Sunday, September 8, 2024
More
    Home Blog Page 95

    Joe Moore & Pat Sajak Benefit Performance “Dial M for Murder” at the HAWAII THEATRE CENTER June 21, 2018 to July 1, 2018

    Hawaii’s most recognized and highly rated news anchor Joe Moore and his long-time friend and television game show celebrity Pat Sajak return to the stage this summer where they will appear in a Benefit Performance for the historic Hawaii Theatre Center in an extended run of the classic thriller Dial M For Murder, June 21, 2018 through July 1, 2018. After a four-year hiatus, Sajak will join Moore as their way in supporting the work of the Hawaii Theatre in maintaining the historic venue for the benefit of the community. Tickets are available to the general public at www.hawaiitheatre.com.

    DIAL M FOR MURDER…Former British tennis pro Tony Wendice (JOE MOORE) wants to have his wealthy American wife, Margot (STACY RAY) murdered so he can inherit her money. When Tony discovers her affair with American crime writer Max Halliday (PAT SAJAK) he comes up with the perfect plan to kill her. He blackmails an old acquaintance, Captain Lesgate (NIGEL BANNISTER) into carrying out the murder, but the carefully orchestrated plan goes awry and Margo stays alive. Now Wendice must frantically scheme to outwit a Columbo like police officer, Chief Inspector Hubbard (TIMOTHY JEFFRYES) and avoid having his plot detected. Po’okela Award winning director Paul Mitri directs this chilling thriller.

    Well known in Hawaii as the state’s most-watched television newscaster, Joe Moore anchors the early evening weekday newscasts for KHON TV. He has been a familiar face on Hawaii television since 1969, when he returned to the islands following two tours of duty in Vietnam as an Army journalist with the 25th Infantry Division and as a newscaster with AFVN in Saigon, where he first met and worked with Pat Sajak.

    Moore has acted in motion pictures, including starring roles in the independent films Goodbye Paradise and Moonglow. He has also guest-starred in most of the island based network TV series, including Hawaii Five-O, Tour of Duty, Magnum, P.I., Jake and the Fatman, and One West Waikiki. Most of his recent acting has been on stage at Hawaii Theatre, co-starring with his longtime friend Pat Sajak in The Odd couple (2001), The Honeymooners (2004), The Boys in Autumn (2010), and Wrestling Ernest Hemingway (2014).

    Also at Hawaii Theatre, Moore co-starred with Gary Burghoff in The Buck Stops Where? (1997) which Moore wrote, with James MacArthur in Dirty Laundry (2003) which Moore wrote, with Richard Dreyfuss in Prophecy and Honor (2007) which Moore wrote, with Patty Duke in Heaven Forbid! (2013), and with Linda Purl in It’s Only a Play (2016). Moore has also written and starred in plays about Will Rogers and John Wayne. In 2017 Moore co-starred with F. Murray Abraham in the radio drama, The Glory of Salieri, which he wrote for National Public Radio. Joe and his wife of 27 years, Teresa have a son Bryce who has just completed his sophomore year at San Diego State University.

    Pat Sajak has been the host of television’s Wheel of Fortune since 1981, a position that has earned him multiple Emmy Awards, a People’s Choice Award, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. His stage credits include The Odd Couple, The Drowsy Chaperone, The Honeymooners, The Boys in Autumn and Wrestling Ernest Hemingway. He performed in most of those productions with his long-time friend, Joe Moore.

    “Not only do I get to perform with an old and dear friend, but we’ve done most of the plays in Hawaii. It’s hard to beat that combination! As for Dial M for Murder, I’m really looking forward to a much different kind of play, where laughs are at a minimum and the emphasis will be on drama and mystery.”

    Sajak splits his time between California and Florida. He and his wife, Lesly, have two grown children.

    Together, the pair will perform 11 total public performances over the course of the two-week run which will help to continue the work of the non-profit Hawaii Theatre Center, which presents world class entertainment as well as local community-sponsored events and performances and is a hub for revitalization efforts in downtown Honolulu. Since the restored theatre opened in 1996, it has attracted an estimated 100,000 residents and visitors annually to experience live music, dance, and drama, as well as cultural festivals and films year-round. Hawaii Theatre Center also offers quality educational programs for the Island’s keiki in grades K-12.

    Ticket prices for DIAL M FOR MURDER are $25.00, $35.00 (reserved seating) and $75.00 (VIP Meet and Greet with the performers) plus fees. Tickets may be purchased online at www.hawaiitheatre.com, by calling or TEXTING the Box Office at 808-528-0506 during regular business hours Tuesday-Saturday, 9-5 pm, or by going in person to the Box Office located at 1130 Bethel Street, Honolulu 96813.

    About Hawaii Theatre Center

    The Hawaii Theatre Center was established in 1984 as a private nonprofit organization to restore and operate the historic Hawaii Theatre as a multi-purpose performance facility for artistic, cultural, entertainment and educational events and to promote the redevelopment of the downtown Honolulu/Chinatown area. Opened on September 6, 1922 as the flagship of Consolidated Amusement Company, the 1,400-seat Hawaii Theatre is listed on both the State and National Registers of Historic Places. It reopened in 1996 after an extensive restoration and has been recognized by the League of Historic American Theatres as the 2005 Outstanding Historic Theatre in America. In 2006, Hawaii Theatre Center received a National Preservation Honor Award from the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

    To learn more, visit www.hawaiitheatre. com.

    How to Terminate Ideological Tenured Professors

    BY FRANK SALVATO

    By now everyone who is up to speed on current events knows that Randa Jarrar, a “professor” at California State University at Fresno, took to Twitter after the death of former First Lady Barbara Bush, to lambaste her memory. This cretin then bragged she couldn’t be fired because she was “tenured.”

    Jarrar tweeted: “I’m happy the witch is dead. Can’t wait for the rest of her family to fall to their demise the way 1.5 million iraqis have. byyyeeeeeee.” She then called anyone who criticized her for disparaging someone who is recently deceased – whether one agrees politically or ideologically or not wit them – “racists going crazy in my mentions.” She claimed she was being attacked because she was “An Arab American Muslim American woman with some clout.”

    I won’t even comment on the over “hyphenization” (to create a word) of her ethnicity.

    Jarrar’s claim that she can’t be fired because she is tenured is about as ignorant as her smear against the now deceased First Lady. Tenured professors can be terminated.

    Gregory Scholtz, the director of the Department of Academic Freedom, Tenure & Governance of the American Association of University Professors (a more Left-leaning organization), insists that the idea that a tenured professor cannot be terminated is an absolute misconception, saying a university can seek a termination if a professor’s words – even if outside the classroom or university setting – raises “grave doubts” about fitness for the position.

    Jarrar is a “creative writing professor” who is currently on leave.

    The idea of tenure in a higher education system where ideology is being infused into students like plasma into an accident victim needs to be reexamined. Educators have transformed into foot-soldiers for the ideological Left (the Progressive Movement) and have expanded their authority over students from facilitating critical thinking skills to enforcing political and ideological thought processes. This is not teaching a student how to think, it is teaching a student what to think. This is not facilitating tools for a student’s life success, it is the creation of ideologues who would be used to change the very definition of freedom in our country and around the world.

    Sadly, this mindset is prevalent in the education system from top to bottom. A quick read of Fabian Freeway will spotlight how Fabian Progressives planned to dominate the education and information (read: media) systems in the United States to transform it from a Constitutional Republic to a Socialist Democracy run by oligarchs. It is an important book and a quick read, and if you haven’t read it you are doing yourself – and our country – a great disservice.

    If our country is to survive then we need to seriously examine our education system, both to purge ideology and return to fomenting critical thinking skills, and to restructure how we educate, moving from a grade-based system to a modular system that allows students to learn at their own pace without asking the teachers to do the impossible by diversifying curriculum to each child.

    The Progressive Left will hate this.

    Asia-Pacific Tour: Taiwan, Korea and Japan (Part Two)

    1

    Author’s Note: This is a series of selected highlights from two years (1986-88) of budget backpacker travel through 15 countries and a half-dozen US States – hosted all along the way by national and local YMCAs – from the Pacific Islands to selected Asian countries including: Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Burma, The Philippines, Hong Kong, Macau, China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan – and the USA.

    Traditional multicolored paintwork on a Korean Buddhist shrine

    Braving the bitterly cold nights in Seoul – thanks to the toasty mattress on the floor of my ‘yogwan’ (traditional guesthouse) pre-warmed by gas heaters under the floor boards — as icy Manchurian winds whipped down the rocky, barren Korean peninsula.

    Dinners out with my Korean friends, followed by coffee at a dedicated coffee lounge, and then to the bar for some Soju — a clear, colorless distilled beverage, typically made from wheat, rice or barley with an alcohol content anywhere from 16% to 54%, and consumed ‘neat’ — straight from the bottle, without being chilled, and without any water, ice, or other mixer – serious stuff!

    Even more ‘serious’ was the accompanying bowl of raw garlic cloves (instead of peanuts typically served in the West) taken with the drinks one at a time with chopsticks. Garlic consumption was quite popular in general, and as the packed and heated buses arrived to take me home on these cold winter nights, a hot blast of collective garlic breath would issue forth as the doors swung open. On other less raucous occasions, we enjoyed drinking a milky-white rice wine called makkole, with a much milder alcohol content of 6% to 9%.

    449a
    “Here we go again….” as the masses miraculously parted on Seoul’s crowded walkways

    In Korea’s “single ethnicity” society — with one race and language enduring for centuries, and a culture deeply influenced by Confucianism — conformity is the norm. It seemed like every Korean man on the street was wearing the same conservative grey business suit, white shirt and dark tie.  And while white people, assumed to be from advanced or ‘wealthy’ nations were welcomed with open arms, this was not always the case for the less commonly seen ‘people of color’ who were perceived to be from a less developed country and relentlessly looked down upon.

    Indeed, I used to kid my friend Bart, who was from Ghana, West Africa, and also volunteering at the Seoul YMCA, and who also had a great attitude — suggesting that he must have been the loneliest person in Korea because whenever we walked down the crowded sidewalks along Seoul’s busy boulevards, the ‘sea of humanity’ would miraculously part as everyone hurried to move away from poor Bart – the only black person in town!

    Arriving in Japan on an overnight ferry from Korea’s southern port city of Pusan,  I made my way by train from Shimonoseki City, on the southwestern tip of Honshu Island, to Kyoto City for a YMCA conference.  While staying with a Japanese family in Kyoto — eating sushi, and sleeping on tatami mats behind sliding paper doors — I proceeded to explore some of the surrounding area, bathing in the simple, balanced harmony flowing through the countryside, the architecture, the arts, and the people.

    From the perfect gardens in Kyoto and the gentle, lilting resonance of a traditional 13-stringed Koto, Japan’s national instrument played by a woman in a colorful, silk kimono, to the shroud of lingering gloom from the terror enshrined in Hiroshima Peace Park, to 14th century medieval castles, luxurious mineral springs and spas, and the rural simplicity of Shukoku Island — and cheerful greetings from beautiful women everywhere, with uninhibited smiles, like swaying bamboos — jet black hair hanging long.

    Himeji Castle dating from 1333,  Himeji, Hyōgo Prefecture, Honshu Island I, Asgatlat CC-BY-SA-3.0 Wikimedia Commons

    Seated in a neatly manicured garden on a bluff overlooking the city lights and along the bridge connecting Honshu and Kyushu islands — in the cool, fragrant dampness of the tropical evening, a maze of bamboos throws shadows in the artificial light, while bright young people eager for a chance to practice speaking English with a foreigner bring together the soft gentleness of the people and the place.

    The Japanese have mastered the art of providing harmony and balance to life – the graceful shrines, temples, gardens, and hot springs offer gentle release to the stresses of the otherwise dazzling neon glitter and fast-lane lifestyle out on the lively, modern city streets.

    But soon the golden brown harvest of ripe corn and grain would be white with snow — carried on the chill winds of Manchuria blowing down the rocky outcroppings of the Korean peninsula. Sad to leave Japan after such a brief visit, and vowing to return for a longer stay next time.

    But the music, the food, the brightly colored temples and shrines, the tall, craggy mountains at Sorak-San National Park in the north of the country, and the delightful fishing ports were calling to me as well, as I boarded the ferry back to South Korea’s seaport in Pusan, where I sold the coveted Japanese bananas for a good price. I had also done well selling Korean apples when I arrived in Japan.

    Bamboo and Japanese Maple, Tenryu Garden, Kyoto. Public Domain

    I must remember her eyes – her bright smile and petite elegance. How I would miss the soft gracefulness and warm generosity of the people – especially the women — who radiate genuine pleasure in being noticed, or curt shyness that melts away with perhaps one more meeting, as if we had been close friends for years.

    But after four wonderful months exploring Taiwan, Korea and Japan, it was time to drag myself away – because the longer I stayed, the harder it was to leave.

    Stay tuned for more stories – coming soon!

    You can read more about Jim’s backstory,  here and here.

    ThinkTech: Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker

    Hawaii Republican Party in Hawaii – alive, well and making a difference. Top GOP leaders, Andria Tupola and Gene Ward provide an update on the current legislative session in Hawaii and nationally.  And they had a few warnings of potential laws being considered.

     

    Asia-Pacific Tour: Taiwan, Korea and Japan (Part One)

    1

    Author’s Note: This is a series of selected highlights from two years (1986-88) of budget backpacker travel through 15 countries and a half-dozen US States – hosted all along the way by national and local YMCAs – from the Pacific Islands to selected Asian countries including: Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Burma, The Philippines, Hong Kong, Macau, China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan – and the USA.

    East Asia
    By Cacahuate CC BY-SA Wikimedia Commons

    Exploring the mountains around Taroko National Park, one of nine national parks in Taiwan and named for Taroko Gorge, an impressive 19-km-long canyon carved by the Liwu River near Taiwan’s east coast. The name Taroko, means “magnificent and splendid” in the language of Truku, the aboriginal tribe that resides in the area, which is also well known for its abundant supply of marble, thus its nickname, “The Marble Gorge”.

    After a splendid couple of days wandering among the amazing gorges, the lush, green hillsides, hot springs and across suspension bridges in this particularly scenic part of the country, I returned to the capital Taipei to meet with my colleagues at the YMCA, which offers a range of programs for all ages including camping, club programs, physical education, social activities, leadership training, vocational training, supplementary education, including a large English language program.

    The Taipei YMCA also runs a hotel and restaurant, and participates in staff and student exchange programs with YMCAs in other countries, such as the International Camp Counselor Program and the Overseas Service Corps of the YMCA (OSCY), for teaching and learning English as a second language.

    Suspension Bridge, Toroko Gorge, Taiwan, Own work CC BY 2.0 Wikimedia Commons

    The OSCY English language program (in cooperation with YMCAs in Japan and the USA) was of particular interest to me personally. So deeply taken by the overwhelming charm of the people and the place, I could easily consider a longer commitment in Taiwan (or Japan) to teach English. But for now, it was time to continue on to Korea.

    I often wondered at the serendipity of life – the chance meetings with other travelers at a particular place or point in time, and how it would all have been totally different had we each taken a different bus or train, at a different time, or had traveled a day earlier or later. But somehow, I was meeting the most extraordinary people all along the way – and many would become lifelong friends. One of the benefits of traveling alone is this added opportunity to meet new friends.

    By edwin.11 – View From Swallow Grotto in Taroko Gorge, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

    And it was happening again as I boarded the packed bus in Korea’s capital, Seoul. Dropping into the last available seat as the bus pulled away from the station, I turned to see a beautiful young Korean woman seated next to me. Mi Sook spoke fairly good English and was also traveling alone. We chatted a bit and soon learned that we were headed to the same destination – Cheju Island, a short ferry ride from the southern coast of South Korea.

    Cheju Do, as it is locally known, is a popular holiday spot among locals, and has some of the only swimmable beaches in the country. It is also popular with couples and newlyweds.  Large rock statues or Dol Hareubang found throughout the island have come to be known as the symbol of Cheju Do, and are considered to be gods offering both protection and fertility — although this interpretation may have more to do with Cheju Do’s present-day status as a “honeymoon island” than with tradition.

    Mi Sook and her mother ran a beautician shop in Seoul, and she was taking this trip to get away from the city for a short holiday. I was on my way to visit the YMCA International Youth Center on the island – a neat, modern building that had been donated by the Japanese YMCAs. I had been treated with impeccable hospitality at the YMCA in Seoul and at other YMCAs throughout the country, and this warm welcome continued at the Youth Center – staying in first class accommodation and with delicious meals as guest of the YMCA. My hosts spoke no English, and my Korean was basically zip.

    Jim, Mi Sook and a Dol Hareubang statue on Cheju Island, Korea

    Still, my YMCA Youth Center hosts were undaunted. Taking me around the island, Mr Kim (it seemed like everyone’s family name in Korea was either “Kim”, “Lee” or “Park”) and I joined the multitudes of visitors climbing the island’s impressive volcano “Hala-san” – where we literally had to queue up on the trail, but were rewarded with wonderfully cool, bracing air and great views. The change in scenery and climate in this temperate setting was a welcome relief from the heat of the tropics – refreshing and invigorating.

    Stay tuned for Part Two – coming soon!

    You can read more about Jim’s backstory,  here and here.

    The Feds Gave You a Break? Now We, the State, Can Turn the Screws!

    It’s not often that State lawmakers express their justification for imposing taxes in terms other than “We need the money to fund essential services and programs.”  But how about this?  The following language is from an actual bill.

    The legislature finds that the federal government has significantly raised the threshold for the federal estate tax.  The federal estate tax grants an exemption of $5,490,000 per individual and up to $10,980,000 for a surviving spouse; provided that the surviving spouse elects to use portability of the predeceased spouse’s exemption on the predeceased spouse’s estate tax return.  Estates valued at less than these amounts are exempt from paying federal estate taxes.  The recently enacted Public Law No. 115-97, originally introduced in Congress as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, doubles the threshold to approximately $11,180,000 and $22,360,000, respectively, and will result in a reduction in federal estate tax revenues.  According to Internal Revenue Service data, twenty-one estates in Hawaii paid a total of $23,471,000 in federal estate taxes in 2015.

    The legislature further finds that these changes to the federal estate tax provide the State with an opportunity to benefit Hawaii residents.  By amending Hawaii’s estate tax thresholds and rates, the State can capture some of the money that certain residents will no longer be required to pay to the federal government and redirect that money to the State.

    This, by the way, is from HB 207, Senate Draft 1.

    As it now exists, the bill would jack up the Hawaii estate tax by adding a new top tax rate of 20% to be applied to taxable estates over $10 million.  It would also hike the Hawaii conveyance tax on purchases or sales of condominiums or single-family residences valued at $2 million or more, and there the tax would increase between 66% and 220% depending on the value of the unit being sold.

    The bill as the House passed it in 2017 looks nothing like the current bill.  Surprise, surprise, this bill is another victim of the much-hyped “gut and replace” technique.  What does that mean?  The only thing about a bill that can’t be changed during its journey through the Legislature is its title, and under the Hawaii Constitution, the contents of a bill must relate to its title.  Therefore, if a legislative committee has before it a bill with a broad title like “Relating to Taxation,” it can amend the bill by gutting it and replacing its entire contents with something very different.  This bill as the House passed it, for example, was an income tax bill relating to the low-income householder renters’ credit.  But because its title is “Relating to Taxation,” the income tax contents can be deleted and replaced with hikes in the estate and conveyance taxes.

    Now, the Senate adopted some rules that sound like they wanted to curb the “gut and replace” technique.  Senate Rule 54(2) says, “The fundamental purpose of any amendment to a bill shall be germane to the fundamental purpose of the bill.”  In practice, however, gut-and-replace is still alive and well, and a technique in the playbook of many of the House and Senate committee chairs.  So, as our legislative session finally winds down, there will be lots of surprises such as bills previously thought dead being resurrected by incorporating their contents into other bills.

    It ain’t over till it’s over, folks!

    Think Tech: Surviving Tax Season and Advocacy Work.

    Aloha –

    This week’s broadcast of Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker: Quarterly Commentary – Surviving Tax Season and Advocacy Work.  Guest Host Ray Tsuchiyama interviews Reg Baker about tax reform, tax season, SBA Awards, SBA Board, SBDC and SBRRB activities.  

    It has been a very busy 3 months!

     

    RALLY AT CAPITOL TO URGE SENATE TO ACCEPT UNANIMOUS HOUSE YES TO SB3095hd1

    Last week the Hawaiʻi House of Representatives unanimously passed the restricted use pesticide  (RUP) regulation bill, SB3095hd1 during its third and final reading on April 6, 2018. The bill is a significant milestone in a decades-long effort to put in place regulations to protect public health and the environment. The Senate now has the opportunity to speed this measure into law by accepting the House bill without any further amendments.

    More than 100 advocates representing multiple organizations who have campaigned for years for greater transparency from corporate agricultural companies rallied at the State Capitol at noon on Monday April 9, 2018 to make clear their hopes and expectations.

    Keani Rawlins-Fernandez, a lawyer, activist and mother of a child who goes to an immersion school next to Monsanto fields on Molokai, said she hopes and prays the Senate will say YES to SB3095hd1.

    Lauryn Rego, long-time activist and advisory board member of the  Hawaiʻi Center for Food Safety, said: “The community has been very patient. Concerned parents have been urging the state and the governor to act to protect our keiki for years now. We are putting our faith in the Senate and asking them to make the very reasonable public health protections provided for in the bill a reality.”

    The key features of SB3095hd1 provide for the regulation of Restricted Use Pesticides (RUP) through:1) The requirement for annual disclosure by the very largest users of RUP.
    2) The restriction on spraying RUP no closer than 100 feet from schools, during instructional hours.

    3) The implementation of a “phased” ban on the use of chlorpyrifos, a known neurotoxin.

    Disclosure will aid informed decision-making

    Companies that need more time to respond to the ban on chlorpyrifos can apply for “exemptions.”   These exemptions will be a matter of public record.  That, and the annual disclosure requirements mean that both citizens and regulatory agencies will have the data they need for informed decision-making.

    The restrictions on spraying within 100 feet of schools and the phased ban on chlorpyrifos are steps the community welcomes as long overdue.

    “These regulations give parents and school administrators a chance to take steps to protect our children from exposure to highly toxic pesticides. Chemicals that can trace their genealogy to nerve agents used in WW II have no business being anywhere near pregnant women, children and unsuspecting adults,” said Rawlins-Fernandez.

    Columbia University researcher shares her findings

    Visiting Columbia University researcher, Dr. Virginia Rauhone of the world’s preeminent authorities on chlorpyrifos and its impact of children’s health, spoke at the rally, alongside many other community representatives.

    Commenting on the unanimous House vote, Gary Hooser, Founder President of the  Hawaiʻi Alliance for Progressive Action (H.A.P.A.), said, “While Kauai’s entire delegation in the House voted in support, I want to particularly recognize Representative Dee Morikawa’s initiative and contribution to the process. It resulted in a balanced measure that will add significantly to the health and environmental protection of our community.  Representative Nakamura also went out of her way to help facilitate this very positive outcome,” added Hooser.

    Entirely up to the Senate now
    While advocates asked for stronger measures, all welcomed the unanimous House assent as good news. “This is a clean and straightforward bill,” said Hooser.

    “I believe the House has actually “threaded the needle” and balanced the needs of the various stakeholders well. I am hopeful that Senator Kouchi will also offer his support and thus ensure passage of this historic bill through the Senate and into law.”

    MEDIA ADVISORY: RELATED EVENTS

    APRIL 9:  SYMPOSIUM AT HAWAIʻI PACIFIC UNIVERSITY

    5.30p.m.-7.30 p.m. Aloha Tower Marketplace MPR3. Flyer attached.

    Dr. Virginia Rauh is keynote speaker. Panel of 4 will respond.

     APRIL 11: BRIEFING for LEGISLATORS

    10 a.m. State Capitol Auditorium

    Dr. Virginia Rauh will provide a special briefing to legislators.

    Can Government Avoid Its Responsibilities With LLCs?

    Do you recognize any of these names:  Hiʻilei Aloha LLC, Hiʻipaka LLC, and Hoʻokele Pono LLC?

    For one thing, all of them have “LLC” in their names. LLC is an abbreviation for Limited Liability Company.  A LLC is a legal “person,” something like a corporation but much easier to create and maintain.  I could go to our Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs today, give them a two-page form, and have a newly created LLC in my hands before I left the building.  It’s much less effort to create than a kid, and it doesn’t need to be fed every day.

    The LLCs that we are talking about today are run by “managers,” which is one of the ways LLCs can be managed.  Their managers are Kamana’opono Crabbe, Lisa Victor, and David Laeha.  These three individuals are the chief executive, chief operating, and chief financial officers, respectively, of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA).  Obviously, the LLCs are related to OHA, and indeed their financial results are included within OHA’s published financial statements.  And these LLCs are not financially insignificant.  Hi’ipaka LLC was given sole title to the land containing Waimea Valley on Oahu, some 1,875 acres.

    Now, OHA was born out of the 1978 Constitutional Convention.  It’s a semi-autonomous department with the State of Hawaii that was established by the Hawaii Constitution and chapter 10 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes.  It’s a $600 million trust that provides millions in grants every year.  It has a trust obligation to help the Native Hawaiian community and advocate on their behalf especially when it comes to health, education, culture, land, governance and economic self-sufficiency.

    Recently, these LLCs were in the center of controversy.  Some members of the public wanted to obtain information about the LLCs’ dealings.  The LLC’s attorneys told them to go take a hike, because the laws requiring disclosure of state agency information to the public don’t apply to the LLCs, at least in those attorneys’ minds.

    On January 31, OHA’s Committee on Resource Management, consisting of publicly elected Trustees, unanimously moved to order its LLC managers to provide the LLCs’ check registers.  The full Board of Trustees confirmed the committee’s action on February 7.  As of March 7, Free Hawaii TV reported that the LLC documents still had not been turned over.  Meaning that someone has been thumbing his nose at the Board of Trustees.

    Isn’t that a great trick?  Suppose you were the head of a state agency that was created by the state constitution, and your agency held title to some land.  So you create a LLC with you and your top lieutenants as managers, and you drop some money and some land – like a whole ahupua’a – into the LLC.  Then you can thumb your nose at state procurement law, state open records law, and other requirements for state agencies by simply noting that an LLC isn’t a state agency.  You can spend money when you want and where you want, and you don’t even have to listen to any of those people in the State Capitol, not even the ones who gave you your job, because they aren’t managers of the LLC.  That’s even better than a special fund!

    My humble reaction?  OH MY GOD, YOU MUST’VE FALLEN OFF THE DEEP END!  HOW STUPID DO YOU THINK PEOPLE ARE?  YOU’D BETTER STOP THIS INSANITY NOW, OR YOU WILL BE IN DEEP DOO-DOO!  CAN YOU SAY, “ANKLE SHACKLES”?

    ThinkTech: Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker and Rusty Komori

    Rusty Komori holds the nations longest running string of state championships (22) in history. Now a successful author and motivational speaker, he shares a few of his secrets for winning at business and life on this weeks Business in Hawaii with Reg Baker.