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MIYASATO: Commissioner Ono. <br /> <br />ONO: You know when you want to maintain this kind of environment there, who pays for the <br />maintenance, the upkeep? Is that the community at large or is the owner of the building? <br /> <br />OLSON (from audience): The owners. <br /> <br />ONO: The owners? Okay, and can the owners do interior wise or exterior wise do any <br />changes—let’s say, for example, those buildings there, as an example? <br /> <br />OLSON: Yeah. <br /> <br />ONO: They, if I, if I own that building but I wanted jalousies, I cannot put in the jalousie as a <br />window replacement? <br /> <br />OLSON: No. <br /> <br />ONO: No. <br /> <br />OLSON: But what happens behind the façade, that’s up to you. <br /> <br />ONO: Okay, so— <br /> <br />OLSON: I mean, we’re not going to try to tell you what kind of a business or— <br /> <br />ONO: Oh, no, no, no—I guess, I have a situation on Kauai which is a relative of mine, and a <br />building that’s, it’s considered a historical whatever— <br /> <br />OLSON: Yeah. <br /> <br />ONO: He cannot even insert outlets of jacks for the sockets for the whatever— <br /> <br />OLSON: Oh, yeah, yeah, but this is all different then—you see, we didn’t go for historic <br />preservation. <br /> <br />ONO: Now, so my question is, when you want to modify something that you’re residing in or <br />you’re utilizing, do you need permission from somebody else to do that? <br /> <br />OLSON: Other than the, other than the normal permitting process? <br /> <br />ONO: Yes. <br /> <br />OLSON: We will in terms of the visuals from the street looking in— <br /> <br />ONO: --Okay, there is— <br /> <br />6 <br />EXHIBIT G <br /> <br /> <br />