honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, August 26, 2005

Letters to the Editor

spacer

SLOW

ZIPPER LANE ISN'T ALL THAT EXCITING TO RIDE

What happened to the "zip" in the Zipper Lane? Returning from vacation recently, I was greatly disappointed to see that the Zipper Lane has been opened to cars with two or more passengers all morning.

I carpool with a neighbor, which allowed me to use the Zipper Lane. The past two days I've found the traffic in the Zipper Lane as bad, if not worse, than the regular traffic lanes.

As a former bus rider, I can't help but think of those poor people standing on the Express bus all the way from 'Ewa Beach! It's certainly not an "express" bus anymore.

Come on, powers-that-be. You have to provide some incentive for those who are willing to carpool or ride the bus. That is a small but vital step forward in the effort to ease traffic. Instead you just took a giant step backward.

Susan Ramie
'Ewa Beach

RACE-BASED

AKAKA BILL SUPPORTERS IGNORE KEY QUESTIONS

There's a lot of debate and rhetoric going on these days, but here are a few questions the supporters of the Akaka bill never touch. They are major issues:

  • Is this bill going to be good for all the citizens of Hawai'i — Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians alike? The answer has to be a resounding no. Its benefits are race-based. Divisiveness helps no one.

  • Is there really a class of people called "Hawaiians"? Not really. Percentage Hawaiians — 50 percent or whatever — have no historical origin other than having been created by federal and state statutes.

  • Is someone who carries 90 percent other than Hawaiian blood really a Hawaiian? Again, not really. Those Hawaiians who keep showing up on the welfare rolls, prison statistics and economic statistics are there by census definition, not because they are members of the Hawaiian race by any measure except by definition.

  • Are Hawaiians as bad off as they are made out to be? No way. There are 200,000 or so living on the Mainland, and they are for the most part successful. Of the 260,000 or so living here, at least 75 percent are doing quite well by any standard. Some are more successful than others, and some less — just like the rest of us.

    Why go any further with a bill as ambiguous and divisive as the Akaka bill? Our government should help everyone in need, not just a race-based, definition-created class of residents. We are all citizens of the United States, and we all deserve equal treatment under the law.

    Thurston Twigg-Smith
    Honolulu

    LUNCH WAGON

    ANOTHER BAD IDEA

    Now that the state has allowed a lunch wagon where Kamehameha fought his most decisive battle, the next thing is that somebody will want to put a casino at Gettysburg. Heaven forbid, perhaps they'll even want to drill for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Oh, I forgot, those things have already been proposed. What a great country this is.

    A.J. Speese
    Kailua

    WIDESPREAD

    TOO MANY DOWNSIDES TO RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEM

    O'ahu does not need a light rail transit system. It would serve only a very small percentage of the population. Even if it were in place, the fact remains that the majority of the drivers would not give up driving.

    It has too many flaws, such as: It would benefit only people going from point A to point B, those who would take it to work and back home. It would still be a burden to those who want to buy lots of things or things impossible to fit even on the bus, and of course it would be of service to a very small number of residents.

    The City Council and the mayor have not thoroughly perceived the many consequences it would have, and that the passage of the 0.5 percentage point increase in the general excise tax would affect all islands because of transportation costs of goods coming from Honolulu.

    The local government is only thinking of what may be best for it, ignoring the consequences it would bring to other island small businesses.

    Drew E. Kosora
    Honolulu

    UH FOOTBALL

    NOT OVER THE RAINBOW

    The Aug. 19 sports page showed a couple of UH football players in the old Rainbow uniform.

    Hey, it looked good and brought back memories.

    Maybe they could use the uniform in certain selected games, eh?

    How's about it, coach!

    Mel Rodenhurst
    Kailua

    HIGHWAYS

    STATE SHOULD START ATTACKING WEEDS, TREES

    The condition of our highways is disgraceful — if not offensive.

    Brown weeds are growing in bundles, bushes are spread out undisturbed and healthy trees are growing even above the median concrete barriers. If a botanist would examine them for age, he would come up with the conclusion they date back to the first Waihee administration.

    I always wonder why our governors or directors of the state Department of Transportation never notice that mess. Perhaps sitting in the back of their limos, windows tinted black, all they are doing is reading the paper. It might behoove them to ask their secretaries occasionally to drive them around in their little Hondas, sitting in the front to see the clutter.

    What are 2,500 workers in the Transportation Department doing every day? No new highways, bridges, tunnels or airports are on the drawing board. Why not 250? And even then perhaps 25 could be put to work to keep our highways clean.

    How about it, Gov. Lingle and Transportation Director Rod Haraga?

    Gerhard C. Hamm
    Wai'alae Iki

    COSTS

    ARGUMENTS OF GAS 'GOUGING' ARE FLAWED

    Frank Young (Letters, Aug. 24) berates the oil companies for "gouging" consumers and now he says Hawai'i "gasoline prices should be higher than they actually are."

    Moreover, his argument — that Hawai'i's gasoline taxes are 17 cents higher than the average Mainland gasoline tax and therefore, with all things being equal, Hawai'i pump prices should be 17 cents higher than the national average — is highly flawed and simplistic.

    Is the price of land, labor and transportation costs of crude and oil products the same in Hawai'i and on the Mainland? Obviously, the answer is no.

    Things are not and never will be equal except in economic textbooks and the fantasy world that is described above.

    Shasha Fesharaki
    Honolulu

    APPRECIATION

    DOE DOESN'T VALUE ITS TEACHERS ENOUGH

    You hear the cries of what is wrong with the DOE and its ability to attract and retain qualified teachers all the time. Well, let me try to shed some light on this point.

    I watched my wife, Shirley, a teacher of 35 years, struggle with a cumbersome state system that does not make it easy for a teacher to do just that, teach. I watched countless hours spent on lesson plans, extra projects as a principal instructor for America's Choice Reading Program, and pure dedication that is symbolic of a good teacher. We marvel at the good ones because there are so few who would do so much for, really, so little. People with less education make more money than teachers.

    My wife just received a 4-by-6-inch plaque for her years of dedicated service. She retired July 1, 2004. Yes, I am not kidding. A student (she was helping with testing at the school) saw the plaque wrapped in bubble wrap and commented that it must be banana bread. What a testimonial. A letter attached apologized for unforeseen circumstances befalling the state and producing the delay (bureaucratic red tape).

    It was because of the hurt that she felt at that moment that I felt sad not only for her but for all the unsung heroes of the DOE, the unappreciated teachers.

    Laughlin M. Tanaka
    Pearl City

    HAWAIIAN PHYSICIANS EMERGING

    I have read with interest the many letters attacking and supporting Kamehameha Schools. Perhaps I might add an interesting medical education dimension.

    From the time of contact with Captain Cook in 1778 until 1892, no Native Hawaiians were sent abroad to receive a medical education, none whatsoever, until Dr. Matthew Makalua (sent to England by King Kalakaua in 1882) received his degree from King's College, London, in 1892. Twenty-two years later, Kaumu Hanchett (Kamehameha, 1908) received his M.D. from Harvard Medical College. Although there were a few other Native Hawaiians in the subsequent decades who received medical degrees, the next physician from Kamehameha was George Mills, M.D. (KHS '40), then Kekuni Blaisdell (KHS '42).

    For the past 30 years, I have researched Hawaiians who studied medicine. With affirmative action programs beginning in the 1970s, the numbers began to accelerate. Today, we have such individuals as: Roberta Apau Ikemoto, M.D., radiology (KHS '60); Gary Gutcher, M.D., neonatology (KHS '62); Chiyome Fukino, M.D., state Department of Health director (KHS '68); Kuhio Asam, M.D., psychiatry (KHS '70); Clayton Chong, M.D., oncology (KHS '72); Angela Pratt, M.D., obstetrics and gynecology (KHS '80); Donna Kalauokalani, M.D., anesthesiology (KHS '82); Winnie Mesiona Lee, M.D., pediatrics (KHS '87).

    These are specialists, but even in the day-to-day delivery of primary care, Kamehameha is well represented: Bernard Chun (KHS '62); William Ahuna, M.D. (KHS '64); Noe Apau, M.D. (KHS '70); Gerard Akaka, M.D. (KHS '72); Martina Kamaka, M.D. (KHS '78); Kelli Ann Voloch, M.D. (KHS '85); Ming Tim Sing, M.D. (KHS '83); William Thomas, M.D. (KHS '77). The current medical director of the health clinic (Hale Ola) at Kamehameha is Phillip Reyes, M.D. (KHS '74).

    Contrary to the accusations of so many letter writers, most of these Kamehameha physicians did not come from privileged backgrounds. They came from working-class families who were not able to afford the other private school tuitions but who still struggled to provide them with a good education at Kamehameha.

    Attorney Eric Grant, in a moment of triumphant oratorical grandiloquence, quoted Martin Luther King's comments about "content of character" but somehow failed to mention whether King would have condemned the HBCU (otherwise known as Historically Black Colleges and Universities), whose preferential admission policies still help to correct inequities, disparities and underrepresentations of African-Americans within the medical profession.

    In the mid-1970s, there were only 10 Hawaiians licensed to practice medicine in the state of Hawai'i. Today, there are more than 200, and most of these physicians are graduates of Kamehameha. Yet this number represents only 3 percent of all licensed physicians in Hawai'i.

    I am a Hawaiian physician but not a graduate of Kamehameha Schools. Yet it is with no small amount of pride that whenever I glance toward Kapalama Heights, I see the faces of Kamehameha's graduates who are now making an indelible mark in improving the lot of an indigenous people who, sadly, still top the list of morbidity and mortality tables.

    Benjamin B.C. Young, M.D.
    Executive director, Native Hawaiian Center of Excellence, UH John A. Burns School of Medicine

    WITH OCEAN RESOURCES AT RISK, KAPU SYSTEM CRITICAL

    I was glad to see the article on bottomfish recovery in the waters of the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve. The article mentioned the use of kapu as a tool to manage the ocean resources surrounding Kanaloa, the ancient name for Kaho'olawe many Hawaiians still prefer.

    I was also pleased to see the feedback letter by Albert A. Nakaji on Aug. 10. He describes several types of kapu, none of which were area-specific. He could have mentioned that kapu can also apply to restricted areas. An ali'i, for example, would often kapu a fish pond, a section of reef or an offshore ko'a, to the exclusion of others. These areas could often be quite large. Because kapu assured a sustainable resource, the entire community and the resources themselves benefited from judicious use of this tool.

    Albert is correct in pointing out that it was never applied to an entire island system. However, our kupuna never had to deal with: (1) unexploded ordnance and the safety issues it creates; (2) commercial fishing, utilizing methods that exploit fishery resources on a massive scale, usually outside of the ahupua'a; (3) large fishing fleets; (4) refrigeration, which allows for taking more than one needs; and (5) electronic fishing technology, like three-dimensional sonar that allows fishermen to "see" under and into caves at depths greater than 600 feet deep.

    Under these circumstances, it is my opinion that our kupuna would have certainly considered implementing the type of traditional kapu that the Kaho'olawe Island Reserve Commission has implemented, not only in the reserve, but also in other waters. The commission has chosen the most prudent path available to effectively carry out its ocean management responsibilities. Other governmental agencies should consider using all the tools available to them, especially traditional methods such as the various kapu whose effectiveness was proven by the original resource managers of these Islands.

    Our kupuna never managed in terms of years, they always managed in terms of generations. More state agencies and members of the public should make use of this wisdom and incorporate it in their planning and stewardship decisions. Using kapu and other traditional methods with a history of success is more important and relevant today than ever, especially since tomorrow's resources have never been at greater risk.

    William Aila
    Fisherman, Wai'anae


    Correction: Dr. Gary Gutcher's name was misspelled in a previous version of one of these letters. In the same letter, it should have said that, from 1778 until 1892, no Native Hawaiians were sent abroad to receive a medical education.