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treatment plan was recommended for five (5) burial sites, seven (7) non-burial sites were <br /> recommended for preservation (including a portion of the Mamalahoa Trail (King's <br /> Highway), the Honok6hau Historic Trail (Mauka-Makai Trail),petroglyphs, an <br /> enclosure, a trail marker mound, a cave, and a terrace complex), and the remaining 28 <br /> sites were designated for no further work. SHPD accepted an archaeological data <br /> recovery report(ADR) on July 19, 2004, and a burial treatment plan was accepted by the <br /> Hawaii Island Burial Council (HIBC), which concurred with the preservation of five (5) <br /> burials in place. Finally, on August 12, 2003, SHPD accepted an archaeological <br /> Preservation Plan(PP), which proposed the establishment of an interpretive preservation <br /> complex containing the seven (7) sites and associated buffer zones, maintenance, signage, <br /> consultation, access and ownership/management requirements. This complex is <br /> designated as TMK 7-4-008:078 (Parcel 78) of the project area. <br /> Remnants of two (2)trails are situated within Parcel 78, the Mamalahoa Trail (Site <br /> 00002) which runs parallel to Queen Ka`ahumanu Highway and whose interest was sold <br /> to L,anihau Partners in 1973 and the Honok6hau Historic Trail (Site 18099), which runs <br /> in a mauka-makai direction from Kaloko Mauka to the Aimakapa`a Fishpond and <br /> intermittently traverses the center of the Parcel 78 preserve as a kerbstone trail. The <br /> approved preservation plan allows for a breach of the Honok6hau Historic trail to extend <br /> Kanalani Street into Parcel 77. Under this amendment request, this proposed breach will <br /> now include a portion of the proposed 20-foot-wide internal driveway connecting <br /> Kanalani Street to Kamanu Street. <br /> According to a 2006 abstract memo from the Na Ala Hele Statewide Trails and Access <br /> Program (Na Ala Hele) (included as Attachment 5 of Planning Department Exhibit 2), <br /> this trail is subject to the Highway's Act of 1892 and thus eligible to be claimed by the <br /> State. However, consultation with Na Ala Hele's trail specialist at the time indicated that <br /> since the state sold sections of the Mamalahoa Trail to the applicant,Na Ala Hele was not <br /> interested in the mauka-makai remnants of the Honok6hau Historic Trail for <br /> programmatic purposes (e.g., hiking trail), nor did the trail have linear recreation or <br /> access value. However, a revised abstract memo, dated July 14, 2021,was issued <br /> clarifying statements on the disposition of the trail from the first memo and confirming <br /> -8- <br />