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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, September 1, 2005

COMMENTARY
Imagine a far better way to get around

By Arnold Dili

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Imagine the same ocean that surrounds and separates each island becoming a ready-made super highway. A fleet of large, super-fast boats could provide both interisland transport as well as a bus-like service between the towns of each island.

Imagine thousands of people from Wai'anae to 'Ewa walking or driving aboard ferries located there, being transported in minutes to ferry docks in town.

Imagine thousands of people being transported from one town to another without using the freeways or highways, thus reducing the volume of cars on every roadway.

Imagine a statewide 20-year master plan that could provide the following benefits:

  • Long-term construction jobs to build and maintain the large number of harbors, docks, parking structures and a large dry dock for major repairs and maintenance of the fleet.

  • Thousands of other jobs created, such as boat captains and crews, boat maintenance and major repair workers. The endless amount of cargo, goods, construction materials and equipment, traveling between the islands within hours instead of days, would require hundreds of new dockworkers to load and unload.

  • An increase in the volume of tourists traveling by Superferry to the other islands also would create the need for more hotels, shops and other service-type industries, producing even more construction and other jobs.

  • A partnership between the state and the private sector to develop and maintain this new transportation system to help to keep it, most importantly, affordable and convenient for the people to use.

    A part of this master plan should include measures to limit population density and the number of cars on O'ahu, and to monitor Neighbor Island growth to prevent O'ahu-type traffic problems. The state could provide incentives for businesses to expand or relocate to the other islands that could benefit most from economic growth, such as Moloka'i, Hawai'i or Lana'i.

    Another part of the master plan may still include a less expensive light monorail, a ski-lift-type people mover, a moving walkway or other types of systems for the Honolulu-to-Waikiki areas.

    Hopefully, this would replace buses, which all too frequently cause traffic snarls during their frequent stops. The cause of these traffic backups are the many bus stops on the main roads that do not have a dedicated off-road bus-stop lane. Immediate action should be to build more off-road lanes at bus stops that don't have one.

    In the meantime, the number of bus stops on main traffic roads without off-road lanes could be reduced during the morning and afternoon peak traffic hours. Instead of every block, buses could stop every three to four blocks during these hours.

    Let's have a 21st-century master plan for O'ahu's traffic that has numerous benefits for the entire state, instead of a fixed-rail system that would be paid for by many to benefit only a few.

    A 20-year statewide transportation master plan of this magnitude, involving billions of dollars from state and federal taxes and the private sector, should require a statewide vote by the people. This unique approach to solving O'ahu's traffic could become world-renowned as the Hawai'i Ocean Super Highway of the Pacific — a planned system that would benefit its people, businesses and tourists alike.

    Arnold Dili is a retired social worker who lives in Honolulu.