.S. Sen. Mazie Hirono
    U.S. Rep. Ed Case
    U.S. Rep. Kai Kahele

    Maui housing bill seriously flawed in July, and even more so now

    By Mark Coleman

    An affordable housing bill that was “recommitted” by the Maui County in July is coming back for review on Tuesday, Sept. 27, but the bill is still seriously flawed, if not worse than before.

    In July, Joe Kent, institute executive vice president, submitted written and oral testimony regarding Bill 107, which at the time sought only to establish “a new method of determining the sales price of an affordable dwelling unit,” by including “the total housing costs associated with home ownership such as principal, interest, taxes, homeowner’s insurance, private mortgage insurance and homeowner’s association dues.”

    Kent said at the time that the bill, “though well-intentioned, could cause homebuilders to stop building affordable homes … because [it] would reduce the sale price of a home by approximately 20% to 22%, which would virtually wipe out any profit homebuilders currently enjoy and significantly reduce the financial incentive for homebuilders to invest in projects.”

    Now the bill is back, more complicated and problematic than ever, stating additionally that it would create a program to “subsidize homebuyers when a developer does not receive direct County subsidies.”

    In his latest testimony, Kent pointed out that such subsidies would either be “insufficient to cover homebuilders’ losses due to the price cap, or would commit the County to massive spending increases. The latter option is probable, since the subsidy’s design is unclear and the cost of producing housing on Maui continues to increase.”

    He concluded: “In light of the uncertainty surrounding the financial aspects of Bill 107, I suggest the Council take the time to study the full potential effects of this ordinance on the local economy and Hawaii’s housing market as a whole. Rushing this bill through would only create heavy-handed and costly regulations — the opposite of what is needed to provide more housing for Maui residents.”

    Meanwhile, we are reminded of the words of the great French economist Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850): “We have tried so many things; when shall we try the simplest of all: freedom?”
    __________

    Mark Coleman is managing editor and communications director at the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii.

    Hawaii All American Rodeo in Waimanlo is Back After a Three Year Hiatus!

    The State’s Largest Rodeo Returns to New Town & Country Stables in Waimanalo after a three year hiatus! Four Exciting shows Thursday September 29 th , Friday the 30th, Saturday October 1, and The Championship Finals on Sunday the 2nd.

    Hawaii’s Queen of Country, Dita Holifield, has stepped up to the plate again for the 7th year to host this annual event featuring Hawaii’s top Male, Female & Keiki Paniolos matching their skills in Hawaii’s most extreme sport…Rodeo! Over 120 top outer-Island and Honolulu based contestants will match up their horsemanship skills against over a hundred head of cattle to win their share of the biggest purse ever offered in the State… Over $60,000 in added money alone! Just Announced Nashville Recording artist Michael Warren performs an acoustic country music set before each show.

    Thursday September 29th at 7pm is Opening night. Doors open two hours prior all four shows. Each show will feature a myriad of 11 exciting rodeo events including:

    • Bull Riding
    • Ranch Bronc Riding
    • Double Mugging
    • *Union Local Chute Double Mugging (Union members competition)
    • Wahine Barrel Racing
    • Keiki Barrel Racing (12 & under)
    • Match Barrel Racing(co-ed)
    • Wahine Steer Undecorating
    • Invitational Team Roping
    • Youth Break Away Roping (17 & under)
    • Match Pole Bending (new event)

    This is a perfect family friendly event with plenty of keiki and family activities including a Na Keiki Paniolo Family Petting Zoo & Pony Rides, Aloun Farm’s Half-Time Keiki Stick Horse Races, Vendor Village, Automotive and Motorcycle Displays, and more!


    A country style selection of tasty food and beverages will be available to purchase from Tex 808 BBQ, Teddy’s Bigger Burger, Budweiser’s Country Cantina, and fresh Waimanalo Farm’s Lemonade, just to name a few. The All American Rodeo is committed to the local community in our island home. Kaneohe Marine Corp MCCS Single Soldiers, Kailua High School Women’s volleyball team, The High School Rodeo Foundation, and The Miss Rodeo scholarship pageant.


    Discount Pre-Sale tickets are available for purchase online. Walk-up Tickets may also be purchased on event days subject to availability. Advance ticket purchase is strongly encouraged.
    PARKING: Due to high traffic volume, early arrival is suggested.

    Tickets: https://honoluluboxoffice.ticketspice.com/all-american-rodeo

    What we can learn from other states getting it right

    By Keli‘i Akina

    Greetings from 35,000 feet! Through the clouds below me, the Great Plains are rolling by. This bird’s-eye view of our nation is a metaphor for how my colleagues and I at the Grassroot Institute have spent the past week. 

    Over the last several days, we have been meeting with members of other state think tanks, talking about new policy ideas, being briefed on new research and learning new strategies. Now, we are headed home, bringing new resources to the table in our efforts to to make Hawaii more prosperous and free.

    Keli‘i Akina

    You might be wondering why it’s important to know what other state think tanks are doing. The answer is simple: America’s federalist system — the famed “laboratory of the states”— is how we learn what works in the policy world, as well as what doesn’t. 

    It would be overwhelming to list all the lessons we gleaned from other states and municipalities over the past few days, but there are a few that really stand out, such as:

    >> North Carolina’s tax-based economic turnaround. In 2010, North Carolina had the 11th worst business climate in the country, an unemployment rate of 10.6%, a poverty rate of 17.4% and a below-average median household income. Its personal income and corporate income tax rates were the highest in the region, its ballooning budget had created a $3 billion shortfall and $6.5 billion in debt, and its rainy-day fund was a paltry $150 million. 

    Fast forward to 2022: North Carolina has the 15th best business climate, unemployment has dropped to 3.7%, its poverty rate has dropped to 13.1%, and between 2013 and 2018 its median household income increased by 29.5%, far outpacing regional and national averages. Its budget growth has slowed dramatically, and the state is on pace for its sixth straight year of budget surpluses. Its debt has been reduced by 35%, and its rainy day fund is up to $1.2 billion. 

    What made the difference? 

    It goes back to 2013, when the state began implementing bold and courageous tax reforms. Foremost, it established a declining flat personal income tax rate to replace its three-tier system which topped out at 7.5%. In 2014, the flat rate debuted at 5.8%. It is now down to 5.25% and by 2027 will drop to 3.99%.  

    Similarly, the state lowered its corporate income tax rate from 6.9% in 2013 to 6% in 2014. It now stands at 2.5% and is scheduled to decline to zero by 2030.

    As the national Tax Foundation recently noted: “Before the 2013 reforms, North Carolina had the highest individual and corporate income tax rates in the Southeast. Today, North Carolina has the lowest corporate rate and among the more competitive individual rates. When the 2021 reforms are fully phased in, North Carolina’s individual income tax rate will have been cut nearly in half between 2013 and 2027.”

    >> Ohio’s bold regulatory reforms. Ohio is the third-most regulated state in America, and its many confusing and often contradictory regulations are especially burdensome for small businesses, causing them to lose time and money. 

    But that’s all about to change. This year, Ohio passed Senate Bill 9, which requires state agencies to reduce unnecessary, duplicative or outdated restrictions by 30% by 2025. If that goal is not achieved, two regulatory restrictions will have to be removed before a new one can be added. 

    Supported by a coalition of small business groups and think tanks such as the Ohio Freedom Foundation and the Buckeye Institute, the bill also allows a legislative panel to recommend invalidation of rules that cannot be justified, and creates a “Cut Red Tape” website that lets businesses communicate directly with agencies about regulatory restrictions. 

    Having recognized the harm that regulations do to small businesses and job creators, Ohio is fixing that problem in a way that will help the economy while still protecting the public.

    >> Georgia’s accounting for housing regulation costs. Hawaii isn’t the only place where residents are experiencing ever-increasing housing prices. Georgia residents also are wondering why housing prices are so high, which is why our fellow policy research organization, the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, launched a study of how much regulations add to the cost of homebuilding in the state. 

    After surveying homebuilders and considering regulations at the local, state and federal levels, the report found that regulatory costs during the lot-development phase account for 11.3% of the final price of a home in Georgia, while regulatory costs during the construction phase account for 15.6%. 

    Combined, that means that 26.9% of the final price for a new single-family home in Georgia is due solely to government regulation — higher than the national average of 23.8%. In other words, government is contributing to the housing crisis, not just in Georgia, but in Hawaii as well.

    As you can see, taxes, regulation and housing costs aren’t just problems in Hawaii. They are major issues in other states as well, and we can benefit from the lessons learned by those other states to propose reforms that will work for Hawaii. 

    In the spirit of “E hana kākou” writ large, the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii is working with experts around the country to create a better Hawaii.
    ____________

    Keli‘i Akina is president and CEO of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii.

    Poor planning, stubborn idealism push Hawaii electricity costs ever higher

    By Keli‘i Akina

    We all know that Hawaii has the highest cost of living in the country.

    We also know about the many factors that contribute to those high costs, such as high taxation, too many regulations, not enough homes and the protectionist federal maritime law known as the Jones Act.

    What is less well known is how we got to this point.

    Keli‘i Akina

    To be fair to Hawaii lawmakers, none of them ever intended to price people out of paradise. Yet that’s exactly what is happening.

    Why?

    Because the road to a high cost of living — much like the road to hell — is paved with good intentions.

    Consider, for example, the well-meaning efforts to make Hawaii energy self-sufficient and improve the environment. Hawaii’s electricity prices had already gone up significantly this year before Hawaiian Electric Co. announced in August it would be increasing its rates by 7% in October, due to the state-mandated closure of Hawaii’s last coal-fired power plant.

    At the beginning of this month, HECO said the increase might be only 4%, but coming on top of the double-digit rate increase in March and record inflation, HECO’s pending price jump will still be a stretch for Hawaii’s hard-pressed residents.

    Tom Ogawa, owner of Honolulu’s Lighting Concepts, told Hawaii News Now that his electricity bills have nearly doubled in a matter of months, from $600 a month earlier this year to almost $1,000 now. He said the company has tried to economize by turning down its air conditioning and lights when there are no customers in the store, but the increases have been so high it had to raise its prices.

    That ripple effect is something that too many people overlook. Not only will Hawaii residents have to pay more for their own electricity use, but they also will have to pay more for the goods and services provided by businesses, which also have to pay more for electricity.

    And the economic effect isn’t limited to higher prices.

    Tina Yamaki, president of the Retail Merchants of Hawaii, explained to Hawaii News Now that “businesses can’t always absorb these increased costs that have been happening. So we have to pass it on to our customer. And unfortunately, if we can’t pass it on to the customer, sometimes we have to let some employees go in order to make it.”

    So the rate hike means higher energy bills, higher prices in general and possible job losses.

    Which brings us to the main cause of HECO’s most recent rate increase. Let us put aside for the moment the arguments for and against coal and just focus on one question: Did the lawmakers who put into motion back in 2020 the closure of Hawaii’s last coal-fired power plant adequately consider the effect it might have on Hawaii’s cost of living?

    At the time, Hawaii already had some of the highest energy prices in the nation. A 2021 report ranked Hawaii as the most expensive state in the country for energy, with an average monthly energy bill of $321, or about $3,850 a year.

    That amount dwarfed what residents of second-place Connecticut were paying, which was about $250 a month, or $3,000 a year. In other words, energy costs for residents with the second highest energy prices in the nation were paying about $850 a year less than Hawaii residents.

    Closing Hawaii’s coal-fired power plant might have seemed like a good idea three years ago, but it was assumed there would be other energy sources ready by 2023 to fill the gap: solar farms, windmills and so on.

    That part of the plan is behind schedule, so because of poor planning and a stubborn commitment to idealism over practicality, we are left paying higher prices for the power we need to function as a modern society.

    This is not to say that renewable energy is not desirable. Rather, I’m saying we need to give more consideration to the economic impact such top-down social engineering will have on average Hawaii residents before we go ahead with it.

    That is true not only about energy policy, but for many other issues we face in Hawaii as well. It is critical that we have informed debate — and that we see greater civic involvement.

    Our lawmakers need to know that their proposed grand schemes will always have a cost, and that all such proposals deserve a second look and serious debate.
    _____________

    Keli‘i Akina is president and CEO of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii.

    Our Kids Are Going Away

    We at the Foundation have been warning lawmakers for several years now that our state has been losing people.  News media and some local nonprofits have been trying to find out why.  The people leaving have said that they are unable to make ends meet here between the high cost of living and taxes. 

    We have told lawmakers that the tax environment here in Hawaii already has reached a point where people are “voting with their feet” and getting on a plane with a one-way ticket out of here. 

    You don’t believe that?

    The Hawaii Board of Education had a special meeting on September 15, 2022, to consider strategic planning.  Tammi Oyadomari-Chun, one of the three new deputy superintendents that have just started with the Department of Education, presented some very telling data to the Board of Education.

    In the chart, the blue bars represent the loss (or gain) in student enrollment, by complex area, over the last five years.  The green bars represent the projected loss (or gain) in student enrollment over the next five years.  Not considering charter schools, enrollment dropped from 168,152 in 2018-19 to 156,518 in  2022-23, and it is projected to decrease further to 148,096 by 2027-28.


    Source:  Hawaii Department of Education.

    Of those students who have left in the past five years, more than half said they were moving to another U.S. state.  The second most mentioned reason was transferring to a private school, but that applied to about 15% of exits.

    Kids are leaving Hawaii.

    The data also looked at the reasons why teachers hired by our school system were leaving.  Over the past five years, roughly half of the teacher resignations were because the teachers were leaving Hawaii.

    Teachers are leaving Hawaii.

    The evidence is piling up.  Folks are heading for the exits.  Is our State population sustainable?  If we don’t do something to make Hawaii a better place to live, Hawaii residents may have something in common with the Hawaiian monk seal, nene goose, or green sea turtles:  they’d be endangered species.

    Save Your Brain by Skipping the Grain: Nerve-Saving Tips to Stop Long-COVID Problems

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    It doesn’t take much to realize that the culture we live in is crazy, unhealthy, and impersonal. Nobody cares about you, but, maybe, yourself. If you’re lucky, someone else might care about you. But to virtually everyone else, you either don’t exist, or you’re something to exploit. 

    Nobody cares if you’re sick or well, either, except for those who make money trying to sell you treatments, and they want you sick so you need them. Then there are those who are making you sick in the first place with their products. 

    They have you coming and going. You buy their crap which makes you sick, and then you buy their crap that’s supposed to make you better, while you work at a crappy job to pay for both. In the end, you’re energy is spent, your money is spent, and your life is spent. You’re born, you live, you die…next victim.

    But it doesn’t have to be that way. Our culture should not make us sick. We should not be fodder for the economy. 

    We are responsible for our own health, safety and happiness, because nobody can give you that besides yourself, despite the ads to the contrary.

    Let’s say you have some nerve problems. Maybe you have numb or tingly feet or hands. Maybe you have an irregular heartbeat. It could be you feel tired and foggy-brained. So you decide you’re tired of feeling tired, and you’re fed up with the weakness and nerve pains you’ve been having. So what can you do about it?

    Lots of health problems are caused by our culture and way of life. We are trained from birth to do certain things that can harm us. Smoking tobacco and drinking alcohol are two examples. Both products are known health hazards, and even carry warning labels. But people still use them, mostly because they are addicted to these substances. This makes the producers of these products very happy, along with the medical profession that is waiting to treat the resulting problems. Try avoiding tobacco and booze, and even the government will get upset, since, despite their warnings, the government gets a piece of the pie with taxes. 

    Then there’s tight clothing. For centuries, women and men and children wore corsets to alter their body shape to make it more appealing and socially acceptable. The constriction and tightness of these garments caused disease, but it was socially essential to wear these torture-like garments, so people put up with the discomfort for the sake of compliance and conformity. These days, the same problem is happening with bras, which are known to cause breast pain, cysts, and cancer. Standards of beauty can be fatal.

    And cultures have been screwing up peoples’ health for a long time. In Ancient Roman times, for example, water engineering was well developed, and it was transported through pipes for drinking and cooking. It was a very clever engineering achievement, and a sign of an advanced civilization to have plumbing. However, these pipes were made of lead, which is called plumbum in Latin, hence the term plumbing and plumber. They didn’t realize that lead, among other things, is a neurotoxin, or nerve poison. It ultimately spelled doom for the Romans. 

    It’s sometimes difficult to know when a culture’s ways are causing harm.  When everyone is exposed to a hazardous substance, all of society gets used to the illnesses it can cause, and it seems “normal” to be ill.  You need people who are not doing the same thing for a comparison. Nobody knows who started it all and made the harmful customs we follow. But you can bet they made money on it. 

    For the Ancient Romans, what killed them was poisoning by lead. For us, and get ready for this, we are being poisoned by bread.  We are also poisoned by potatoes and beans and whole grains and other starchy products. More accurately, it’s the way they are prepared that is the problem. And it’s a bigger problem than you can imagine. 

    You may not realize this, but when you cook food you are causing a chemical reaction. The heat from cooking helps breakdown the food, but it also forms some new chemicals that were not in the food, and which are poisonous. The same cooking temperatures that make delicious bread, cookies, crackers, chips, cakes, fries, and other favorite foods is also making toxic chemical by-products. 

    “Wait a minute!”, you shout. “For thousands of years people have been heating foods in ovens. Have they been creating poisons all that time?”

    Yes, they have. But our bodies know how to eliminate it if there is not too much of it. Our bodies know how to detoxify from many things if we’re not getting overdosed. 

    But today, with all the products that are fried, baked, roasted, toasted, broiled, or in any other way heated to over 248 degrees F, we are exposed to too much of this poison. And it’s name is acrylamide. 

    This chemical is an important one in our culture. It is the building block for polyacrylamide, which is used in tons of things. Acrylamide is a powerful nerve poison, or neurotoxin, and is also highly suspected to cause cancer. It also causes smaller babies to be born, reduced fertility in men, and lots more. You really don’t want acrylamide in your body. 

    What happens when you are eating this nerve poison at every meal, your entire life? 

    One thing that can happen is numb or tingly hands and feet, low energy and fatigue, and mental fogginess. This poison actually destroys nerve cells in the brain and nerve endings in the hands and feet. It causes muscle weakness, clumsiness, trouble walking, and even an irregular heartbeat, among other things.

    “Wait!”, you exclaim. “Aren’t these also symptoms of Long-COVID?”

    That’s right, they are. More than half of the public that has had COVID experiences nerve problems that last beyond the initial infection, with many still suffering. It comes and goes, as though there was something they are eating that is making it better or worse, depending on the amount consumed.

    And that’s what’s happening. The virus that causes COVID-19 is known to enter the entire nervous system, including the brain and all the nerves, causing what doctors call “COVID neuropathy”. They don’t know what causes it, or how to treat it. But they do know that nerves are damaged by COVID-19, and that nerve poisons make it worse.

    I see the light going off in your head. That’s right. If you eat lots of acrylamide in your cooked food, then you are taking in nerve poison, which makes an already sick nervous system even sicker. 

    The government knows this, of course. There are governments all over the world that are scrambling to try getting acrylamide out of food. This has been going on since 2002, when scientists first discovered acrylamide in food. But it’s hard to challenge the cooking methods of baking, frying, and roasting. Harder yet is challenging the industries which make these foods, along with the ovens and other appliances used to cook the food to the high temperatures that cause acrylamide formation. So there has been resistance to the message that acrylamide in food is unsafe at any level.

    FYI, the worst foods for acrylamide content are chips, coffee and roasted-grain coffee substitutes, crackers, and potato chips, fries, and crisps. Tobacco smoke also has this poison, and it’s also in cosmetics and gets absorbed through the skin. 

    Here is a list of food products and their acrylamide content, as determined by the FDA. The longer and hotter a food is cooked, the higher the acrylamide content goes. 

    The good news is that you can boil and steam any food and not form this poison. You need to get things hotter than boiling to cause the chemical reaction that creates acrylamide. So this means you can still eat a balanced diet. Just don’t cook it over boiling temperature. This means no baked goods, including breakfast cereals, which are very high in acrylamide. The drier and the crunchier, the more toxic it is. 

    Unfortunately, the US government is still resisting the call to warn the public about acrylamide causing nerve damage. For some reason, probably industry resistance, the Feds are saying that the levels of acrylamide in foods is bad, but probably not bad enough to cause nerve problems, although they then say to try to reduce your acrylamide in food, anyway.

    The problem is that the FDA and CDC, which are both concerned about acrylamide, have not considered that a huge chunk of the US population now has Long-COVID and associated nerve problems. This means that the public is now more sensitive to nerve poisons than before COVID-19. 

    When people are healthy, they can tolerate some nerve poison in their food. But when they’re sick with a nerve disease, they become more sensitive to a nerve poison.  This means the Feds need to reevaluate their claim that levels of acrylamide are too low in foods to cause nerve damage. The population has changed. People now have nerve damage from COVID. The last thing they need is more nerve poison.

    But don’t expect the Feds to issue the warnings they should about this crisis. California is currently being sued by the Chamber of Commerce to prevent warning labels on foods and drinks that contain acrylamide. Warning people that the food they are eating is contaminated with acrylamide is not good for business.

    Actually, the issue the Feds are more concerned about regarding acrylamide is that it causes cancer. But the studies on that are mixed, so no action is being taken warning about acrylamide in foods, yet. Meanwhile, the fight over whether or not acrylamide causes cancer is overshadowing the fact that it does cause nerve damage.

    But you shouldn’t wait for the government to overcome industry and cultural resistance to this information before you decide to improve your health. If you are suffering from any nervous condition, be it a mental health issue or heart palpitations or digestive problems or numb/tingling feet and hands, then you need to stop eating nerve poison with your meal. 

    It’s simple. Eat foods raw, boiled, or steamed. That’s it. Avoid roasted beverages like coffee or, especially, coffee-substitutes that have roasted grains. The darker the roast the higher the poison level. (Try a tea instead). Even chocolate is roasted, unfortunately. Potatoes, which are major sources of acrylamide when fried or roasted, are fine if only boiled. A Keto Diet would be fine, since the major offenders in creating acrylamide when cooked at high temperatures are grain products, and Keto diets avoid starchy foods. A Paleo diet also avoids grains. But, again, you can still enjoy grains, but boiled and not fried or baked.

    It may sound severe to give up your donuts, bread, pastries, coffee, and fries. But if you are suffering from nerve problems, you need to try eliminating this poison. Acrylamide is everywhere, so total elimination is difficult. But you can reduce the amount, and possibly stop the progressive loss of nerve function. 

    The good news is that, from research on people who have been exposed to acrylamide in industrial settings and have suffered nerve damage, this damage can heal to some degree. However, as the brain also gets involved, it becomes more difficult to heal, since it’s hard to regenerate brain cells.   

    Keep in mind that the effects of acrylamide on the nerves are cumulative. This means you may not feel the effect at first, but the impacts add up. By the time you have been poisoning yourself for 60 years, your body will have signs of chronic nerve poisoning. Maybe this causes other problems associated with aging and a progressively failing nervous system? 

    In any event, you now know that your food is tainted by poison if cooked too long at too high a temperature. It could be killing you slowly, waiting until you are weak from something else, like a viral infection that causes nerve problems, such as COVID-19. At that point, what you once tolerated in a healthy body may be no longer tolerated in a sick body. This means that the crispy bread you enjoyed yesterday may be killing you tomorrow.

    For more, with lots of science and quotes from the experts on this issue, see my article, COOKED TO DEATH: How the acrylamide in food causes nerve damage and Long-COVID.

    Bon appetit!

    “DEAD END” Haunted Drive Thru at Aloha Stadium is back starting October 9th!

    The haunted attraction “Dead End” opens at Aloha Stadium, October 9, 2022. Featuring 6 terrifying interactive scenes and an outdoor drive-through horror like nothing seen before. 

    Feel your nerves rise as chilling monsters, deranged doctors and killer clowns surround your car. You think you’re safe behind closed doors? Well, think again.

    When you go to each station, you’re directed to put your car in park, with your emergency brake off and windows rolled up. And then from there, the scene will begin!

    It’s a good scare for for a good cause. DEAD END is a fundraiser for Habilitat Hawaii, an organization that helps people overcome substance abuse and addiction.

    DEAD END will run October 9th to October 31st. Times: 7pm-10pm Friday & Sunday and 7pm-11pm on Saturdays.

    Get TICKETS: https://www.oahuhauntedhouse.com