Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Hawaii
Related: About this forumWaihee and Cayetano: Hoopili Flaunts Mandate to Protect Ag Land
By Sophie Cocke 03/15/2012
Former Governor John Waihee strolled into a hearing room packed with a sea of orange shirts that read, Hoopili Now!
The political veteran, age 65, clad in dark blue jeans and black cowboy boots, exuded a casual confidence as he chatted with executives of D.R. Horton, Hoopilis developer, as well as opponents of the proposed 12,000-home development in Ewa, which he was there to support.
--------
Thursday was one of the last days of testimony that began in October for the master-planned community that would displace about 1,500 acres of prime farmland, much of it under cultivation. And it was likely the most important day for intervenors in the case, which include Friends of Makakilo, the Sierra Club and state Sen. Clayton Hee.
Hee had enlisted not only Waihee, but former Gov. Ben Cayetano, who is currently running for mayor of Honolulu, to testify against the development. The political heavyweights are likely to be among the most persuasive witnesses in the case before the state Land Use Commission, which is expected to rule on D.R. Hortons petition to reclassify the land from agricultural to urban by this summer.
More: Civil Beat Story
Former Governor John Waihee strolled into a hearing room packed with a sea of orange shirts that read, Hoopili Now!
The political veteran, age 65, clad in dark blue jeans and black cowboy boots, exuded a casual confidence as he chatted with executives of D.R. Horton, Hoopilis developer, as well as opponents of the proposed 12,000-home development in Ewa, which he was there to support.
--------
Thursday was one of the last days of testimony that began in October for the master-planned community that would displace about 1,500 acres of prime farmland, much of it under cultivation. And it was likely the most important day for intervenors in the case, which include Friends of Makakilo, the Sierra Club and state Sen. Clayton Hee.
Hee had enlisted not only Waihee, but former Gov. Ben Cayetano, who is currently running for mayor of Honolulu, to testify against the development. The political heavyweights are likely to be among the most persuasive witnesses in the case before the state Land Use Commission, which is expected to rule on D.R. Hortons petition to reclassify the land from agricultural to urban by this summer.
More: Civil Beat Story
I am 100% against this project.
4 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Waihee and Cayetano: Hoopili Flaunts Mandate to Protect Ag Land (Original Post)
ellisonz
Mar 2012
OP
the train to nowhere is designed to serve this limited planned community and similar ones...at the
msongs
Mar 2012
#1
msongs
(70,287 posts)1. the train to nowhere is designed to serve this limited planned community and similar ones...at the
expense of the majority of Oahu;s population that will not benefit in any way
ellisonz
(27,759 posts)2. "the train to nowhere"
, sir.
dkf
(37,305 posts)4. The people who don't benefit are the lucky ones not stuck in that horrendous traffic.
Yeah we live on the more expensive side of the island so our traffic isn't as bad as those who bought in those planned communities.
Let their traffic get worse. I guess 3-4 hours of their lives stuck in traffic eating up gas is fine.
Firebrand Gary
(5,044 posts)3. My personal opinion on Hawaii.
Is that there should be a total ban on building horizontally. There is plenty of opportunity to build new skyscrapers if there is that much of a need for new housing.