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Mike Gabbard |
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MIKE GABBARD (R)
Lives: Kalaeloa
Age: 58
Occupation: Owner, MC Services
(healthy living technologies) and Hawaiian Toffee
Treasures
Experience: City Council, 2002-2004;
founder and president, Stand Up For America
One big idea: Government and businesses
should offer employees financial incentives to work
from home. This will decrease traffic, improve personal
health, increase productivity and strengthen families.
Contact: 682-0676; mike@mikegabbard.com;
www.mikegabbard.com
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Former city councilman Mike Gabbard and retired police officer
George Yamamoto will
face off in the Nov. 7 general election for the West O'ahu
Senate seat that's been occupied by Brian Kanno since 1992.
Gabbard, a Republican, served on the Honolulu City Council from
2002 to 2004. He chose to forgo a re-election bid for a shot
at the 2nd Congressional District seat that was won by incumbent
Ed Case. He is perhaps best known as the founder of the Alliance
for Traditional Marriage and Values, which led the fight to
ban gay marriages in Hawai'i.
Yamamoto's political experience consists of seven years on the
Makakilo/Kapolei/Honokai Hale Neighborhood Board. The Democrat
recently retired from the Honolulu Police Department after 25
years on the force, including six as executive officer for the
Kapolei police station.
Kanno, a Democrat, long led the Senate Labor Committee and has
been a supporter of Senate President Robert Bunda. In the fractured
25-member Senate, the winner of the Gabbard-Yamamoto fight could
be instrumental in deciding leadership matters.
The 19th Senate District encompasses the burgeoning Kapolei
and Makakilo regions, as well as Kunia and Waikele. The 2000
U.S. Census numbers reflect the youthfulness of the district.
While 13.3 percent of adults statewide identified themselves
as 65 and older, 7 percent of 19th District adults described
themselves as in that bracket.
The district also is among O'ahu's more affluent areas. The
2000 Census figures also show annual median household income
for the district was $65,680 — higher than the $52,280
median income statewide.
Maeda Timson, a Makakilo resident for more than 35 years, said
the region needs elected representatives who are cognizant of
the area's rapid development and can minimize growing pains.
Campbell Estate and other developers of the area have been required
to pay the government for roads, schools and other infrastructure
in the area, but not enough of that money is returning to the
community, Timson said. "It just goes into this big account
(the state general fund) that everybody enjoys," she said.
The district, she said, needs lawmakers who will argue that
most, if not all, of that money should be dedicated to the needs
of the region.
Both Gabbard and Yamamoto cite traffic as the top concern for
the district. They support the city's mass transit project and
want to ensure it reaches Kapolei.
Yamamoto said private developers and the government need to
be more responsive to growth in the region and how it affects
traffic. "We also have to ensure that the developers that
are building there have a component of business and jobs so
that we don't continue to go into town and contribute to the
(traffic) at the H-1-H-2 merge," he said.
Yamamoto, who also spent time in HPD's traffic unit, said he
will seek a committee assignment on the Transportation Committee
as well as the O'ahu Metropolitan Planning Organization, which
overseas road projects on the island.
Gabbard said West O'ahu commuters are frustrated. "It takes
them (Makakilo residents) half an hour to get home" from
Kapolei, he said.
Gabbard wants to reintroduce the concept of staggering work
hours for government workers as a means of easing the traffic
burden and explore the possibility of four-day workweeks where
it makes sense.
He also wants to push the city to improve bus service to needy
neighborhoods in his district, including Royal Kunia. And he
supports the city's plans for an experimental ferry project
that would run between Kalaeloa and Honolulu.
Gabbard, a lifelong educator and currently a part-time substitute
teacher, said education also is a priority. While teacher salaries
are dictated in large part at the bargaining table between state
and union negotiators, he said he would encourage the state
to use its general fund budget surplus to pay for larger raises.
"At the same time, we would like to see teacher accountability,"
Gabbard said. "Teacher performance should be judged on
student progress from the beginning of the year to the end."
Yamamoto said he will lobby heavily for construction of the
UH-West O'ahu campus. Once open, he said, it would also go a
long way toward alleviating the district's traffic woes.
"That would bring jobs and opportunities for people in
the area, and they won't be driving all the way to UH-Manoa."
Yamamoto said.
He said he also will push for speedy construction of new schools
in the Kapolei area, noting that the existing high, middle and
elementary schools are already at capacity.
In the primary, Yamamoto beat runner-up Janice Salcedo Lehner
by 25 votes in a three-way race that also included Chuck Anthony.
Gabbard defeated Robert Fong by nearly 1,000 votes.
Reach Gordon Y.K. Pang at gpang@honoluluadvertiser.com.
Correction: The e-mail address for 19th Senate
District candidate Mike Gabbard is mike@mikegabbard.com.
An incorrect address was given in a previous version of this
story. Also, Gabbard said Makakilo residents are frustrated
that it can take 30 minutes for them to travel home from Kapolei.
A partial quote attributed to Gabbard was not clear on that
point.
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