Crossover Check-in

Yesterday was first crossover, marking the midway point of the 2024 Legislative Session! Thanks to the consistent engagement and advocacy of our members and supporters, we have been able to defeat many misguided measures, and have made remarkable progress on others. Read on for a summary of highlights from the legislature thus far:

Red Hill Bills

Still alive is HB2690 HD2, which would establish a WAI Policy Coordinator, additional staff positions to assist the coordinator, and a Red Hill remediation special fund. We have supported this bill with amendments to better protect the Policy Coordinator’s work from being influenced or undermined by political pressure in the years and decades it will take to fully remediate our ʻāina and wai.

Also alive is HB1896 HD1, which would expand the ban on PFAS-containing products passed via Act 152 in 2022. This bill would prohibit the manufacture, sale, or distribution of food packaging, food serviceware, and cosmetic and personal care products containing PFAS “forever chemicals” beginning on January 1, 2027. A substantially similar bill, SB504 SD1 HD3, died at the last minute during conference committee last year - fingers crossed that we can get this year’s proposal past the finish line this year!

Unfortunately, most of the other Red Hill-related bills have failed to meet their legislative deadlines. 

Wai Bills

SB3327 SD1 is a transformative measure that would finally implement decades-old recommendations to free the Water Commission from special interest political influence in the management of our precious wai. This bill would authorize the Water Commission to choose its own Chair (currently selected by the Governor) and hire independent legal counsel (rather than rely on the Governor's Attorney General). It would also clarify that employment decisions over the Commission’s lead staff person should be made by the Commission and not the Chair alone, based on objective and transparent criteria. It would further give the Commission the authority to enforce its laws and orders with meaningful penalties, and streamline its authority to respond to water emergencies such as those threatened by Red Hill or the Lāhainā fires (read more about SB3327 SD1 at the Sierra Club's Capitol Watch website). 

With overwhelming community support, including and particularly from the Maui Komohana community, SB3327 SD1 was heard and passed by the Senate Water and Land, Judiciary, and Ways and Means Committees. Stay tuned as we continue to push this measure through the House of Representatives.

Also still in play is HB1544 HD1, a bill that would give the Water Commission the authority to levy meaningful fines against recalcitrant and deep-pocket water code violators. A substantially similar bill was vetoed by Governor Josh Green last year, despite the urging of over three dozen community organizations and countless individuals to let it pass into law. According to Water Commission staff, Governor Green’s veto justification last year appeared to be based on testimony from the Land Use Research Foundation, which misleadingly suggested that affordable housing would somehow be impacted by county water departments’ immediate implementation of the increased fines. Legislators fortunately so far have seen past the exploitative fearmongering around our housing challenges by opponents of this measure, and it has passed over to the Senate.

Invasive Species

It appears that our legislators have heard the calls from their constituents for meaningful and proactive action to control and eradicate invasive pests, like the little fire ant and coconut rhinoceros beetle, that could permanently impact life on these islands. Thanks in large part to the voluminous and clear testimonies from the community, HB2758 HD2, the omnibus biosecurity bill, has sailed through its House Committee hearings, despite protests by the Department of Agriculture. SB3237 SD1, in a last minute hearing by the Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees, was also heard and passed on March 1st. Continued community support will be critical to keeping these bills moving through the Senate and House, respectively.

Clean Elections

SB2381 SD2, a “clean elections” bill that would offer public campaign funding for candidates for office, has already crossed over from the Senate to the House. This is another potentially transformative measure that would free both incumbents and challengers from having to solicit campaign contributions from deep-pocket special interests, and instead spend their time and energy focused on the needs and interests of their constituents - including those who care deeply about protecting our environmental and cultural integrity for current and future generations. 

Bad Bills Countered/Stopped

As usual, we have seen a number of measures that would have resulted in long-term sacrifices of our environmental and cultural integrity, public health, food security, and quality of life, for questionable public benefit. Fortunately, thanks in large part to community advocates and thoughtful decisionmakers, many of these bills have been stopped or amended to mitigate their potential harmful impacts. These include:

Land Use Commission

SB2175 - this measure would have stripped the Land Use Commission of its ability to protect our food security, cultural practices, natural resources, affordable housing opportunities, and other important public interests in land use district changes (e.g., agricultural to urban) of up to 100 acres at a time. Water and Land Chair Lorraine Inouye, hearing the concerns of dozens of testifiers, fortunately deferred this measure after its first hearing.

SB2204 SD1 - this measure would have allowed counties to forego “technical studies” - including environmental review - in petitioning the Land Use Commission for land use district boundary changes involving potentially thousands of acres at a time. Water and Land Chair Lorraine Inouye, responding to community concerns, amended this bill to ensure that counties are not excused from submitting “archaeological, cultural, and biological survey” studies as part of their district boundary amendment petitions for changes to the agricultural and conservation districts. While this was a positive amendment, the bill language still raised the risk of potentially incomplete petitions that would prevent the LUC from fulfilling its statutory and constitutional responsibilities. Fortunately, the bill died after failing to receive a hearing by the Judiciary Committee.

Environmental Review

SB3047 SD1 would have created a new category of actions exempted from the environmental review requirements of our environmental review law, namely, certain “affordable” housing projects in the urban districts. Unlike the current and carefully balanced regulatory exemption for certain affordable housing projects, this measure would have completely exempted all such projects from any environmental review, even if they raised the potential for severe ecological, cultural, public health, or economic impacts. Moreover, the public would not be given any notice regarding the exemption of these projects from environmental review, unlike under the current regulatory requirements. Fortunately, SB3047 SD1 died after not receiving a hearing in the Ways and Means Committee. Unfortunately, its companion, HB2538 HD1, has made it to crossover. Stay tuned for our next chance to stop HB2538 HD1.

Threatened and Native Species

HB2472 and SB3161 would have rolled back existing protections for threatened species, lowering the standard for protective measures and even giving the Department of Land and Natural Resources the ability to override the judgment and expertise of the Endangered Species Recovery Committee, among other provisions. Fortunately, both measures were deferred after their first hearing.

Energy and Resiliency

As originally proposed, SB2994 and SB2335 would have prevented our building codes from being updated for the better part of a decade, locking in building standards that do not respond to the rapidly changing realities of our climate crisis, and thereby jeopardizing human health and safety as well as our islands’ climate resiliency, and even foreclosing critical federal funding opportunities that are contingent on up-to-date codes. SB2335 would have further given developer interest groups more seats on the State Building Code Council, and required a “cost benefit analysis” before any updates are made to the state building code. SB2335 was killed by the Government Operations committee, and SB2994 was amended in its SD1 to ensure that energy code updates still occurred on the current schedule, mitigating concerns regarding the climate resiliency of new buildings. HB2089 HD1, a very similar bill to SB2994, was also amended to ensure that the energy code remains updated on the current schedule - read more about the remaining concerns with this bill below.

Bad Bills Still Alive

Unfortunately, there are still a small handful of bills that raise serious concerns regarding their impact to our environmental and cultural integrity. These include: 

HB2358 HD1, the companion to SB3047 SD1 described above, which would completely exempt certain “affordable” housing projects from any of the requirements under our environmental review law.

SB2677 SD1, which would roll back our general requirement that new single-family residential units be equipped with solar hot water heaters. As currently drafted, the bill would allow for variances to be issued for gas-powered heaters for units in a "low or moderate income" district, or in a region prone to wildfires. Given the health impacts of gas appliances, and the ever-increasing costs of fossil fuels, this bill would saddle future tenants of new residential developments with both the costs and health impacts of gas water heaters while also walking back Hawaiʻi’s commitments to a carbon negative future.   

HB2089 HD1, a similar bill to SB2994 SD1, would delay the adoption of the International Building Code and International Residential Code into the State Building Code for nearly a decade at a time (current law requires these codes, along with the International Energy Code, to be adopted within two years of their publication). This would result in buildings that do not reflect the latest technological, planning, and construction standards developed in response to climate threats such as wildfires, hurricanes, and floods. Given what we know about the impending impacts of the climate crisis, this measure may render our residents and communities more vulnerable to climate impacts, in an era when we should be doing all we can to protect ourselves from an increasingly unstable environment. 

These are just some of the many, many bills that we have tracked and testified on this legislative session. As you can see, we cannot do this work alone - and in many cases, engagement and advocacy from readers like you have made all the difference in what has been accomplished thus far. THANK YOU SO MUCH to all who have responded to our action alerts, shared bills of concern, and otherwise done your part to engage with the legislature this year!

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With heightening climate crisis impacts, fuel and forever chemicals poisoning our water, a skyrocketing cost of living, development threatening significant lands and countless other issues impacting our lives as we know it and the future well-being of the islands, Hawaiʻi needs policies and lawmakers that take a stand for our shared environment and all the lives that depend on it.

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