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• <br />ID II <br />district than this island. <br />BOWLES: I had a couple of points that were just spinning through my head <br />while we were going through this. One is a point of confusion that I run into all the time, <br />and it's driving me crazy. We have a Water Department which has a Commission. I <br />would like to see that Commission change from Commission to Board. The Island of <br />Oahu has the Honolulu Board of Water Supply. I would like to see us have the Hawaii <br />County Board of Water Supply. And the reason is because the State, in it's infinite <br />wisdom, created the Statewide Commission on Water Resource Management, and <br />people refer to it as the Water Commission. And then people in this county who don't <br />know anything about the State, call this Commission the Water Commission, and <br />there's incredible human confusion out there by the people who don't know the system. <br />And this is an opportunity, to me, to just clean it up, change it to a Board, get rid of the <br />word 'Commission' because we can't change the State's, but we can change the <br />County's. <br />MARTIN: Can I ask a question on that? <br />BOWLES: Yes. <br />MARTIN: Isn't the State one an ad hoc commission? <br />BOWLES: Oh, no. It's the most powerful body in the State now. <br />MARTIN: I know it is and I know there's been a lot of controversy with some <br />of the things that they've been proposing, but I thought once they were done with the <br />work that they were doing - <br />BOWLES: No, you're confused, and this is part of the problem. There was a <br />Review Commission of the Commission's work. That's Freddie Trotter and his gang <br />that went on the dog and pony show. And I think this is an opportunity for us to just <br />clean this language up. <br />HIGASHI: It's a good idea. <br />BOWLES: That was one point, and then one other relevant point related to <br />this, because of our economic change in this County, and it's just a concern and I felt I <br />need to bring it up, and it relates to diversified agriculture. And John knows that we've <br />been wrestling with this problem from around this island repeatedly, and it relates to the <br />water and energy. And somehow, nowhere in our Charter are we able to deal with the <br />issue of diversified ag as related to energy and water, and they all become intimately <br />related in our economic growth. So the only question I'm posing is isn't there some way <br />in which we can deal with this kind of a thing, either in Research and Development, <br />one of the departments having some sort of a task in which it must be sensitive to this <br />issue? We try to do it in R&D now, but it simply doesn't quite get to where we're going <br />because where we're going in the future is a break-up of land that's phenomenal, and <br />23 <br />