The full Senate voted 19 to 5 Wednesday to
reconfirm William Aila as deputy director of the state Department of
Hawaiian Home Lands.
Aila faced tough
questioning and testimony earlier this month in front of the Senate
Hawaiian Affairs Committee, which narrowly voted to advise the Senate to confirm him.
He attracted support from groups such as
the Office of Hawaiian
Affairs and Council
for Native Hawaiian
Advancement, but feelings among homestead associations were divided.
Sen. Kai Kahele
(D, Hilo) was one of the few senators to oppose Aila, saying DHHL needed new leadership.
Kahele noted that the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, which established the homesteading program for Native
Hawaiians with at least
50% Hawaiian blood,
is approaching its 100th anniversary. At the same time, there are close to 45,000 applications for agricultural, pastoral and residential leases.
Critics have long noted that beneficiaries are
dying on the waiting list.
“My own father, a beneficiary of the trust, passed away on the list,” noted Kahele, referring
to Gil Kahele, a state
senator who died in
2016.
Kahele said that DHHL needed to focus on the full range of its obligations to Hawaiian
beneficiaries, such as
supporting loan programs, business
opportunities and the development of pasture lands.
DHHL oversees a land trust of more than 200,000 acres throughout the state
“I want to see DHHL
firing on all cylinders,
not just one section
of the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, every section.”
Sens. Michelle Kidani
(D, Mililani-Waikele-Kunia), J. Kalani English (D,
Molokai-Lanai-East Maui) and Kurt Fevella (R, Ewa Beach-Iroquois Point)
also voted against Aila’s confirmation. Sens. Sharon Moriwaki (D, Kakaako-
McCully-Waikiki) and
Mike Gabbard (D, Kapolei-Makakilo) voted yes,
but with reservations.
Sen. Breene Harimoto (D, Pearl Harbor-Pearl City-Aiea) was absent.
While Aila has made
it through the Senate
confirmation process,
Jobie Masagatani, DHHL’s director, will step down
at the end of the legislative
session. Gov. David Ige has not announced who
will replace her, and Aila could end up leading the department at least in the interim.
Ige announced in
January that he was
reappointing both
Masagatani and Aila to head DHHL during his
second term as governor. However, Masagatani struggled to gain the needed Senate votes and ultimately Ige did not formally submit her name for confirmation.
Among Aila’s many
supporters was Masagatani, who listed some
of the department’s accomplishments in her testimony.
Masagatani said that
Aila had played a key
role in may of the accomplishments under the
Ige administration,
including securing the highest level of general funding for DHHL’s operating budget in its history; completing more than
700 homestead lots, half
of which have been awarded; increasing the earnings from available lands, and refinancing
debt that has resulted in savings of more than
$20 million, among other accomplishments.
Masagatani said that Aila, who lives on Hawaiian homelands, “takes to
heart the responsibilities we have at DHHL to manage the DHHL trust fairly, and in the best interests
of all beneficiaries: lessees, applicants, and those yet to come or to be qualified as beneficiaries.”