Monday, April 13, 2015

Ewa Farmland Conversion Impact Rating

Ewa Farmland Conversion Impact Rating

John Bond,       Kanehili Cultural Hui



HART Rail Covers Over 1000 Year Old Ewa Farmland, Top Rated Volcanic Alluvial Soil

This correspondence to FTA is specifically about the Farmland Conversion Impact Rating that was applied to the Honouliuli Ewa Plain farmland which is now planned to have three transit stations and Transit Oriented Developments as part of the FTA funded Honolulu Authority Rapid Transit (HART) system.

The issue is that the Farmland Conversion Impact Rating done by the contracted project engineering company was erroneous, very possibly intentionally so, which resulted in no subsequent important prime farmland mitigation.



This led to the HART rail project constructing an elevated fixed guide way through this very important farmland. FTA may argue that the guide way itself has a “de minimus” (no or minimal effect) impact on this traditional agricultural farmland, however the next planned rail construction phases are three stations and planned TOD’s: East Kapolei, UH-West Oahu and Hoopili.

The impact on the important agricultural lands will be very severe and essentially destroy them forever. FTA is funding this farmland destruction and it certainly isn’t a “de minimus” impact.   

Kanehili Cultural Hui (KCH), HART PA consulting party had identified a very important Section 4f discrepancy with the “Farmland Conversion Impact Rating” (NRCS-CPA-106) a fundamental requirement and farmland rating document for all Federally funded transit corridor type projects which uses prime or unique agricultural land.

As a consulting party Kanehili Cultural Hui (KCH) specifically brought this issue up at the Annual HART Programmatic Agreement meeting on Monday, March 2, 2015 at the HART Ali`i Place, Suite 150 conference room to discuss Implementation of the PA over 2014 and planned activities for 2015.

During that meeting KCH president John Bond asked Ted Matley of FTA if the West Oahu Farrington Highway (WOFH) Farmland Conversion Impact Rating decision could be revisited again because of very credible evidence that the Farmland Conversion Impact Rating was very erroneous and quite possibly intentionally so.

Area of Potential Effect - APE for West Oahu Farrington Highway (WOFH)

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What is a 4(f) "use"?

 In discussing 4(f), "use" may mean either a direct use or constructive use. A direct use occurs when land is permanently incorporated into a transportation facility or when there is a temporary occupancy of land that is adverse to a 4(f) resource. Constructive use occurs when a project's proximity impacts are so severe that the protected activities, features, or attributes that qualify a resource for protection under Section 4(f) are "substantially impaired".




TCPs are “places of religious and cultural significance” (NHPA Section 101 and NHPA regulations, Section 106). NHPA guidance (Parker and King 1990:1) defines a TCP as a property “… that is eligible for inclusion in the National Register because of its association with cultural practices or beliefs of a living community that (a) are rooted in that community’s history, and (b) are important in maintaining the continuing cultural identity of the community.” TCPs derive their importance from the practices or beliefs of a community because they are integral to the community’s history and identity. The people who are best able to identify these places and their importance are the members of the community that understand their value.

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KCH has done extensive auditing of the HART rail project’s handling of historic and cultural issues and has found several discrepancies and previously overlooked Traditional Cultural Properties and one with a very erroneous boundary to achieve a “no effect” on the project Area of Potential Effect (APE). There is substantial evidence that the HART rail project’s consultants intentionally misrepresented important APE decisional information to push construction forward.


The KCH analysis is twofold: 1. The original very low farmland rating document done by rail contractor Parsons Brinkerhoff does not reflect the obvious reality of the Ewa Plain farmland based on observation and known published criteria of what constitutes prime or valuable Oahu farmland in Hawaii. Our shared drive links provide the documents, maps and photos to support this analysis.

KCH: 2. The value of the Ewa Plain farmland must be seen in the full context of both ancient and modern Hawaiian cultural values- ahupua’a (mountain to sea) as well as why it was a 1000 year old continuously used Traditional Cultural (Agricultural) Property. How could a traditional native Hawaiian agricultural society based upon Konohiki (deeply skilled land and water management) support the largest pre-western population on Oahu if these lands weren’t among the very best on the island?
These Ewa farmlands were the major native Hawaiian population center because of the rich volcanic soil, fresh spring water and very abundant sunshine. And to this very day these same prime and valuable farmlands support large scale agricultural production.

FTA support for important farmland destruction is a social and environmental injustice and not Smart Growth. Instead of rail transit the Ewa Plain community is getting massive new urban sprawl, vast environmental damage, a huge increase in highway traffic and an important food security safeguard completely eliminated.


It should not ever be forgotten that during the early Honolulu rail design and engineering process there was an enormous amount of political pressure (and still is) placed on government agencies and employees to “get on board” and not be the odd nail that needs to be hammered down by powerful land development interests that want rail construction moved forward as fast as possible, no matter what had to be done to make that happen. 

At the time key project reviews were being made the State Historic Preservation Division was in a very weak and understaffed situation and considered the worst SHPO in the United States- on verge of being shut down and taken over by the NPS.
 

It is no surprise to see that the very flawed Farmland Conversion Impact Rating form was run through with few if any questions asked

KCH asks: How could the Hawaiian Island’s largest and most profitable sugar plantation – Ewa Plantation, thrive and prosper for over 100 years on the Ewa Plain if it didn’t have an ideal combination of abundant sunshine, pure spring water and rich Waianae volcano soil (rated A and B quality) which caused it to be an agricultural powerhouse?

Please review the link to the Historic Ewa Villages which show that the Ewa plantation was a major historic and culturally important community in the Hawaiian Islands known worldwide. It’s fame and fortune was all a result of the very valuable agricultural lands that sustained it and providing thousands of jobs. 


Further, as we show in numerous supporting government documents and agricultural evaluations that there is no way this very valuable prime farmland and Traditional Cultural Property doesn’t meet and exceed the criteria of the Farmland Conversion Impact Rating regulatory threshold of 160 points.

 Not fairly and honestly addressing these major obvious discrepancies while there is still time, however short, will forever be a dark stain on the HART project and the involvement of the Federal Transit Administration in sponsoring the destruction of a very valuable and a culturally very important agricultural TCP.

The Honolulu City Council INTENDED that these Ewa TCP Farmlands be identified and mapped- even when in an already designated Urban Boundary

The Honolulu City Council passed a resolution in 2011 to advocate establishment of an Agricultural Liaison:

RESOLUTION URGING THE CITY ADMINISTRATION TO CREATE AN AGRICULTURAL LIAISON POSITION – CCR 11-70.

The Honolulu City Council also passed a resolution in 2012 to expedite the identifying and mapping of important agricultural lands:

RESOLUTION URGING THE CITY’S AGRICULTURAL LIAISON TO EXPEDITE THE IDENTIFYING AND MAPPING OF IMPORTANT AGRICULTURAL LANDS AND ENSURE THAT THE CITY WORKS TO PRESERVE THE AVAILABILITY OF AGRICULTURAL LANDS FOR FARMING – CCR 12-23.

It is very important to note that the resolution contained a Further Resolved clause: “that the process of identification and mapping of important agricultural lands also consider agriculturally productive lands within urban growth boundaries that are classified as prime agricultural lands, provided adequate water supply is available;

This highlighted statement is very important because it says that even IF the agriculturally
productive lands are in a designated urban growth boundary, as the three HART Rail stations and TOD’s will be, the lands that meet the prime agricultural lands criteria must be mapped- and they HAVE NOT BEEN. 

This is because there has been direction from the Honolulu Mayor’s office to City Department of Planning and Permitting to prevent this Important Agricultural Lands (IAL) identification. Mayor Caldwell supports this valuable farmland destruction.

The Federal Transit Administration most likely knows by now that there is a great deal of unhappiness and dissatisfaction about the HART Rail project- how over budget it is, etc. However, FTA management may not be aware that one of the single greatest issues is the HART Rail project creating a massive urban sprawl development project that will pave over and destroy West Oahu’s largest contiguous farmland – the remaining Ewa Plantation lands.


http://www.hoopilitraffic.com/                               http://www.stophoopili.com/


The Honouliuli Ewa Plain agricultural farm lands MUST be seen in their full ecological, cultural environmental, and historic cumulative context and not as a single abstraction. In Hawaii this is the “Konohiki” viewpoint and also the “ahupua’a” sustainability concept because islands have limited space and resources.

A Continental US farmland rating system for a massive heavy rail transportation project in the very limited confines of traditional island farmlands tied in with vast sprawling home developments and shopping centers under the guise of Transit Oriented Development that FTA is supporting isn’t simply just unfair or inadequate, it is tragic and possibly even criminal in intent. 

The Ho’opili farmland constitutes 31% of all of the farmland on O’ahu currently producing food for the local market.  

From the March 2012 Agricultural Liaison Important Agricultural Lands Progress Report:

FTA transit funds are going into this very valuable farmland destruction and many West Oahu residents believe this will be creating a future environmental catastrophe.

Not only will there be a loss of key valuable traditional open space farmland, a loss of an important food security safeguard, a massively overcrowded highway system that even HART rail admittedly cannot adequately address, but also the loss of native endangered and migratory bird habitats, water runoff pollution of the impervious surface rail station - TOD development projects which will direct their storm water runoff into West Loch Pearl Harbor and the Ewa shoreline ecosystem, poisoning Ewa fisheries, reef system and shoreline habitat of sea birds, mammals and edible limu. 


ALL of the FTA sponsored HART Rail impacts are VERY NEGATIVE, a social and environmental INJUSTICE and not SMART GROWTH.

 FTA may not know that the Ho’oplili TOD project which covers over and destroys prime agricultural farmland is opposed by a large number of West Oahu residents as well as former Hawaii governors George Ariyoshi, John Waihee and Ben Cayetano.

FTA may not know that a large number of agricultural experts and community groups believe that this great misuse of very valuable traditional cultural property is tragically WRONG.

FTA and HART rail are the major sponsors of this valuable agricultural land and TCP obliteration which frankly appears to be more about real estate development and land speculation than the public transit system people were lead to believe they were getting.

It is also not lost on many local residents that the FTA HART rail agenda has required the decimation of the very popular TheBus system which has been the only mass transit system to be recognized twice by the American Public Transportation Association as America's Best Transit System for 1994–1995 and 2000–2001, beating other transit systems.

From the March 2012 Agricultural Liaison Important Agricultural Lands Progress Report:


Administrative Testimony, March 5, 2015 – City Council Bill 3 to Remove Ewa farmland’s Ag-1 designation and replace the land with a HART and FTA funded Transit Oriented Development.

Testimony of Kamana’opono Crabbe, Ph.D

Ka Pouhana, Chief Executive Officer, Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA).

The irrevocable loss of this prime agricultural land from agricultural use raises significant
concerns. Although OHA readily acknowledges that the Land Use Commission previously
reclassified the project area from the State Agricultural District to the Urban District in 2012, and that City and County plans have deemed Kapolei the secondary urban center 2, the continued loss of agricultural land threatens the future of agriculture in Hawai’i.
Policies supporting increased agriculture must be implemented, rather than policies that result in paving over prime agricultural land.

(As the Department of Permitting and Planning DPP acknowledges “the vast majority of the project site consists of ‘A’ and ‘B’ rated soils” according to the University of Hawai’i Land Study Bureau Detailed Land Classification for the Island of O’ahu; and (“[t]he majority of the project site is classified as ‘Prime’ according to the Agricultural Lands of Importance to the State of Hawai’i system. DPP, Findings of Fact, Analysis, Conclusions of Law, and Recommendation on File No. 2014/Z-5, pages 5-6.
(2) General Plan for the City and County of Honolulu, I. Population, Obj. C, Pol. 2, IIV. Physical Development and Urban Design, Obj. C; ‘Ewa Development Plan, 1-1, 2-3, 2-8, Table 2.2.1.)

Support for agriculture has a direct connection to Hawai’i’s ability to grow its own food.
One of the targets of the Aloha+ Challenge, which has been supported by OHA, the mayors of the four counties, and the legislature, and Governor Abercrombie, is to double local food production by 2030.~ The benefits of supporting agriculture in Hawai’i are vast, ranging from the obvious—food security, fresher food, maintenance of a rural landscape, and potential for reduced environmental impacts—to the less obvious—improved health for consumers and farm workers, a diversified employment industry, connection to the ‘aina, and sense of community.

In this testimony, which follows up on OHA’s December 3, 2014 testimony to the Planning
Commission and OHA’s September 19, 2014 comments to DPP, OHA reiterates its concern
about the applicant’s request to remove prime agricultural lands, with both high soil and
productivity ratings, from all present and future agricultural use.

(See more testimony and government documents in the Shared Drive link in this letter.)


Federal law concerning major projects like this multi-billion dollar FTA funded railway requires that in the identification of historic and cultural sites, a “reasonable and good faith effort” be made. We don’t see this as having been the case and certainly Federal Judge Wallace Tashima stated in his ruling in 2014 that he was greatly concerned about the identification of ALL Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP) along the rail route. 


Kanehili Cultural Hui provided to FTA and HART extensive detailed reports on all of these TCP issues for many years and not once were they acknowledged or taken seriously until we filed our HART Programmatic Agreement Stipulation 9 objection letter.

The Honouliuli Ewa Plain was the site of a very important ancient Hawaiian community with kalo fields feeding many hundreds of thousands of people over 1000 years. Annual Makahiki Ceremonies and processions along the ancient trail network through this traditional agricultural property honored the very important god of agriculture- Lono.


The main waterway through this Ewa Plain farmland is called Kalo’i Gulch (actually the surface feature of a much larger below surface karst waterway that flows to the ocean). The name says what the area was used for: Kalo farming. These Kalo farms were all connected by a series of ancient trails (Malden in 1825 identified the main network but hundreds of smaller trails existed) and this was all managed under a Konohiki land management system in the ahupua’a of Honouliuli.
What can be done to remedy this situation?

It could not be more clear what a great and tragic injustice is coming to the Ewa Plain- sponsored by the Federal Transportation Administration and the City’s HART Rail project.
FTA should immediately review and correct the erroneous Farmland Conversion Impact Rating based upon all of the substantial evidence Kanehili Cultural Hui has submitted in this letter and linked shared drive.

In addition, Mayor Caldwell should immediately direct City DPP to accomplish an honest Important Agricultural Lands (IAL) identification of Ewa Traditional Cultural Place agricultural farmlands as was the intent of City Council resolutions CCR-11-70 and CCR 12-23.

Further, before City Council Bill 3 is passed that will permanently remove and allow obliteration of these valuable Ewa farmlands, the Ewa TCP issue now under review through the HART Programmatic Agreement Stipulation IX should be settled as well as the pending Hawaii Supreme Court case concerning this same issue. 


Ewa Farm Land Conversion To Commercial Development Unconstitutional

City Bill 3 violates Hawaii Constitution, Creates Highway To Hell Death Trap

West Oahu Eco-Disaster: HART Rail Hitting Karst Water, Sea Caves And Polluting Ewa-Honoululi-Waipahu Wetlands


West Oahu's greatest natural apocalypse is unfolding, with hundreds 
of 8 foot in diameter, 200 foot deep drill bores, the ancient karst water, sea caves and 
wetlands are being fractured and polluted, then to be followed by 
a major new asphalt and concrete city based around 
three huge HART Rail Transit Oriented Developments.

The already fragile Ewa Plain ecosystem based on natural clean water will be destroyed.


HART Rail Ewa Plain Route Drills Into Major 1000 Year Old Native Hawaiian Burial Grounds


By John Bond,   Kanehili Cultural Hui

The Great Honouliuli Ewa Apocalypse Returns




Photos Of West Oahu Community Opposition At HART Rail Hoopili Station Meeting In Kapolei

Photos Of West Oahu Community Protests Of Hoopili Project Destroying 1500 Acres Of Prime Historic Ewa Farmland

Photos Of Protest Of Day Of Infamy City Bill 3 Which Destroys 1500 Acres Of Historic Prime Ewa Farmland 






City Bill 3 violates Hawaii Constitution, Creates Highway To Hell Death Trap

City Bill 3 violates Hawaii Constitution, Creates Highway To Hell Death Trap

John Bond   Kanehili Cultural Hui

West Oahu residents does it take you an hour and a half each way?
Get ready for 2 ½ hours or MORE.  It’s coming, thanks to your City Council and Bill 3.  http://www.hoopilitraffic.com

 

The Honolulu City Council believes cars from 53,000 homes will fit into one lane. And now they are preparing to approve urban zoning for 12,000 additional homes at Ho’opili. Around Easter in April Oahu drivers got a taste of the horrific disaster that is coming to West Oahu. This will become a future environmental disaster that could lead to many deaths because there is NO WAY OUT.

Included some very useful graphics to make this testimony fairly simple to follow:
Most of it comes from the Important Agricultural Lands workshops from Phase I. The workshops intentionally prevented attendees from reviewing very obvious IAL lands such as Hoopili. Important issues such as Food Security were also not allowed to be a consideration.

It is very important to realize that even with a strong pro developer bias and DDP’s attempt to stack the deck towards the decisions the workshop was structured to deliver, the attendees arrived at a final analysis which concluded that an arbitrary urban boundary was NOT an important criteria in making an Important Agricultural Land decision.

    The important IAL criteria was the OBVIOUS:

    1.     Currently used for agricultural production
    2.     Soil Qualities and Growing Conditions
    3.     Sufficient quantities of water.
    4.     With or near support infrastructure.

The intent of Bill 3 to take this highly important agricultural land forever out of ag production will be absolutely the worst decision ever made by the Honolulu City Council and haunt those who vote for it.

It should be defered until the land is IAL mapped as per the Constitution.

1964 Oahu General Plan – designated Ag-1 and in production

2003 Oahu General Plan – designated Ag-1 and in production

2012 Oahu General Plan – designated Ag-1 and in production


The City DPP will soon stage three public hearings on the Oahu Important Agricultural Lands Mapping Project which will be a PR attempt to explain why they are acting in behalf of land developers rather than the Hawaii State Constitution Article XI, Section 3.


Nothing in Chapters 205 or Act 183 says State Law "Prevents" IAL Mapping Ho’opili totally qualifies under ALL criteria as IAL. 35-40% of local produce comes from Ho’opili.  All past stated political and legislative goals and agendas have been for “greater agricultural self-sufficiency and less dependence on imported foods.”


Previously we have learned that HART Rail contractor Parsons Brinkerhoff graded West Oahu Ewa Plain rail right of way lands, in US Natural Resource Conservation Service Farmland Impact Conversion Rating Form (NRCS-CPA-106), as being SUB PAR and LOW AG VALUE, while five agricultural experts rated the same lands using NRCS-CPA-106 as nearly twice as high and meeting the Important Ag Land standard.


The purpose of the IAL Study is supposed to be to fulfill a constitutional mandate to identify ALL of the City’s candidate lands for IAL designation.


City DPP: “State law does not allow land identified for urban use by the State or county to be designated as IAL.” – FALSE! This is purely a City political determination for land sprawl development schemes and not the intent of the State Constitution or HRS 205. 


Despite City DPP trying to steer IAL workshop attendees the consensus was that any politically set boundary was NOT of primary importance to identify IAL.


City Council Reso and Agricultural Liaison Show Intent- But Thwarted By DPP

Be it resolved by the Council of the City and County of Honolulu that the City’s Agricultural Liaison is urged to expedite the identification and mapping of important agricultural lands and ensure that the IAL maps support and protect farming by stabilizing the agriculture land base.

Honolulu City Council Reso 12-23 states "lands to be mapped even if in an Urban Boundary." The City DPP had testified during the committee hearing that Urban Growth Boundaries can be modified if IAL are identified.

The intent of the Constitution supersedes ALL administrative boundaries. Now City DPP is told to intentionally deceive the public in their IAL meetings where major IAL decisions of interest to the community are already made and pre-determined.

Hoopili would have been mapped had the mapping taken place in 1978 or in 2012 when the City Council passed CCR 12-23, CD-1, FD-1, or when Laura Thielen issued her City Ag Liaison Report which clearly stated the process and the mandate to follow the Hawaii State Constitution. 

Government Data, Maps All Shows  

Ho’opili Is An Important Agricultural Land

The State of Hawaii for many decades in the Oahu General Plan identified Ewa Plantation and Ho’opili as Agricultural Land and why to this very day the land is classified as “AG-1.” 


The State of Hawaii ALISH map shows the Ho’opili area as PRIME AG (Agricultural Lands of Importance to the State of Hawaii – ALISH)

The State of Hawaii Land Study Bureau (LSB) map shows Ho’opili as top rated soils A & B.

And here is WHY City DPP is running this fraudulent land conversion scheme:


Section 4 (f) Federal Transportation Projects: Farmland Protection Act

Minimize impacts on farmland and maximize compatibility with state and local farmland programs and policies. All projects that take right-of-way in farmland, as defined by the regulation.

Farmland Protection Policy Act of 1981:  7 U.S.C. 4201-4209
1. Early coordination with the NRCS.
2. Land evaluation and site assessment.
3. Determination of whether or not to proceed with farmland conversion, based on severity of impacts and other environmental considerations.
\

Bill 3 Is Anti Food Security And  

Creates An Environmental Disaster Condition

Ho’opili will create a SOCIAL INJUSTICE - ENVIRONMENTAL DISASTER for H-1 Commuters and is NOT “Smart Growth” Transit Oriented Development.

A quote from State of Hawaii DOT director Brennon Morioka from 2009: "Even under a best case scenario, which includes an optimistic rail transit operation, the H-1 freeway would operate at LOS E with the Ho`opili project. At LOS F, there is gridlock on the freeway." (LOS - level of service.)


Important Historic and Cultural Aspects Of Ewa Plain Lands Under FTA Review

Currently the Federal Transit Administration has been notified by the HART Programmatic Agreement manager that the entire Ewa Plain –HART Rail Area of Potential Effect (APE) has four identified and unmitigated Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP’s)


The land also has considerable major issues with mass iwi kupuna burials of hundred of thousands of native Hawaiians over 1000 years of Honouliuli habitation, many of whom died shortly after Western contact with diseases they had no immunity for, and also buried anti-aircraft explosive ordinance fired from Pearl Harbor gun batteries at retreating Japanese planes on December 7, 1941. 

There is also a Federal level to this which are four identified Traditional Cultural Properties associated with the lands in Bill 3


Hawaiian artifacts were often found in the sugar cane fields after heavy rains or flooding. Iwi burials were commonly found in the coral sinkholes and caves around the plantation and were treated with due respect and avoidance.

Many credible sources say there are tens of thousands of burials because this area was a significant population center for approximately 1000 years which ended with the mass death of 95% of the population within a short span of time due to contact with Western diseases that the native Hawaiians had no natural resistance to.

Ewa Farm Land Conversion To Commercial Development Unconstitutional

Ewa Farmland Conversion Impact Rating


West Oahu Eco-Disaster: HART Rail Hitting Karst Water, Sea Caves And Polluting Ewa-Honoululi-Waipahu Wetlands

West Oahu's greatest natural apocalypse is unfolding, with hundreds 
of 8 foot in diameter, 200 foot deep drill bores, the ancient karst water, sea caves and 
wetlands are being fractured and polluted, then to be followed by 
a major new asphalt and concrete city based around 
three huge HART Rail Transit Oriented Developments.

The already fragile Ewa Plain ecosystem based on natural clean water will be destroyed.

HART Rail Ewa Plain Route Drills Into Major 1000 Year Old Native Hawaiian Burial Grounds

By John Bond,   Kanehili Cultural Hui

The Great Honouliuli Ewa Apocalypse Returns






Ewa Farm Land Conversion To Commercial Development Unconstitutional


Ewa Farm Land Conversion To Commercial Development Unconstitutional

by John Bond  Kanehili Cultural Hui

TO: City Council Chair Ernest Martin, Councilmember Ikaika Anderson
and Honoulu City Council members
Honolulu, Hawaii

Bill 3 Is Likely Unconstitutional; FTA Has Liabilities In West Oahu HART Rail Segment

Bill 3 is unconstitutional and counter to the will of the people of Oahu
and the cultural rights of Hawaiian people.
 



The Hoopili lands meet every single criteria to be a recognized Important Agricultural Land (IAL) under the State of Hawaii Constitution. In ALL of the substantial amount of documentation I have assembled there is nothing in State law, as frequently asserted by City Department of Planning and Permitting (DPP), that prevents its mapping as Important Agricultural Lands.

The identification and designation of Important Agricultural Lands (IAL) was first proposed at the 1978 Constitutional Convention and subsequently approved by voters in the same year.  Enacted as Article XI, Section 3, of the Constitution of the State of Hawaii, the State is required to conserve and protect agricultural lands, promote diversified agriculture, increase agricultural self-sufficiency and assure the availability of agriculturally suitable lands.

This Bill 3 will surely be the city bill that shall live in infamy. The politicians that vote for it will be remembered for decades as committing one of the worst environmental disasters ever.



The City DPP is staging three public hearings on the Oahu Important Agricultural Lands Mapping Projectwhich will be a PR attempt to explain why they are acting in behalf of land commercial developers rather than the Hawaii State Constitution Article XI, Section 3

Be it resolved by the Council of the City and County of Honolulu that the City’s Agricultural Liaison is urged to expedite the identification and mapping of important agricultural lands and ensure that the IAL maps support and protect farming by stabilizing the agriculture land
base.

City Council Reso and Agricultural Liaison Show Intent- But Thwarted By DPP:


Hoopili would have been mapped had the mapping taken place in 1978 or in 2012 when the City Council passed CCR 12-23, CD-1, FD-1, or when Laura Thielen issued her City Ag Liaison Report which clearly stated the process and the mandate to follow the Hawaii State Constitution.

The City DPP is holding the three meetings on IAL and already says in their announcement that “Hoopili and Koa Ridge developments can NOT be designated as IAL because “State law does not allow land identified for urban use by the State or county to be designated as IAL.”

That these lands should have been mapped since 1978 except there was "no money" (as was the continuous excuse for years)- the intent of Hawaii State Constitution Article XI, Section 3 never the less still trumps ALL and says SHALL MAP Important Ag Lands. No State or City boundary or “plan” can subvert and pervert the intent of the Hawaii State Constitution and public interest. 



Bill 3 and City DPP are actually running an unconstitutional land development scheme. This land was supposed to be mapped! If not, WHY do we have a State Constitution?

As stated in Chapter 205, Hawaii Revised Statutes, (State) and county incentive programs shall provide preference to important agricultural lands and agricultural businesses on IAL.  

There shall be an inclusive process for public involvement in the identification of potential lands and the development of maps of lands to be recommended as IAL, including a series of public meetings throughout the identification and mapping process. 


What City DPP is really doing is holding a FAÇADE of public meetings in which they have dictatorially PRE DETERMINED the “inclusive process for public involvement in the identification of potential lands and the development of maps of lands to be recommended as IAL” as stated in Chapter 205, HRS. 

HART Rail Converts And Destroys Farmland For Land Development  

And here is WHY City DPP is running this fraudulent land conversion scheme:

Section 4 (f) Federal Transportation Projects: Farmland Protection Act:

Minimize impacts on farmland and maximize compatibility with state and local farmland programs and policies. All projects that take right-of-way in farmland, as defined by the regulation.

Farmland Protection Policy Act of 1981:  7 U.S.C. 4201-4209

1. Early coordination with the NRCS.
2. Land evaluation and site assessment.
3. Determination of whether or not to proceed with farmland conversion, based on severity of impacts and other environmental considerations.



The City is running this unconstitutional ag land conversion scheme in an attempt to absolve the Federal Transit Administration in being legally responsible for funding the destruction of Important Ag Lands as identified in the US Natural Resource Conservation Service Farmland Impact Conversion Rating Form AD 1006.

Previously we have learned that HART Rail contractor Parsons Brinkerhoff graded West Oahu Ewa Plain rail right of way lands, in US Natural Resource Conservation Service Farmland Impact Conversion Rating Form (NRCS-CPA-106), as being SUB PAR and LOW AG VALUE, while five agricultural experts rated the same lands using NRCS-CPA-106 as nearly twice as high and meeting the Important Ag Land standard.

So really, this whole City DPP ag land devaluation process is a compounding of fraud upon fraud to meet land developer and Transit Oriented Development interests. Who needs a State Constitution when you can become a third world special interest dictatorship?



Government Data, Maps All Shows Ho’opili Is An Important Agricultural Land

The State of Hawaii for many decades in the Oahu General Plan identified Ewa Plantation and Ho’opili as Agricultural Land and why to this very day the land is classified as “AG-1.”

The State of Hawaii ALISH map shows the Ho’opili area as PRIME AG (Agricultural Lands of Importance to the State of Hawaii – ALISH)

The State of Hawaii Land Study Bureau (LSB) map shows Ho’opili as
top rated soils A & B.


 The Ewa Plain Farmlands Are Also Wetlands For Migratory And Endangered Species

Laura Thielen in 2012 was hired by the City to map IAL and said it was "easy" to map the lands and could be done within a year. Her report laid out the process. But it wasn’t done!

Just because an Urban Growth Boundary has been administratively created by the City or State does NOT CHANGE what can be mapped as Important Agricultural Lands or the intent of the Hawaii State Constitution, Article XI, Section 3.

Honolulu City Council Reso 12-23 states "lands to be mapped
even if in an Urban Boundary."

The City DPP had even testified during the committee hearing that Urban Growth Boundaries can be modified if IAL are identified.


The intent of the Hawaii State Constitution supersedes ALL administrative boundaries.

Now City DPP is told to intentionally mislead the public in their IAL meetings where major IAL decisions of interest to the community are already made and pre-determined!

Nothing in Chapters 205 or Act 183 says State Law "Prevents" IAL Mapping of Hoopili.



Ho’opili totally qualifies under ALL criteria as IAL.
35-40% of local produce comes from Ho’opili.  

All past stated political and legislative goals and agendas have been for “greater agricultural self-sufficiency and less dependence on imported foods.”

The DPP is acting completely in behalf of major land development, against the will and expressed intent the people of Hawaii, creating an environmental disaster, endangering the population of West Oahu and going against the Hawaii State Constitution Article XI, Section 3 and 1978 Hawaii Constitutional Convention.

Bill 3 Is Anti Food Security And Creates An Environmental Disaster Condition

Ho’opili will create a SOCIAL INJUSTICE - ENVIRONMENTAL DISASTER for H-1 Commuters and is NOT “Smart Growth” Transit Oriented Development.

A quote from State of Hawaii DOT director Brennon Morioka from 2009: "Even under a best case scenario, which includes an optimistic rail transit operation, the H-1 freeway would operate at LOS E with the Ho`opili project. At LOS F, there is gridlock on the freeway." (LOS - level of service.)

Hawaii imports roughly 90% of our food and we have less than 

two week’s supply of food in the islands.

We need to be aware of the many things that could cut off our food supply such as a tsunami or hurricane which could destroy our ports and coastal airports. Oahu is long, long overdue for such a major disaster based upon historic records. A major earthquake in California, Washington or Alaska could destroy West Coast ports and roadways and a world pandemic could close the islands to all flights and shipping. These are all very REAL historic possibilities.


Oahu is being over built beyond its sustainability
and most people know this.

Surely the time will come when these Ho’opili lands will be needed for food in order to survive. But they will be gone forever covered in concrete and asphalt. Most people on Oahu intuitively feel this is unmitigated greed and insanity- as well as unconstitutional!

Important NEW cultural and historic information overlooked by the HART EIS has been brought to the attention of HART and FTA from Kanehili Cultural Hui of Ewa Honouliuli, including four NEW Traditional Cultural Properties of significant magnitude and impact on the West Oahu HART Rail segment.

Wide Spread Public Opposition To Bill 3 And Decimation Of Important Ag Lands

Ho’opili is actually a fake development name for the historic Honouliuli
agricultural Ewa Plain


 
Star-Advertiser Poll March 29, 2015 showed overwhelming massive public support for preserving IAL with 93%, 1,099 votes, to preserve prime, A-B farmland from development.

The CEO of Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) has expressed in numerous written testimonies that OHA has great reservations about the Ho’opili lands being taken out of agricultural production.

These same lands were used for 1000 years as native Hawaiian agricultural lands where Oahu’s largest pre-contact native Hawaiian community thrived on the rich volcanic soils with many natural springs that formed the Konohiki managed ahupua’a food ecosystem.



A Honouliuli lineal native descendant has provided this
very important cultural history:

Ewa was the central governance extending throughout the archipelago and later after the 6th millennium was associated with the Hema-Ohua lineage. From Ohua extended Maweke lineage that provided the foundation for all the millennial kings throughout the archipelago.

Ewa was not only where centralized rule is associated in the most ancient times, but also, the central breadbasket. 

That is why less royal gravesites are found there, because of its being a food, gathering area.  Also, it is a most valued area for propagating and gathering sacred plants and minerals by the kahuna lapa'au.  

Judith Flanders, a descendant of James Campbell and a beneficiary of the Campbell Estate, said in a news article that estate trustees made a mistake selling the lands under Ho‘opili to Horton.

Flanders urged the city to rectify "the wrong that was perpetuated against the aina when the Campbell Estate sold somewhere around 1,375 acres of prime grade A and B agricultural lands to the developer."



Testimony typically runs about 4-to-1 against approving the Ho’opili agricultural land development plan during public hearings. No one is opposed to creating jobs, however there are already very large home tracts planned on non-farm lands ready for construction.

Nearby Kapolei, the “second city,” still has many large undeveloped open city blocks that are urban zoned and far better suited for concentrated “Smart Growth” development rather than the vast sprawling Ho’opili H-1 traffic generating housing tract that is the complete antithesis of “Smart Growth.”



Highly Productive Soils And Conditions Can’t Be Replaced Someplace Else

The Ewa Plain lands cannot be easily “replaced” as developers like to state. These historic and culturally important spring fed rich volcanic agricultural lands CANNOT be administratively moved like furniture to another location.


We can’t do this with historic and Traditional Cultural Property sites either, which this area is- a TCP- a Traditional Agri-culture Property

Hawaii has many very UNIQUE Micro-Climates.

Because of the unique local combination of solar radiation, volcanic A & B soil and mountain spring water these lands can produce four ag farm crops a year.

This is an important production capacity that can’t be matched by “replacement” land anywhere else on the island. The Ho’opili land has very favorable conditions for crop production, high-quality soils, flat or gently sloping terrain, high solar radiation (sunshine) with low pumping costs for irrigation. All farm conditions on this land are ideal.

The largest, most productive and profitable sugar plantation in the Hawaiian Islands was the Ewa Plantation on these very same lands.
 
All historic and cultural evidence shows these as Important Agricultural Lands. The Ho’opili area constitutes about one-fourth of what was called the Golden Triangle and is the only part of the Golden Triangle still remaining in agriculture.



“For vegetable crops, the Ho’opili lands are among the most sustainably productive farm lands in the world,” says Hawaii ag expert James Brewbaker.  “Yields of crops like sweet corn are at least 55% higher there than on the North Shore slopes. Ho’opili land produces more than 40% of Oahu’s fresh broccoli, beans, romaine lettuce, and zucchini, and more than 70% of Oahu’s fresh corn, cantaloupe, pumpkin, and honeydew, along with a number of other popular local crops. (See our photos of local farmers and local families using this ag TCP.)

Ho’opili’s 1,497 acres constitutes a huge chunk of ag land on O’ahu- 32% of Oahu’s active farm acreage. Hawaii Soil expert Jonathan Deenik has testified, “Close to 90% of the Ho’opili area is composed of high activity clays, which are characterized by very high nutrient retention capacity, and high fertility. “

Because these acres are clay, which contracts and expands the Ho’opili developers and HART rail stations will need to scrape off three or four feet of the prime, A and B quality soil, haul it away, and replace it with three feet of coral. This destruction of the Golden Triangle farmland will be total, irreversible and impossible to restore for as long as humans live on Oahu.

The Ewa Plain farmland is well-located for farmers due to the short trucking distance to Kapolei food distributors, Ko Olina Resorts and downtown Honolulu markets via H-1. The lands have a completely TURN KEY ag infrastructure- a large scale Ewa Plantation water distribution system, conveniently accessible field plots, close by public roadways and electrical power.



There are NO replacement areas for these ideal Ewa Plain farm lands. Demand for locally grown foods is skyrocketing and these farm lands could actually become a tourist attraction. The annual October Pumpkin Patch is a very popular local Ewa farm land tradition.

Important Historic and Cultural Aspects Of Ewa Plain Lands Under FTA Review

Currently the Federal Transit Administration has been notified by the HART Programmatic Agreement manager that the entire Ewa Plain –HART Rail Area of Potential Effect (APE) has four identified and unmitigated Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP’s) including the 1000 year old Honouliuli Ewa Plain agricultural lands that were the Oahu food breadbasket in the Hawaiian pre-contact era.

Another large looming problem is that for approximately 1000 years native Hawaiians lived on this same land raising food and families- and died and were buried on this same land.

Native burial sites are sacred and there are likely tens to hundreds of thousands of native Hawaiian iwi burials on this Traditional Cultural Property that will be disturbed and dug up.

Other Outstanding Legal Issues Not Settled

A lawsuit by the environmental group Sierra Club and former state Sen. Clayton Hee argues that the state has a constitutional obligation to protect important agricultural land.

The case is pending before the state Supreme Court. The outcome of the case could have a major impact on many land development plans in this Ewa Plain area and Bill 3 should have been DEFFERED.


Widespread Public Opposition – There is Nothing SMART About Bill 3…

The Kapolei “Second City” has vast EMPTY blocks of land while DPP wants MASSIVE URBAN SPAWL on IAL Farm Land- This makes absolutely NO SENSE.

The H-1 traffic is already rated as INSANE and this project will make H-1 a total parking lot and a very dangerous future public disaster when a major emergency strikes. The project is missing approval from the Navy to allow storm water from the development to intersect Navy-owned land and flow into West Loch, Pearl Harbor. Any planned “holding pond” will allow contaminated water to seep through the porous ancient coral reef karst in a matter of days.


There has been a mushrooming of public consciousness a
bout fresh fruits and vegetables. 

People are concerned about nutrition and many want organically or locally grown food.  They feel strongly about food security and the need to save important local traditional farmlands. Residents are willing to pay more for healthy, locally grown food and create more opportunities for local farmers.

The Kapolei NB passed a resolution opposing the Ho’opili.  Makakilo-Kapolei-Honokai Hale Neighborhood Board stated its strong opposition to the Ho'opili development.

Kanehili Cultural Hui has assembled a large on-line collection of maps, documents, photos about the Ewa Honouliuli  (Ho’opili) - former Ewa Plantation farmland that shows it is not only very valuable farmland but also a Traditional Cultural Property which can become a Federally recognized property placed on the NPS National Register in Washington, DC.

We have also gone through the quite massive Hoopili EIS and related Ewa plantation cultural history documents that help make the Traditional Cultural Property (TCP) case. TCP identification is somewhat like a public referendum- the public can decide what farmland is a Traditional Cultural Property. People don't have to be a native Hawaiian or a farmer to believe a TCP is an important cultural place in the community.

While Ewa Plantation Villages still exist and are on the State historic register, the actual Ewa agricultural fields, which also still exist in original plantation plots- are still in ag production as part of a 1000 year old cultural practice. Whether it is native Taro, sugarcane fields or supermarket table  veggies, the ag culture lives on and THAT is the TCP that still exists today!

Kanehili Cultural Hui, a 501-c-3 has a mission statement to work for the identification and preservation of historic and cultural areas, both Western and native Hawaiian in the ahupua’a of Honouliuli.  Ho’opili is sited on very historic kalo lands that go back 1000 years with an 1825 documented trail network (Malden Map).

The primary waterway through the area is Ka Lo’i (kalo fields) gulch which is today a channelized waterway that originally fed these many fields. The largest pre-contact native population on Oahu lived at Honouliuli (Hoopili).

All of these historic facts show the area was a Traditional Cultural Property (TCP) as found in Federal documents (Navy, HART) which have been left out of the previous Land Use Commission reviews. 




Shared Drive Collection of Maps, Documents and Photos Supporting This Letter

Ewa Farmland         

         City Bill 3 Violates Hawaii Constitution, Creates Highway To Hell Death Trap

Ewa Farmland Conversion Impact Rating

West Oahu Eco-Disaster: HART Rail Hitting Karst Water, Sea Caves And Polluting Ewa-Honoululi-Waipahu Wetlands

West Oahu's greatest natural apocalypse is unfolding, with hundreds 
of 8 foot in diameter, 200 foot deep drill bores, the ancient karst water, sea caves and 
wetlands are being fractured and polluted, then to be followed by 
a major new asphalt and concrete city based around 
three huge HART Rail Transit Oriented Developments.

The already fragile Ewa Plain ecosystem based on natural clean water will be destroyed.

HART Rail Ewa Plain Route Drills Into Major 1000 Year Old Native Hawaiian Burial Grounds

By John Bond,   Kanehili Cultural Hui

The Great Honouliuli Ewa Apocalypse Returns


Photos Of West Oahu Community Opposition At HART Rail Hoopili Station Meeting In Kapolei

Photos Of West Oahu Community Protests Of Hoopili Project Destroying 1500 Acres Of Prime Historic Ewa Farmland

Photos Of Protest Of Day Of Infamy City Bill 3 Which Destroys 1500 Acres Of Historic Prime Ewa Farmland