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DARROW: Correct. <br />ALAMEDA: Okay. <br />KUROKAWA: It’s going to be a long one. <br />ALAMEDA: All right. <br />IWASHITA: Mr. Chair? <br />ALAMEDA: Commissioner Iwashita. <br />IWASHITA: Thank you, Mr. Chair. Mainly because the Kona meeting agenda is so full <br />and I hopefully won’t want to say anything in the Kona meeting, I want to make a record now, I <br />guess, of my bigger picture view about this particular proposal. And that is that I really <br />appreciate, you know, the concern and the intent to reduce the auto dependency in our <br />community; and I think that’s something that we all, well, I would hope that we all would <br />support doing. You know, every time I read the paper and we see little tweaking of things like <br />this, right, my concern is that that’s all it is and that it’s, you know, trying to tweak, trying to do <br />little things that may or may not, you know, help towards getting away from auto dependency. <br />And, really, what I think is needed which I’ve said before is that the County should spend 2, 3, 4 <br />million dollars, whatever it takes in the next couple of years, and do the community development <br />planning in an, I would say, effective way. And my view of that is to do it in a way not by, what <br />it is, Council districts or those kind of gross kind of, in my mind, not real appropriate planning <br />kind of areas, that it should be as small as, done on the smallest scale as possible; and then that <br />way the community would -. Like my friend Junior De Luz here in the audience, he and his <br />fellow business people in the Kanoelehua area, they all ought to get together with houselots <br />people and figure out what that area should look like, on that kind of a scale. And I think that it <br />can be done if we structure it properly. And that really would be, if it’s done all at one time <br />island-wide everybody knows that we’re all doing this at one time on a large island-wide basis <br />but in a smaller context that the community development plan will be as effectively done as <br />possible. So that, and if in fact -. I mean there are people out there I know that are going to say, <br />hey, I want a freeway, I want to be able to drive, you know, no speed limit to go to Kona in an <br />hour kind of a situation. But all of those different concerns can be raised and -. But it really <br />needs to be done on that, to me, at that kind of a level, in that kind of a format in order for this <br />County, this island, to effectively deal with, you know, getting away from auto dependency or <br />being actually, to put it positively, you know, to establish an effective public transit system down <br />the road, you know, planning for half a million, seven-hundred thousand, a million people living <br />on this island, you know, 30, 40, 50 years from now. So the concerns are legitimate. I just think <br />that, you know, trying to do it on a piece-meal basis really just takes away from the big picture; <br />and in the end to me we’re going to just end up like Honolulu, no matter what we do. Because <br />they had all the same concerns and they got what they got. <br />ALAMEDA: Thank you, Commissioner Iwashita. Commissioner Domingo? <br />DOMINGO: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I just received the administration’s input and <br />recommendations and I’m glad that it’s going to be continued to the next meeting, of which I’m <br /> EXHIBIT A 4 <br /> <br /> <br />