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Hawaii News

Driver’s exam to be offered in Hawaiian in March

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The state Department of Transportation is preparing to make Hawaiian a driver's license exam language at the end of March.

Even though Hawaiian is one of the official languages of the state, residents won’t be able to take driver’s license exams in the language until next month.

The state Department of Transportation is preparing to make Hawaiian an exam language at the end of March. It will be one of the few official transactions that can be conducted in Hawaiian.

In 2001 the state began offering the exam in several languages, including Taga­log, Japa­nese, Mandarin, Korean, Vietnamese, Samoan and Tongan. But those tests were no longer offered when new questions were added. It’s not clear when the state stopped offering those translated tests.

But those languages will be reinstated and others will be offered for the first time, department officials said. The new languages will be Ilo­cano, Spanish, Chuuk­ese, Marshallese and Hawaiian.

It’s not clear how the department’s plans to offer the languages will affect an ongoing federal lawsuit claiming Hawaii discriminates against immigrants by allowing driver’s license tests to be taken only in English.

"I will be thrilled if they ultimately do it," said Gavin Thornton, deputy director of the Hawaii Appleseed Center for Law and Economic Justice, one of the organizations that filed the lawsuit in September. "But I don’t have any confidence that we’ll actually see something in March."

Thornton said lawyers defending the state against the lawsuit have suggested in court filings that allowing those who don’t speak English is dangerous.

"Issuing driver’s licenses to persons unable to read and comprehend traffic control signs would clearly be irresponsible, and would place other motorists and pedestrians at risk from drivers unqualified to use a motor vehicle on public roads," the state attorney general’s office argued in court papers.

DOT spokeswoman Caro­line Sluy­ter said the department can’t comment on pending litigation.

Making the translations available has been a goal for several years, said Clifton Harty, the department’s acting civil rights coordinator. He said the department used census data to help determine which languages to offer.

According to the census, of about 1.2 million people in Hawaii, nearly 300,000 spoke a language other than English at home from 2006-08.

Translations of the written, multiple-choice exams are complete, and the department is finalizing details such as formatting, Harty said.

The process involved making sure the translations were accurate for some of the technical language in the exam. "We want to make sure these exams hold up and people can pass the exams," he said.

Offering the translated exam is "very important for the local community," Harty said, and including Hawaiian is especially important as a way to honor its status as an official language of the state.

Jennifer Sinco Kelleher, Associated Press

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