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Religious groups miraculously escape a fine
In the world of political lobbying, things are not always black or white. Depending on who’s doing the lobbying, or the monitoring, there can exist a mighty wide area of gray.
So it is that the Hawaii Family Forum and the Hawaii Catholic Conference have agreed to revise some of their spending reports with the state Ethics Commission and pay $3,000 to resolve complaints about their lobbying activities. It’s not a fine, mind you, but payment that goes along with public transparency to resolve charges of improper disclosure of lobbying.
For its part, the Catholic Conference said it hadn’t realized it had to separately file lobbying reports for its political activism, and has now done so.
This case "should send a message to others who lobby elected officials to inquire into whether filings are warranted in their particular case," said former Ethics Commissioner Jacqueline Kido. "We have a lobbying law for good reason." Amen to that.
Haleiwa Farmers Market back in business
It’s good to see that the Haleiwa Farmers Market has finally found a new venue, after being displaced in June from its three-year spot due to a liability problem. The market will reopen Thursdays from 3-7 p.m. in Waimea Valley, at the Pikake Pavilion and nearby lawn. The market has a 3-month trial lease, but here’s hoping it retains its popularity to stay on much longer. It might have to go through a name change, though — perhaps something clever like the Waimea Farmers Market.
As for the previous venue, that triangular remnant parcel at the junction of Kamehameha Highway and Haleiwa bypass road: The state Department of Transportation really should pursue redesignating that site to cease liability issues, so that it can be used productively instead of going to waste.