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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, October 26, 2009

Gay & Robinson workers, retirees gather to remember


By Dennis Fujimoto
The Garden Island

KAUMAKANI — Kauai is reading the last few paragraphs of one long chapter, but is not at the end of the book.

“We had to move on,” said Alan Kennett, president and CEO of Gay & Robinson. “We are moving on. I know it’s going to be a sad day on Wednesday or Thursday when the last sugarcane will probably go through the mill.”
G&R employees, retirees, friends and the Westside community poured onto Kaumakani Avenue on Saturday to attend a luncheon celebrating 120 years of Gay & Robinson sugar as the company’s final harvest draws closer.
“This is a sad, sad day,” said Conrado Francisco of Kaumakani. “I’ve been with G&R for 34 years, and I was just diagnosed with cancer. I grew up in Makaweli Camp 4 and worked with sugar all my life. This is sad.”
Conrado’s wife, Sumile, said he just finished his third chemo treatment, but had to come and see what was happening.
“I like to stay and see, but he’s not feeling well so we’re going to have to go,” she said.
Kennett said the accomplishments of G&R and the 120 years of sugar production are due to the collaborative support of the Robinson family, who owns the land, the dedicated efforts of all of the employees and the equal support from the families of those workers.
“It is coming to the end of an era for the Robinson family,” Kennett said. “That of growing sugar cane. The ranch is still there. They started out as a ranch and that has not changed. But they are going back to leasing land.”
Kennett said G&R hopes to maintain the company housing, but there are some issues with the large capacity cesspools that they are working to remedy.
Most of the lands around the mill have already been leased out to the corn companies.
Will Maloney, president of Pacific West, is negotiating with the landowners to work out a lease for the mill as a part of Pac-West’s plans for alternative energy.
“I know there is a lot of anguish here about how to create a future here,” Maloney said. “But I think a future has been created with some of the transactions Gay & Robinson has done, and we certainly hope to play a big role in the future here on the Westside.”
Maloney said Pac-West hopes to convert the base sugar operation into a renewable energy plantation. A recent agreement with Kauai Island Utility Cooperative is an important milestone toward that goal.
Another key step to keep the project moving forward is the acquisition of land for sugarcane and biomass, he said.
Eventually, Maloney said he hopes to link in other sources of energy such as solar and wind.
“We“We’re celebrating the end of an era here, but I do believe that we can create the start of a new era moving forward that will provide a future for your children,” Maloney said.
Gary Heu, representing Kauai Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr., said many would not be here if it weren’t for the plantations.
“Hawaii is the melting pot of the world in more ways than one because of the sugar plantations,” he said. “This is a fact that none of us will ever forget. With the closing of this operation, however, Gay & Robinson must also look into the future as Mr. Kennett said.”
“When I started working for the Robinsons, I got $93 a month,” said Carmelita Gante, retired after 30 years of service. “I started in 1963 and stopped in 1993, but my husband Jose, he worked for 40 years.”
Carmelita said Jose is now 98 years old and lives in a care home in ‘Omao.
“I struggle,” Carmelita Gante said. “My husband, he suffer. He used just a pick and shovel to clean the ditches up the mountain. When we (retired), there were 30 ladies who had 30 years of service. Today, only four of us left.”
Gante said she always remembered what Sinclair Robinson told her when she got her first $93 paycheck.
“The money the Robinsons give you, we want you to buy something so you remember the Robinsons,” she said.
“It was hard work, but I work honest because I know I going get good fruit in the end.”
After raising three children, she now has eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
“Everything done now,” Gante said. “I just bought a lot in the Pikake subdivision (sold by Grove Farm). The children are all grown and the lot in Pikake is my souvenir from the Robinsons. I tell my children, ‘No sell that lot because that is all our hard work.’”
Marcia Emayo said her mother and father were employees of the Robinsons and she grew up in the area of the Kaumakani Avenue Park where then-manager J.C. Carter would walk through and check the yards of people living there.
“If your yard was not clean, you had to get a new yardman,” said Julia Nabeshima, whose grandfather and father worked for the G&R sugar operation. Nabeshima was celebrating attending her first football game, talking about her granddaughter, Dayna Fujii, who reigned as Kaua‘i’s homecoming queen.
“Everything was good at one time,” Emayo said.