Anthony Aalto

Anthony Aalto

Administrative Captain
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Anthony likes to refer to himself as a European poi dog. He grew up on Mallorca, which he calls the O‘ahu of the Mediterranean. There he witnessed the impact of 12 million tourists a year. He wants to use that experience to ensure that Hawaii’s future is one of pono growth. He’s Chair of the Sierra Club O‘ahu Group and convener of the Ag Hui which is pushing to double the amount of food grown in Hawai‘i by 2020.

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

Friends, on Monday we have a wonderful opportunity to encourage the Legislature to take a stand against monster developments that threaten the two most productive food farms in the state - Ho‘opili and Koa Ridge. So I am appealing to you for your support. If these resolutions pass they could have a major impact on the debate.

 

At 10:20 am in Conference Room 312, a joint hearing of the House Agriculture Committee and the House Committee on Water and Land will hear testimony on a resolution -HCR 72- that would serve as a clarion call from our two statewide elected bodies calling on DR Horton to preserve Ho‘opili forever in agriculture.

 

At 3:30pm in Conference Room 16 the Senate Committee on Water & Land and the Senate Committee on Public Safety, Intergovernmental & Military Affairs will hold a joint hearing on a resolution –SCR 178- that would provide ringing endorsement from our Senators and Representatives for the idea that the state and the city should work together to swap the proposed development at Koa Ridge for access to a development project in the urban core, so Koa Ridge can remain a food farm forever.

 

Please consider coming to testify in person. But if you can’t, please send testimony. Use your own words. Politely ask your Representative and your Senator to act. You don’t need to say much. But you could note that we have lost 50% of our best farmland since statehood, that we rely on imports for more than 90% of our food, that Ho‘opili produces at least 25% of the food we grow in Hawai‘i, and that Koa Ridge produces at least 15% of the food we grow in Hawai‘i.

 

Here’s the place to send testimony for the House hearing on Ho‘opili.

And here’s the place to send testimony for the Senate hearing on Koa Ridge – the direct link doesn’t work so when you get to this page, click on the “Submit Testimony” button.

 

Thanks for all you do.

 

Aloha

 

Anthony

 

 

 

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Smart Growth / Transport

David Murdock -the sole proprietor of Castle & Cooke and one of the richest men on the planet- wants to build 3500 suburban homes and half a million square feet of commercial space on the 768 acres at Koa Ridge near Mililani which currently constitute the second most productive food-growing farmland in the state.

This development, which is nowhere near the five billion dollar train, would dump 3500 to 7,000 more cars onto H2 and H1. It makes no sense.

Senate Resolution 134 urges the state and the city to do a land swap with Castle & Cooke. In return for access to land in the urban core where it would be appropriate to build housing, the Koa Ridge lands should be preserved in perpetuity to grow food.

If you think this idea makes sense, please send testimony urging passage of SR134 to members of the Senate here:

This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 

Saturday, February 09

Get on Your Bike!

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Smart Growth / Transport

Anyone who dares risk life and limb to ride their bike in this State can tell you first hand that we need more bike lanes!  In Honolulu, a city that could be a mecca for bicyclists, with year-round good weather and a relatively compact urban area, bikes are instead persona non grata on our streets and sidewalks.  Encouraging cycling reduces automobile traffic, green house gas emmisions, dependence on imported oil and is good for people’s health to boot.  It should be a no-brainer for the state to aggressively encourage cycling, but this unfortunately doesn’t seem to be the case. HB 1080, scheduled for a hearing on Monday, February 11 at 10:00 a.m. in the House Committee on Transportation, is a bill that will take us a step closer to addressing this issue.

The existing law requires that the Department of Transportation consider establishment of bikeways, whenever practicable, wherever a new or existing highway, road, or street is being designed, planned, constructed, reconstructed, relocated, or rehabilitated.   When a bikeway project isn’t practicable, the DOT isn’t required to do anything, resulting in no new bikeways, and causing the state to miss out on opportunities to secure additional federal funds for these projects.  HB 1080 would amend the law to add a requirement that when bikeway projects aren’t practicable on the roadway under consideration, that the Department must consult with the biking community to identify alternative bikeway projects.

Please support this measure by submitting testimony here!

 

Tuesday, February 05

Stop the Cancer!

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Smart Growth / Transport

Traffic isn’t the disease!   It’s a symptom of the cancer called Suburban Sprawl that is rapidly killing the ‘aina. 

But it doesn't have to be that way: tomorrow there’s a hearing on a really smart bill that, by tackling the traffic congestion symptom, could at least stop the sprawl from metastasizing.

HB1357 simply states that no new subdivisions can be built “until the director of transportation certifies to the Governor that adequate highway capacity exists for major peak-hour commuting to work in the county’s business district.”

Simple, right? If the roads can’t handle the traffic your project is going to generate, then you don’t get to build your project. Finis. Pau. End of story.  It's a no brainer.

This would be a great way to encourage urban-infill and transit-oriented development and to stop paving over our farmlands.

The first hearing on this bill is tomorrow (maybe today by the time you read this) Wednesday February 6th at 11:20 a.m. in State Capitol Conference room 309.

Please send testimony in support by clicking here

The standard etiquette applies:

"Aloha Chair  Yamane and Members of the Transportation Committee,

Thank you for the opportunity to testify.

I wish to express my strong support for HB 1357 for the following reasons..."

It’s a really simple argument to make: we have the most congested commute in the nation, no developer –no matter how big and influential- should be allowed to build a project that makes our freeway traffic nightmare any worse.  Put it briefly in your own words.  You can make your voice count.

Or better yet: why not come and testify in person?


Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

Aloha Everyone,

Here is some really good news: the Senate Democratic Caucus has decided to throw its support behind our Food Self-Sufficiency Bill this year and we also have strong support from the new Chair of the Ag Committee in the House.

In other words we have a truly excellent chance of committing our state to doubling the amount of food grown for local consumption by the year 2025 – with all of the enormous benefits that would entail.

But it is not a slam dunk and WE NEED YOUR HELP to make it happen.

The Ag Hui, which brings together activists from the Sierra Club, Kanu Hawaii and the Food Policy Council, has been negotiating with members of the Legislature and the Department of Agriculture.

As part of that process we have accepted that you cannot double food production without knowing what we currently produce, so we have committed ourselves to help the DOA get the extra staff it needs to start compiling good data in this bill:

HB502 - http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/measure_indiv.aspx?billtype=HB&billnumber=502

We also recognize that you cannot spark a food-growing renaissance without having a good sense of what the obstacles are and a clear set of proposals and measures to overcome those obstacles.

Coming up with that sort analysis and those policy proposals takes time and money. So we are pushing the Legislature to commit a million dollars to this effort over the next two years in this bill:

SB1284 - http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/measure_indiv.aspx?billtype=SB&billnumber=1284

Other people will have their eyes on that money. Without that money our bill will be little more than empty rhetoric – indeed it might simply die.

That’s why we need you. We need to show the Legislature and the Administration that this is an effort that counts on truly popular support. And that effort starts with a hearing at the Senate Agriculture Committee tomorrow Thursday, 1/31 @ 2:45pm in Rm. 229.

Please contact your Senators and the Senate Ag Chair Clarence Nishihara to support SB1284.

Senator Clarence Nishihara

Hawaii State Capitol, Room 204

Phone 808-586-6970

Fax 808-586-6879

E-Mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

If you could show up to testify in person that would be great!

You can also submit testimony in writing here.

Here are some talking points:

§  Doubling our food production, according to a 2008 UH study, would give a $313 million jolt to the state economy, create $47 million in profits, provide $6 million in state tax revenues and create more than 2,300 jobs.

§  Hawaii currently only grows 8% to 10% of the food we eat, according to the US Department of Agriculture.  This leaves us incredibly vulnerable to supply disruptions.

§  Opinion polls repeatedly show this issue is one of the top political concerns of voters in Hawaii.  They also show that local people are prepared to pay a little more than for imported food because they place a premium on locally grown food.

§  A statutory goal for food production will have a galvanizing effect both on the state and on the private sector - in the same way as the Clean Energy Initiative has helped kick-start the booming alternative energy sector.

§ Hawaii's state constitution says the following:

ARTICLE XI

CONSERVATION, CONTROL AND DEVELOPMENT OF RESOURCES

Section 1.  For the benefit of present and future generations, the State and its political subdivisions shall conserve and protect Hawaii's natural beauty and all natural resources, including land, water, air, minerals and energy sources, and shall promote the development and utilization of these resources in a manner consistent with their conservation and in furtherance of the self-sufficiency of the State.

All public natural resources are held in trust by the State for the benefit of the people. [Add Const Con 1978 and election Nov 7, 1978]

AGRICULTURAL LANDS

Section 3. The State shall conserve and protect agricultural lands, promote diversified agriculture, increase agricultural self-sufficiency and assure the availability of agriculturally suitable lands.  The legislature shall provide standards and criteria to accomplish the foregoing.

Lands identified by the State as important agricultural lands needed to fulfill the purposes above shall not be reclassified by the State or rezoned by its political subdivisions without meeting the standards and criteria established by the legislature and approved by a two-thirds vote of the body responsible for the reclassification or rezoning action. [Add Const Con 1978 and election Nov 7, 1978]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 25

I'm Mad as Hell

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it any more.

I thought I would be able to write to you today to tell you that all your hard work had finally paid off – that the state Legislature had finally established a priority to double the amount of food we grow in Hawaii – setting the stage for a raft of measures that would ignite a food farming revolution.

But oh no… At the very last minute the Chair of the House Agriculture Committee, Mr. Clifton Tsuji, took it upon himself to hijack months of work and replace our bill with language not seen or discussed before - some of which is not even within his committee’s remit and has no relation to the title of the bill.

It’s Undemocratic

In other words, what Tsuji did was not just a dirty political trick that flouts the wishes of the hundreds of people who have lobbied for this bill, it’s probably unconstitutional.

So now we need you to call and email Rep. Tsuji at:

808-586-8480 This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

and tell him to go back to the original Senate version SD2

And call and email Senator Nishihara at:

808-586-6970         This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

and ask him to either defend his SD2 version or kill the whole darned thing.  Yes, its’ that bad.

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

This our very last call… because The Moment of Truth has arrived!

I have been told that if our food self-sufficiency bill, HB2703, makes it out of Conference Committee it will –finally- become law.

We need one last outpouring of support.

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

Aloha Gang,

I confess, I feel a bit like a used car salesman! How many times can I keep coming back to you promising: “One last email and it’s in the bag?”

But the truth is we didn’t see this one coming and we need your help!

Our food sustainability bill -to commit the state to double food production by 2020- has passed every committee on both sides of the Legislature leaving just minor differences between the Senate and House versions to be ironed out in a Conference Committee before final votes on the floor of both chambers. Hallelujah! It’s a done deal, right?

Well, Not so fast…

The Senate has appointed its Conferees. But the Speaker, Calvin Say, has not named his House reps yet. No House conferees, no conference. No conference, no bill. It’s that simple.

HB2703 would set the stage to press for all the things needed to spark a true food-farming renaissance in Hawaii. Things like helping farmers get leases, investing in irrigation systems, providing covered port facilities to encourage inter-island commerce, building processing and purchasing networks and revising procurement codes so institutions like the Board of Education can start buying local, investing in training and loan assistance programs, putting food stamp machines in farmers’ markets, etc, etc.

So we need a huge response.

We need everyone to contact Speaker Say and the House Ag Committee Chair, Clift Tsuji, to politely ask them to pass this bill out of Conference Committee. We need the response to be bigger that at any previous stage. We need people who don’t normally do this kind of lobbying. We need people to identify themselves – “I’m a teacher, I’m a lawyer, I’m a waiter…” to impress on our reps the breadth of support.

And we’d really love it if you could email this to one or two friends, even if you don’t normally do that kind of thing. Hundreds of people have sent in testimony. Dozens have testified in person. We can’t allow that broad popular support to be squashed out of pique.

So please can you call and email:

Speaker Calvin Say

Phone 808-586-6100

E-Mail:  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it


and

House Ag Committee Chair Clift Tsuji

Phone 808-586-8480

E-Mail:  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it


You don’t need to write much. A couple of lines would do. Preferably in your own words. And keep the message positive. Ask them to pass the bill out of conference committee and here’s some other things you could say:

§  Doubling food production would give a $313 million boost to the economy, provide $6 million in state tax revenues and create more than 2,300 jobs.

§  Hawaii only grows 8% of the food we eat, according to the US Department of Agriculture.  This leaves us incredibly vulnerable to supply disruptions.

§  Opinion polls show this issue is one of the top concerns of voters in Hawaii and that people are prepared to pay a little more for locally grown food.

§  A statutory goal for food production will galvanize the state and the private sector – just like the Clean Energy Initiative helped kick-start the booming alternative energy sector.

Thanks for all that you do.

Monday, April 02

Never Say Die!

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

Congratulations! We keep tiptoeing up to the deadline and then squeezing out victories at the last moment. Once again, all your calls worked! The Ways and Means Committee will hear HB2703 on Wednesday, April 4, at 9:10.  This is the bill that would set a target of doubling food production by 2020.  The public is not allowed to testify at WAM sessions. But you can send testimony. Could you please do so…  It will take you less than a minute.

This is the very last step in the public committee process. After that the bill will go to a closed-door conference meeting and our ability to influence the bill will greatly diminish. So this is one of our last chances to convince Senators that this is a truly popular measure.

Please address an e-mail to yourself, then copy and paste these addresses into your BCC line.

This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ,

 

Then copy and paste this short message into the body of your e-mail.  Sign it.  And send it.

Aloha, Senator,

Please vote Yes on HB2703, which commits Hawai‘i to double the amount of food grown locally by 2020. The bill comes before the WAM Committee this Wednesday morning, April 4th - it could help kick start a farming revolution, boost our economy by more than $300 million per year and create more than 2300 jobs.

Thank you,

Your Name

 

Written by Anthony Aalto | Published in Agriculture

OK guys, I’m so sorry to do this, but here we go again.

They are still trying to kill our bill that would require the state to double food production by 2020 and it needs your help once more.

It has passed every other committee except Ways and Means.  But the Chair of WAM, David Ige has not scheduled a hearing.  And if it is not heard this week it will die.

 

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