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Waive permitting fees to help Maui residents rebuild faster
By Grassroot Institute @ 3:53 PM :: 1778 Views :: Maui County, Development

Waive permitting fees to help Maui residents rebuild faster

from Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, February 27, 2024

The following testimony was submitted by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for consideration by the Maui County Council on Feb. 28, 2024.
_____________

Feb. 28, 2024, 9 a.m.
Maui County Council Chamber

To: Maui County Council
       Alice Lee, Chair
      Yuki Lei Sugimura, Vice-Chair

From: Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
           Joe Kent, Executive Vice President

RE: COMMENTS IN SUPPORT of Bill 21, Draft 2 — RELATING TO SECTION 105 PERMITS OF THE BUILDING CODE ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPPLEMENTAL PROVISIONS

Aloha Chair Lee, Vice-Chair Sugimura and Council Members,

The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii would like to offer its support for Bill 21, Draft 2, which if enacted would reform the County’s emergency housing permitting policies to help facilitate a quicker recovery for the residents of Lahaina and elsewhere on Maui who were affected by the disastrous wildfires of Aug. 8, 2023.

Overall, Bill 21 accords with the policy memo that Grassroot President and CEO Keli’i Akina sent last month to Gov. Josh Green, Mayor Richard Bissen and other state, county and federal officials, including each of you on the Maui County Council.

The memo recommended that Maui officials “amend the County’s emergency permitting statute to speed up approval times, waive building permit fees and expand the types of structures to which the statute applies.”[1]

Thus, the Institute supports Bill 21, which indeed would expand the types of structures to which Subsection 105.2.2 of the Maui County Code applies.

Under Bill 21, the County’s emergency permitting code would be broadened to cover not only the “alteration and repairs of one- and-two family dwellings and accessory structures” in disaster-affected areas, but also the “reconstruction and new construction” of other types of residential structures, as well as other types of structures, such as commercial buildings — even if they were completely destroyed.

On the downside, Bill 21 would extend the emergency approval process from seven to 15 days, and would continue to allow only deferral rather than waiver of permit fees for residential structures.

In particular, Paragraph E of Subsection 105.2.2 currently says county building officials “may defer” all plan review and building permit fees for one- and two-family dwellings “on written request by the applicant.”[2]

Bill 21 would keep that language mostly intact, but would add that “permit fees for commercial structures may not be deferred,” and that “the permit fee for the reconstruction of recently built residential structures or commercial structures using previously approved construction plans may be assessed at 50% of the permit fee.”

We thank the Council for considering this bill and welcome any dialogue with you about this topic.

Joe Kent

Executive vice president
Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
_____________

[1] Keli’i Akina, “Re: Maui Interim Housing Plan,” Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, Jan. 18, 2023, p. 3.
[2] Maui County Code, Chapter 16.25, Article 1, Section 105, Subsection 105.2.2, accessed Jan. 24, 2024.
[3] Kristin Downey, “Maui’s Fire Victims Are Frustrated By Insurance Hassles, Financial Delays,” Honolulu Civil Beat, Sept. 28, 2023.

RELATED: SB3381: Stop Lahaina Property Owners from Rebuilding

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