Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Landfill Update from Mayor's Report Card

"• Siting of the new landfill

o As you know…we’ve moved forward with the siting of a new landfill and have held two community meetings in Kalāheo…where the top ranked site is located.

o At the present time, we are reviewing all of the comments and information that have been provided through this outreach process…and will hopefully have more information on our next steps within 60 days.

o I want to be sure that the public knows that we have heard what you have said…we are taking all of this information into account…and we appreciate the effort you have made to bring important information to the forefront."

The complete "Report & Talking Points" can be viewed at the County Website.

http://www.kauai.gov/

Friday, January 22, 2010
Mayor Carvalho's Quarterly Report Card - 4th Qtr 2009
Report Card presentation
Report Card narrative

Thursday, December 17, 2009

EIS to review alternatives, Umi remains ‘prime target’

Proposed Kalaheo landfill site questioned

By Michael Levine - The Garden Island

Published: Thursday, December 17, 2009 3:10 AM HST
LIHU‘E — The Kaua‘i County Council wasted no time Wednesday morning, questioning Mayor Bernard Carvalho’s decision to move forward with siting a new landfill at the Umi site near Kalaheo and grilling the county’s consultant for answers about the selection process.

Hours later, roughly 100 Kalaheo residents took their turn, attending an informational meeting at Kalaheo School Wednesday night.

While the public meeting was the second of its kind in less than a month, the council’s discussion during its final regular meeting of 2009 was the legislators’ first opportunity to weigh in on the controversial proposal, first announced in late August when Carvalho signaled his support for the recommendation made by a 15-member advisory committee tasked with ranking potential sites.

In the months since then, Kalaheo residents have come out strongly against the siting. Kaua‘i Coffee Company, a subsidiary of Alexander and Baldwin, the current landowner of the proposed landfill site, has said putting a 127-acre landfill in the middle of its coffee operation would undermine its image and make it difficult for the company to compete.

In late November, around 250 people packed the Kalaheo School cafeteria for a public meeting, with dozens offering myriad reasons why the proposal is a bad idea, and councilmembers wondered Wednesday whether an unwilling landowner would delay the process to beyond the 2017 date currently projected for closing of the Kekaha Landfill.

Tom Shigemoto of A&B testified to register opposition to the proposal and said it might be “prudent” for the county to look elsewhere because unfriendly condemnation will likely be necessary before permitting can even begin.

“There seems to be a number of items that will consume a lot of time while we have a must-complete date,” said Council Vice Chair Jay Furfaro, pointing out that the MACLS stated in its final report that “Any final siting decision must take into account the importance of not only the need for a landfill, but the loss of the potential use of the selected property as well as its reuse potential when the landfill is closed.”

Councilman Daryl Kaneshiro wondered if it is “premature” for the county to identify a single site, and Tim Bynum said the county should not “put all our eggs in one basket.”

“It is becoming apparent that there’s other issues out there that we need to address,” County Engineer Donald Fujimoto told the council. He said the Mayor’s Advisory Committee on Landfill Site Selection was not meant to be the final answer but designed to identify important issues. “We’re at the beginning of the process.”

Brian Takeda of the Honolulu-based design, engineering and management firm R.M. Towill Corp. said the committee and consultant weighted 26 criteria and ranked the potential sites, but said that work is not a substitute for the Environmental Impact Statement that comes as the next step in the years-long process.

Fujimoto said the EIS for the Umi site, described by Furfaro as the “prime target,” would also encompass a review of two or three of the top-ranked alternatives, and that the county is still negotiating the terms of a contract for the EIS.

For more information, visit www.kauai.gov/newlandfillsite.

• Michael Levine, assistant news editor, can be reached at 245-3681 (ext. 252) or mlevine@kauaipubco.com. Dennis Fujimoto, photographer and staff writer, contributed to this report in Kalaheo.

Monday, December 14, 2009

COUNCIL MEETING NOTICE and AGENDA ITEMS Related to Landfill

COUNCIL MEETING NOTICE and AGENDA ITEMS Related to Landfill

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16,2009
9:30 A.M. OR SOON THEREAFTER
COUNCIL CHAMBERS
Historic County Building
4396 Rice Street, Room 201
Lihu'e, Kaua'i, Hawai'i

COMMUNICATIONS:
C 2009-388 Communication (08/28/2009) from the Environmental Services
Management Engineer, Department of Public Works, transmitting for
Council information the Final Report from the Mayor's Advisory
Committee on Landfill Site Selection (MACLS), dated May 2009.
(Copy of report on file in the County Clerk's Office.)

C 2009-390 Communication (10/30/2009) from the Environmental Services
Management Engineer, Department of Public Works, requesting
Council approval of the September 2009 Integrated Solid Waste
Management Plan (ISWMP Update).(See Resolution No. 2009-71)(Copy of Integrated Solid Waste Management Plan September 2009 on file in the County Clerk's Office.)

RESOLUTIONS:
Resolution No. 2009-71, RESOLUTION ADOPTING THE INTEGRATED
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT PLAN UPDATE FOR THE COUNTY OF KAUA'I

Call TELEPHONE NO. 241-6371. for more info

Second public information meeting on landfill siting process set for Dec. 16

KALĀHEO – Those who missed the Nov. 19 meeting on the landfill siting process will have another opportunity to see a presentation on the process, and also provide input. The meeting will be held on Wednesday, Dec. 16, from 6 to 9 pm, at the Kalāheo Elementary School cafeteria. Included on the agenda will be the same information that was presented at the previous meeting -- the results of the Mayor’s Advisory Committee on Landfill Site Selection (MACLS) ranking process and the next steps in siting the new landfill.

The presentation will be made by R.M. Towill, Inc., the consultant that conducted the MACLS process.

Following the presentation, the public will be invited to express their views on the landfill siting process.

To access the Power Point presentation that will be made at the meeting, please log on to the county’s website, http://www.kauai.gov/newlandfillsite.

Based on the results of the study, Mayor Bernard Carvalho, Jr. sent a communication to the County Council in August stating that the administration intends to proceed with the next steps to further evaluate the feasibility of developing a landfill at the Umi site.

The site is located along Halewili Road between Kalāheo and Niumila Camp. The land is owned by Alexander & Baldwin, Inc. For more information or to request an American Sign Language interpreter, alternative format, or an auxiliary aid, please contact Allison Fraley with the Solid Waste Division at afraley@kauai.gov or 241-4837 before the meeting.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Mayor Carvalho Speaks On Landfill PT1

Mayor Carvalho Speaks On Landfill PT 2

Landfill Facts

Choosing a new landfill site requires planning and foresight, not simply keeping an election promise!

Fact: Mana will be full in seven years. Pau!

Fact: A&B will not sell their land to the County for the Umi project.

Fact: The County must file condemnation proceedings (a court action) to take the A&B land under “eminent domain.”

Fact: Condemnation proceedings will take a minimum of 10 years.

Fact: The county will hire “legal experts” to fight A&B’s legal team and will cost $1 million-plus in taxpayer money, likely much more!

Fact: If the county were to win out over A&B, it will take at least another year minimum to permit and construct the Umi landfill.

Think! That’s four years or more past the end of Mana landfill’s life expectancy before Umi can be opened. What will our county do with the trash during the 4-plus years we do not have a landfill?

Fact: Two public schools are two miles from the Umi site. ‘Ele‘ele School will be downwind most of the time. Kalaheo School will be downwind during Kona or Ni‘ihau winds. ‘Ele‘ele School already contends with KIUC’s diesel exhaust during Kona wind episodes.

Fact: A shopping center with grocery store and eateries are within two miles of the Umi site, downwind.

Fact: Port Allen — a visitor destination, local jobs and businesses, Coast Guard, harbor and fishing club — is two miles downwind of the Umi site.

Fact: Two communities will have this landfill in their “front yard.” Brydeswood and New Mill are not NIMBY!

Fact: Two towns will have justifiable NIMBY status. Kalaheo and ‘Ele‘ele. Add Hanapepe too!

Jeff Kritz, Kalaheo