HomeMy WebLinkAbout2019-01-31 Letter to Representative Henry J.C. Aquino HB 421 Relating to the General Excise Tax (Helicopter Servicing and Repair)
County of Hawai‘i
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County of Hawai‘i is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.
Wil Okabe
Managing Director
Harry Kim
Mayor Barbara J. Kossow
Deputy Managing Director
January 31, 2019
Representative Henry J.C. Aquino, Chair
Committee on Transportation
Hawaiʻi State Capitol
Honolulu, HI 96813
Dear Chair Aquino and Committee Members:
Re: HB 421 Relating to the General Excise Tax (Helicopter Servicing and
Repair)
Hearing Date: 02/01/2019 – 10:00 am; House Conference Room 423
Thank you for this opportunity to testify against HB 421.
Helicopters are a valued component of our tourism industry. They also have been a
source of endless complaints from communities that lie in their flight paths, and there should be
no doubt that noise can constitute both a nuisance and a health hazard, especially in otherwise
tranquil rural areas.
Helicopter companies are now asking the Legislature for special treatment with respect
to the general excise tax. There is no suggestion of economic hardship; there is no credible
argument (that I know of) that new facilities will be attracted to Hawaiʻi; and there is no
suggestion that the industry would use its savings to better accommodate those who live in their
fly-over country. The exemption will simply add to the companies’ bottom line.
This year’s bill is slightly better than last year’s version, in that it asks for only a five-year
general excise tax exemption, and it adds a provision that “75% of the helicopters serviced and
maintained annually in the facility are equipped with quiet technology.” But as far as I can tell,
there is no definition of “quiet technology” nor a hint as to how effective such technology is. At a
minimum, that needs clarification.
As you struggle to balance your budget, one must ask whether the added profits for
these companies’ owners could be better utilized in meeting the multiple needs that Hawaiʻi
faces. To me, the answer is that our transportation, education, social service needs, etc.,
should be a higher priority.
In addition, I don’t think it would be unfair to say that tax giveaways should be reserved
for good corporate citizens.
I have met with tour operators and asked them to develop a plan to address noise and
safety. They have taken some initial steps, and I commend them for that. Moreover, I am
January 31, 2019
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County of Hawai`i is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.
hopeful that tour operators and community members can work together. However, the history
laid out in SCR 183 (2018) is eye-opening:
“In 2000, the National Environmental Policy Act, in conjunction with the National
Parks Air Tour Management Act of 2000, required an Air Tour Management Plan to be
implemented at various national parks throughout the country… The objective of an Air
Tour Management Plan is "to develop acceptable and effective measures to mitigate or
prevent the significant adverse impacts, if any, of commercial air tour operations upon
the natural and cultural resources, visitor experiences and tribal lands...In 2005, the
project was upgraded to an Environmental Impact Statement, and the Federal Aviation
Administration published a notice of opportunity for commercial air tour operators
granted interim operating authority to review and self-correct annual authorizations. In
2008, Federal Aviation Administration and National Park Service staff met with Hawaiʻi
air tour operators, and acoustic monitoring of three sites at Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National
Park was conducted. In 2011, a preliminary draft Air Tour Management Plan for Hawaiʻi
Volcanoes National Park was published, but…seven years later, in 2018, there [was] still
no final Air Tour Management Plan for Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park…In addition,
after more than sixteen years, no Air Tour Management Plan for any national park in the
nation has been completed…”
How can our residents be asked to tolerate the status quo when it has been 15 years
since the Federal Aviation Administration and National Park Service asked for comments on an
Air Tour Management Plan Environmental Assessment, and eight years since a preliminary
draft Air Tour Management Plan for Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park was published. That is an
outrage.
I would urge a No vote on HB 421, at least until the helicopter industry proves itself to be
a better neighbor, it is established that “quiet technology” actually makes a difference, and this
Legislature determines that the benefits to the broader community of this tax giveaway outweigh
the benefits to the helicopter industry.
Respectfully submitted,
Harry Kim
Mayor, County of Hawaiʻi