Showing posts with label APE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label APE. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

New AIS Testimony: Rail Route Illegally Damages Hawaiian Cultural Properties

AIS Testimony: Rail Route Illegally Damages Hawaiian Cultural Properties



by John Bond, Kanehili Cultural Hui

Saturday,  June 1, 2013


Numerous groups and organizations submitted comments and testimony on the 22 mile Honolulu Rail Archaeological Impact Statement (AIS) to the State Historic Preservation Division (SHPD) to meet the May 30th Deadline.

The new AIS comment period had been extended because of last year's Hawaii Supreme Court ruling that the rail AIS cannot be done in phases or segments.

The previous 2009 AIS omitted a great deal of valid cultural information, many groups were not consulted, and data was skewed to fit a 'rush-to-begin-building-the-rail' agenda, rather than any attempt at honest historic and cultural preservation.

The law finally caught up with them.

In his ruling, Federal Judge Wallace Tashima made a special point of noting his concern about the identification of Traditional Cultural Properties (TCPs) along the HART rail route. It was later made clear in recent HART meetings that TCP's include all cultures, not just native Hawaiian, as per federal law.

HART is required to also adhere to Department of Transportation Act of 1966 special provision - Section 4(f) - which stipulates that US DOT agencies-including the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), cannot approve the use of land from wildlife and waterfowl refuges or public or private historical sites unless both of the following conditions apply:
  1. There is no feasible and prudent alternative.
  2. The action includes all possible planning to minimize harm to the property resulting from use.
Hawaiian Cultural Practitioner Mike Lee, along with Hawaii Thousand Friends, submitted approximately 800 pages of detailed comment and testimony on the the HART Rail AIS covering the entire 22 mile route.

This package included maps, photographs, emails with many agencies (HART, SHPD, DLNR, BLNR, Oahu Burial Council, HCDA, etc.) that go back nearly a decade, as well as news articles, historic research and citations, legal documents and filings, native Hawaiian rights, the Clean Water Act, and much more.

A key issue for Lee is the identification of the ancient coral reef limestone along the Oahu shoreline known as Karst, which connects volcanic mountain lava tube water to the shoreline Karst reef water systems.

These water springs feed a shoreline ecosystem and was how ancient Hawaiians managed their fish ponds. The Karst was also of very high spiritual importance to ancient Hawaiians and used for sacred burials, such as downtown Honolulu on the grounds of I'olani Palace where there is an ancient Karst burial cave.

"I wanted them to know that I wasn't just making this up ten minutes ago" said Lee. "I am a Konohikist- I believe in the ecological management and protection of our very important natural island water systems. Protecting our Wahi Kapu sites is also very important to me."

Lee's testimony concerns identification and protection of important Hawaiian cultural sites along the rail route, including wahi pana (sacred sites) and wahi kapu (sacred burial areas) and their inclusion into a TCP (Traditional Cultural Properties) that would make sure these special sites, caves, caverns, springs, ponds and water systems are preserved and not contaminated during rail construction.

Also included were photographs of Kawaiaha'o Church which is a graphic example of early Karst limestone block construction. The church and surrounding walls are made of rough ancient reef from the shoreline and ancient sea shells and marine organisms can be clearly seen.

The church is also located on the site of an important ancient Karst spring. Nearby I'olani Palace and the royal guard barracks are also constructed from Karst limestone blocks from the shoreline.

In addition, Kanehili Cultural Hui also submitted another approximately 250 pages of detailed comment and testimony on the the HART Rail AIS- primarily concerned with the Honouliuli-Ewa area and the documentation of previously unidentified Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP), Ewa Historic Districts, Ewa Dec 7, 1941 Battlefield Area and an outline for a Honouliuli-Ewa Cultural Landscape Report.

Many current or former Ewa Village residents helped by supplying historic documents, maps, photos and oral histories. The Kanehili Hui name comes from the original Hawaiian name for the Honouliuli-Ewa area and is mentioned by Hawaiian goddess Hi'iaka in her famous and often quoted chants when she traveled through the Ewa Plains area aprroximately 1000 years ago.

The Kanehili Cultural Hui 501-c-3 non-profit community organization is concerned with the entire cultural history of the area- from ancient times to modern times.

A key focus of the Kanehili Cultural Hui report and testimony was on the 1825 Malden Trails (ancient Hawaiian Trails- believed to have possibly been originally constructed by very early Tahitian arrivals to Kanehili) which played a major role in the Hawaiian cultural history of the Honouliuli-Ewa area, and which was entirely left out of the HART Rail AIS.

The fixed guideway and stations directly overlay the 1825 trails as well as the Kalo'i Karst waterway that flows to the Ewa shoreline.

Also of major importance is the identification and location of the Leina a ka Uhane, a sacred spiritual leaping off place for souls returning to the ancient homeland of Tahiti. This is a National Register eligible TCP, yet HART and the SHPD administrator has continuously tried to minimize the importance and geographic area of this TCP as well as apparently intentionally misidentify its location, despite the error being brought to their attention several times since last year.

The previous Rail AIS also failed in many ways to adequately document important Honouliuli-Ewa cultural sites such as the greater Ewa Plantation and railway network that was the largest private railway in Hawaii. The Oahu Railway that served Honouliuli-Ewa plantation railway was chartered under King David Kalakaua.

A Cultural Landscape Report (CLR) is the primary report that documents the history, significance and treatment of a cultural landscape. A CLR evaluates the history and integrity of the landscape including any changes to its geographical context, features, materials, and use.
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West Oahu Eco-Disaster: HART Rail Hitting Karst Water And Polluting Ewa-Honoululi-Waipahu Wetlands

http://honouliuli.blogspot.com/2015/01/Hart-rail-disaster-hitting-Oahu.html

Monday, January 5, 2015

A Plan To Restore The 1825 Malden Mapped Ancient Hawaiian Trails On The Ewa Plain

A Plan To Restore The 1825 Malden Mapped Ancient Hawaiian Trails On The Ewa Plain

By John Bond,     Kanehili Cultural Hui

This is truly an ahupua'a trail system and also a golden opportunity to tie directly into the 
campus of UH West Oahu, Kapolei Regional Park and a planned future road access extension to Makakilo.  It will also connect with Ewa Village, Ewa Mahiko Park, Ewa Village Golf Course and future City Kalaeloa shoreline beach parks on the Ewa coast.

The proposed trail system restoration also ties in with the historic Pearl Harbor - Oahu Railway bike way that will allow Kapolei and Ewa residents to walk or bike all the way along Pearl Harbor to the USS Arizona and Bowfin museums as well as the USS Missouri and Pacific Aviation Museum.

The Malden Hawaiian trails historically and culturally connect with the ancient Hawaiian 
traditions of Makahiki and Lono processions marked by the position of the Pleiades 
and star Sirius. The trail aligns with the ancient westerly solar views of Puu o Kapolei. 

The restored trails could also allow for future historic pageantry of annual 
Lono Processions and Ewa Plain Paniolo and Pa'u riders during Aloha Week (Makahiki)

The restored ancient trail would also link the shore of West Loch near West Loch Golf Course and Shoreline Park with an existing Oahu Railway bikeway to the Fish & Wildlife Honouliuli Preserve and the Oahu Railway bike path that allows walking or biking to Waipahu, Pearl City and Aiea.

Why refer to the ancient Hawaiian trails of the Ewa Plain as the 1825 Malden Trails?

The reason is that the map is an undeniable Western historic published document and a rare "snapshot" in time like a photograph. Hawaiian culture relies upon a rich oral tradition that fortunately had some cultural histories later transcribed into Hawaiian language newspapers.
However many stories were also lost forever because large numbers of native Hawaiians died within a very short time in the Honouliuli ahupua'a as a result of contact with Western diseases, particularly when the whaling industry expanded phenomenally.

There has not been such a visual documentation of the Honouliuli ahupua'a trail network other than the 1825 Malden map. We can use it to compare with later Ewa plantation maps
which followed these same ancient native trails out of logical convenience to lay out the Ewa plantation. Native Hawaiians had already created a detailed Konohiki farming and land management system based around Honouliuli and Kalo'i streams. The apocalypse of foreign diseases left large areas of previously cultivated fields and waterways abandoned.


Unfortunately also lost during the mass deaths of the native population were vast amounts of oral history about the ancient Honouliuli trails and how that population used them. Fortunately a lot can be recreated by what is known about similar trail networks on the other islands and valuable documentation by cultural historians like Kepa Maly of Kumu Pono, LLC.

Restoring the ancient Honouliuli trails is an important way to help remember the people who lived and died in Honouliuli and their once great, sustainable and highly productive Konohiki based culture. It's a legacy that our society today owes to native Hawaiian cultural history.



The main waterway through the HART Rail Project is Kalo'i which means Kalo fields waterway.
Most of its surface flow was cut off decades ago except when it rains, but around 90 percent of the Kalo'i water flow is underground through the ancient coral reef karst down to One'ula.
There is a great deal of evidence of ground water flowing under the Ewa Plain surface along the Kalo'i route down to the Ewa shore, especially after seasonal rains.


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The Governor, Legislature, Mayor and City Council Must Act QUICKLY 

There is an enormous opportunity to restore this major historic and cultural feature of the Ewa Plain before it is too late and the rights of way are all bulldozed away and covered in concrete and asphalt. Because of modern development not all of the trail segments can be given a truly accurate ancient alignment, but a fairly good restoration is still very possible if acted upon quickly. 

The restored trails would link together nearly every major historic and cultural location on the Ewa Plain as a walkable, bikable public trail way as proscribed under State law and with Federal NPS trail way program technical support. As an identified State right of way under legal authority Hawaii Revised Statutes, Chapter 198 D and Hawaii Administrative Rules, Title 13, Chapter 130, it would be more than just another walk/bike path, it would honor native Hawaiian cultural history, could become a nationally recognized trail system, encourage a healthier lifestyle and be a very convenient way to get around the Ewa Plain.

However this plan must be acted upon very quickly as West Oahu developers are rapidly bulldozing the trail right of way before an historic native Hawaiian trail corridor can be established. The City and State have been extremely lax in enforcing historic preservation laws and have never even full filled the long promised Leeward Bikeway plan. However at least the right of way remains preserved.

The main legal driver at this time to preserve and restore the 1825 Malden identified trails is Section 106 and 110 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (NHPA) which requires Federal agencies and their federally funded Projects (FTA-HART) to take into account the effects of their undertakings on historic and cultural properties. The FTA-HART Programmatic Agreement also states that impacts must be identified and mitigated.

Not only has HART already begun building an elevated fixed guide way and placing station columns directly over, by or near the trail routes, they are preparing to let contracts for three rail stations. The HART and FTA funded project is also offering all kinds of incentives for developers to make huge profits placing Transit Oriented Developments (TOD) over, by or near the ancient trails and covering them with asphalt and concrete.


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

The Ewa Development Plan (EDP) And Kapolei Area Bikeway Plan (KABP)


The EDP and KABP states that corridors should be viewed as opportunities to link major open spaces with pedestrian and bike paths along open corridors. The Kapolei Area Bikeway Plan, published by Campbell Estate in 1991, encourages a "comprehensive bike way network to serve the Ewa Plain and notes that because of generally even, gradually sloping terrain, Ewa offers decided advantages for bicycle transportation and recreation." 


The restoration of the 1825 Malden Trails isn't just another walkway-bikeway concept. It is an historically accurate concept and way of honoring the cultural history of the Ewa Plain, including the spiritual concept of remembering the likely up to one million original native Hawaiian population that walked these very same mountain to sea ahupua'a pathways for approximately 1000 years.

Even though covered over with volcanic dirt for the expansion of Ewa plantation for sugar cane fields, these very same trails likely still EXIST under the surface of the rich soil brought in from nearby Waianae volcano hillsides using steam engines and sluice waterways.


The 1825 Malden Trail Plan Uniquely Ties Together Historic, Cultural and Recreational Sites In Kapolei, Ewa and the UH West Oahu Campus


A major advantage of this trail plan is that a great deal of it in the primary east-west direction can use existing, mostly paved old plantation roadways or existing modern sidewalk improvements such as along Farrington Highway in Kapolei. The segments most in peril are on former Ewa Plantation agricultural fields now being converted into HART Rail stations and the major Transit Oriented Developments (TOD) that will be built around them for big developers to profit from.

Unlike the Leeward Bikeway plan which uses the right-of-way of the old Oahu Railway, which is in fact still in use by the Hawaiian Railway Society, the 1825 Malden Trail routes are well north of the Leeward Bikeway plan and also run mauka-makai (north-south) connecting the mountains to the sea.

This is truly an ahupua'a trail system and also a golden opportunity to tie directly into the campus of UH West Oahu, Kapolei Regional Park and a planned future road access extension to Makakilo. It will also connect with Ewa Village, Ewa Mahiko Park, Ewa Village Golf Course and future Kalaeloa shoreline beach parks on the Ewa coast. 

The proposed trail system restoration also ties in with the historic Pearl Harbor - Oahu Railway bike way that will allow Kapolei and Ewa residents to walk or bike all the way along Pearl Harbor to the USS Arizona and Bowfin museums as well as the USS Missouri and Pacific Aviation Museum.



The Malden Hawaiian trails historically and culturally connect with the ancient Hawaiian 
traditions of Makahiki and Lono processions marked by the position of the Pleiades 
and star Sirius. The trail aligns with the ancient westerly solar views of Puu o Kapolei. 

The restored trails could also allow for future historic pageantry of annual 
Lono Processions and Ewa Plain Paniolo and Pa'u riders during Aloha Week (Makahiki)



There is even a northern Palehua trail that would connect with the future 
Makakilo extension (a second way out of Makakilo.)

The southern trails of Kualaka'i and One'ula would connect with State and national Register sites Ewa Villages, Hawaiian Railway museum, MCAS Ewa Field, 1942 aircraft revetments, Barbers Point Golf Course, Kalaeloa Heritage Park, Hoakalei Foundation preserve and major planned City Kalaeloa shoreline parks and Barbers Point horse riding stables. 

The restored ancient trail would also link the shore of West Loch near West Loch Golf Course and Shoreline Park with an existing Oahu Railway bikeway to the Fish & Wildlife Honouliuli Preserve and the Oahu Railway bike path that allows walking or biking to Waipahu, Pearl City, Aiea and all the way to Pearl Harbor historic attractions.


Continuing West from the Honouliuli bay near Laulaunui Island the restored trail would cross Fort Weaver Road near the original James Campbell homestead and first Ewa artisan well and pass mauka of the Child and Family Service Center which was the second site of the Ewa Plantation Hospital. 

The trail would then continue along old Mango Tree Road to a point directly across from the Ewa Village Golf Course club house. It is near this location where the original 1925 Ewa Plantation Hospital existed until the later larger hospital was built overlooking Lower Village which grew around the original ancient Hawaiian trail.

At a point near the Ewa Village Golf Course the trail would go northwest to a crossroads and then across North-South Road (Kualaka'i Parkway) on to the University of West Oahu campus.
There are some really exciting possibilities here to use some historic Ewa Plantation infrastructure and large bermed ancient Hawaiian Kalo'i waterways where the Ewa Plantation railway once ran.

The trail then continues to a point near the entrance of Kapolei Golf Course and then West along Farrington Hwy to near the intersection of Farrington Hwy and Fort Barrette Rd. There is a large open lot still not developed which could incorporate the trail into its development design.
The ancient Hawaiian trail route would then cross Fort Barrette and into Kapolei Regional Park.

The Southern Extensions of Kualaka'i and One'ula trails

This section has many unique historic and cultural 

The southern trails of Kualaka'i and One'ula would connect with State and National Register Ewa Villages, Hawaiian Railway museum, MCAS Ewa Field, 1942 aircraft revetments, Barbers Point Golf Course, Kalaeloa Heritage Park, Hoakalei Foundation preserve and major planned City Kalaleoa shoreline parks and Barbers Point horse riding stables. 

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The Traditional Cultural Properties (TCP) aspect make these trails            National Register eligible.

The only mitigation has been HART "tombstones" which say "here lies a one thousand year old highly developed native Konohiki culture" that HART and their land developers have destroyed in the second coming of the Honouliuli Apocalypse (the first was the massive and nearly total annihilation of the native Honouliuli population in the early 1800's.)


Decorated HART Rail pylons are NOT "mitigation" for putting in three rail stations on 1000 year old agricultural lands and then spawning Transit Oriented Development projects covering over EVERYTHING with massive amounts of asphalt and concrete and creating majorwater pollution from imperious surfaces


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University of Hawaii West Oahu Campus Has 1825 Malden Trail On Its Makai Property Border

The Restored 1825 Malden identified Hawaiian Trails offer special historic and cultural tie-ins including Makahiki, Paniolo, Pa'u Aloha Week Pageantry





















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Pearl Harbor Bike Path offers unique view of Oahu port and its shoreline
by: Catherine E. Toth   Hawaii Magazine    Oct 22, 2013


For Albert Silva, the Key to the Future Lies in the Past By Chad Pata

Sunday, December 28, 2014

University of Hawaii West Oahu Campus Has 1825 Malden Trail On Its Makai Property Border

University of Hawaii West Oahu Campus Has 1825 Malden Trail On Its Makai Property Border

John Bond,  Kanehili Cultural Hui

The 1825 Malden Trails would be a really great visitor attraction with likely state and federal 
funding, as well as serve as a walking and bicycle path across the Ewa Plain from Fort Weaver 
Road to the campus of UH West Oahu and then on through Kapolei and the Leeward coast. It 
would be an historic, cultural and environmental preservation win-win for everyone...but right 
now they are on the verge of being bulldozed unless action isn't taken immediately!


The 1825 Malden Trails, mapped during an expedition of the British Royal Navy HMS Blonde to Oahu, showed the trail connections between various locations of native Hawaiian communities at the time of early Western contact.




Two routes of the trail run by the UH West Oahu campus which is located on former Ewa Sugar Plantation on the Ewa Plain. The plantation maintained a detailed sugar cane field map for many decades and fortunately most of the agricultural cane fields can still be seen from the air, especially using a GIS software tool like Google Earth.

Plotting the trail route was a matter of reviewing many older USGS maps and air photos taken by the US military that reveal where the oldest roads appeared. In reviewing the history of trails in the continental US, in most cases early trails were made by Indians migrating from place to place.

When Western settlers arrived trail scouts showed them the Indian trails to follow. Originally with ox drawn wagons, trails were improved for carriages, early automobiles, then becoming improved roads, etc.  



On the Ewa Plain there was one single land owner, James Campbell, who leased out the ancient coral reef plain to the Ewa Plantation Company. The plantation cane haul roads and railway network largely followed existing trail ways made by native Hawaiians. 

By overlaying the 1825 Malden Trails map, which was not made with the benefit of air photos or Google Earth, the best fit is made where the oldest main roads and plantation cane haul tracks appeared as the plantation expanded. They often ran side by side.

While not perfect, the 1825 Malden Trails shown below in a modern geographic context are the most likely ancient routes that could still be preserved as the traditional native Hawaiian rights of way under the Na Hele trail program. This should be done before it is too late. 


Hawaii State Trails Program


National Park Service Trails Assistance program



The Honolulu City Council in 2012 passed a resolution to preserve the trails, but nothing was ever followed up. Land developers continue to bulldoze everything without any regard for cultural history and State law protecting these very important native Hawaiian trails.

A Plan To Restore The 1825 Malden Mapped Ancient Hawaiian Trails On The Ewa Plain



HART Rail And The State of Hawaii Should Preserve the Historic Trails of the Ewa Plain


Despite Hawaii State Law, Ancient Historic Ewa Plain Trails Being Destroyed By HART Rail Land Developers



Above, the UH West Oahu campus with Ewa Plantation field numbers for reference.


The western trail ran from the village of Honouliuli to Kahe Point. A mauka trail branched off to Palehua. Over time trail roads were somewhat straightened out for cane railway and cane trucks.


The 1825 Malden Trails as overlaid on a 1939 Ewa Plantation field map.


UH West Oahu campus in relation to Ewa Sugar Plantation with main road and rail routes



Ewa Plantation and villages as seen from Makakilo. On the right side is MCAS Ewa Field


The Ewa Plantation maintained their own railway. The original Ewa hospital 
location is believed to be where the 1825 Malden Trails branched off to the 
makai shoreline communities of  Kualaka'i and One'ula. 


Ewa Plantation with some modern developments around the remaining agriculture fields. 


Another view of the 1825 Malden Trails with still remaining Ewa Plantation sugar fields.


The overall view of the 1825 mapped native Hawaiian trails on the entire Ewa Plain.


Area circled in red is the HART Rail Area of Potential Effect (APE).

HART Rail And The State of Hawaii Should Preserve the Historic Trails of the Ewa Plain


The Governor of Hawaii, The Hawaii State Legislature, The Mayor of Honolulu and the Honolulu City Council should absolutely and unequivocally follow state law and preserve the ancient historic native Hawaiian trails of the Ewa Plain as originally identified in the British Royal Navy surveyed map of Oahu published in 1825. A City Council resolution passed in 2012 urged the same initiative.



Honouliuli Ewa Plain Pueos


The Disappearing Sacred Guardians Of Native Lands On The Ewa Plain




The HMS Blonde played an important role in early Hawaiian history, see link:



Honolulu City Council RESOLUTION 12-172, CD1 (2012) passed unanimously:

URGING THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY AND 
THE STATE OF HAWAII TO RECOGNIZE AND PRESERVE 
THE HISTORIC TRAILS OF THE EWA PLAINS.




CIA Helps Establish Honouliuli Ewa As A Traditional Cultural Property - Place




1936 USGS Map shows the historic Ewa Plantation railway crossing through the
UHWO Campus makai section and over the culturally very important Kalo'i Gulch
where native Hawaiians grew kalo and other crops for approximately 1000 years.


Overlay of 1936 USGS map with recent Google Earth image of the UHWO campus


The ancient Hawaiian trail became an EPco Railway route and then finally a cane 
haul road for tournahaulers, large vehicles which replaced rail cars after WW-II


The UHWO campus land preserves some of the last historic 1000 year 
agricultural and cultural history of the Ewa Plain


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



HART Rail Ignores Signed Programmatic Agreement - Destroys Oahu Cultural Sites



The HART Rail Library Of Traditional Cultural Properties, Unidentified TCP's and TCP Meetings