Showing posts with label Senate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Senate. Show all posts

Big Oil's plan for public land denied

SUBHEAD: US Senate denies Trump plan to overturn Obama restriction on methane flaring on federal lands.

By Andrea Germanos on 10 May 2017 for Common Dreams -
(https://www.commondreams.org/news/2017/05/10/senate-just-killed-trumps-plan-hand-our-public-lands-big-oil)


Image above: Methane flares as the gas is burned off at shale oil well site. From (http://www.globalchange.gov/news/white-house-issues-methane-reductions-strategy).

"Just when we thought all hope was lost, common sense prevailed today in the United States Congress," said Jessica Ennis, senior legislative representative with the environmental law organization Earthjustice.

That's because the Senate on Wednesday failed to pass a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution that would have killed an Obama-era Bureau of Land Management (BLM) rule that limits methane flaring from fossil fuel production on federal and tribal lands.

"Methane is a potent contributor to climate change, and letting companies simply vent or flare methane in vast quantities from their operations on publicly-owned lands is foolhardy," explained Jeremy Martin, senior scientist with the Clean Vehicles Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). "That’s why it's so important that we protect common-sense standards, and why this resolution deserved a 'no' vote."

That vote was 49-51, with three Republicans—Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, and Jon McCain of Arizona—joining Democrats in voting "no."

The House already voted to kill the rule, which environmental groups said amounted to "giving away a taxpayer-owned resource for free," and was thanks to the CRA, "a dirty trick that Congress can use to do the oil industry's bidding."

If the resolution had been successful in the Senate, it would have made making fossil fuel companies accountable for their pollution "nearly impossible," said UCS's Martin—"not only would it have overturned current rules, it would have blocked future administrations from setting standards."

Now, with that effort stopped, climate campaigners are cheering, though "[t]he fact that Congress even considered this giveaway to the oil industry is stunning," said Brett Hartl, government affairs director at the Center for Biological Diversity. "We applaud the senators who stepped up to kill this resolution, ensuring that people will breath cleaner air and saving taxpayers millions of dollars."

According to Lukas Ross, Friends of the Earth's climate and energy campaigner, the vote marks a "victory against Trump's plan to hand our public lands to Big Oil [and] is a win for the American people. Reducing venting and flaring from oil wells will reduce emissions contributing to climate change and save public resources. Today the Senate proved it will not always rob taxpayers to line Big Oil's pockets," he continued.

Still, it's not the time for climate campaigners to put their guard down.

"While we have beaten back this attack on the BLM methane rule, we know that Trump and his Big Oil cronies are eyeing other avenues," Ross cautioned. "An earlier Executive Order already instructs [Interior Department] Secretary Zinke to examine how to give Big Oil an ever bigger share of our public lands. We will continue to fight against any efforts to endanger the future of our lands and our climate," he said.

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President Trump baits the hook

SUBHEAD: If Trump's people are able to collaborate, we'll be on a highway to Hell, 8 lanes wide and no potholes.

By William Rivers Pitt on 1 March 2017 for Truth Out -
(http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/39673-president-trump-baits-the-hook)


Image above: Republicans applaud as most Democrats remain seated as President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on February 28, 2017. Photo by Stephen Crowley. From original article.

I learned a few things while covering the long grind that was the Candidate Trump phenomenon.

"Don't drink whiskey during debates" proved to be an important if elusive maxim.
"You are never off-duty" became an inescapable truth once the 3 am tweetstorms turned into a thing.

"If his lips are moving, he's lying" comes in handy on a daily, sometimes hourly basis.

By far and away, however, the most important axiom of all consistently proved to be the most difficult to obey: "Don't take the bait."

Donald Trump is all bait.

It is the essence of his existence, his governing principle. Herds of stray cats follow him around because he smells like a bag of musty tuna. He is one of those creepy deep-sea monster fish, all eyes and teeth and dangled glowing lure.

Every tweet is a ladle of chum tossed into the water. It takes a special kind of self-control to lay off, but you have to if you want to keep everyone's eyes fixed on what matters, and not on whatever is scrolling across the careening Times Square ticker-tape screen that passes for his mind.

President Trump delivered maybe the performance of his political life before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, and the entire thing was positively surreal.

You had Mike Pence and Paul Ryan standing together in their positions of honor above the president's podium wearing exactly, precisely the same suit, shirt and blue ties.

They looked for all the world like Thing 1 and Thing 2 from The Cat in the Hat. Beyond that was the breathtaking finality of the theatrics: The Sargent-at-Arms bellowed, "Mr. Speaker, the President of the United States," and out came Trump.

It wasn't a mistake; he didn't wander through the wrong door. Here was the president, resplendent in his orangeness, and hats over the windmill. Now it's real.

The performance itself was the bait this time, and many in the media found it tempting on the lure. Is this the new Trump? Has he turned a corner? Is everything different and better now? Can I come out from under the bed and stop stocking canned goods? James Pindell of The Boston Globe sure seemed to think so:
 "In many ways, it was the long-awaited pivot that Trump has always promised. This was unlike any other speech we have seen from Trump: he was disciplined, didn’t veer much at all from the script and hit his marks. Trump expressed optimistic platitudes such as, 'The time for small thinking is over. The time for trivial fights is behind us,' and, 'From now on, America will be empowered by our aspirations, not burdened by our fears.'"
Van Jones, one of Trump's most caustic critics, was even more ebullient in his praise on CNN. Describing Trump's praise for a fallen SEAL, Jones said, "There are a lot of people who have a lot of reason to be frustrated with him, to be fearful of him.

But that was one of the most extraordinary moments you have ever seen in American politics, period. And he did something extraordinary. And for people who have been hoping that he would become unifying, hoping that he might find some way to become presidential, they should be happy with that moment.

Now, there was a lot that he said in that speech that was counterfactual, that was not right, that I oppose and will oppose. But he did something tonight that you cannot take away from him. He became president of the United States."

Not everyone was impressed. "I did not hear President Trump say one word, not one word, about the need to combat climate change, the greatest environmental threat facing our planet," said Sen. Bernie Sanders in a video rebuttal.

"Do we add another $80-plus billion to the Pentagon, or do we allow every qualified young American the ability to go to college tuition-free at a public college or university and reduce student debt?

Tonight, President Trump once again made it clear he plans on working with Republicans in Congress who want to repeal the Affordable Care Act, throw 20 million Americans off of health insurance, privatize Medicare, make massive cuts in Medicaid, raise the cost of prescription drugs to seniors, eliminate funding for Planned Parenthood, while at the same time, he wants to give another massive tax break to the wealthiest Americans."

Two takeaways from Tuesday night, both of which are potentially of a single piece: infrastructure and immigration. President Trump proposed a truly massive $1 trillion infrastructure improvements package.

The problem with the passage of such a large piece of legislation, as ever, is your average Republican congressperson, who will like as not run up a tree and hide when confronted with such a stupendous spending bill. Under most circumstances it's a dead stick, and has been for a while now.

Before the speech, Trump huddled with some news anchors and let it drop that he is open to a "path to citizenship" for undocumented immigrants.

In this, he sounded a whole lot like Ted Kennedy a dozen years ago, who along with John McCain came up with an immigration plan that opened a pathway to citizenship for millions of people.

During the speech itself, though, he made no mention of such a path and instead announced that he has ordered Homeland Security to create a new agency to publish a weekly list of all crimes committed by immigrants.

Make no mistake: If he returns to the idea of a path to citizenship, the GOP base will flip out over this in truly incandescent fashion. "NO AMNESTY," they will howl, and it will be taken as a betrayal of everything Trump stood for during his campaign.

How to square this circle? Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell have a whole raft of right-wing bills they're just dying to deploy.

Cuts to Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid, a rollback of food assistance programs, massive corporate tax cuts, wide-ranging assaults on reproductive rights and LGBTQ+ equality, along with any number of Jesus Uber Alles laws that will technically make it illegal for trans people to go to the bathroom.

Not one of the items on the right's wish list sees the light of legal day without Donald Trump's signature, and there's the bait.

Give me my infrastructure bill, he can say, and you can go have a ball turning the country into A Handmaid's Tale at your pleasure. It's pretty safe to say the GOP hard-liners in Congress will go along for the ride if it gets them even half of what they want.

But hey, who knows? It was just one speech. For all we know, the president and his administration will revert back to full clown status again before the daylight fades … but there was a rumble for a minute there on Tuesday night that should not be ignored.

If these people actually get organized enough to collaborate, we'll be on a highway to Hell, eight lanes wide and no potholes. Ryan, McConnell and the far right will be able to accomplish every nightmare priority on their list while Trump can point to a couple of big bills and strut his way toward the authoritarian Islamophobic regime Steve Bannon has been dreaming of.

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Hello Russia! Are you there?

SUBHEAD: There is a war going on between US intelligent/security services involving China and Russia.

By Dmitry Orlov on 13 December 2016 for Club Orlov -
(http://cluborlov.blogspot.com/2016/12/hello-russia.html)


Image above: Today's page hits by country to cluborlov.blogspot.com. Note the unlikely possibility that Russian traffic exceeds American traffic on this English language blog. From original article.

Over the past week, Google's Blogger has been reporting an excessive number of visits to this blog coming from Russia. This data is not corroborated by other web traffic monitoring sources, including Revolver Maps or Google's own Google Analytics.

Looking at the structure of the “Russian” traffic, it looks very much like random noise. What could this possibly be? “Evidence of Russian hacking,” anyone?

Well, here it is, finally! Let's not forget, Google founder Sergei Brin is a Russian... And here we were thinking that “Russian hacking” is as real as “Iraqi WMDs”! Shame on us!

 Below is the December 13th, 2016 page hits by country to cluborlov.blogspot.com.




Dasvidaniya Rossiya!

SUBHEAD: You're not the only one Dmitry. At least my American readers outnumber the Russians.

By Juan Wilson on 14 December 2016 for Island Breath -
(islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/12/hello-russia-are-you-there.html)


Image above: Today's page hits by country to islandbreath.blogspot.com. Note new heavy traffic from Russia as well as significant traffic from China. Both are new phenomena... and possible fake.

IslandBreath.org has been getting similar "misinformation" monitoring traffic to our website. Our website is divided into two internet service providers (isp). One isp has the oldest material on the "islandbreath.org" site from 1993 to 2009. That isp provider also has the outer frame that nests the newer material on the "islandbreath.blogspot.com"  that has been posted day to day since 2009.

The blogspot.com and blogger.com web tools were bought up by Google several years ago as blogging and blogger.com were getting very popular.

I know, that's sounds confusing but is is the way it is... and is does let me see things a bit differently then just through the viewport of Google's monitoring tools.

What I've discovered is that for some time in the recent past "Russian" views of our site have increased by at least two orders of magnitude. It is interesting that Club Orlov has more Russian than American traffic. Unlike Dmytri's site on the Island Breath sitethe Chinese traffic has increased similarly. American traffic to our website appears the Chinese traffic yesterday was almost almost tied with Russia. See chart above of our latest website traffic taken today.

But as Dmitry Orlov has discovered, other traffic statistic counters other than that provided by blogger.com have widely different results. IslandBreath uses www.statcounter.com to monitor traffic on our sites. Today it show the most recent traffic having hit from Hong Kong and no other traffic from China and no traffic from Russia.


Image above: The image above is a screen capture of recent traffic today 12/14/16 on our islandbreath.blogspot.com site provided by statcounter.com.

It looks like the anti-Trump elements (including CIA) of the American intelligent/security apparatus are trashing Russia and blaming it for the election Clinton loss. On the other hand elements of the FBI are on the other side of that fight.

Something is going on here that I suggest is disinformation that could threaten alternative news, information and opinion expressed on the most prevalent source for such information - the internet and its variations in social media.

The other aspect of this we should be aware of is the fake "Fake News" debacle. The US Congress has moved to "eliminate" sources of non approved "fake news". See below.



Disinformation & Propaganda

SUBHEAD: Senate passes billgiving the government a full mandate to punish, shut down or otherwise prosecute, any website it deems offensive and a source of foreign government propaganda.

By Tyler Durden on 12 December 2016 for Zero Hedge -
(http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-12-10/senate-quietly-passes-countering-disinformation-and-propaganda-act)

While we wait to see if and when the Senate will pass (and president will sign) Bill  "H.R. 6393, Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017", which was passed by the House at the end of November with an overwhelming majority and which seeks to crack down on websites suspected of conducting Russian propaganda and calling for the US government to "counter active measures by Russia to exert covert influence … carried out in coordination with, or at the behest of, political leaders or the security services of the Russian Federation and the role of the Russian Federation has been hidden or not acknowledged publicly,” another, perhaps even more dangerous and limiting to civil rights and freedom of speech bill passed on December 8.

Recall that as we reported in early June, "a bill to implement the U.S.’ very own de facto Ministry of Truth has been quietly introduced in Congress. As with any legislation attempting to dodge the public spotlight the Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation Act of 2016 marks a further curtailment of press freedom and another avenue to stultify avenues of accurate information.

Introduced by Congressmen Adam Kinzinger and Ted Lieu, H.R. 5181 seeks a “whole-government approach without the bureaucratic restrictions” to counter “foreign disinformation and manipulation,” which they believe threaten the world’s “security and stability

Also called the Countering Information Warfare Act of 2016 (S. 2692), when introduced in March by Sen. Rob Portman, the legislation represents a dramatic return to Cold War-era government propaganda battles. “

These countries spend vast sums of money on advanced broadcast and digital media capabilities, targeted campaigns, funding of foreign political movements, and other efforts to influence key audiences and populations,” Portman explained, adding that while the U.S. spends a relatively small amount on its Voice of America, the Kremlin provides enormous funding for its news organization, RT.“Surprisingly,”

Portman continued, “there is currently no single U.S. governmental agency or department charged with the national level development, integration and synchronization of whole-of-government strategies to counter foreign propaganda and disinformation.”

Long before the "fake news" meme became a daily topic of extensive conversation on wuch mainstream fake news portals as CNN and WaPo, H.R. 5181 would rask the Secretary of State with coordinating the Secretary of Defense, the Director of National Intelligence, and the Broadcasting Board of Governors to “establish a Center for Information Analysis and Response,” which will pinpoint sources of disinformation, analyze data, and — in true dystopic manner — ‘develop and disseminate’ “fact-based narratives” to counter effrontery propaganda.

Fast forward to this past Thursday, December 8, when the "Countering Disinformation and Propaganda Act" passed in the Senate, quietly inserted inside the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) Conference Report.

Here is the full statement issued by the generously funded Senator Rob Portman (R- Ohio) on the passage of a bill that further chips away at press liberties in the US, and which sets the stage for future which hunts and website shutdowns, purely as a result of an accusation that any one media outlet or site is considered as a source of "disinformation and propaganda" and is shut down by the government.

Senate Passes Major Portman-Murphy Counter-Propaganda Bill as Part of NDAA
Portman/Murphy Bill Promotes Coordinated Strategy to Defend America, Allies Against Propaganda and Disinformation from Russia, China & Others 

U.S. Senators Rob Portman (R-OH) and Chris Murphy (D-CT) today announced that their Countering Disinformation and Propaganda Act – legislation designed to help American allies counter foreign government propaganda from Russia, China, and other nations – has passed the Senate as part of the FY 2017 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) Conference Report.

The bipartisan bill, which was introduced by Senators Portman and Murphy in March, will improve the ability of the United States to counter foreign propaganda and disinformation by establishing an interagency center housed at the State Department to coordinate and synchronize counter-propaganda efforts throughout the U.S. government.

To support these efforts, the bill also creates a grant program for NGOs, think tanks, civil society and other experts outside government who are engaged in counter-propaganda related work. This will better leverage existing expertise and empower local communities to defend themselves from foreign manipulation.

“The passage of this bill in the Senate today takes us one critical step closer to effectively confronting the extensive, and destabilizing, foreign propaganda and disinformation operations being waged against us. While the propaganda and disinformation threat has grown, the U.S. government has been asleep at the wheel.

Today we are finally signaling that enough is enough; the United States will no longer sit on the sidelines. We are going to confront this threat head-on,” said Senator Portman. “With the help of this bipartisan bill, the disinformation and propaganda used against our allies and our interests will fail.”

“Congress has taken a big step in fighting back against fake news and propaganda from countries like Russia. When the president signs this bill into law, the United States will finally have a dedicated set of tools and resources to confront our adversaries’ widespread efforts to spread false narratives that undermine democratic institutions and compromise America’s foreign policy goals,” said Murphy.

 “I’m proud of what Senator Portman and I accomplished here because it’s long past time for the U.S. to get off the sidelines and confront these growing threats.”

NOTE: The bipartisan Countering Disinformation and Propaganda Act is organized around two main priorities to help achieve the goal of combatting the constantly evolving threat of foreign disinformation. They are as follows:
  • The first priority is developing a whole-of-government strategy for countering foreign propaganda and disinformation. The bill would increase the authority, resources, and mandate of the Global Engagement Center to include state actors like Russia and China in addition to violent extremists. The Center will be led by the State Department, but with the active senior level participation of the Department of Defense, USAID, the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the Intelligence Community, and other relevant agencies. The Center will develop, integrate, and synchronize whole-of-government initiatives to expose and counter foreign disinformation operations and proactively advance fact-based narratives that support U.S. allies and interests.
  • Second, the legislation seeks to leverage expertise from outside government to create more adaptive and responsive U.S. strategy options. The legislation establishes a fund to help train local journalists and provide grants and contracts to NGOs, civil society organizations, think tanks, private sector companies, media organizations, and other experts outside the U.S. government with experience in identifying and analyzing the latest trends in foreign government disinformation techniques. This fund will complement and support the Center’s role by integrating capabilities and expertise available outside the U.S. government into the strategy-making process. It will also empower a decentralized network of private sector experts and integrate their expertise into the strategy-making process.
In other words, the Act will i) greenlight the government to crack down with impunity against any media property it deems "propaganda", and ii) provide substantial amounts of money fund an army of "local journalist" counterpropaganda, to make sure the government's own fake news drowns that of the still free "fringes."

So while packaged politely in a veneer of "countering disinformation and propaganda", the bill, once signed by Obama, will effectively give the government a full mandate to punish, shut down or otherwise prosecute, any website it deems offensive and a source of "foreign government propaganda from Russia, China or other nations."

And since there is no formal way of proving whether or not there is indeed a foreign propaganda sponsor, all that will be sufficient to eliminate any "dissenting" website, will be the government's word against that of the website. One can be confident that the US government will almost certainly prevail in every single time.

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Kauai Election 2016 Updated

SUBHEAD: Island Breath endorsements and recommendations for federal, state and county election.

 Some changes to County Charter Amendments made on 10/17/16

 By Linda Pascatore on 14 October 2016 for Island Breath -  
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/10/kauai-election-2016.html

 
Image above: Incumbent Gary Hooser - Our first pick for Kauai County Council.  

Important Election Dates:

Early Walk-In Voting and Late Voter Registration:
Tues, October 25 to Sat, Nov 5, 2016, 8am to 4 pm, at Lihue Neighborhood Center

Last day to request a Mail Ballot:
Tues, Nov 5, 2016, 4:30pm deadline

Early Walk-In Voting Ends:
Sat, Nov 5, 2016  

General Election:
Tues, Nov 8, 2016, polls open 7am to 6pm

To Register to Vote, Find your Polling Place, and see your Sample Ballot, go to: https://olvr.hawaii.gov/

Island Breath Endorsements:
We found information on candidates records and position on Votesmart (http://votesmart.org/), Ballotpedia (https://ballotpedia.org/Hawaii_elections,_2016), the League of Women Voters (http://www.lwv-hawaii.com/candidates-2016.htm), OHA Election Guide (http://www.oha.org/2016electionguide), and also in articles profiling individual candidates in the Honolulu Star Advertiser, Civil Beat, and The Garden Island.

We endorsed candidates with progressive or liberal values; their support for the environment, sustainability, and Hawaiian Sovereignty; and for their anti-GMO stances.

*SPECIAL ENDORSEMENT:  GARY HOOSER FOR KAUAI COUNTY COUNCIL*
Our favorite Kauai politician of all time: if you vote for only one person on this ballot, vote for Gary!


U.S. FEDERAL OFFICES

President and Vice President:
Jill Stein and Ajamu Baraka
IB Note: We are voting our conscience on this one--Jill is just too good, and we can't support Trump or Clinton. Check out the Green Party website (http://www.jill2016.com/)

US Senator:
Brian Schatz

US Representative, Dist II:
Tulsi Gabbard


HAWAII STATE OFFICES

State Representative, Dist 14: (Hanalei, Princeville, Kilauea, Anahola, Kapaa, Wailua)
Nadine Nakamura
IB Note: Nakamura looks better than her opponent Combs in her positions on issues. However, we lost faith in Nadine when she left the county council at the time she was needed for a crucial GMO vote, in order to accept an appointment from Carvalho

State Representative, Dist 15:(
IB Note: James Tokioka is running unopposed for this office. We do not endorse him.

State Representative, Dist 16:
Dee Morikawa


Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA):
Hawaii Resident Trustee:
Mililani Trask

OHA At-Large Trustee:
Keli'i Akina


KAUAI COUNTY OFFICES

County of Kauai Prosecuting Attorney:
Justin Kollar

Kauai County Council:
Mason Chock
Gary Hooser
JoAnn Yukimura


IB Note: You can vote for 7 council members. However, the 3 above supported 2491 (Bill regulating pesticides and GMO's).  If you vote for all seven candidates, but only really support three, your #4, 5, 6, and 7 votes could enable those other candidates to win over your top candidates. Consider voting for fewer--a practice called "plunking".


STATE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS

IB Note: Constitutional amendments in Hawaii require approval from a majority of all voters casting a vote in the election, which means that filling out a ballot but not voting has the same effect as voting no. A yes vote approves the proposed change, a no vote or not voting leaves the State Constitution as is.

VOTE YES: RELATING TO JURY TRIALS IN CIVIL CASES
"Shall the threshold value in controversy requirement for jury trials in civil cases at common law be increased from $5,000 to $10,000?"
IB Note: This amendment deals with how much money a civil suit has to be seeking in order to have a jury trial.  We believe that a judge can adjudicate a monetary claim in a civil case and avoid a costly jury trial.


VOTE YES: RELATING TO THE DISPOSITION OF EXCESS REVENUES
"Shall the legislature be provided, when the state general fund balance at the close of each of two successive fiscal years exceeds five per cent of the general fund revenues for each of the two fiscal years, the additional alternatives of appropriating general funds for the pre-payment of either or both of the following:
(1) Debt service for general obligation bonds issued by the State; or

(2) Pension or other post-employment benefit liabilities accrued for state employees?"IB Note: Without the passage of this amendment, excess general funds can only be used to provide tax refunds for taxpayers or to supplement other funds in place for emergencies.  This amendment would allow excess general fund revenues to be used to pre-pay general obligation bonds issued by the state and pensions accrued by state employees. General obligation bonds are bonds issued and backed by the state.


KAUAI COUNTY CHARTER AMENDMENTS

IB Note: For Kauai County Charter Amendments, blank votes are not counted.  
Update: We have changed a couple of our recommendations as of 10/17/16.

VOTE YES:
RELATING TO CORRECTING GENDER NEUTRALITY, GRAMMATICAL, SPELLING AND FORMATTING ERRORS.

"Shall the charter be amended throughout to ensure that its language is to the greatest extent possible gender neutral and to make changes to spelling, capitalization, punctuation, formatting, and grammar?"
IB Note: This amendment simply corrects errors and gender references



VOTE YES:
RELATING TO EXPANDING THE DUTIES OF THE FIRE CHIEF AND DEFINING AUTHORITY TO EXECUTE POWERS AND DUTIES
"Shall the duties of the Fire Chief be clarified to include duties currently performed such as addressing hazardous materials, emergency medical services, and ocean safety, and shall the reference to the Mayor's authority to assign duties be removed?"
IB Note: The section of the County Charter was created before the Fire Commission was formed. The current language of the Charter does not specifically identify lines of authority in assigning duties. Additionally, the Department has broadened its scope beyond fire control, to include such functions as ocean safety, hazardous materials, and emergency services, which are currently not reflected in the charter. This amendment would appropriately describe the current functions of the fire chief and the Fire Department, as they relate to duties and authority.



MODIFIED 10/17/16

VOTE NO: RELATING TO ESTABLISHING A ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS TO ASSIST THE PLANNING COMMISSION IN PROVIDING DUE PROCESS FOR APPELLANTS
"Shall a Zoning Board of Appeals be established to hear appeals from decisions of the Planning Director and to conduct evidentiary hearing at the request of the Planning Commission?"
IB Note: Currently, the Zoning Board hires a hearing officer for appeals.  This amendment would have a volunteer board appointed by the mayor and approved by county council.  It is unclear whether these volunteers would be as knowledgeable and as impartial as a hearing officer.



VOTE YES:
RELATING TO THE CIVIL DEFENSE AGENCY
"Shall the county Civil Defense Agency be renamed the Emergency Management Agency and its organization clarified consistent with State Law?"
IB Note: Hawaii State law recently renamed the “Civil Defense Agency” to the “Emergency Management Agency.” Therefore, the current language of the Charter referring to the Civil Defense Agency is inconsistent with state law. Additionally, the Charter does not currently assign a department administrator or director.



VOTE YES:
RELATING TO THE PERCENTAGE OF REQUIRED VOTERS FOR AN INITIATIVE PETITION, A REFERENDUM PETITION, OR A CHARTER AMENDMENT PETITION
"Shall the percentage of registered voter signatures required to start the initiative or referendum process be reduced to 10 percent from 20 percent, and shall the percentage of registered voter signatures required to start the charter amendment process via voter petition be increased to 10 percent from 5 percent?"
IB Note: This makes the required percentage consistent at 10 percent for those wishing to propose an ordinance, referendum or charter amendment. Currently, the 20 percent required for an initiative or referendum is too high.



MODIFIED 10/17/16
VOTE NO: RELATING TO ENABLING THE COUNTY CLERK TO DETERMINE WHAT IS A VALID CHARTER AMENDMENT
"Shall it be specified what constitutes a charter amendment, and shall the processing of a proposed charter amendment via voter petition be revised to enable the county clerk to determine whether the proposal is a valid charter amendment?"
IB Note: If voters collect the required signatures to get a Charter Amendment on the ballot, it should be included, unless the courts decide it does not constitute a valid charter amendment.



VOTE NO:
RELATING TO ESTABLISHING A PERMANENT CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION
"Shall the Charter Review Commission be an ongoing commission?"
IB Note: The current language of the charter states that the Commission will expire on December 31, 2016. A new commission can reconvene in 10 years, with members to be appointed by the mayor and approved by the council. This amendment seeks to remove the expiration date of the Charter Review Commission and eliminates the 10-year intervals between the creation of the commissions, thereby establishing a permanent Charter Review Commission. We believe that once every ten years is often enough to review changes to the County Charter, which is the equivalent of our constitution.
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Senate thwarted GMO Food Labels

SUBHEAD: Activists weigh path forward on labeling genetically modified food ingredients on packaging.

By Tracey Frisch on 14 October 2016 in Truth Out -
(http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/37996-activists-weigh-path-forward-after-congress-thwarts-gmo-food-labels)


Image above: In March US Senate rejected the "Deny Americans the Right to Know" (DARK) Act that disallowed GMO labels and then in July, after Vermont GMO label law came into effect the Senate mandated unreadable labels. From (http://www.occupy.com/article/senate-rejects-gmo-anti-labeling-bill-handing-huge-victory-consumers).

This was supposed to be the watershed moment for activists around the region who had long campaigned for labeling of genetically modified foods.

On July 1st, Vermont became the first state in the nation to require labels on food products with genetically engineered ingredients. The state's law, which the Legislature passed by an overwhelming margin in 2014, was the result of years of effort by grassroots activists who spoke out forcefully and jammed public hearings to demand the right to know what was in their food.

As Vermont's law staved off a court challenge and moved toward implementation this summer, activists in New York and Massachusetts gained a new burst of momentum in their effort to pass similar labeling laws in those states.

And as the effective date of Vermont's law neared, a series of large food companies announced that, rather than create separate labels for one small state, they would simply start nationwide labeling of products with genetically modified ingredients. A few companies also made plans to reformulate their products to omit these ingredients.

But in mid-July, Congress rode to the aid of processed food, pesticide and biotechnology companies, which had bitterly fought Vermont's labeling law. With no hearings and little debate, first the Senate and then the House passed a much weaker federal law for disclosing genetically modified ingredients in food -- and barred states, including Vermont, from setting their own labeling requirements. President Obama signed the federal measure into law on July 29.

Although the new federal law directs food companies to disclose whether products contain genetically modified ingredients, the companies won't have to say so directly on product labels. Instead, the labels can simply include a QR code, Web address or toll-free number where consumers can seek information about genetically engineered ingredients.

A consumer theoretically could find out about genetically modified ingredients by scanning the QR codes on packages while shopping -- but only if the consumer has a smart phone with the appropriate app and can get adequate reception in a particular store.

"The idea that this will provide right to know is ridiculous," said Andrea Stander, the executive director of Rural Vermont, which pushed for Vermont's labeling law. "It doesn't pass the laugh test."

Now Stander and other local advocates of labeling are trying to settle on a path forward, perhaps by challenging the new federal law in court -- or, more likely, by organizing to push for tougher standards as the US Department of Agriculture embarks on a two-year process to craft rules for implementing the new federal law.

Widespread but Secret?
Foods made from genetically engineered crops began appearing on supermarket shelves in the mid-1990s, and within a few years the vast majority of processed foods contained these ingredients. Today, about 90 percent of the corn, soybeans, sugar beets, canola and cotton grown in the United States is genetically engineered.

Unlike plants developed through traditional breeding practices, most of the genetically engineered varieties sold commercially so far contain foreign genes extracted from animals, bacteria or unrelated plant species. Critics say this makes the altered crops fundamentally different -- and risky.

The companies that produce engineered crops claim they are safe, and the US Food and Drug Administration has supported those claims -- relying heavily on industry data.

The United States stands nearly alone among industrialized nations in resisting consumers' calls to label foods produced with genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, despite national surveys showing as many as 90 percent of Americans favor labeling. Until Vermont's law passed two years ago, major agricultural, chemical and biotechnology companies like Monsanto and Dow had succeeded in thwarting all labeling legislation.

Vermont's labeling law set a simple standard: It required food producers to put four to six words on packages of food containing genetically modified ingredients. Companies had a choice of three phrases: "Produced with genetic engineering," "Partially produced with genetic engineering," or "May be produced with genetic engineering."

In determining the percentage of genetically engineered ingredients that would require labeling, Vermont followed the 0.9 percent threshold set in Europe, where labeling laws are widespread. The Vermont law did not cover foods containing meat or poultry, such as many canned soups, because separate US Department of Agriculture rules govern labeling for these products.

But the new federal law has now nullified all existing state laws that mandate GMO labeling, and it prevents states from requiring labeling in the future. Apart from Vermont, Maine and Connecticut had enacted laws requiring GMO food labeling once a certain number of other states mandated it.

And in Alaska, where wild salmon are central to the fishing industry, the state had passed a law in 2005 requiring labeling of genetically engineered fish and fish products. (The FDA approved the first genetically engineered fish -- a salmon -- in November.)

In addition to blocking state food-labeling laws, the new federal law also pre-empts state laws that had required labeling of genetically modified seeds, thereby denying farmers and gardeners the right to know whether seeds were produced with genetic engineering. Vermont had had a seed-labeling law in place since 2004; Virginia also had such a law.

Stander called the new federal law "a dramatic abrogation of states' rights."

Vermont's seed-labeling law was working well, she said. In addition to Vermont's many organic farmers, some conventional growers in the state also had chosen not to use genetically modified crops, she said.

The seed law had made it possible to track the number of acres of GMO crops in Vermont -- a number that has increased dramatically in the past decade, Stander said.

GMO Labels Take Off
Because Vermont's labeling law was in place for nearly a month before Congress overrode it, and because the state law carried substantial penalties for noncompliance, most if not all food producers that sell their wares in Vermont have been labeling foods containing genetically modified ingredients for much of this summer -- and not just in Vermont.

As the July 1 effective date of Vermont's law neared, major food companies like Campbell Soup Co., Mars Inc., PepsiCo, Nestle and General Mills started to label their products nationally. T

he wording required by Vermont's law generally appears on food packages just below or near the federally mandated ingredients list -- and was evident in a spot-check of a variety of packaged foods at an eastern New York supermarket in late August.

"They're labeling, and the sky is not falling," said Stacie Orell, the campaign coordinator for GMO Free NY, a group that has been pushing Albany to pass a labeling law for New York.

Orell said that to make her case to New York's legislators, she had recently been carrying around a show-and-tell kit with sample product labels resulting from Vermont's law -- including products like Skittles candy (from Wrigley's), an empty bag of chips from Frito-Lay (a PepsiCo subsidiary), a Campbell's soup can and a package of M&M's.

Campbell Soup was the first of these large companies to announce, in January, that it would begin labeling nationally. Others, such as PepsiCo, never made an official announcement, but Orell said people have seen GMO-containing products labeled on store shelves as far away from Vermont as Hawaii.

Whether these companies continue to label genetically modified products voluntarily under the new federal law remains to be seen.

Massachusetts, New York Campaigns
Orell said she first became aware of the controversy surrounding GMOs in 2009 and began reading books like "The World According to Monsanto." Around that time, she completed a master's degree in environmental conservation from New York University and decided she wanted to engage the political system.

"The more I learned, the angrier I got," she said.

In Albany, Orell helped to form a statewide coalition that has been pushing for a GMO labeling law since 2013. (The New York coalition includes GMO Free NY, the Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York, Food and Water Watch, Hunger Action, Consumers Union, the New York Public Interest Research Group, Natural Resources Defense Council, Catskill Mountainkeeper, Fire Dog Lake, Good Boy Organics, the Green Party of New York, the Brooklyn Food Coalition and the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter.)

In past years, when she and other advocates met with legislators to advocate for GMO labeling, they "looked at you like you had two heads," Orell said.

But as Vermont's law neared implementation this year and companies actually started labeling, Orell said there was a sea change in the response to her efforts.
"The volume was turned up in Albany," she said.

Coalition members actively pushed out alerts to call legislators and come to lobby days. Some 300 people came to the coalition's March lobby day, staging a big rally on the Capitol staircase. In some districts, labeling proponents met individually with legislators -- or held protests and rallies outside legislators' offices.

"We were able to get a majority of both houses of the legislature to sign on as sponsors of the labeling bill or promise to vote for it," said Elizabeth Henderson, an organic farmer from western New York who worked with Orell on the campaign. "But we were not able to get the leadership to bring it up for a vote."

Orell and Henderson said the New York labeling bill was strongly opposed by lobbyists for the Farm Bureau, the Grocery Manufacturers Association and the biotechnology industry. One of those lobbyists, a former deputy state agriculture commissioner, showed up to take pictures whenever the pro-labeling campaign staged public events, Henderson said.

As in New York, activists in Massachusetts say the advent of Vermont's labeling law led to a new burst of support this year for their efforts to enact a similar law. On Beacon Hill, a GMO labeling bill garnered more than 75 percent of state legislators as co-sponsors.

Martin Dagoberto, the campaign coordinator for Massachusetts Right to Know GMOs, said the House Agriculture & Environment committee unanimously advanced the bill in March. It then sat in the House Ways & Means committee, where its chances appeared to fade near the end of the legislative session as federal action on the issue appeared likely to pre-empt any state law.

"Transparency opponents appear to have … convinced House leadership that this issue would soon be handled at the federal level," Dagoberto said in an e-mail interview.

Although advocates of GMO labeling are often accused of being anti-science, Dagoberto knows the scientific perspective well: He studied biotechnology and genetics at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, graduating in 2006.

"It was there that I gained an appreciation not only for the immense promise of medical biotechnology, bur also for the incredible set of risks that the shortsighted and accelerated engineering of our food entails," Dagoberto explained. "When I learned about the federal government's hand-off approach to regulating agricultural biotechnology, I became convinced that the only way forward must be with full transparency and informed participation of the public."

Industry's End Run
In Washington, industry groups opposed to labeling had been pushing for most of the past two years for Congress to intervene to block Vermont's law and any others that individual states might pass.
Last summer, the House voted 275-150 in favor of a bill, ironically titled the Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act, to prohibit individual states from requiring labeling of genetically modified foods.

Supporters of GMO labeling dubbed the bill the "Deny Americans the Right to Know Act" or Dark Act, and it stalled in the Senate.

This year, labeling opponents focused their efforts first in the US Senate. The result was a "bipartisan compromise" backed by Sens. Pat Roberts of Kansas and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, who are respectively the Republican chairman and the ranking Democratic member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry.

Like last year's bill, this year's version barred states from requiring GMO labeling, thereby overturning Vermont's law. But the new compromise also purports to establish a national system for disclosing information about genetically modified ingredients -- except that the information doesn't have to be disclosed on product labels.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell fast-tracked the bill, a maneuver that allowed the leadership to bring it to the floor for a vote without any witnesses giving testimony or amendments being considered.

Stander, of Rural Vermont, said both of Vermont's senators -- Democrat Patrick Leahy and independent Bernie Sanders -- put forth amendments but were denied an opportunity to have them debated.

The bill passed the Senate by a vote of 63-30. On July 14, the House, without making any changes, passed the bill, officially titled "An Act to Reauthorize and Amend the National Sea Grant College Program, and for other purposes," by a vote of 306-117. Despite an outcry from labeling opponents and a petition to the White House, the president signed it into law on July 29.

All of the senators representing New York and New England voted against the new federal law except New Hampshire's two senators, Republican Kelly Ayotte and Democrat Jeanne Shaheen. House members representing Vermont, western Massachusetts and eastern New York all voted against the federal law except Rep. Elise Stefanik, who supported it. Stefanik, a freshman Republican, represents New York's northernmost House district.

Advocates said one critical factor that allowed the anti-labeling bill to advance in the Senate was the decision of the Organic Trade Association, a trade group representing organic food producers, to support the so-called compromise legislation. The group cast the bill as the best deal that could be achieved -- and even went so far as to criticize organic farm and food groups who opposed the bill, saying they were dividing the organic movement.

"What really turned the tide was essentially a betrayal by the Organic Trade Association, saying we can live with this, it is OK," Stander explained. "Our understanding is that once they did that, it provided enough cover for some farm-state Democrats in the Senate to vote for it."

Many activists believe the Organic Trade Association backed the bill because of the influence of some of the association's larger members -- namely, major food-processing corporations that also own organic brands. Conventional food manufacturers stand to gain from the new law's lack of full and accessible disclosure, while organic companies can continue to claim that only their products are, by definition, produced without genetically modified ingredients.

Devil in the Details
What particularly galls labeling advocates is that the new federal law is being described by its supporters as a national standard for GMO labeling -- but won't require any information about GMOs to be placed directly on product labels.

Advocates point out that all kinds of other data -- nutrition information, a calorie count, ingredient list, and so on -- are already printed on labels. Only for information about genetic engineering will consumers have to take extra steps beyond reading the label.

"There are no other types of mandatory disclosure that are not right there on the food package," said Orell of GMO Free NY.

She said some national groups are looking into the possibility of suing on the grounds that the law is discriminatory, and hence unconstitutional, given that more than 100 million Americans do not own a smart phone. Many of those who don't have low incomes, are elderly or live in rural areas.

Stander said another concern is that the new federal law will limit the range of items subject to classification as genetically engineered.

"The way they have defined bioengineering leaves out a whole host of products," Stander said. "It will just lead to more confusion for consumers."

For instance, the law exempts products that do not contain "genetic material." According to the FDA, oils, starches and purified proteins do not contain genetic material.

This means high-fructose corn syrup and canola, soy and corn oils, all routinely made from genetically modified crops, would be excluded from the disclosure requirement, explained Liana Hoodes, formerly executive director and now a policy adviser for the National Organic Coalition.

Disclosure also will not be required if the genetic modification could have been achieved through conventional breeding. Such a claim would appear to be difficult, if not impossible, to prove and extremely difficult to police.

Hoodes said the National Organic Standards Board has convened panels to look at how to include newer genetic technologies in the definition of genetic engineering that is excluded from certified organic products. But the new federal law goes in the opposite direction.

The latest technologies, like gene editing which does not involve the transfer of foreign genetic material from different species, do not fall under the new law's definition of genetic engineering.
Hoodes said the implications are great.

"The law that was passed is likely to redefine what GMO is -- and even what organic thinks is a GMO," she said.

Building Public Awareness
Despite the defeat in Congress, Stander said the pro-labeling campaign had had a huge impact -- and the campaign's effort to educate the public is paying off. She cited recent survey research that found a large jump in the number of people who are able to identify the five crops most commonly produced with genetic engineering.

Stander said there's another important measure of success: The tenacity of her state, one of the country's smallest, leveraged national change.

"We did persuade major corporations to label their products or to change the formulation of their products in response to consumer demand," she said.

When General Mills announced that it would reformulate its classic Cheerios brand, Stander said the group Moms Across America ran a massive social media campaign, and the company decided to remove genetically modified ingredients from the cereal. The food company didn't acknowledge that this grassroots activism played a role in its decision, however.

Though Stander said she is frustrated by the passage of the new federal law, she remains energized by what has already been accomplished.

"This issue isn't going away," she said. "Too many people who are aware will continue to vote with their dollars."

She and others who've campaigned for labeling say they will continue to organize their grassroots supporters to press for fuller disclosure as the US Department of Agriculture develops rules to implement the new federal law.

"We will need to help people participate in the comment periods and other input opportunities during the rulemaking process," Dagoberto explained.

Hoodes said she sees "a lot of pressure points coming up ahead" in the federal rulemaking process.
"We're trying to look at all these bads as opportunities to keep the issue fresh in the public's eyes," she said. "There will be opportunities for publicity at every stage of the way."

Focusing on the details of the new law might also help create public pressure to improve the law, Stander suggested.

"As the USDA's rulemaking process goes forward, more of the flaws with the law will be revealed," Stander said. "It will become clear how vague and unclear it is, how many loopholes it has. … We may be able to have some influence or shine a light on the problems."

She predicted, however, that the next presidential administration probably won't be "particularly consumer-oriented."

On Aug. 18, Congressman James McGovern (D-Worcester, MA), speaking in Northampton, Mass., called for repealing the new federal law -- an effort Dagoberto said the Massachusetts coalition would support.

But action on GMO labeling will not be restricted to the political arena. Nearly 500,000 people have already signed up to boycott brands that refuse to label products genetically modified ingredients -- as well as those organic companies that supported the new law.

"Companies that don't disclose which products contain genetically engineered ingredients are going to pay a price for that with consumers," Dagoberto warned. "We are choosing whether the future of food and agriculture will be in the hands of the people or in the hands of multinational chemical corporations."

Henderson, the organic farmer from western New York, said she supports GMO labeling in part because she wants people to be able to avoid food that contains glyphosate, the herbicide better known by the brand name Roundup. Last year, the International Agency for Research on Cancer classified glyphosate as a probable human carcinogen.

The weed killer is used in tandem with the most popular types of genetically modified crops, Roundup Ready corn and soybeans. Its use has skyrocketed since these herbicide-resistant crops first went on the market. The USDA also has significantly increased the allowable levels of glyphosate in food to accommodate the actual residual levels that result from heavy spraying of these crops.

The organic movement has played a crucial role in propelling GMO labeling forward. Hoodes said that even though this isn't the group's focus, the National Organic Coalition made a commitment to work on the issue "because we knew what was at stake -- the right to know what's in our food."

"Organic means no GMOs -- and that's a bona-fide label," Hoodes said. "But the absence of GMOs is not the same as organic."

For Dagoberto, GMO labeling could be the gateway to an alternative future.

"I see GMO labeling as one avenue for food sovereignty: people reclaiming control over what our food supply looks like," he said.

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Kauai Election 2016 Updated

SUBHEAD: Island Breath endorsements and recommendations for federal, state and county election.

NOTE: Some changes made to County Charter Amendments made on 10/17/16.

By Linda Pascatore on 14 October 2016 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/10/kauai-election-2016.html)


Image above: Incumbent Gary Hooser - Our first pick for Kauai County Council.

Important Election Dates:
Early Walk-In Voting and Late Voter Registration:
Tues, October 25 to Sat, Nov 5, 2016, 8am to 4 pm, at Lihue Neighborhood Center

Last day to request a Mail Ballot:
Tues, Nov 5, 2016, 4:30pm deadline

Early Walk-In Voting Ends:
Sat, Nov 5, 2016  

General Election:
Tues, Nov 8, 2016, polls open 7am to 6pm

To Register to Vote, Find your Polling Place, and see your Sample Ballot, go to: https://olvr.hawaii.gov/

Island Breath Endorsements:
We found information on candidates records and position on Votesmart (http://votesmart.org/), Ballotpedia (https://ballotpedia.org/Hawaii_elections,_2016), the League of Women Voters (http://www.lwv-hawaii.com/candidates-2016.htm), OHA Election Guide (http://www.oha.org/2016electionguide), and also in articles profiling individual candidates in the Honolulu Star Advertiser, Civil Beat, and The Garden Island.

We endorsed candidates with progressive or liberal values; their support for the environment, sustainability, and Hawaiian Sovereignty; and for their anti-GMO stances.

*SPECIAL ISLAND BREATH ENDORSEMENT:  GARY HOOSER FOR KAUAI COUNTY COUNCIL*
Our favorite Kauai politician of all time: if you vote for only one person on this ballot, vote for Gary!


U.S. FEDERAL OFFICES

President and Vice President:
Jill Stein and Ajamu Baraka
IB Note: We are voting our conscience on this one--Jill is just too good, and we can't support Trump or Clinton. Check out the Green Party website (http://www.jill2016.com/)

US Senator:
Brian Schatz

US Representative, Dist II:
Tulsi Gabbard



HAWAII STATE OFFICES

State Representative, Dist 14: Hanalei, Princeville, Kilauea, Anahola, Kapaa, Wailua
Nadine Nakamura
IB Note: Nakamura looks better than her opponent Combs in her positions on issues. However, we lost faith in Nadine when she left the county council at the time she was needed for a crucial GMO vote, in order to accept an appointment from Carvalho

State Representative, Dist 15: Wailua Homesteads, Hanamaulu, Lihue, Puhi, Old Koloa Town, Omao
IB Note: James Tokioka is running unopposed for this office. We do not endorse him.

State Representative, Dist 16: Niihau, Lehua, Koloa, Waimea
Dee Morikawa



Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA):
Hawaii Resident Trustee:
Mililani Trask

OHA At-Large Trustee:
Keli'i Akina



KAUAI COUNTY OFFICES

County of Kauai Prosecuting Attorney:
Justin Kollar

Kauai County Council:
Mason Chock
Gary Hooser
JoAnn Yukimura


IB Note: You can vote for 7 council members. However, the 3 above supported 2491 (Bill regulating pesticides and GMO's).  If you vote for all seven candidates, but only really support three, your #4, 5, 6, and 7 votes could enable those other candidates to win over your top candidates. Consider voting for fewer--a practice called "plunking".



STATE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS

IB Note: Constitutional amendments in Hawaii require approval from a majority of all voters casting a vote in the election, which means that filling out a ballot but not voting has the same effect as voting no. A yes vote approves the proposed change, a no vote or not voting leaves the State Constitution as is.

VOTE YES: RELATING TO JURY TRIALS IN CIVIL CASES
"Shall the threshold value in controversy requirement for jury trials in civil cases at common law be increased from $5,000 to $10,000?"
IB Note: This amendment deals with how much money a civil suit has to be seeking in order to have a jury trial.  We believe that a judge can adjudicate a monetary claim in a civil case and avoid a costly jury trial.



VOTE YES: RELATING TO THE DISPOSITION OF EXCESS REVENUES
"Shall the legislature be provided, when the state general fund balance at the close of each of two successive fiscal years exceeds five per cent of the general fund revenues for each of the two fiscal years, the additional alternatives of appropriating general funds for the pre-payment of either or both of the following:
(1) Debt service for general obligation bonds issued by the State; or

(2) Pension or other post-employment benefit liabilities accrued for state employees?"IB Note: Without the passage of this amendment, excess general funds can only be used to provide tax refunds for taxpayers or to supplement other funds in place for emergencies.  This amendment would allow excess general fund revenues to be used to pre-pay general obligation bonds issued by the state and pensions accrued by state employees. General obligation bonds are bonds issued and backed by the state.


KAUAI COUNTY CHARTER AMENDMENTS

IB Note: For Kauai County Charter Amendments, blank votes are not counted.  
Update: We have changed a couple of our recommendations as of 10/17/16.

VOTE YES:
RELATING TO CORRECTING GENDER NEUTRALITY, GRAMMATICAL, SPELLING AND FORMATTING ERRORS.

"Shall the charter be amended throughout to ensure that its language is to the greatest extent possible gender neutral and to make changes to spelling, capitalization, punctuation, formatting, and grammar?"
IB Note: This amendment simply corrects errors and gender references




VOTE YES:
RELATING TO EXPANDING THE DUTIES OF THE FIRE CHIEF AND DEFINING AUTHORITY TO EXECUTE POWERS AND DUTIES
"Shall the duties of the Fire Chief be clarified to include duties currently performed such as addressing hazardous materials, emergency medical services, and ocean safety, and shall the reference to the Mayor's authority to assign duties be removed?"
IB Note: The section of the County Charter was created before the Fire Commission was formed. The current language of the Charter does not specifically identify lines of authority in assigning duties. Additionally, the Department has broadened its scope beyond fire control, to include such functions as ocean safety, hazardous materials, and emergency services, which are currently not reflected in the charter. This amendment would appropriately describe the current functions of the fire chief and the Fire Department, as they relate to duties and authority.




MODIFIED 10/17/16

VOTE NO: RELATING TO ESTABLISHING A ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS TO ASSIST THE PLANNING COMMISSION IN PROVIDING DUE PROCESS FOR APPELLANTS
"Shall a Zoning Board of Appeals be established to hear appeals from decisions of the Planning Director and to conduct evidentiary hearing at the request of the Planning Commission?"
IB Note: Currently, the Zoning Board hires a hearing officer for appeals.  This amendment would have a volunteer board appointed by the mayor and approved by county council.  It is unclear whether these volunteers would be as knowledgeable and as impartial as a hearing officer.




VOTE YES:
RELATING TO THE CIVIL DEFENSE AGENCY
"Shall the county Civil Defense Agency be renamed the Emergency Management Agency and its organization clarified consistent with State Law?"
IB Note: Hawaii State law recently renamed the “Civil Defense Agency” to the “Emergency Management Agency.” Therefore, the current language of the Charter referring to the Civil Defense Agency is inconsistent with state law. Additionally, the Charter does not currently assign a department administrator or director.




VOTE YES:
RELATING TO THE PERCENTAGE OF REQUIRED VOTERS FOR AN INITIATIVE PETITION, A REFERENDUM PETITION, OR A CHARTER AMENDMENT PETITION
"Shall the percentage of registered voter signatures required to start the initiative or referendum process be reduced to 10 percent from 20 percent, and shall the percentage of registered voter signatures required to start the charter amendment process via voter petition be increased to 10 percent from 5 percent?"
IB Note: This makes the required percentage consistent at 10 percent for those wishing to propose an ordinance, referendum or charter amendment. Currently, the 20 percent required for a referendum is too high.




MODIFIED 10/17/16
VOTE NO: RELATING TO ENABLING THE COUNTY CLERK TO DETERMINE WHAT IS A VALID CHARTER AMENDMENT
"Shall it be specified what constitutes a charter amendment, and shall the processing of a proposed charter amendment via voter petition be revised to enable the county clerk to determine whether the proposal is a valid charter amendment?"
IB Note: If voters collect the required signatures to get a Charter Amendment on the ballot, it should be included, unless the courts decide it does not constitute a valid charter amendment.




VOTE NO:
RELATING TO ESTABLISHING A PERMANENT CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION
"Shall the Charter Review Commission be an ongoing commission?"
IB Note: The current language of the charter states that the Commission will expire on December 31, 2016. A new commission can reconvene in 10 years, with members to be appointed by the mayor and approved by the council. This amendment seeks to remove the expiration date of the Charter Review Commission and eliminates the 10-year intervals between the creation of the commissions, thereby establishing a permanent Charter Review Commission. We believe that once every ten years is often enough to review changes to the County Charter, which is the equivalent of our constitution.

.

TPP won't get Senate vote now

SUBHEAD: Republicans will not seek lame duck vote on Trans Pacific Partnership. Thank God!

By Deidre Fulton on 26 August 2016 for Common Dreams -
(http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/08/26/good-news-says-sanders-mcconnell-signals-no-lame-duck-vote-tpp)


Image above: People attend a rally protesting the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in Maui, Hawaii, the United States, July 29, 2015. From (http://thebricspost.com/if-tpp-fails-us-will-cede-trade-leadership-role-to-china-us-trade-rep/#.V8M86LUnqe8).

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Thursday that the U.S. Senate will not vote on the 12-nation, corporate-friendly Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) this year, buoying progressive hopes that the trade deal will never come to fruition. 

Responding to the news, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)—whose opposition to the TPP was a hallmark of his presidential campaign—said: "This is good news for American workers, for the environment, and for the ability to protect public health."

McConnell told a Kentucky State Farm Bureau breakfast in Louisville that the agreement, "which has some serious flaws, will not be acted upon this year."

Grassroots groups have led a concerted campaign to prevent a vote during the so-called "lame-duck" session of Congress, after the November election and before President Barack Obama leaves office in January. The White House recently vowed to wage an "all-out push" in favor of such a vote.

"We never thought we would agree with Mitch McConnell on something, but we do agree on not bringing the TPP to a vote in the lame-duck session," said Adam Green, Progressive Change Campaign Committee co-founder, on Friday. "There's widespread, bipartisan opposition to the corporate-written TPP and an unaccountable, lame-duck Congress voting on it."

However, The Hill reports, "McConnell said that while the trade agreement won't get approved in its current form, it could pass next year with some changes."

"It will still be around," said the Republican from Kentucky. "It can be massaged, changed, worked on during the next administration."

Both Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton say they're against the deal, but that opposition isn't guaranteed. And that's why opponents need to keep the pressure on.

Indeed, added Sanders: "This treaty is opposed by every trade union in the country and virtually the entire grassroots base of the Democratic Party.

In my view, it is now time for the leadership of the Democratic Party in the Senate and the House to go on the record in opposition to holding a vote on this job-killing trade deal during the lame-duck session of Congress and beyond."

To that end, Reuters notes that earlier this month, Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan "said he saw no point in bringing up the TPP deal for a vote in any 'lame duck' session of Congress later this year because 'we don't have the votes.'"

.

Obama sells soul to Monsanto

SUBHEAD: In a time he could do the right thing, he persists in GMO evil doing.

By Nathanial Johnson on 29 July 2016 for Grist Magazine -
(http://grist.org/politics/gmo-labels-are-now-the-law-of-the-land/)


Image above: A sample of digital VR code that would pass for food ingredient labeling under law signed by Monsanto tool Obama. From (http://www.activistpost.com/2016/07/house-passes-gmo-labeling-bill-obama-set-to-sign.html).

We’re officially a country that labels GMOs now. President Obama signed a bill on Friday that requires food companies to label products with genetically engineered ingredients. They can do this by writing it on the box, slapping on a symbol, or applying a Quick Response (QR) code — something like a barcode. For more on the law, check out our previous coverage.

Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, who was instrumental in pushing the bill through Congress, praised its passage in a statement. She said the law “gives our nation’s farmers and food companies a fresh opportunity to start a conversation with consumers about the importance and safety of biotechnology.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture now has two years to figure out how to define a GMO. Are they crops that have had their genes tweaked or silenced, or mutated with radiation? Should the definition be narrowly focused on the original transgenic crops? There will undoubtedly be fights during the rule-making process.

This new law overrides Vermont’s GMO-labeling law and prevents any other state-level GMO-labeling attempts, but it allows voluntary labeling to continue.



Obama leaves most in the DARK

By Staaff on 29 July 2016 for Food Safety Center -
(http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/press-releases/4438/president-obama-signs-gmo-non-labeling-bill-leaves-millions-of-americans-in-the-dark#)


Image above: Demonstrators supporting California's Proposition 37 to label GMO food ingredients that narrowly failed. From original article.

Today President Obama signed into law a GMO labeling bill that discriminates against more than 100 million Americans. The bill recently passed through Congress and allows companies and producers to use QR codes, 1-800 numbers and other difficult to access technology to label food products that contain GMOs, instead of clear, on-package text.

The law also sets a dangerous precedent to override the sovereignty of states, as many state labeling laws, including Vermont’s recently enacted GMO labeling law, are now void.

Consumer, food safety, farm, environmental, and religious groups along with several food corporations representing hundreds of thousands of Americans condemned the bill when it was before Congress.

The FDA said the bill’s narrow and ambiguous definition of “bioengineering,” would “likely mean that many foods from GE sources will not be subject to this bill” and that it “may be difficult” for any GMO food to qualify for labeling under the bill.

 Civil rights activist Rev. Jesse Jackson said the bill raised “serious questions of discrimination” and left “unresolved matters of equal protection of the law”.

The following is statement from Andy Kimbrell, executive director at the Center for Food Safety:
“I don’t know what kind of legacy the president hopes to leave, but denying one-third of Americans the right to know what is in the food they feed their families isn’t one to be proud of.

This law is a sham and a shame, a rushed backroom deal that discriminates against low-income, rural, minority and elderly populations.

The law also represents a major assault on the democratic decision making of several states and erases their laws with a vague multi-year bureaucratic process specifically designed to provide less transparency to consumers.”
 See also:
Ea O Ka Aina: Why Obama should veto DARK Act 7/29/16
Ea O Ka Aina: Tell Obama to Veto GMO DARK Act 7/23/16
Ea O Ka Aina: GMO guys the dumbest in the room 7/10/16
Ea O Ka Aina: Sham GMO labeling vote passes 7/8/16
Ea O Ka Aina: Senate endangers GMO labeling 7/4/16
Ea O Ka Aina: GMO Labeling Flimflam 7/2/16
Ea O Ka Aina: Vermont GMO labeling impact 5/30/16
Ea O Ka Aina: GMO labeling issue over? 4/18/16
Ea O Ka Aina: General Mills to label GMOs 3/21/16
Ea O Ka Aina: Congress may block GMO labeling 9/12/15
Ea O Ka Aina: US Congress & GMO labeling 4/25/13
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Tell Obama to veto GMO DARK bill

SUBHEAD: The Dark Act  bill is sitting on President Obama's desk waiting to be signed! This is our last chance!

By Staff on 22 July 2016 for Food Democracy Now -
(http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/sign/label_gmos_now_2016/)


Image above: Obama's promise to support GMO labeling. From Food Democracy Now.

Monsanto's DARK Act has landed on President Obama's desk 3 DAYS ago and he still hasn't signed it!

This outrageous bill has passed both the Senate and the House and the only thing standing in our way from it becoming the law of the land is President Obama actually signing the bill. The White House phones have been ringing off the hook for weeks as hundreds of thousands of Americans outraged over this terrible, unconstitutional bill have been voicing their opposition.

We need everyone who can act today to sign this letter or make a call to remind President Obama to stand up for the American people — It's time to put an end to the corporate corruption of our democracy and our food supply!

Tell President Obama to VETO Senate Bill 764 Monsanto's Corporate Coup and STAND UP for our basic rights and our democracy! The White House needs to hear from you today - CALL (202) 456-1111 or (202) 456-1414 -  Every voice counts!

While Congress has a long history of being in bed with Monsanto and the junk food companies, First Lady Michelle Obama planted an organic garden on the White House lawn and has tried to promote healthy food as a solution to our nation's growing obesity problem and to motivate children to eat healthier food.

Just as impressive, while on the campaign trail President Obama stood up to Big Food and told a group of Iowa farmers that if elected President he would actually label "genetically modified foods, because Americans should know what they're buying!"

We couldn't agree more! Which is why we're sending this email today to have your remind him of his courageous pledge to label GMOs foods back in 2007 - when most Americans had never even heard of Monsanto or GMOs!

We know, with everything happening in Washington DC it's easy to be cynical, but after he was elected, President Obama was asked if he'd actually follow through on his promise.

Obama's response was "Show me the Movement. Make me do it". And these past 7 years - that's exactly what We've done!

Please take a few seconds today and watch this historic 2007 video where a young Senator from Illinois made the first pledge of a Presidential candidate EVER to Promise to Label GMOs!

Now's the time Mr. President , stand up for ALL Americans and - VETO S. 764 - and help us win honest labels!

Rush an urgent message to President Obama to veto Monsanto's Corporate Coup S. 764 and TAKE A Stand for REAL GMO Labels! Every voice counts!

Please help us flood the White House with calls today (202-456-1111) asking Obama to stand with Americans who want real labels - Tell President Obama to veto S. 764.

Please SHARE this Important message to President Obama far and wide with friends and family today!
Facebook link here - (https://fdn.actionkit.com/go/2001)
And sign a White House Petition here: (http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/1999)

Now that both chambers of Congress have passed S. 764 aka Monsanto's Corporate Coup, the only thing left before it becomes law is it being signed by President Obama. And we need your help to make sure he understands this does not represent what 90% of the American public actually wants.

Republicans and Democrats have Climbed into Bed to Protect Monsanto and Big Food, but that doesn't mean that President Obama has to sign this terrible bill.

As a Constitutional law professor, President Obama knows better than anyone else how important it is to make sure that our laws are written fairly and properly protect the rights of the American public. It's time to end Monsanto's corruption of our democracy!

Tell President Obama to VETO S 764 and put an END to Monsanto's Corporate Coup! Every voice counts! (http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/sign/label_gmos_now_2016/)

The bill is now on President Obama's desk and could be signed into law at any moment! The White House needs to hear from you today!

Please share with your friends and call your Members of Congress today! Every voice counts!

Remember, democracy is like a muscle, either you use it or you lose it!


Video above: Obama's promise to support GMO labeling. From (https://youtu.be/zqaaB6NE1TI).

Additional Information:
1. "Show Me the Movement!", Center for a Livable Future, March 24, 2009
(http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/2002)
2. See how your Senator Voted on this procedural motion to Kill States’ Rights and Vermont’s Historic GMO Labeling Law!
(http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/1995)
3. “FDA concerned with GMO labeling 'compromise'”, The Hill, June 30, 2016
(http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/1981)
4. "What Senate Backers Aren't Saying About the GMO "compromise" bill", The Hill, July 1, 2016
(http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/go/1996)
5. Agribusiness: Money to Congress, OpenSecrets
(https://fdn.actionkit.com/go/1989)

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8/13 Primary Elections on Kauai

SUBHEAD: Important primary election dates, information, and lists of candidates.

By Linda Pascatore on 17 July 2016 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/07/813-primary-elections-on-kauai.html)


Image above: Hawaiians line up to vote for Bernie Sanders in Democratic Primary. From (http://www.leadertelegram.com/News/Daily-Updates/2016/03/27/Sanders-captures-two-states-Clinton-keeps-big-delegate-lead.html).

Early Walk In Voting for Primary: 1 August to 11 August 2016

Last day to request Mail in Ballot: 6 August 2016

Primary Elections: 13 August 2016 - Polls open 7am to 6pm

To register to vote, update existing voter registration, confirm voter address, and request to vote by mail, find your polling place, or view your ballot, go to: https://olvr.hawaii.gov/Default.aspx



On the front page of the primary ballot, you must first choose one political party or non-partisan, and then vote only for those candidates. Vote for only one candidate for the offices below:

Democratic Party: 
US Senator:

Christensen, Makani
Honeychurch, Tutz
Reeyes, Arturo
Schatz, Brian
Shiratori, Miles

US Representative, Second District
Chan Hodges, Shay
Gabbard, Tulsi

Hawaii State Senator:
Ahuna, Kanoe
Kouchi, Dan

Hawaii State Representative:
District 14:
Nakamura, Nadine
Rosenstiel, Fern Anuenue

District 15:
Oi, Tommy
Tokioka, James Kunane

District 16:
Morikawa, Dee



Republican Party:
US Senator:

Carroll, John
Gottschalk, Karla (Bart)
Pirkowski, Eddie
Roco, John P

US Representative, 2nd District:
Hafner, Eric
Kaaihue, Angela Aulani

State Representative, District 14:
Sandra Combs


State Representative, District 15: 
no candidate

State Representative, District 16:
Franks, Victoria (Vickie)



Libertarian Party:
US Senator:
Kokoski, Michael A



American Shopping Party:
US Senator:

Giuffre, John M (Raghu)



Constitution Party:
US Senator:
Allison, Joy J



Nonpartisan Ballot: 
US Representative, 2nd District:
Turner, Richard



On the back page of your ballot, you will find the non-partisan votes for Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA), Prosecuting Attorney, and County Council:

Kauai County Council:  (vote for not more than 7 candidates)
Apalla, Juno-Ann A
Bernabe, Matt
Brun, Arthur
Chock, Mason
Doctor Sparks, Norma
Fukushima, Richard S
Hooser, Gary L
Kagawa, Ross K
Kaneshiro, Arryl
Kawakami, Derek S K
Kualli, Kipukai
Rapozo, Mel
Yukimura, JoAnn A

Kauai County Prosecuting Attorney (both candidates advance to general election)
Lisa Arin
Justin Kollar

Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA): Hawaii Resident Trustee: (vote for one candidate)
Kahui, Bo V (Craig)
Lindsey, Robert K (Bob)
Trask, Mililani B

Molokai Resident Trustee: (vote for one candidate)
Flowers, Jerry (Manuwa)
Hanapi, Alapai
Machado, Colette (Pipi'i)

At large trustee: (vote for one candidate)
Akina, Keli'i
Anthony, Daniel K
Apoliona, Haunani
Crum, Couglas E
Kalima, Leona Mapuana
Makekau, Keali'i
Mossman, Paul Ledwith

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