Laserfiche WebLink
And generally my comments related to changing zoning, is I€m against upzoning <br />basically, especially for agricultural lands and lands that are in native forest. I€m trying <br />to preserve that for the future generations for the kids, so they have something to enjoy <br />and be proud of as something unique to the rest of the world. But if we develop over all <br />that it will all be gone, so I try not to make that happen in as many ways as I can. And <br />one of them is I€m involved with the Puna Community Development Plan which is also a <br />big process that has a lot to do with land use and making recommendationsto Planning <br />and to the County Council as far as future growth, growth management, lots of different <br />landuse issues. There€sactually ten different working groups that address all of the <br />issues that we€re faced with in Puna, beingthat the population is growing really fast; and <br />most of it is, you know, people coming from off-island, out of state. There are a lot of <br />things that those people need to know when they move here. <br />And I also work for my community association, the roads maintenance tax office, <br />becausewehaveprivateroads.Wehave45milesofprivateroadsinFernForest;anda <br />mandatory roads maintenance assessment. So I take care of the bookkeeping for that, and <br />the billings, and what not. So I get all the calls, too, because I have the telephone in my <br />house. So people call and they ask me, you know, everything. Its residents, potential <br />residents, absentee lot owners, realtors, mortgage companies, you know, everybody calls <br />me. My job is to take care of the bookkeeping for the roads maintenance assessment; and <br />nobody pays us for anything else except for transferring properties, you know, $25 for a <br />transfer fee if it goes through escrow. But the point is that there€s a lot of burden on our <br />subdivisions, our substandard subdivisions, because of all these new developments, too. <br />So I don€t think that we really need more new developments on the island because I live <br />in one of those subdivisions that€s only maybe, you know, 30 percent full right now. But, <br />of course, that€s not where the jobs are. So there€s an economic thing that has to happen <br />too if we want to do good planning. There€s a whole bunch of things that are involved in <br />good planning for the future. <br />And community development plan working groups have come up, you know, they€ve <br />been working for about a year on different ideas, different things that could possibly <br />work. One of the things the groups have come up with is in doing agricultural parks, <br />industrial parks, and what not, so that we can have some of these issues resolved ahead of <br />time with traffic or what not. But they haven€t, you know, I don€t think they all, those <br />reports are not going to all tell you exactly where they want all the parks to be. There are <br />some suggested places. But I think that once people accept, you know, once those plans <br />are accepted then we could have more discussion about exactly where things should go. <br />Anyway, back to this again. The things that I€m concerned with these bills are that they <br />don€t really steep all of the different types of public services that I would consider <br />essential public services, and a lot of other people would too. And then they state some, <br />but some people don€t. It€s kind of vice versa, you know, transportation and water are <br />big things if you want to develop a community. But if you live in a community where <br />you get three inches of rain a night, every night for a week like we have had in the last <br />12EXHIBIT D <br /> <br />