SUPPORT SB2002 SD2: Free the Water Commission

March 14 Update

SB2002 SD2 would address longstanding structural issues that have allowed special interests to unduly influence the Water Commission and its staff as they work to implement the Water Code, and uphold the public trust in wai. From Red Hill, to Lahaina, to West Hawaiʻi Island, we have seen the Water Commission’s work appear to be stifled, delayed, or even punished time and again by those with close ties to the Governor’s office, which directs both the Commission’s chair AND its legal counsel. Among other important provisions, this measure would require the Commission to choose its own chair and allow it to retain its own attorney, as well as establish clear performance standards that can protect its staff from arbitrary retaliation for simply doing their job. This bill has a hearing on Tuesday, March 17, at 9am in conference room 411 by the House Water & Land Committee (to be broadcast live on Youtube here).

Please take a moment to testify on this measure and to ask your friends and networks to do the same! Sample testimony and testimony instructions below.  

Sample Testimony for SB2002 SD2

Aloha Chair Hashem, Vice Chair Morikawa, and Members of the Committee,

My name is ______ and I STRONGLY SUPPORT SB2002 SD2, to enable the Water Commission and its staff to implement the Water Code in an objective and consistent manner.

This bill would provide the Water Commission with a level of independence similar to that enjoyed by the Honolulu Board of Water Supply (HBWS), which has allowed HBWS to take critical actions to protect our drinking water resources even in the face of opposition by politically powerful entities, such as the U.S. military and its contractors. As our future water and food security, environmental and cultural integrity, economy, and social fabric may all hinge on consistent and objective water management, the long-recommended amendments proposed by this measure may be more important now more than ever before.

This measure addresses political vulnerabilities with the Water Commission’s governance structure that have been of significant concern for over 30 years now. Currently, a Governor appointee - the Board of Land and Natural Resources Chairperson - chairs the Water Commission and dictates its agenda. In addition, another Governor appointee, the Attorney General, is the sole provider of legal advice to the Water Commission. Both of these appointees have considerable power over the actions and decisions of the Water Commission and its staff. Accordingly, those with influence over our Governors, including powerful corporate and military-related interests, can substantially interfere and have interfered with the work of the Commission, through their political appointees.

By requiring the Commission to choose its own Chair, retain its own legal counsel, and select its own executive director, this measure will provide important layers of independence necessary for the objective management of our water resources, as otherwise required by the Water Code, constitution, and public trust. These provisions, as well as a staff performance review process to ensure an objective, apolitical basis for staff employment decisions, would also allow Commission staff to fulfill their constitutional and statutory obligations without fear of political retribution.   

In addition, I support this measure’s authorization of meaningful fines for water code violations, based on a careful assessment of the circumstances of each case; such authority is critical to protecting the public interest from deep pocket water code violators who could easily shrug off the Commission’s current maximum daily fine.   

Finally, I also support the inclusion of an appointee of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ CEO in the Water Commission Nominating Committee, especially given the Commission’s historical disregard of Native Hawaiian water rights in its decisionmaking. Such an appointee will ensure that the nominating committee considers prospective commissioners’ understanding of Hawaiian water rights in making recommendations to the Governor.

Accordingly, I respectfully urge the Committee to PASS this measure. Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify. 

Sincerely, 
[Your Name]

Testimony instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (youʻll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email).

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter "SB2002" where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information, select “SUPPORT”, write or copy/paste your testimony, and select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. Please consider providing verbal testimony (in-person or remotely) if you are able!

    Note: Virtual testimony option may be disabled 24 hours before the hearing.

  5. If you are testifying via Zoom, be sure to review these instructions (page 4).

  6. Spread the word!


March 5 Update

SB2002 SD1 passed out of the Senate Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees on March 4. This measure would protect the Water Commission and its staff from undue influence or intimidation by politically connected special interests, such as luxury real estate developers, multinational investment firms, or the US military. 

Mahalo nui to the 72 individuals and organizations who submitted testimony in support and special thanks to Chairs Rhoads and Dela Cruz and Vice Chairs Gabbard and Moriwaki for passing this measure.⁠


March 2 Update

SB2002 SD1, the “Free the Water Commission” bill, has a hearing on Wednesday, March 4, at 10:35 a.m. in room 211 before the Senate Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees. Submit testimony as soon as possible.

Sample Testimony for SB2002 SD1

Aloha Chair Rhoads, Chair Dela Cruz, Vice Chair Gabbard, Vice Chair Moriwaki, and Committee Members,

My name is ______ and I STRONGLY SUPPORT SB2002 SD1, to allow the Water Commission and its staff to implement the Water Code without fear of political interference or retribution.

With increasingly severe droughts and ever more revelations about new drinking water contamination threats, our need for careful, objective, and fair decisionmaking over Hawaiʻi’s increasingly scarce water resources has never been more evident. 

Unfortunately, from responding to the ongoing aquifer contamination underlying the Navy’s Red Hill Facility, to issuing water use permits being pursued by both luxury “gentlemen farm” developers and bona fide kalo farmers, major upcoming water decisions by the Water Commission will be fraught with the risk of undue influence by powerful and politically connected special interests. 

Now more than ever, we must act to mitigate this risk, starting with the unilateral control that the Governor’s office can exert over the Commission and its work.

This bill would address political vulnerabilities that have allowed powerful special interests to unduly interfere with the work of the Commission and its staff, since its very inception. Currently, a Governor appointee - the Board of Land and Natural Resources Chairperson - chairs the Water Commission and dictates its agenda. In addition, the Attorney General, who is also appointed by the Governor, is the sole provider of legal advice to the Water Commission. Both of these appointees have considerable power over the Water Commission and its staff. Accordingly, those with influence over the Governor, such as corporate water hoarders and military water polluters, can substantially interfere and have interfered with the work of the Commission, through the Governor’s political appointees.

By requiring the Commission to choose its own Chair, select its own executive director, and retain its own legal counsel, this measure will provide important layers of political insulation necessary for the objective management of our water resources, as otherwise required by the Water Code, constitution, and public trust. These provisions, as well as a staff performance review process to ensure an objective, apolitical basis for staff employment decisions, would also allow Commission staff to fulfill their constitutional and statutory obligations without fear of retribution.   

In addition, I support this measure’s authorization of meaningful fines for water code violations, based on a careful assessment of the circumstances of each case; such authority is critical to protecting the public interest from deep pocket water code violators who could easily shrug off the Commission’s current maximum daily fine.   

Finally, I also support the inclusion of an appointee of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs in the Water Commission Nominating Committee, especially given the Commission’s historical disregard of Native Hawaiian water rights in its decisionmaking. Such an appointee will ensure that the nominating committee considers prospective commissioners’ understanding of Hawaiian water rights in making recommendations to the Governor for new commissioners.

Accordingly, I respectfully urge the Committees to PASS this measure. Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify. 

Sincerely, 
[Your Name]

Testimony instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (youʻll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email).

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter SB2002" where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information, select “SUPPORT”, write or copy/paste your testimony, and select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. No verbal testimony will be taken for SB2002.

  5. Spread the word!


Bill Background & Info

SB2002, to free the Water Commission from undue political influence, is being heard by the Senate Water, Land, Culture and the Arts and Public Safety and Military Affairs Committees this Wednesday, February 4 at 3:01pm in room 016 (watch online here). Please take a moment now to submit written testimony and provide verbal testimony on Wednesday if can! 

What SB2002 does:

SB2002 would protect the Water Commission and its staff from the influence of opportunistic and politically connected special interests, allowing them to implement the state Water Code in the public’s interest, and without fear of political retribution. The bill would also allow the Water Commission to hold water code violators accountable with meaningful fines. Moreover, it would provide for a member of the nominating committee for new Water Commissioners to be appointed by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ CEO, ensuring that the committee takes into account the unique Hawaiian rights and interests that have been historically ignored or undermined by Commission decisions.

Why this is important:

First, this bill would address political vulnerabilities that could allow powerful corporate interests to unduly influence the critically important work of the Water Commission. Currently, the Commission’s Chair is a member of the Governor’s cabinet, as is its legal counsel, the Attorney General. Both individuals have considerable power over the Water Commission and its staff, and both answer directly to the Governor. As a result, powerful interests who have the Governor’s ear could substantially interfere with the Commission’s implementation of the Water Code, and the Public Trust Doctrine. 

This bill would accordingly allow Commission members to decide amongst themselves who among their volunteers should serve as their Chair, and would further allow the entire Commission to choose an “executive director” as the lead Commission staff person. Annual performance reviews for the executive director would ensure that any employment decisions are based on a documented and objective assessment of their performance, rather than political opportunism or retribution. Finally, the Commission would be able to hire their own legal counsel, rather than rely on the Governor-serving Attorney General.

Second, this bill would authorize the Water Commission to impose meaningful fines against those who could otherwise over pump our aquifers and drain our streams dry with impunity – notwithstanding the law or the needs of the community. The current $5,000 daily fine the Commission is authorized to levy is wholly insufficient to hold multinational corporations - or the Department of Defense - accountable if and when their water code violations impact priority public needs, including for affordable housing. Without the increased fines authorized under this measure, millions of gallons of water per day could be illegally monopolized by deep pocket entities for a fraction of a cent per gallon in penalties, harming our precious water resources, and the houses, schools, farms, small businesses, and others that rely on them.

Finally, this bill would allow the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ CEO to appoint a member of the Water Commission Nominating Committee, to help in its nomination of new commissioners; this change would ensure that the committee recognizes the importance of the unique Native Hawaiian water rights and interests that have been historically ignored or undermined by Commission decisions.

Sample testimony

Aloha Chairs Lee and Fukunaga, Vice Chair Inouye, and members of the Senate Water, Land, Culture and the Arts and Public Safety and Military Affairs Committees,

My name is ______ and I STRONGLY SUPPORT SB2002, to enable the Water Commission and its staff to implement the Water Code without fear of political retribution.

This bill would address political vulnerabilities that have allowed powerful special interests to unduly interfere with the work of the Commission and its staff. Currently, a Governor appointee - the Board of Land and Natural Resources Chairperson - chairs the Water Commission and dictates its agenda. In addition, the Attorney General, who is also appointed by the Governor, is the sole provider of legal advice to the Water Commission. Both of these appointees have considerable power over the Water Commission and its staff. Accordingly, those with influence over the Governor, including corporate water hoarders, can substantially interfere and have interfered with the work of the Commission, through his political appointees.

By requiring the Commission to choose its own Chair, select its own executive director, and retain its own legal counsel, this measure will provide important layers of political insulation necessary for the objective management of our water resources, as otherwise required by the Water Code, constitution, and public trust. These provisions, as well as a staff performance review process to ensure an objective, apolitical basis for staff employment decisions, would also allow Commission staff to fulfill their constitutional and statutory obligations without fear of political retribution.   

In addition, I support this measure’s authorization of meaningful fines for water code violations, based on a careful assessment of the circumstances of each case; such authority is critical to protecting the public interest from deep pocket water code violators who could easily shrug off the Commission’s current maximum daily fine.   

Finally, I also support the inclusion of an appointee of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs’ CEO in the Water Commission Nominating Committee, especially given the Commission’s historical disregard of Native Hawaiian water rights in its decisionmaking. Such an appointee will ensure that the nominating committee considers prospective commissioners’ understanding of Hawaiian water rights in making recommendations to the Governor for new commissioners.

Accordingly, I respectfully urge the Committees to PASS this measure. Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify. 

Sincerely, 
[Your Name]

Testimony instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (youʻll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email)

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter "SB2002" where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information and your written testimony, select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. Please consider providing verbal testimony (in-person or remotely) if you are able!

    Note: Virtual testimony option may be disabled 24 hours before the hearing.

  5. If you are testifying via Zoom, be sure to review these instructions (page 4)

  6. Spread the word!

SUPPORT HB1926 HD1: Protect Our Wai

March 14 Update

HB1926 HD1 would provide funding for Red Hill remediation research, environmental monitoring, groundwater modeling, public education, and independent water testing and expert review of the Navy’s water data - all still critically needed to heal Oʻahu’s sole source aquifer and protect our future generations’ water security in the wake of the November 2021 Red Hill catastrophe. This measure is being heard on Monday, March 16, at 3:01pm in Capitol Conference Room 016 by the Senate Water, Land, Culture and the Arts and Public Safety and Military Affairs Committees (to be broadcast live on Youtube here).

Please take a moment to testify on this measure and to ask your friends and networks to do the same! Sample testimony and testimony instructions below.  

Sample Testimony for HB1926 HD1

Aloha Chair Lee, Chair Fukunaga, Vice Chair Inouye, and Committee Members,

My name is [your name], and I am writing in STRONG SUPPORT of HB1926 HD1.

In recent months, we have seen continued efforts by the Navy to evade public scrutiny and community accountability, regarding its monitoring and clean-up of the ʻāina and wai contaminated by its Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility. This includes a refusal to explain countless “irregularities” in its water sampling and reporting, to report and properly maintain water samples, to answer questions posed at Fuel Tank Advisory Committee meetings, and most recently, to meet with the Red Hill Community Representation Initiative. Most concernedly, there also has been no meaningful investment in proactive remediation research that can actually clean the contamination within Oʻahu’s sole-source aquifer.  

Clearly, we need much greater state-level investments in remediation research, independent groundwater modeling and environmental testing, objective expert assessments of Navy water testing procedures and data analyses, and public engagement, to protect our children, grandchildren, and future generations from having to live with the constant threat of water insecurity and contamination. HB1926 HD1 would provide for these necessary investments, while making clear our expectation that the federal government will reimburse us for any expenses Hawaiʻi incurs in cleaning up the Navy’s mess.      

Accordingly, I respectfully urge you to PASS HB1926 HD1.

Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify.

Sincerely,
[Your name]

Testimony instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (youʻll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email).

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter "HB1926" where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information, select “SUPPORT”, write or copy/paste your testimony, and select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. Please consider providing verbal testimony (in-person or remotely) if you are able!

    Note: Virtual testimony option may be disabled 24 hours before the hearing.

  5. If you are testifying via Zoom, be sure to review these instructions (page 4).

  6. Spread the word!


March 4 Update

HB1926 HD1 was passed unamended by the House Finance Committee on March 3. This measure would provide funding for Red Hill remediation research, environmental monitoring, groundwater modeling, public education, and independent water testing and expert review of the Navy’s water data.⁠

Mahalo nui to the over 64 individuals and organizations who submitted testimony in support and special thanks to Chair Todd and Vice Chair Takenouchi for passing this measure.⁠


February 28 Update

HB1926 HD1 would provide funding for Red Hill remediation research, environmental monitoring, groundwater modeling, public education, and independent water testing and expert review of the Navy’s water data - all still critically needed to heal Oʻahu’s sole source aquifer and protect our future generations’ water security in the wake of the November 2021 Red Hill catastrophe. This measure is being heard on Tuesday, March 3, at 10am in Capitol Conference Room 308 by the House Finance Committee (to be broadcast live on Youtube here).

Sample Testimony for HB1926 HD1

Aloha Chair Todd, Vice Chair Takenouchi, and Committee Members,

My name is [your name], and I am writing in STRONG SUPPORT of HB1926 HD1.

In recent months, we have seen continued efforts by the Navy to evade public scrutiny and community accountability, regarding its monitoring and clean-up of the ʻāina and wai contaminated by its Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility. This includes a refusal to explain countless “irregularities” in its water sampling and reporting, to properly maintain water samples needed to understand what may have poisoned its water system as well as Oʻahu’s sole source aquifer, to answer questions posed at Fuel Tank Advisory Committee meetings, and most recently, to meet with the Red Hill Community Representation Initiative. Most concernedly, there also has been no meaningful investment in proactive remediation research that can actually clean the contamination within Oʻahu’s sole-source aquifer.  

Clearly, we need much greater state-level investments in remediation research, independent groundwater modeling and environmental testing, objective expert assessments of Navy water testing procedures and data analyses, and public engagement, to protect our children, grandchildren and future generations from having to live with the constant threat of water insecurity and contamination. HB1926 HD1 would provide for these necessary investments, while making clear our expectation that the federal government will reimburse us for any expenses Hawaiʻi incurs in cleaning up the Navy’s mess.      

Accordingly, I respectfully urge you to PASS HB1926 HD1.

Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify.

Sincerely,
[Your name]

Testimony Instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (youʻll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email).

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter "HB1926" where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information, select “SUPPORT”, write or copy/paste your testimony, and select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. Please consider providing verbal testimony (in-person or remotely) if you are able!

    Note: Virtual testimony option may be disabled 24 hours before the hearing.

  5. If you are testifying via Zoom, be sure to review these instructions (page 4).

  6. Spread the word!


February 18 Update

HB1926 HD1 which provides unspecified funding for the Red Hill WAI Policy Coordinator office, was passed out of the House Energy & Environmental Protection Committee on February 17. 

Mahalo nui to the over 55 individuals and organizations who submitted testimony in support and special thanks to Chair Lowen and Vice Chair Perruso for passing this measure.

HB1673 HD1, which repeals the prohibition against placing landfills above the underground injection control line on Oʻahu enacted last year, was deferred by the House Energy & Environmental Protection Committee on February 19 and is essentially defeated for this session.

Thank you to the over 70 individuals and organizations who submitted testimony in opposition to defeated this amended measure.


Bill Background & Info

Tomorrow, Tuesday, February 17, two separate measures will be considered in the Hawaiʻi House and Senate that will jeopardize our future water security and provide key funding for the Red Hill WAI Policy Coordinator, to support the clean up of our ʻāina and wai contaminated by the US Navy’s Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility. Please take a moment to testify on these bills - sample testimony and testimony instructions below!

First, at 9am in room 411, the House Energy & Environmental Protection Committee will hear HB1673 HD1, a bad bill that as currently drafted would repeal last year’s prohibition against the siting of landfills above drinking water aquifers on Oʻahu.  

During that same hearing, the Committee will also consider HB1926 HD1, which would provide unspecified funding for the Red Hill Water Alliance Initiative (WAI) Policy Coordinator’s office, to support its facilitation of the timely clean up of our ʻāina and wai contaminated by the Red Hill Underground Storage Tank Facility.

What these bills do

HB1673 HD1 repeals the prohibition against placing landfills above the underground injection control line on Oʻahu, a policy enacted last year to protect additional drinking water aquifers from catastrophic contamination. 

HB1926 HD1 provides unspecified funding for the Red Hill WAI Policy Coordinator office, including for public engagement, environmental monitoring, groundwater modeling, remediation research, and independent  water testing and expert review of the Navy’s water data.

Why these bills are important

In 2025, the Hawaiʻi Legislature made a much-needed policy call by prohibiting the siting of landfills above drinking water aquifers on the island of Oʻahu, given the inevitability of groundwater contamination from highly toxic landfill leachate whether in the near future, or decades from now. By repealing this prohibition, HB1673 HD1 is a dangerous bill that will risk creating another “Red Hill water crisis” for future generations, as city administrations and Honolulu Board of Water Supply chief engineers are pressured over time into allowing a new landfill to be located above a drinking water source – as was already attempted last year.  

Meanwhile, a lack of transparency and candor from the Navy, unexplained Navy water testing anomalies, hidden water samples, a lack of meaningful proactive remediation efforts by the Navy, and a growing unwillingness to hold the Navy accountable to public concerns by both the Hawaiʻi Department of Health and EPA make public engagement, independent remediation research, and objective expert assessments of the Navy’s Red Hill cleanup efforts absolutely critical if we wish to heal our poisoned wai and ʻāina. HB1926 HD1 is a hopeful measure that provides state funding to meet these critical needs, while making clear our expectation that the federal government must reimburse us for these expenses. 

Sample testimony for HB1673 HD1

Aloha Chair Lowen, Vice Chair Perruso, and Members of the Committee,

My name is [Name], and I am writing in strong opposition to HB1673 HD1.

The latest draft of this measure would needlessly remove a critical and common sense state-level protection against the placement of future landfills above drinking water aquifers on Oʻahu.  

As we continue to navigate the Red Hill water crisis, it is incumbent upon all of us to do what it takes to protect what water sources we have left from foreseeable future contamination, if we wish to do right by our islands and the future generations who will inhabit them long after we are gone. Accordingly, the legislature rightly passed a law last year to prevent the siting of landfills above Oʻahu’s drinking water aquifers, given the inevitability of a landfill’s highly toxic leachate eventually contaminating any underlying groundwater. Please do not roll back this critical protection by passing this measure as drafted.

While there may or may not now be an additional layer of protection provided by City’s recognition of the Honolulu Board of Water Supply’s “no-pass zone,” this is no reason for the legislature to abdicate its own responsibility to safeguard our precious wai, and that of our children, grandchildren, and future generations. As we saw just last year, the tremendous pressure that may be placed on current and future city administrations and current and future chief engineers of the Board of Water Supply could very well lead to city-level decisions to site a landfill above a drinking water aquifer, if this measure is passed. 

I respectfully urge you to HOLD HB1673 HD1.

Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify.

Sincerely,
[Your name]

Sample testimony for HB1926 HD1

Aloha Chair Lowen, Vice Chair Perruso, and Members of the Committee,

My name is [Name], and I am writing in SUPPORT of HB1926 HD1.

In recent months, we have seen continued efforts by the Navy to evade public scrutiny and community accountability, regarding its monitoring and clean-up of the ʻāina and wai contaminated by its Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility. This includes a refusal to explain countless “irregularities” in its water sampling and reporting, to properly maintain water samples needed to understand what may have poisoned its water system as well as our aquifer, to answer questions posed at Fuel Tank Advisory Committee meetings, and most recently, to meet with the Red Hill Community Representation Initiative. Most concernedly, there also has been no meaningful investment in proactive remediation research that can actually clean the contamination within Oʻahu’s sole-source aquifer.  

Clearly, we need much greater state-level investments in remediation research, independent groundwater modeling and environmental testing, objective expert assessments of Navy water testing procedures and data analyses, and public engagement, to protect our children, grandchildren and future generations from having to live with the constant threat of water insecurity and contamination. HB1926 HD1 would provide for these necessary investments, while making clear our expectation that the federal government will reimburse us for any expenses Hawaiʻi incurs in cleaning up the Navy’s mess.      

Accordingly, I respectfully urge you to PASS HB1926 HD1.

Mahalo nui for the opportunity to testify.

Sincerely,
[Your name]

Testimony instructions

  1. Register for a capitol website account if you haven’t yet (you’ll need to confirm your registration by responding to an automated email).

  2. Sign in to capitol.hawaii.gov with your registration information and click the "Submit Testimony" button.

  3. Enter "HB1673" or “HB1926” where it says "Enter Bill or Measure."

  4. Input your information, select “OPPOSE” for HB1673 and “SUPPORT” for HB1926, write or copy/paste your testimony, and select your testimony option(s)—in-person + written, remotely + written, written only. Please consider providing verbal testimony (in-person or remotely) if you are able! 

    Note: Virtual testimony option may be disabled 24 hours before the hearing.

  5. If you are testifying via Zoom, be sure to review these instructions (page 4).

  6. Spread the word!