HomeMy WebLinkAboutCommunication No. 2022-05 -2022-01-19 Draft Kona CDP ReportMitchell D. Roth
Mayor
Lee E. Lord
Managing Director
Zendo Kern
Director
Jeffrey W. Darrow
Deputy Director
County of Hawaiʻi
PLANNING DEPARTMENT
KONA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN ACTION COMMITTEE
Aupuni Center • 101 Pauahi Street, Suite 3 • Hilo, Hawai‘i 96720
Phone (808) 961-8288 • Fax (808) 961-8742
Hawai‘i County is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer Page 1
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 1
DRAFT Meeting Report 2
CALL TO ORDER 3
This meeting was attended by members of all Community Development Plan (CDP) Action 4
Committees (AC) in the County of Hawai’i. Long-Range Planner, Keiko Mercado serving as a non-5
voting Chairperson for the island-wide convening of CDP ACs, called the Kona Community 6
Development Plan (CDP) Action Committee (AC) meeting to order at 5:11 P.M. Due to 7
restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, this meeting was held via the Zoom interactive 8
video platform. 9
Kona AC Chair Charles Young shared an ʻŌlelo Noʻeau: 10
E kanu mea ʻai o nana keiki i ka haʻi 11
Plant edible food plants lest your children look with longing at someone else’s. 12
ROLL CALL 13
Action Committee Members Present: Charles Young (Chair), Kari Kimura, Franz Weber. 14
Planning Department Staff: Zendo Kern (Planning Director); Grant Nagata (Admin Services 15
Officer); Keiko Mercado, Heather Bartlett, and Jaslyn Nathaniel (Long Range Division Planners); 16
Courtney Costa (Long Range Div. Staff). 17
Members of the public: 9 members of the public attended the meeting via Zoom. Members of 18
the public also observed the meeting via the Livestream on YouTube. The Livestream is available 19
at: https://youtu.be/eEv32s28l4g 20
STATE SUNSHINE LAW UPDATE BY CORPORATION COUNSEL 21
Deputy Corporation Counsel Jean Campbell presented the basic tenents of the State Sunshine 22
Law and its new changes. 23
Click here for the Presentation slides (Communication No 2022-01): 24
http://records.hawaiicounty.gov/Weblink/1/doc/113992/Page1.aspx 25
Hāmākua Committee Member Keeney asked for clarification from Ms. Campbell on Sunshine 26
Law restrictions for contacting members of other Action Committees. Ms. Campbell responded 27
that discussing business with members of your own Action Committee is a breach of Sunshine 28
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Law and that caution should be taken when discussing business with other AC members, 29
especially if there is potential for applicability across multiple Action Committees. 30
Kona Committee Chair Young questioned amending an agenda and whether rearranging items 31
would be applicable. Ms. Campbell clarified that agenda items may be re-ordered or postponed. 32
She added that boards are generally discouraged from adding agenda items during a meeting as 33
it does not give the public advanced notice. 34
Hāmākua Committee Member Kua asked if there were any plans to switch to in-person meetings 35
and, if so, how much notice would the Planning Department provide. Ms. Campbell responded 36
that the Governor’s current Emergency Proclamation lifts the requirement of in-person meetings 37
until the end of February and that the proclamation could be extended/canceled depending on 38
the COVID-19 emergency. Remote meetings may resume after the proclamation is lifted but will 39
require at least one in-person site (usually at a County facility). 40
Hāmākua Committee Member Keeney inquired further on communication with other members 41
through email on recommendations for agenda items. Ms. Campbell responded with a 42
suggestion that communications outside of meetings should generally be discouraged and 43
recommended that Action Committee members share their agenda item suggestions with staff. 44
Ms. Mercado reminded Committee Member Keeney that staff contacts AC members about three 45
weeks before each meeting to request input for the upcoming agenda. She requested that any 46
additional questions and/or feedback be included in the post-meeting feedback form. 47
PUBLIC COMMENT ON AGENDA ITEMS: 48
Two (2) members of the public and one (1) Action Committee member (representing 49
themselves) provided testimony. 50
1. Community member Cory Harden provided testimony on the Planning Director’s message 51
and on item (3) 2022 RoadMap. She contended that the North Kohala Action Committee “fell 52
apart” a while back due to what the Kohala Mountain News quoted as “Tight rules [that] 53
made it impossible to respond to issues in a timely manner and to allow discussions on items 54
that are not in the agenda.” Ms. Harden expressed concern with the AC meetings moving 55
from once a month to once every three months. She also described long delays in filling 56
vacant Action Committee and Kailua Village Design Commission seats. She mentioned that 57
the multi-meeting process for taking action combined with the limited number of meetings 58
severely slows progress. She also conveyed frustration with Planning Staff that an agenda 59
item request to discuss a large 201H housing development on agricultural land, was not 60
honored. Ms. Harden shared her concern that Action Committees were changing from being 61
place-based to issue-based. Lastly, she expressed concern that the draft General Plan is 62
formatted so differently from previous General Plans that it is too difficult to differentiate the 63
changes. 64
2. South Kohala Committee Chair Smith, representing herself, testified on the Planning 65
Director’s message. She read her written testimony to Director Kern regarding incoming 66
Federal infrastructure funding. She asked the Director to advocate for the CDP 67
Infrastructure/ Emergency preparedness priorities. Ms. Smith expressed that each Action 68
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Committee has worked thoroughly, investing time to research and find the infrastructure 69
needs for each community to meet favorable selection criteria. 70
Click here for Ruth Smith's written testimony (Communication No 2022-04): 71
Communication No. 2022-04 -R. Smith Testimony to PD Dir. Kern 72
3. Community Member Meizhu Lui, representing herself, testified on the State Sunshine Law 73
Update. She expressed agreement with the previous testifiers, adding that CDPs are 74
products of a democratic process and that she hoped the administration would honor that. 75
Ms. Lui explained that the Sunshine Law premise would mean nothing if there were no 76
meetings. She shared that infrequent meetings are a hindrance particularly given the 77
significance of the incoming Federal funds and the pandemic. She expressed support for 78
place-based AC initiatives given how different each district is. Ms. Lui echoed concern about 79
the 100-acre 201H housing development Ms. Harden mentioned. She talked about the 80
disadvantages of bypassing zoning regulations through the 201H and how it could potentially 81
harm the community. Community Member Lui voiced the need for affordable housing, 82
however, not at the expense of agricultural land. 83
MESSAGE FROM PLANNING DIRECTOR, ZENDO KERN: 84
Planning Director Zendo Kern introduced himself and shared his appreciation to Action 85
Committee members for their service to the community. Mr. Kern described the heavy 86
workload in the Planning Department explaining that it is not meant to be an excuse but an 87
insight on staff experiences. He mentioned Mayor Roth’s priority of sustainability and how the 88
Planning Department plays a central role in that function. In describing his strategic 89
approach; Director Kern utilized the Japanese term Kaizen. He defined it as continuous 90
improvement and an approach to improve the multifaceted processes of the department 91
through improving communication and addressing ongoing challenges. Director Kern shared the 92
benefits of the County’s EPIC system that would increase transparency, improve customer 93
service, and streamline processes. 94
He summarized some primary project goals to improve the EPIC system, increase digitization of 95
department files, and ongoing work with the Research and Development Department on a 96
Climate Action Plan to be a “living document” attached to the General Plan. He explained that 97
the Department is now back to “full throttle” on the General Plan comprehensive review 98
although it still has an extensive process to go through. He also shared plans for a 99
comprehensive update of the Zoning Code and Subdivision code to include a framework for 100
green infrastructure and transit-oriented developments (TODs) among other initiatives. He 101
shared that the Puna Eruption Recovery work continues to be a big priority for the Department 102
which includes the property buyout program, working with FEMA on infrastructure needs, and 103
designing a resiliency framework that can be applied island-wide. Director Kern also explained 104
the work he’s done to connect with Senators and the State DOT to understand and plug into the 105
process of dispersing Federal infrastructure funds. He said the County is still waiting on 106
information but that he would advocate for CDP Action Committee priorities as the process 107
moves forward. Lastly, he expressed that the Roth administration cares deeply about the CDP 108
Action Committees and shared regret that previous statements had been misconstrued to imply 109
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otherwise. Moving forward, he encouraged AC members to contact the CDP team so that further 110
feedback could be shared with him. 111
BUSINESS: 112
1. Presentation by Susan Kuntz from the Office of Housing and Community Development: 113
Housing Administrator Susan Kuntz presented an overview of the 201H process and provided 114
information on its use and applicability. In her presentation, she covered the housing needs 115
in Hawai‘i County by outlining how they used Area Median Income (AMI) figures of 5 years to 116
estimate the need for 10,796 affordable housing units. Ms. Kuntz identified the challenges 117
developers face as affordable housing is not as profitable as developing market-rate housing 118
and may not always be financially feasible. She spoke about different mechanisms available 119
to assist qualifying housing projects, including federal funding assistance and the State’s 120
201H law. This law allows for exemptions from various permitting constraints relative to 121
affordable housing developments. Administrator Kuntz also shared 201H projects that were 122
proposed in 2021. She explained the agency's Strategic Roadmap which included regulatory 123
reform of the inclusionary zoning code (Hawai‘i County Code (HCC) Chapter 11), as well as 124
working with the Planning Department on amendments to the subdivision (HCC Chapter 23) 125
and zoning codes (HCC Chapter 25). Ms. Kuntz also included the creation of an affordable 126
housing program that identifies potential or existing State and County properties that could 127
be used for affordable housing developments. 128
Based on questions posed in the Zoom chat, Ms. Bartlett summarized a general question 129
around the qualifications for 201H. Ms. Kuntz replied by stating that both private and non-130
profit developers could apply with the stipulation of a 50% plus 1 criterion of affordable 131
units. Ms. Bartlett assured participants that other questions or comments would be followed 132
up on after the meeting. 133
Click here for the OHCD presentation slides (Communication No. 2022-02): 134
http://records.hawaiicounty.gov/Weblink/1/doc/114215/Page1.aspx 135
The 2019 Hawai‘i Housing Study mentioned in the presentation may also be accessed here: 136
https://dbedt.hawaii.gov/hhfdc/files/2020/01/FINAL-State_Hawaii-Housing-Planning-137
Study.pdf 138
2. Presentation by Executive Director Kristine Kubat from Recycle Hawai‘i. 139
Recycle Hawai‘i Executive Director, Kristine Kubat shared information on strategic methods 140
to reduce solid waste, available resources, and their mission as a non-profit 141
organization. She stressed the importance of recycling and the general goals and objectives 142
that the non-profit organization would like to see communities accomplish. Ms. Kubat 143
phrased Zero Waste as “The conservation of all resources through responsible production, 144
consumption, reuse, and recovery of products, packaging, and materials without burning and 145
with no discharges to land, water, or air that threaten the environment or human 146
health”. She provided examples of self-sufficient community successes and current waste 147
management practices that could be expanded. Recycle Hawai‘i would like to be further 148
involved with Action Committee work and invites the community to get involved in the 149
mission. 150
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Click here for the 2021 Zero Waste Plan: 151
https://www.hawaiicounty.gov/home/showdocument?id=304313&t=637812904261834301 152
Click here for the 2019 Integrated Solid Waste Management Plan: 153
https://records.hawaiicounty.gov/weblink/ElectronicFile.aspx?openfile=true&dbid=1&docid=154
110921 155
Click here for the 2009 Zero Waste Plan: 156
http://hawaiizerowaste.org/site-content/uploads/3-14-09Hawaii_Zero_Waste_Plan.doc.pdf 157
3. 2022 Roadmap Discussion. 158
Long-Range Planner, Heather Bartlett presented on the 2022 Action Committee Roadmap 159
and provided the Action Committees and community with updates, foreseeable events, and 160
upcoming discussion topics. Ms. Bartlett explained that the slideshow was a brief skeletal 161
overview to be discussed in greater detail at individual AC meetings. Ms. Bartlett covered a 162
collection of thoughts, ideas, and feedback from one-on-one meetings with AC members and 163
encouraged more AC members to share their thoughts with the CDP Team. She highlighted 164
progress for the Puna AC who gained two new members to satisfy quorum requirements 165
along with their progressive recovery efforts. Ms. Bartlett highlighted ongoing work to 166
engage the North Kohala community as they work to formalize an AC. She shared that the 167
Mayor’s office had received numerous applications for the Ka'ū CDP Action Committee and 168
the CDP Teams aspires to have members appointed by mid-2022. Suggested upcoming AC 169
discussion topics include chair and vice-chair elections in March, sharing of the draft Capital 170
Improvement Projects (CIP) budget, project prioritization/road-mapping, Chapter 16 review 171
and guidelines, and the hosting of mixed Zoom and in-person (hybrid) meetings. 172
Click here for the 2022 Roadmap Presentation slides (Communication No 2022-03): 173
http://records.hawaiicounty.gov/Weblink/1/doc/114216/Page1.aspx 174
ANNOUNCEMENTS: 175
The February Action Committee meetings have been moved to March. The next Kona Action 176
Committee meeting will be on March 10, 2022. 177
ADJOURNMENT: 178
The meeting was adjourned at 7:13 pm. 179
These minutes and all related documents are available in the Planning Department’s Kona 180
Community Development Plan Action Committee folder via the County of Hawaiʻi Public 181
Documents Repository. These documents may also be requested from the Planning Department 182
by calling (808) 961-8288 or emailing cdp@hawaiicounty.gov. 183
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