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From: Kathleen Mumme <br /> To: W PCtesti mono <br /> Subject: Punalu'u Village <br /> Date: Wednesday, May 1,2024 2:15:19 PM <br /> Dear Planning Commission: <br /> We are writing again in support of the project above. Much has been said on social media and <br /> after nearly two months of this all I can feel is a mixture frustration and sadness. The <br /> frustration comes with all of the misinformation being promoted. The sadness comes from <br /> many of us who feel as though we have no right to an opinion because we are for it or because <br /> we weren't born and raised here. This does not promote the Aloha spirit. <br /> We hope that at the next meeting on May 6th more time will be allotted for Black Sand <br /> Beach LLC ito present its project in a public setting. This seems the only way to achieve <br /> fairness. <br /> FACTS: <br /> 1. Black Sand Beach LLC owns the 400 plus acres in Kau where the proposed addition sits. <br /> 2. Less than half that acerage is within the footprint of the area that was excavated and <br /> developed over fifty years ago and which comprises this project. <br /> 3. Personal property rights should be as important as the opinions of those of us who call Kau <br /> home. <br /> 4. There has always been a community at Punalu'u and Ninole. There have been over 100 <br /> residences in the area and in the Kalana Estates for decades. <br /> 5. A sewer and water system has served this community for decades. <br /> 6. Black Sand Beach LLC,who also owns the private sewer and water system, has spent the <br /> last four years here in Kau listening to people who call it home. <br /> 7. BSB has adjusted its plans based on that input and taken steps to reduce the number of <br /> units,while still enabling them to seek the capital to complete its project, and to insure that <br /> critical maintenance is done to the sewer and water system. This maintenance will insure that <br /> the system is safe and functioning in the future. <br /> 8. Homeowners and condo owners in this area have mixed opinions on the future of this <br /> project, but all of us are very concerned about the future of our sewer and water system, <br /> including the fire hydrants. <br /> 9. Punalu'u's Sea Mountain Resort was approved and building began in about 1970. Since <br /> then, at least three different corporations have tried and failed to add units to this development. <br /> All of them were huge projects and none of them asked the people of Kau what they could <br /> accept in the way of development. <br /> 10. The area around Sea Mountain and Colony One saw four decades of neglect. Everything <br /> from non-native plants choking out the grounds, dilapidated buildings, over-growth in the <br /> parking and walking areas and in the upper nine holes of the closed golf course, all adding <br /> danger in an area where people LIVE and where people recreate every day. BSB has <br /> spearheaded efforts to clean it up and invested many dollars to do so. <br /> 11. Despite the neglect that surrounds it, and its heavy use, Punalu'u Black Sand Beach <br /> thrives. The people come—both local families and tourists and so do the turtles, the birds, <br /> the monk seals and the fishermen. <br /> 12. Opportunities for jobs and entrepreneurial enterprises for our local people are a part of <br /> this plan. <br /> 13. Between Volcano NP and South Point, Punalu'u is the only developed area and one of <br /> very few privately owned coastal parcels . While all Hawaiians are given access to the shores <br /> of the state BY LAW,this additional fact means that almost the entire coast line here <br /> BELONGS to Hawaiians and with diligence, can never be developed. That is a huge benefit <br />