PRESS RELEASE
From: Maui Tomorrow Foundation, Inc.
Date: February 23, 2007
Contact Information: Ron Sturtz, President
Maui Tomorrow Foundation, Inc. 808 891-0425 (Maui)
mauitomorrow@aol.com
Subject: STATE ENVIRONMENTAL COUNCIL ISSUES OPINION:
SUPERFERRY EXEMPTION FROM EIS IS WRONG
Honolulu: The State Environmental Council, the advisory
commission to the Office of Environmental Quality Control (O.E.Q.C),
issued an Opinion on Thursday that "the State Department of
Transportation (DOT) erred when it granted to the Hawaii Superferry an
exemption from the requirement to do an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS)."
The Environmental Council was created by the State legislature to
provide direction to the OEQC concerning the EIS process. On Thursday,
the Council clearly stepped forward to exert its authority.
In a 9:1 vote, with one abstention, the Council stated that the
exemption granted by the DOT failed to take into consideration the
cumulative and secondary environmental impacts of the Hawaii Superferry
(HSF) project.
In response to a letter from Senator Majority Leader Gary Hooser, D-7th
(Kaua`i, Ni`ihau) asking the Council to rule on the matter, the 11
member board met Thursday, in Honolulu, to consider the request.
Present at the meeting were HDOT State Deputy Attorney General Bill
Wynoff; HSF attorney Lisa Woods Munger; Isaac Davis Hall, representing
Maui Tomorrow Foundation Inc., the Kahului Harbor Colalition; and Isaac
Moriwake, of Earth Justice Foundation . The HSF, Maui Tomorrow, and
Earth Justice all submitted legal briefs to the Council; attorneys
Munger, Hall, and Moriwake presented oral testimony.
Taking part in the hearing as witnesses, were also former Maui Planning
Commission member Dick Mayer, Rob Parsons - the Environmental
Coordinator for the County of Maui under the Arakawa administration,
Henry Curtis and Kat Brady from Honolulu-based Life of the Land, John
Harrison from the University of Hawaii Environmental Center, and
Senator Gary Hooser, who led off the hearing.
At issue was an exemption granted by the HDOT in 2005, stating that the
Hawaii Superferry did not have to comply with the State's environmental
laws relating to Environmental Impact Statements. The HDOT based this
exemption on their position that proposed impacts to the harbors were
minor. The Environmental Council strongly disagrees.
In a lively discussion among Council members, there was a consensus
that this case is a most blatant example of flagrant disregard of the
State's environmental laws in recent memory. In the words of Earth
Justice attorney Isaac Moriwake, "the DOT did violence to the State's
environmental statute HRS 343 and undermined the intention and spirit
of the law."
In the view of the Council, the HRS 343 requires that "the HDOT look at
the cumulative and secondary impacts of actions that occur repeatedly
and over a long period of time." The combined impact of 882 people and
hundreds of vehicles landing on each island daily, and over a period of
years, necessitates close public scrutiny through the investigative
process of an EIS, that incorporates broad public input and accurately
describes potential mitigation measures.
Not insignificant was testimony that the HDOT had set precedent by
doing its own 561 page EIS for the Oahu Intraisland Ferry System in
1989, for a project with far less environmental impacts. Throughout the
hearing, the Council's legal counsel and the HSF legal counsel argued
to defer a ruling, and questioned the Council's legal ability to take
any action. The Council, however, saw this issue as an exact area in
which their interpretation was sanctioned, and felt that the Courts and
the public could well benefit from the Council's own interpretation of
their rules. They chose to assert their legal authority by voting to
issue an opinion in the form of a letter of response to Senator Hooser.
The legal implications of the Opinion will soon unfold. Legislation is
before both the House and the Senate in companion bills, calling for an
EIS requirement for the Superferry. Legal proceedings continue in the
Circuit Court and the Supreme Court that could be impacted by this
Council Opinion. This Opinion lends support to the perspectives of the
County Councils of Maui, Hawaii, and Kauai, and many others who have
been calling for an EIS on the HSF for more than two years.
http://www.superferryimpact.com/news-mauitomorrow.htm