State Collaboratively Removes Unpermitted Structure Near Pu’u Huluhulu
News Release from DHHL, Sept 6, 2019
(PU’U HULUHULU, HI) – The State of Hawai’i removed an unpermitted structure near the Pu’u Huluhulu site on Department of Hawaiian Home Lands property on Friday, Sept. 6, 2019.
Removal efforts were conducted by Hawai’i Department of Transportation (HDOT) personnel, at the request of DHHL, in a process that took approximately four hours. Prior to the removal of the unpermitted structure, two individuals were arrested at the site for Obstruction of a Governmental Operation. State and Hawai’i County law enforcement personnel remained present throughout the removal to ensure the security of the operation and the safety of everyone involved.
The structure was constructed with a floor, framing, and a roof that appeared to resemble a building anticipated to be permanent. Prompt removal was deemed necessary as the structure posed serious health and safety concerns related to fire protection and structural integrity.
Additionally, since the structure was built without any regulatory oversight, there were concerns about the impact it could have on the land and the possible introduction of invasive species including fire ants.
“Given the health, safety, and environmental concerns, the Department prioritized the prompt removal of the structure,” said Hawaiian Homes Commission Chair William J. Aila, Jr. “With the assistance of HDOT personnel, we were able to accomplish this task quickly and efficiently. DHHL will be reimbursing our partners for this work.”
“Law enforcement has deliberately refrained from escalating its approach to the current protest because it was important to provide some meaningful space and time for all of us to find a peaceful resolution to this situation,” said Governor David Ige. “However, this type of permanent structure erected without DHHL permission, and without being regulated or inspected in any way, cannot be allowed. The safety risk is too great.”
DHHL posted a Notice to Vacate on Sept. 4, 2019, both on the property and to the individual who organized the erection of the structure.
Any unclaimed property will be handled in accordance with 171-31.5, HRS.
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OHA statement on dismantling of a small structure on DHHL lands at Maunakea
News Release from OHA, Sept 6, 2019
Statement of OHA Chair Colette Machado; Trustee Dan Ahuna, chair of the OHA Boardʻs Ad Hoc Committee on Maunakea; and OHA Interim Chief Executive Officer Sylvia Hussey
HONOLULU (Sept. 6, 2019) — State law enforcement’s swift dismantling today of a small wooden structure built by protectors earlier this week brings into sharp focus the longstanding and particularly abhorrent double standard the state uses to enforce land use laws against Native Hawaiians as opposed to others.
Law enforcement removed the small hale, which was located on lands controlled by the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands at the base of Maunakea, because it was an unpermitted structure. Yet the state has a long history of expressly allowing unpermitted and unauthorized astronomy structures that were far larger and located in far more environmentally- and culturally-sensitive areas of the mountain.
Examples include:
The first three telescopes built on the summit of Maunakea failed to apply for a conservation district use permit and therefore were unpermitted for at least six years.
In 1976, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources discovered an additional unauthorized structure. While the Board of Land and Natural Resources (BLNR) approved an $85,000 fine against the building contractor, that fine appears to have never been collected.
In 1982, BLNR approved the Caltech telescope permit with an explicit requirement that no further astronomy development occur until the University of Hawaii completed a new master plan. Two months later, BLNR approved a new telescope before the master plan was completed, thereby endorsing a violation of the Caltech permit.
In 1997, BLNR approved four after-the-fact subleases for telescopes already built or in the process of being built on the summit.
This selective enforcement re-enforces the State Auditor’s finding in 1998 that the state and the University of Hawaiʻi manage Maunakea for astronomy at the expense of everything and everyone else. Moreover, the particularly offensive way todayʻs selective enforcement was carried out, which included the wholly unnecessary sawing of a Hawaiian flag, is deeply troubling, and further adds to the trauma of the Native Hawaiian people and could have escalated an already tense situation.