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The Honolulu Advertiser

Updated at 1:09 p.m., Monday, February 4, 2008

Hawaii military programs could get $544 million

By DENNIS CAMIRE
Advertiser Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Military spending for construction in Hawai'i next year would total $544 million under the $3.1 trillion budget request President Bush unveiled today.

The request calls for $279 million to continue the 20-year "Whole Barracks Renewal" program at Schofield Barracks and expansion of the water, power and other infrastructure needed to support it.

"I am pleased that the president is proposing a healthy military construction budget for Hawai`i," said U.S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawai'i, chairman of the Senate appropriations defense subcommittee. "The military construction projects ... are a reflection of Hawai'i's importance as a crucial strategic location in the volatile Asia-Pacific region."

The president has proposed increasing the budget for defense spending to $515 billion, which is nearly an 8 percent increase over last year. Of that, funding for military construction would increase 8.9 percent to $18.2 billion.

Other Hawai'i projects include $40 million for an Army wideband satellite communications operations center at Wahiawa; $41.1 million for a facility at Pearl Harbor to help submarines maintain their stealth capabilities; and $19.2 million for an Army reserve center at Fort Shafter.

The budget request's proposed military construction spending in Hawai'i next year is about the same as the $544 million being spent this year.

But the president's request is only the first step in the congressional approval process, which can change the dollar amounts and the projects.

U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie, D-Hawai'i, a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, said that the military construction money for Hawai'i "means good paying jobs for local people."

"But that's about all the hopeful news" in the Bush's budget request, said Abercrombie, noting the president's budget cuts Medicare and Medicaid by $144 billion and eliminates or reduces about 50 educational programs, including some for Native Hawaiians and Alaska natives.

"And despite his promises, there is no funding for the Northwest Hawaiian Islands," Abercrombie said.

Under the proposed budget, the Navy will continue building its new drive-in "magnetic silencing facility" for submarines next year at Beckoning Point at Pearl Harbor.

The new facility would measure the magnetic signature of submarines and adjust the signatures to help the subs avoid detection by enemy sensors and underwater mines.

Other Navy projects at Pearl Harbor include $29.3 million for a child development center, $45 million for a fitness center and almost $6 million for a joint forces deployment area.

About $28.2 million would be used for building new barracks for enlisted troops at the Marine Corps Base in Kaneohe Bay.

The Defense Logistics Agency would receive $27.7 million to replace a fuel pipeline also at Pearl Harbor.

While the Bush proposal would commit $544 million to military construction in Hawai'i, it also would eliminate two Native Hawaiian education programs that cost $39 million.

Contact Dennis Camire at dcamire@gns.gannett.com.