HomeMy WebLinkAboutComm No 0035.30 - Testimony - CA-18 - PONC Maintenance fundDoug Sensenig
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Waimea, HI 96743
dougsensenig [? n aiT.corn
Testimony before the Charter Commission
April 25, 2019
Re: CA18
I'm Doug Sensenig of Waimea. I am a former attorney and have been involved in land
conservation since the late 198o's as an attorney, volunteer, and as an executive director of two
land trusts.
Thank you all for the hard work you've been doing in the effort to improve the Charter. And
another thank -you to Debbie Hecht and Brenda Ford for their dedication to this island and this
community, evidenced by their passion to continuously improve the operation of the 2% Land
Fund and the Maintenance Fund. Partially through their care and desire for continuous
improvement, the 2% Fund has enjoyed massive support from the voters of Hawaii Island, even
through difficult economic times.
I'm here to urge you to approve the proposed change to CA -18 that allows the Maintenance
Fund to provide money to pay people for the stewardship of lands protected by the Fund. As you
probably know, only 9% of all monies in the Maintenance Fund were awarded to stewardship
non -profits in the last 6 years. The stewardship non -profits have not been able to keep up with
the work that needs to be done. A full-time staff person in addition to existing PONC staff can
facilitate and coordinate stewardship efforts, as well as leverage community involvement.
The 2% land fund contemplates PERMANENT protection of exceptional land for the benefit of
the people of Hawaii Island. That permanence requires different thinking about how the
protected land is to be managed. We have all heard the refrain, "The County can't manage the
land it already has - how can we protect more?" It's a good question, and proposed amendment
CA -18 helps solve the problem.
As someone who's been involved in land conservation for some time, I can tell you that
stewardship can mean much more than picking up trash and removing invasives. At its best,
stewardship means involving the community in caring for the land in a virtuous cycle that brings
Comm. No. 35.30
Sensenig testimony, p. 2
children outdoors, gives satisfying work to young adults, and which gives older people a chance
to exercise and share their experience. Stewardship can mean education, rehabilitation, and joy
that really changes communities for the better.
Some examples of creative stewardship 1 have been involved in include permaculture
demonstration gardens, students adopting trails and organizing themselves to maintain them,
outdoor classrooms, young people reintegrating from jail into society by working on restorative
justice projects on preserves, nature walks to identify and learn about native plants and wildlife,
and farm days where the public can come and harvest food from protected land. To have this
level of community involvement you have to have paid staff.
Even on its most basic level, all -volunteer stewardship of protected lands isn't appropriate
because it is simply insufficient for the amount of work that needs to be done over long periods
of time, let alone the work that CAN be done if the land is to be honored as we hope it will be.
And it isn't fair to the land. itself. We can't afford to allow degradation of protected land, and
reliance on strictly volunteer work increases the risk of land not being cared for properly. We
need to be realistic, and the proposed change to CA -18 is a flexible answer.
Thank you!