Haku Mo‘olelo – The Maui News

maui-news-ad

Haku Mo‘olelo

By EDWIN TANJI, For The Maui News

POSTED: August 28, 2009

There may be plenty of water on Maui.

There is not enough cheap water – not when an extended period of abnormal rainfall places much of the island in drought and not when Hawaii law and court decisions require reallocation of access to the cheap water.

That’s not how state water commission hearings officer Dr. Lawrence Miike put it in his proposed findings and recommendations on setting stream flow standards for Na Wai Eha, the four major streams at Waihee, Waiehu, Wailuku and Waikapu (hawaii.gov/dlnr/cwrm/currentissues/cchma0601/CCHMA0601-01.pdf).

But his analysis, including a synopsis on the evolution of Hawaii law on water rights, helps to explain the issue. His history doesn’t go into detail but that was not its purpose.

The Miike findings note that sugar planters in the mid-1800s were granted rights to divert water from streams by the Hawaiian monarchy, but say nothing about whether the monarchy tempered effects on downstream users.

In the post-overthrow era, Miike notes the territorial Supreme Court turned out rulings that treated water as property of landowners. But after World War II, the legal standing of water was modified by other court decisions until the 1978 Hawaii Constitutional Convention added a section that established water as a public trust.

The constitutional amendment led to a State Water Code – Hawaii Revised Statutes 174C - and sets up the Commission on Water Resource Management to create and enforce standards on use of the islands’ water resources.

Continue reading ‘Haku Mo‘olelo – The Maui News’

Monsanto picks scholars – Mauinews.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Visitor’s Information – The Maui News

maui-news-ad

Monsanto Corn <br /> Click for larger image

Monsanto Corn
Click for larger image

KIHEI – Five Maui County students were among the recipients of the 2009 Monsanto Hawaii Life Sciences Scholarship. Ten $1,000 scholarships were distributed in Hawaii.

The Maui County recipients were Celina Hayashi, who graduated from King Kekaulike High School; Elizabeth Lagbas, Lahainaluna High; Colton Manley, Molokai High; Tiare Pimentel, Baldwin High; and Myles Tabios, Lahainaluna.

This annual scholarship is offered to students of all Hawaii high schools who will pursue postsecondary education in a discipline related to the life sciences. Examples are agriculture, agronomy, biology, botany, genetics, horticulture, plant physiology, chemistry, crop science and soil science.

Continue reading ‘Monsanto picks scholars – Mauinews.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Visitor’s Information – The Maui News’

Howzit Howard

 

November 13th… birthday of Robert Louis Stevenson… anniversary of the dedication of the Vietnam War Memorial… and the day 1,100 Hawaii state employees are set to lose their jobs. But despite a specific date, this situation is still fluid.

If there is any kind of cutback at all, whether outright layoffs or just furloughs, I predict you will see noticeable disruption of state services even if all affected state workers suck it up and try to provide as much service as before.

For example, the Hawaii Department of Agriculture has more than 120 people slated for layoff including about 70 from the plant industry division, I am told, which will disrupt plant inspections and either disrupt imports or allow imports without inspections.

Howzit Howard

Hawaii Agriculture News

Hawaii’s Back Yard
Honolulu Star-Bulletin – Honolulu,HI,USA
We were fortunate to be able to purchase 128 acres of beautiful forest preserve land and another 10 acres of agriculture land there. ?

Genetically modified crops need scrutiny
Honolulu Star-Bulletin Honolulu,HI,USA
JOBS and a boost in Hawaii agriculture from genetically modified crops aren’t good enough if the trade-off is the island’s food-growing industry and its

Biologically altered produce pits grower against grower
San Mateo County Times – San Mateo,CA,USA
Only the US Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service gathers such data, and it usually doesn’t share it with state officials

Latest Classifieds