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Tommy Kahikina Ching <br />76-317 Kealoha St <br />Kailua Kona, HI 96740 <br />March 4, 2022 <br />Kristin Frost Albrecht <br />The Food Basket Inc. <br />40 Holomua St. <br />Hilo, HI 96720 <br />Aloha Mrs. Albrecht, <br />Executive Director <br />I would like to voice my support for The Food Basket's proposed Community Food Campus development on <br />Ponahawai St. I have been fundraising for The Food Basket for 21 years through an annual event called the <br />Feed-A-Thon. I believe that this new development will further their mission "to end hunger in Hawaii <br />County." I share in their vision and it has brought us together kept us together for many years as a family. <br />I am a community advocate that works in broadcasting and am currently hosting the "Pau Hana Party" on the <br />Hawaiian radio station that promotes Hawaiian music and values. I am a big promoter of Hawaiian culture and <br />am actually responsible for the birth of Hawaiian music on the radio that previously only existed on AM <br />stations. I believe strongly in educating our community in Hawaiian culture so that it does not get lost and <br />forgotten. <br />The Food Basket's proposed project of a Community Food Campus will include sustainable crop development, <br />agricultural and gardening education programs, a food and agriculture innovation center inclusive of food <br />processing, along with a food bank and community center, with a strong focus on Hawaiian cultures and <br />values. Their project will help to educate the people in our community on how we can all work together and <br />help each other succeed and survive in today's fast -changing world. <br />The way I was brought up is that we all move forward together. This is why I have been a warrior against food <br />insecurity for over twenty years. The Hawaiian people had strong values in sharing and knew how to share for <br />all, from the fish in the ocean, to the fruits and vegetables on the land, to the water that flowed from the <br />mountain to the sea. There was no such thing as hungry keiki or needy kupuna because there was always <br />"enough" for everyone and the children and elderly were always taken care of. Rather than just "No child <br />left behind," I believe in "No person left behind." Our keiki and kupuna do not have the strength or often <br />even the knowledge to care for themselves. Thus, following Hawaiian cultural values, those who are capable <br />should help to provide for those who cannot. <br />I am excited to support the work of The Food Basket and its partners through their collective efforts to build <br />a more sustainable future and improved food security for our community. I look forward to working together <br />with them as a Hawaiian cultural advisor as they move forward with this project to improve our island's <br />sustainability and natural resources. <br />