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So I'm looking at this map and I'm telling you, oh, okay, you gu
<br />you guys, that's one visitor center. So what, you guys going to get buses or what? I don't
<br />see the parking for the buses. You know, that's one concern. B
<br />know, volume, volume make money. Okay? So I'm looking at this
<br />wow. Okay, where the buses going in? You have cars coming from Kailua, going into
<br />this roadway for go to the school. Oh, the mean the traffic, 12, 30 cars, 50 cars, 120 cars,
<br />long. Worse than 'da kine, what you call, highways. Any more impact into this
<br />O`ahu
<br />intersection, you guys killing us. Trying to even get from this side coming over, mean
<br />action. Most of our people who work in the hotels and stuff, they're all south, they're all
<br />down Hawaiian Ocean View. You know, Ho`okena School, we get traffic going almost
<br />all the way back to Ho`okena School from this intersection. So I don't know what the
<br />thinking is about mitigating traffic in this area. It's mean. So you're going to put more
<br />commercial stuffs, right on. But you're already killing us. Maybe you guys can think
<br />about these guys, maybe they hire their own policeman so they ca
<br />Every morning we're grumbling, every afternoon we're grumbling.
<br />police already? Because this traffic light ain't working. It's killing us. So anyway, that's
<br />one.
<br />I was up at, having breakfast at McDonalds, it's my favorite pla
<br />far from over there. Up there, normally in the mornings, you have all of these farmers,
<br />they all come get their coffee in the morning, they all talk story and what not. And they
<br />was looking in today's newspaper, and they was wondering, hey, what the heck going on?
<br />Oh, how come these haoles, they can go inside and then, you know, us, we got to suffer
<br />about somebody. Agriculture, they're going to change the agriculture kind stuff. Oh, our
<br />taxes going to go up again. I mean all of these kinds of talk start to happen, yeah.
<br />So I stay listening to them grumbling, and I say what are you guys talking about? So
<br />they was reading, they showed me the paper. So I said, well, I don't know. I come over
<br />here, and I going to go look. And I look. Oh, it's only applying to that area. But then
<br />good buddy over here, Charlie, he said some interesting words, Ð
<br />over here, everybody else open doors.Ñ You know, that's spooky. I tell you why it's
<br />spooky.
<br />I think I went start 1988 with this crazy, I going call them Hawaiians, but most of the
<br />people they call them haoles. But it's this guy, C. J. Villa, and this other haole wahine is
<br />Nancy Pisicchio. They went kind of like grab me by my shirt and
<br />said, what, what you guys problem? This name, Hkkano, what is that? Well, it's one
<br />developer. Well, let them develop. Shit, we need jobs; no grum
<br />haole said? You know what, if you guys no get involved now, what happening up on the
<br />mainland is exactly what going happen over here in Hawai`i. There is no regulation to
<br />protect our environment. Now today we call them Oceanside 1250 or Hokuli`a.
<br />Okay, let me tell you what went happen at Hokuli`a. Now just mi
<br />1989. I think 1989 is when Nancy guys went file the lawsuit. But I know we like break
<br />fast, but I sorry. This is very important. In the Hokuli`a case, after Nancy guys went do
<br />their lawsuit, one other lawsuit came in, and it was with the Kelly vs. Oceanside 1250. In
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