A Senate committee chairman has killed legislation
to authorize $250 million in bonds for the state to purchase
500 acres at Kalaeloa.
WHILE Hawaii's congressional delegation was disappointed by
the Navy's recent decision to base an aircraft carrier in San
Diego instead of Pearl Harbor, proponents of an ambitious plan
by the state for redevelopment of land at Kalaeloa were encouraged
by an end to the uncertainty. A state Senate committee chairman
who has injected new uncertainty by killing legislation necessary
to go forward with the plans should not be allowed to bury them.
The possibility of the former Barbers Point Naval Air Station
being used as a base for fighter jets and helicopters attached
to the USS Carl Vinson had cast uncertainty over the state redevelopment
plans. The Hawaii Community Development Authority is seeking
to issue $250 million in bonds to purchase 500 acres from the
Navy and bring economic growth to the area.
Sen. Russell Kokubun, a Big Island Democrat who heads the Senate
Water, Land, Agriculture and Hawaiian Affairs Committee, instead
killed House-approved legislation to authorize the bonds. Calling
the Kalaeloa plans "kind of a blank canvas," Kokubun
refused to schedule a hearing to try filling in the blanks.
Kokubun said he was uncertain about the purchase price of the
Navy land, the cost of infrastructure work and apparently the
effects of the Navy's decision to locate the carrier in San
Diego. If Kokubun had held a committee hearing, he would have
learned that the Navy's announcement would have no effect on
the Kalaeloa redevelopment.
"It doesn't change the master plan at all," Daniel
Dinell, HCDA's executive director, told the Star-Bulletin's
Nina Wu. "It creates a certainty over something that was
not certain." Sen. Mike Gabbard, who represents
the area, called the Navy's announcement "a very positive
thing, so we can move forward."
HCDA completed a Kalaeloa master plan in September 2005 detailing
its vision for 3 million square feet of light industrial, retail
and office space, high-technology energy development and 6,350
homes. The plans call for new public schools, parks and a Hawaiian
cultural center.
The state regards HCDA's redevelopment of Kakaako as a blueprint
for Kalaeloa. Gov. Linda Lingle has pointed out that the state
spent $153 million on infrastructure in Kakaako over 30 years,
attracting more than $2 billion in private investment. At Kalaeloa,
she expects the $250 million in bonds would enable the state
to leverage $3.5 billion in private funds for development.
Congress is allowing the Navy to transfer the lands by September
2008, which might give next year's Legislature an opportunity
to approve the bonds in time. In the meantime, Gabbard
said, "The bottom line is, we have to be careful these
lands don't just go to the highest bidder."
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