Showing posts with label Land Trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Land Trust. Show all posts

Water as a Trust

SUBHEAD: Earthjustice successfully compelled the restoration of stream flows diverted by former plantation companies.

By Andy Parx on 4 April 2014 for Parx News Daily -
(http://parxnewsdaily.blogspot.com/2014/04/down-rabbit-hole-down-drain.html)


Image above: Graphic for ad created to promote company that sells publicly owned Kahili Mountain water back to the public. The culprits - Kauai Springs and Grove Farms.  From (http://hawaiihealthguide.com/healthtalk/display.htm).

Once again a land use ruling by Kauai 5th Circuit "junior" Judge, Katherine Watanabe who never met a claim of vested rights she didn't like, or a developer whose claims to have a right to do anything they damned-well please for that matter, has been overturned by the Supreme Court, at great time and expense for one of the few public interest law firms around.

According to a press release from Earthjustice:
The Hawaii Supreme Court recently issued another landmark decision on water resources and the public trust. The case, Kauai Springs v. Kauai Planning Commission, involved a company bottling and selling spring water on the island of Kauaʻi.

The court’s opinion strongly reinforced principles that water is a public trust, and that private companies profiting off these resources bear the burden of justifying their diversions and showing the resources will not be jeopardized...

The court’s decision is its latest statement on the public trust doctrine, the legal principle that the government holds water resources in trust for certain presumptively favored “trust purposes” including resource protection. This case builds on the court’s historic precedent in 2000 in the Waiahole case, where Native Hawaiian and rural communities represented by Earthjustice successfully compelled the restoration of stream flows diverted by former plantation companies.

Some highlights from the court’s latest ruling include:
  • Contrary to the company’s claims of “grandfathered” diversions, “no person or entity has automatic vested rights to water.”
  • Private commercial users of water bear the burden of affirmatively justifying their uses. “[A] lack of information from the applicant is exactly the reason an agency is empowered to deny a proposed use of a public trust resource.”
  • This burden includes showing the use is reasonable and beneficial and consistent with trust purposes, has no practicable alternative water source, and implements mitigation of the cumulative impact of diversions.
  • Government agencies have “duties under the public trust independent of the permit requirements,” including a duty to hold private commercial users to their burden under the public trust..
(This case began in 2006 when the Planning Commission of Kauai County cited the bottling company for unlawfully operating without required land use permits. Left with unresolved questions whether the diversion and sale of water was permissible, the commission denied the request for after-the-fact permits. On appeal, the lower court reversed and ordered the permits issued.

The intermediate appeals court rescinded the permits, but sent the case back for more hearings. Finally, the supreme court ruled that the commission was justified in denying the permits without better information.)

Watenabe seems capable of bizarre rulings that fly in the face of Hawaii State Supreme Court decisions in including this one which was based on the far-reaching Waiaholewater case that determined that water to be a constitutional public trust.

In addition, apparently even the broad "smart growth" concept that says that the local community should determine growth is an alien concept to Watenabe. She's made "give-backs", things like roads parks and other amenities demanded by our local planning commission in exchange for development rights- all but impossible to attach to development approvals without some strict yet nebulous almost unattainable concept of a "direct nexus" being applied, as in the case of struck-down attempts to make the resort developers of that monstrosity right across from Safeway help to alleviate the traffic nightmare they helped create.

How many overturns does it take to unscrew a judge from her seat after her 10 year term is up? Many hope she's over her limit.

IB Editor's note:

Kauai Springs
3840 Maluhia Rd.
Koloa, Kauai, HI 96756
808-742-7075 Phone
808-652-9166 Cell
http://www.kauaisprings.com/
jim@kauaisprings.com

Grove Farms
3-1850 Kaumualii Highway
Lihue, HI 96766
(808) 245-3678
http://www.grovefarm.com/



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Film Festival in Waimea

SOURCE: Jonathan Jay (jjkauai@gmail.com)
SUBHEAD: Wild & Scenic Film Festival will benefit Hawaii's statewide land trust. "Protecting the Lands that Sustain Us".

By Jennifer Luck on 28 March 2013 in Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2013/03/film-festival-in-waimea.html)


Image above: Detail of poster for Wild & Scenic Film Festival to be held at Waimea Theater. From HILT.

Mark your calendars to join Hawaiian Islands Land Trust (HILT) as we host the Wild & Scenic Film Festival on April 6 & 7 at the historic Waimea Theater. We are pleased to present this premiere travelling environmental and adventure film festival featuring award- winning films about nature, community activism, adventure, conservation, water, energy, wildlife, environmental justice, agriculture, and indigenous cultures.

The Wild & Scenic Film Festival is a collection of films from the annual festival held the third week of January in Nevada City, CA. Now in its 11th year Wild & Scenic focuses on films that speak to the environmental concerns and celebrations of our planet. “Films featured at Wild & Scenic give people a sense of place,” says Tour Manager, Lori Van Laanen. “In our busy lives, it’s easy to get disconnected from our role in the global ecosystem. When we realize that the change we need in this world begins with us we can start making a difference. Come watch and see!”

This year’s selections in Waimea combine stellar filmmaking, beautiful cinematography, and first-rate storytelling to inform, inspire and ignite solutions for the environmental challenges that confront us locally (Saturday’s theme) and globally (Sunday’s theme).

The historic Waimea Theater serves as a backdrop for our cinematic journey into a deep appreciation and a sense of wonder for the natural world that surrounds and supports us. The festival is a natural extension of Hawaiian Islands Land Trust’s work to inspire people to act on behalf of the environment. BEsides movies there will be food, and door prizes.

Hawaiian Islands Land Trust is a statewide conservation organization, our mission is to protect the lands that sustain us for current and future generations through conservation of lands providing recreation and access to recreation, culturally significant lands, working farms and ranches, view planes and corridors, and habitat for native plants and animals.

Our mission ties in seamlessly to the Wild & Scenic Film Festival’s call to action to inspire people and unite communities to heal the earth. To find out more about our organization, please visit our website at www.hilt.org.

Mahalo to our local sponsors Aston Waimea Plantation Cottages and Blue Hawaiian Helicopters and for the support of the Wild & Scenic Film Festival National Partners: Patagonia, CLIF Bar, Sierra Nevada Brewing and Mother Jones.

WHAT:
 The Wild & Scenic Film Festival

WHEN:
April 6th & 7th
Theater opens at 4:00pm. Movies start a 5:00pm. 

WHERE:
Waimea Movie Theater
Kamohoalii Highway
Waimea, Kauai, Hawaii

COST:
$15 each night. $20 for both nights.
Buy tickets at HILT website or at Waimea Theater.

CONTACT:
Jennifer Luck Kauai Island Director
jennifer@hilt.org

Hawaiian Islands Land Trust
www.hilt.org

Kauai Office: P.O. Box 562 Kilauea, HI 96754
phone: 808-755-5707

Main Office: P.O. Box 965, Wailuku, HI 96793
phone: 808-244-5263




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