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Rc d att tg by 20 <br /> Dist'd Read�. _. <br /> FILE COPY <br /> Subject:Written Testimony in Opposition to Bill 147 <br /> Aloha Members of the Hawaii County Council and members of the County Planning <br /> Department, <br /> My name is Noella Callejo and I respectfully submit this written testimony in opposition <br /> to Bill 147. I was born and raised in Kona, am a third-generation resident of Hawaii, and I <br /> am a homeowner,working professional, business owner, lifetime student of hula, and <br /> mother of three children ages 21, 16, and 8. I returned to this island 12 years ago for a <br /> career opportunity in the healthcare sector. <br /> Before imposing broad restrictions,the County should clearly identify the problem it is <br /> trying to solve and tailor the solution accordingly. I support efforts to address <br /> absentee ownership, unhosted rentals,tax noncompliance, and irresponsible <br /> operators. However, I respectfully ask that the County not treat tax-paying local <br /> families who actually live on their properties, host responsibly, and contribute to this <br /> community as though we are the problem. <br /> As reported by Civil Beat, Councilmember Holeka Inaba previously questioned the purpose <br /> of requiring hosted rental operators to register, asking: "Why are we asking people to <br /> register for something and it isn't really clear what the purpose is?"That question remains <br /> central to my concern. Restrictions should not be applied so broadly that it creates <br /> confusion and removes an important supplemental income source for working families <br /> who are simply using existing space in homes they own during an already difficult <br /> economic time. <br /> My concern is that Bill 147, as proposed,takes a broad-brush approach to a problem that <br /> appears to be driven largely by absentee or part-time ownership,while restricting local <br /> resident homeowners who actually live here and rely on hosted accommodations to help <br /> meet the cost of living in Hawaii. Civil Beat reported that 54%of owners rely on rental <br /> income to cover housing costs.That data matters. It means this bill is not only affecting <br /> outside investors; it is also affecting working local families using existing space in homes <br /> they already own.The Council should be very careful that Bill 147 does not become a <br /> policy that claims to protect local communities while, in practice, pushing visitor <br /> dollars away from local home owners and back toward large resort and hotel interests. <br /> If a local homeowner responsibly welcomes guests into existing space on the property <br /> where they live, pays taxes, and has no neighbor complaints,why should that opportunity <br /> be restricted while billionaire conglomerates continue to profit from Hawaii at scale? I <br /> respectfully ask the Council to consider the following concerns: <br />