Laserfiche WebLink
broken, leaking 24 hours a day. That's the reports just been coming out here and there. <br /> Obviously, they cannot make that huge report in one cause the County will get sued, but <br /> there's a couple of developments that wanted to come into Keaukaha and build 48-unit, <br /> condos or what, you know, they wanted to make short-term rentals right there in front <br /> of Onekahakaha Beach Park and another one at the end by Richardson's. This past <br /> County Council meeting and Department of Planning meeting last week denied them, <br /> ah, denied them their permits, a lot of it was having to do with the properties being <br /> below the high tide mark inland—and over ponds in Keaukaha is all ponds and lava <br /> tubes everywhere so just the infrastructure of putting in the waterline and the sewage <br /> line for another 48 units plus the street handling an average of two cars per unit was <br /> enough for the Planning Department to, um, I don't know if they 100% cancelled the <br /> project but the project is not allowed to move forward thus far, and you know, that has <br /> to all do with the sewage plant. Shoots I was talking the [unclear]. I forget, kala mai, that <br /> was my update about the sewage plant and then this past weekend I noticed it's <br /> actually your district but I went on a hunting trip to Wailoa, I counted with my own eyes <br /> 56 huge tilapia about this big—they're really huge—they're the bigger fish in the pond— <br /> I saw some awa'awa—the tilapia was bigger— I saw mullet—the tilapia was bigger—all <br /> the mullet were like woo woo size, you know, not too big, and it went from the river <br /> mouth where the water starts to get a little more salty—all the way back into the graffiti <br /> area by the Green Onion and all the way up to the homeless camp, you know, the <br /> homeless camp by Mitchville—so the tilapia actually go up to homeless camp and the <br /> people re-building the bridge right down the road—they tell me that the tilapia swim up <br /> there because the homeless population throws things in the river that causes the tilapia <br /> to grow in population in that little stretch right down here, so that was like a real <br /> interesting thing where I ran across some hunters with their slingshot bows with, you <br /> know, we're out there for like 3 or 4 hours trying to catch the tilapia. We caught two, <br /> that was pretty cool but that was my big understanding of how the population of tilapia <br /> kind of wrecked all the fish inside there by taking the food, taking the resources and <br /> kind of dominating the area by—with aggression, that was, that was my main concern <br /> this past one and same thing the pigs is nothing different with the pigs, nothing different <br /> with the fish, and that was my report for District—3, today, thank you. Moving forward, <br /> District—4? <br /> BL: Brian, District—4, the usual healthy pig population—we're doing good—we don't have <br /> to worry about running out of food any time soon. I haven't heard anything about the <br /> dredging in Pohoiki starting lately. I got another report of the hatchet guy on the trail up <br /> Kaloli —just wandering down there with a hatchet and I did look up brandishing is illegal <br /> in the State of Hawaii to brandish a weapon which is just waving around threateningly <br /> so when he's yelling and screaming at people waving a hatchet that's considered <br /> brandishing and it's against the law. He's been reported but he's still down there— I'm <br /> sure if he took a hatchet to a turtle there would be swarming with DOFAW officers and <br /> quick but since he's just threatening elderly people that OK, so, and, ah, Barbara, were <br /> you able to load up those pictures I sent you yesterday? Did we lose Barbara again? <br /> 18 <br />