County Making Laughable Assertions

May 20th, 2010

Director of Maui Environmental (mis)Management, Cheryl Okuma, stated
that she found an unnamed University of Hawai’i staff (staph?) member
who stated that staph cannot survive in salt water.

Thus, the fact that her department pours 4-5 million gallons of R2
(un-disinfected) wastewater into the ocean off Kahului with their
injection wells is just hunky dory.

After the 100′s of paddlers and surfers who’ve gotten MRSA
(antibiotic-resistant staph) have stopped laughing, let’s ask this
so-called staff member to go swimming off Kanaha with an open sore.  I
dare you.

Cheryl Okuma is probably a clever lawyer (she has to be clever at what
she does,  to enable the County to continue breaking the Clean Water
Act, give themselves illegal SMA exemptions, etc) but she doesn’t know
____ about water quality.  (Pardon my pun)

Call the Mayor.  Tell her to quit stalling.  Clean up the water.

Karen Chun
SaveKahuluiHarbor.com

P.S. Read more in Rob Parson’s excellent Maui Time Article

Maui County Council Acts on Injection Wells

May 1st, 2010

During budget hearings this Friday, which included $2,000,000 for injection wells and other wastewater funding, Councilmember Wayne Nishiki and Sol Kaho’ohalahala proposed conditions to the wastewater the funds.  Department of Environmental Management is required to come up with a plan and timeline to start treating the wastewater to R1 and re-using it in order to get their funding.  The County Council passed these conditions.

Thank you, Maui County Council!

Will Tourists Still Come, Once They Know They’re Swimming in Sewage?

April 29th, 2010

The Maui County Environmental Management stonewalled the DIRE coalition and Save Kahului Harbor at their intervention in the SMA Permit Exemption hearing.   By some real fast talking and misrepresentation, they managed to convince the Maui Planning Commission that drilling two new “replacement” injection wells a couple hundred feet away from the existing wells and putting in more piping was “refurbishment” and worthy of an exemption from SMA permit application.

Meanwhile Councilmembers Wayne Nishiki and Sol Kaho’ohalahala, fed up with the Tavares administration’s foot-dragging on bringing Maui County into compliance with the wishes of the residents to phase out injection wells (instead of building new ones) introduced language to force the Department of Environmental Management (known to many as the Department of Environmental Law Evasion)  to at least draw up plans to disinfect the water and re-use it, prior to getting the money for their new injection wells.

In an overblown stalling technique, Dave Taylor, head of wastewater (aka “A Little Sewer Water Never Hurt Anyone“) claimed the design cost would be $1 million.  To which we respond, maybe in your department, but not in the real world.

Since the 1998 EIS for the Kahului injection wells stated that it was both the intent and effect that the effluent in the wells go into the ocean, the County is violating the Clean Water Act.  Fines for this are $32,000 per day per well or in excess of  a quarter million dollars per day.

Councilmember Joe Pontanilla estimated that the construction to treat the sewage to R1 (e.g. disinfect it) and pipe it for re-use would be about $30,000,000.   Sounds like a big number given the current budget crisis.  But it is less than 4 months of fines that could be imposed at any time by the EPA.

When (not if) the EPA cracks down on the Kahului injection wells, we’ll have to just bite the bullet and pay those fines for however many months it takes to plan and construct the R1 treatment.

We can’t afford not to start planning for this immediately.

What You Can Do

Download our flyer.  Print it out and hand it out everywhere.

Call or email  your CouncilMembers and ask them to light a fire under the Wastewater Division to clean up our water before pushing it into the ocean.

Stop Ocean Infections

April 17th, 2010

The number of people hospitalized in Hawaii because of MRSA infections is twice the national average and approximately 200 people in Hawaii die from MRSA every year with the highest incidence on Maui.

Dr. Alan Tice, a professor at the University of Hawaii who specializes in infectious diseases, has identified ocean water as a potential source of MRSA.  “I think ocean water is definitely a potential source of MRSA,” Tice has said.  “We have found in Hawaii as many as 100 MRSA colonies per liter of sea water”.

It is suspected that this bacteria comes from wastewater treatment systems.  Waterborne pharmaceutical byproductspromote antibiotic-resistant germs, especially when — as in the process of wastewater treatment — they are mixed with bacteria in human sewage.

Disinfection of wastewater removes disease-causing organisms from wastewater, using either chlorine or UV light.  Chlorine is cheaper but not good for the ocean. Because UV is expensive, the County of Maui does not disinfect all wastewater that is injected into the ground at Kahului.

That water then seeps into the ocean and we surfers, paddlers, swimmers and divers reap the results – increasing  infections.  This is why we want to stop the two new Kahului injection wells  until the County either disinfect the water or redirects it.

We do not understand why Mayor Tavares is fighting us on this. Please call her at 270-7855  and ask for her support.

Superferry Costs Taxpayers ANOTHER $218,000

April 10th, 2010

The $12 million barge and ramp used on Maui for the now bankrupt Superferry sat at a dock in Honolulu Harbor on Friday night with an uncertain future.

Harbor officials said the barge was towed to Honolulu from Kahului Harbor on Thursday, docking at Pier 34 at about midnight.

The state paid more than $218,000 to ensure the vessel was seaworthy and to have it towedRead more

Interesting Summary of Superferry History

March 21st, 2010

With great videos and the classic photo of the lone surfer facing down the Superferry.

informationfarm.blogspot.com/2010/03/kauai-superferry-chronicles.html

Hitler Reacts to the Superferry

March 8th, 2010

Souki’s Bill Turned into “Study”

February 10th, 2010

Saner members of the Legislature, realizing that the State of Hawai’i could not take on subsidizing a ferry system, deflected Souki’s bill proposing a State-run high speed ferry system by turning it into a “study”.

The State of Washington has pretty much eliminated highspeed ferries due to their high fuel use and destructive wakes.  Their ferry fleet is much more fuel-efficient and goes half the distance that a Hawai’i ferry would travel.

Yet Washington is obliged to kick in 50% of the operating costs.  Doing the math, it would suggest that the State of Hawai’i would have to subsidize at least 75% of the cost of  ferries traveling between Oahu, Maui, Kaua’i and the Big Island.

Estimates were that the Maui run of the Hawai’i Superferry may have been loosing between  $100,000 and $300,000 per week.  Adding the long Big Island and Kaua’i routes and the State could be paying a minimum of $300,000 per week or $15 to $46 million per year.

What was Souki thinking?

DOT Confirms Possible Army Superferries

February 10th, 2010

Mike Formby, deputy director of the state Department of Transportation Harbors Division, said yesterday the impacts are unclear should the Army decide to base one or more of the 338-foot catamarans in Hawai’i.
“One thing we don’t know that needs to be fleshed out is where the vessels are going to operate, if they are deployed or positioned in Pearl Harbor,” Formby said. “Are they going to go to Pōhakuloa (Training Area) on the Big Island? Are they going to use our state piers? Where are they going to offload their military equipment and troops? None of that has been discussed with the state.”

Souki’s Bill Will Bring Back Superferry Without EIS

February 8th, 2010

Joe Souki is at it again. He’s introduced HB2667 which will remove any future Superferry from either County or EIS review.  Please send testimony opposing this here.

To submit testimony go here, put in the bill # (HB26657), press [Get Latest Hearing]

Then fill in the info and your comments and press  [submit]