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JN�V Gs M�!y <br /> cP•�L" �Id%4i <br /> COUNTY OF HAWAII STATE OF HAWAII <br /> BILL NO. 113 <br /> ORDINANCE NO. <br /> AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 14 OF THE HAWAII COUNTY <br /> CODE 1983 (2005 EDITION, AS AMENDED), BY ADDING A NEW ARTICLE <br /> RELATING TO GENETICALLY ENGINEERED CROPS AND PLANTS. <br /> BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE COUNTY OF HAWAII: <br /> SECTION 1. Findings. The public trust doctrine is memorialized in the Hawaii <br /> State Constitution, Article XI, Section 1 "Conservation and Development of Resources," <br /> and in the Charter of the County of Hawaii, Article XIII, Section 13-29 "Conservation of <br /> Natural and Cultural Resources." Pursuant to the public trust doctrine, our natural <br /> resources, including land and water, are entrusted to our care for the benefit of both <br /> current and future generations. The Intermediate Court of Appeals in Kauai Springs Inc. <br /> vs. Planning Commission of the County of Kauai, dated April 20, 2013, underscored the <br /> importance of the public trust doctrine and the associated precautionary principle. In <br /> Kauai Springs, the Intermediate Court of Appeals reaffirmed that the county government <br /> in its trustee capacity is subject to the precautionary principle and therefore must exercise <br /> a higher level of scrutiny in establishing reasonable measures and making appropriate <br /> assessments in order to avoid harmful impacts to our public trust resources. The Council <br /> therefore recognizes the right of the people and their government to guard against the <br /> intrusion of potential contaminants and prevent the contamination of non-genetically <br /> engineered crops, plants and lands by genetically engineered crops and plants without <br /> having to first wait for definitive science. As the United States Supreme Court made clear <br /> in Maine vs. Taylor (1986), the government is not required "to sit idly by and wait until <br /> potentially irreversible environmental damage has occurred or until the scientific <br /> community agrees on what disease organisms are or are not dangerous before it acts to <br /> avoid such consequences." <br /> The Council finds that its authority to impose restrictions on the cultivation, <br /> propagation, and development of genetically engineered crops and plants is granted to it <br /> by: <br /> (1) The Hawaii Revised Statutes, Section 46-1.5(13), which states: "Each county shall <br /> have the power to enact ordinances deemed necessary to protect health, life, and <br /> property, and to preserve the order and security of the county and its inhabitants on <br /> any subject or matter not inconsistent with, or tending to defeat, the intent of any <br /> state statute where the statute does not disclose an express or implied intent that the <br /> statute shall be exclusive or uniform throughout the State."; <br />