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    The Helpless and Clueless Zigzag Course of the Old Boys’ Club-Guided by Small-minded Jealousy

    The postponement of Theodore Liu’s confirmation as Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT) Director makes sense. Ted Liu and so many others provide a true challenge to all the ones left over from the Old Boys’ & Girls’ Club. Finally, truly qualified experts are taking charge and the clueless Democrats have nothing to offer but to respond with small-minded, helpless, political maneuvers. They are acting like little, jealous children.

    When Gov. Linda Lingle and her appointees speak and act, something intelligent is going to happen, while all former Gov. Ben Cayetano and his buddies did was to produce a lot of bubbles. And they still do. It is a matter of difference in class and political wisdom.

    For example, Gov. Lingle was able to promote Hawaii twice in one day (2/28/03) on TV to promote Hawaii as a tropical paradise and ”’safe.”’ And she convinced the First Lady to serve Hawaiian coffee –

    Grassroot Perspective – March 6, 2003-Treatment Denied: State Formularies and Cost Controls Restrict Access to Prescription Drugs; Smoke 'em if You Got 'em; In Like Flynt; They're young – But Still Adults

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    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Treatment Denied: State Formularies and Cost Controls Restrict Access to Prescription Drugs

    Author: Linda Gorman
    Source: Washington Policy Center, 2/03

    Prescription drug formularies are a cost containment tool used by health-care payers that usually restrict the number and type of drugs covered, often favoring older and generic drugs. Many states have implemented restrictive formularies in an attempt to control Medicaid costs. But Linda Gorman of Colorado’s Independence Institute says that this may actually increase health care costs in the long run. “Because the Medicaid population is sicker than the general population, political attempts to arbitrarily cap prescription drug spending run the risk of sending other health care costs out of control.” A 1999 review of restrictive formularies by the National Pharmaceutical Council found that, “In general, formularies increase costs because overruling physician prescribing decisions increases the utilization of other forms of health care.” Additionally, physicians in Florida, which has a formulary, reported, “Medicaid patients were not getting the brand name medication that they needed, and that denials had resulted in negative clinical outcomes.”
    Full text: https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/HealthCare/PBGormanTreatmentDenied.html

    The revelation that drug formularies limit patient choice of needed drugs, decrease health outcomes, and lead to higher health care costs in the long run is not a new one. Dr. Susan Horn, senior scientist for the Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research in Utah, conducted a study of 13,000 patients from six HMOs, titled the Managed Care Outcomes Project. This study found that more restrictive drug formularies were correlated with an increase in patients’ use of more expensive medical services, treatment in emergency rooms and hospitals, and visits to doctors’ offices. Horn also recently co-authored a Heritage Foundation paper that found restrictive drug formularies have a greater negative impact on senior citizens than younger cohorts, a warning to those who would design a Medicare drug benefit.

    Above article is quoted from The Galen Institute https://www.galen.org 2/21/03

    – Smoke ’em if You Got ’em

    It had to happen. The great tax-free-tobacco window appears to be closing. States and localities have too much riding on their tobacco taxes to sit back and let Net sales escape the net. And consumers have way too much incentive, considering the draconian levels tobacco taxes have reached in some jurisdictions, to seek out tax-free sources.

    Now some tobacco-selling Web sites are beginning to comply with the Jenkins Act, passed in 1949, which requires tobacco sellers to report their sales. Sooner or later, some state is going take a tobacco hawker to court for its failure to comply with the act, so a few have gotten ahead of the curve.

    The states would then hit up the consumers for back taxes on smokes.

    https://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,57657,00.html

    – In Like Flynt

    Never one to leave out a demographic, Hustler publisher Larry Flynt is apparently poised to go after the anti-war “war is obscene” crowd. A Hustler staffer will go with U.S. ground troops to Iraq. Flynt may have another infamous scratch-and-sniff issue in mind.

    Nor is his the only, uh, specialty outlet heading to the Middle East. MTV, Nickelodeon, and BET, among others, will be turned loose to produce stories relevant to their particular cohorts.

    This means that it might be possible to get radically different information about the conflict, depending on which primary source you choose. With so many potential “on the scene” reporters, the American public has a chance to be well-informed about the war. But with so many sources it will be particularly tricky to poll the public about any one aspect of the ongoing conflict. You might be asking about apples while they’ve read and watched oranges.

    https://www.msnbc.com/news/876126.asp?cp1=1

    Above articles are quoted from Reason Express reasonexpress@reason.com 2/25/03

    ”Roots (Food for Thought)”

    – They’re young – But Still Adults

    By Brian Doherty

    Associate editor, Reason magazine

    Assemblyman Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, has reintroduced a publicity-driven, needless bill to raise the smoking age in California to 21. If the bill passes, it would give California the highest smoking age in the nation. Currently in California and in 46 other states anyone 18 or over – that is, any adult – can legally buy and use tobacco (the smoking age is 19 in Alabama, Alaska and Utah).

    Over the past decade, the “war on tobacco” has increased in ferocity and casualties. We’ve seen increased taxes, advertising bans and huge jury awards against tobacco companies. Koretz defends his bill with standard rhetoric from this “war.” He argues that tobacco use eventually kills 400,000 Americans each year and that nearly 90 percent of smokers start their habit before age 21. On the surface, the gist of those arguments is true enough. But from that truth anti-smokers leap to many completely untrue suppositions. It is not true, for example, that you cannot stop smoking once you start. It isn’t true that people taking up smoking are unaware of the potential risks. It is not true that smoking on the whole costs “society” money above and beyond the costs borne by the individual smoker.

    It is true, though, that smoking can kill you and that most people start smoking when they are young.

    But it is the very truth at the heart of the anti-smoking crusade that should make all Americans nervous — if they value their liberty. Koretz says that because “our highest calling is to do things that save lives,” his bill is therefore justified. But this is a very dangerous legal philosophy for a limited government for a free people.

    Arguments of the “old enough to die for my country” variety may seem banal. But they express an important truth. The draft age is co-terminous with when we decide you are an adult citizen, with the rights and responsibilities thereof. Many 18-year-olds in the military are facing the possibility of heading to war in Iraq. If they are based in California, they wouldn’t be allowed to buy a pack of cigarettes — but we’ll send them across the globe to hunt down Saddam Hussein?

    Most Americans tend to believe that adults should have as much freedom as is compatible with not causing direct, provable harm to other people’s life or property. We have strayed far from this happy American principle of liberty, to be sure. For example, the drinking age is, thanks to the federal government’s threats to withhold highway funds, a uniform 21 across the nation. But such straying ought not be an excuse to give in to every other restriction on liberty that comes down the pike. The fact that smoking is such an unpopular liberty is all the more reason to fight fiercely for it. After all, it is the unpopular liberties that most need a principled defense.

    It is of course true that banning cigarette sales to a certain age group and preventing them from smoking are two very different things, but the restriction on freedom is still there nonetheless.
    There’s also one interesting wrinkle toward the end of Koretz’s bill, AB 221. Jails will be exempt. “The Director of Corrections may sell or supply tobacco” to any 16-year-old jailbird — with parental permission, of course.

    Drug law reformers have often noted the irony that not even in prisons can the government succeed in keeping out illegal drugs. Now prisoners ages 16 to 21 would officially be freer with regard to smoking than those of us outside, living in the outdoor prison that California increasingly resembles.

    Koretz’s arguments about the potential dangers of smoking are dangerously beside the point. So, for that matter, are arguments against the bill objecting only to the tax money California would lose in cigarette taxes — though a state in a budget crisis needs to think of such things.

    The real point: People over 18 years old are adult Americans. And if being an adult American means anything, it means being free to make decisions about one’s pleasures — and risks. That Koretz doesn’t see this means he doesn’t want to be our legal representative — he wants to be our daddy.

    And that’s the last thing adult Americans need, or want, from the government.

    Above article is quoted from Reason https://www.reason.com 2/26/03 gillespie@reason.com

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “If you are to stand up for your government you must be able to stand up to your government.” — Harold Caccia

    “An ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for the good of his country.” — Henry Wotton

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii. He can be reached at (808) 487-4959. For more information, see its Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    Grassroot Perspective – March 6, 2003-Treatment Denied: State Formularies and Cost Controls Restrict Access to Prescription Drugs; Smoke ’em if You Got ’em; In Like Flynt; They’re young – But Still Adults

    0

    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Treatment Denied: State Formularies and Cost Controls Restrict Access to Prescription Drugs

    Author: Linda Gorman
    Source: Washington Policy Center, 2/03

    Prescription drug formularies are a cost containment tool used by health-care payers that usually restrict the number and type of drugs covered, often favoring older and generic drugs. Many states have implemented restrictive formularies in an attempt to control Medicaid costs. But Linda Gorman of Colorado’s Independence Institute says that this may actually increase health care costs in the long run. “Because the Medicaid population is sicker than the general population, political attempts to arbitrarily cap prescription drug spending run the risk of sending other health care costs out of control.” A 1999 review of restrictive formularies by the National Pharmaceutical Council found that, “In general, formularies increase costs because overruling physician prescribing decisions increases the utilization of other forms of health care.” Additionally, physicians in Florida, which has a formulary, reported, “Medicaid patients were not getting the brand name medication that they needed, and that denials had resulted in negative clinical outcomes.”
    Full text: https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/HealthCare/PBGormanTreatmentDenied.html

    The revelation that drug formularies limit patient choice of needed drugs, decrease health outcomes, and lead to higher health care costs in the long run is not a new one. Dr. Susan Horn, senior scientist for the Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research in Utah, conducted a study of 13,000 patients from six HMOs, titled the Managed Care Outcomes Project. This study found that more restrictive drug formularies were correlated with an increase in patients’ use of more expensive medical services, treatment in emergency rooms and hospitals, and visits to doctors’ offices. Horn also recently co-authored a Heritage Foundation paper that found restrictive drug formularies have a greater negative impact on senior citizens than younger cohorts, a warning to those who would design a Medicare drug benefit.

    Above article is quoted from The Galen Institute https://www.galen.org 2/21/03

    – Smoke ’em if You Got ’em

    It had to happen. The great tax-free-tobacco window appears to be closing. States and localities have too much riding on their tobacco taxes to sit back and let Net sales escape the net. And consumers have way too much incentive, considering the draconian levels tobacco taxes have reached in some jurisdictions, to seek out tax-free sources.

    Now some tobacco-selling Web sites are beginning to comply with the Jenkins Act, passed in 1949, which requires tobacco sellers to report their sales. Sooner or later, some state is going take a tobacco hawker to court for its failure to comply with the act, so a few have gotten ahead of the curve.

    The states would then hit up the consumers for back taxes on smokes.

    https://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,57657,00.html

    – In Like Flynt

    Never one to leave out a demographic, Hustler publisher Larry Flynt is apparently poised to go after the anti-war “war is obscene” crowd. A Hustler staffer will go with U.S. ground troops to Iraq. Flynt may have another infamous scratch-and-sniff issue in mind.

    Nor is his the only, uh, specialty outlet heading to the Middle East. MTV, Nickelodeon, and BET, among others, will be turned loose to produce stories relevant to their particular cohorts.

    This means that it might be possible to get radically different information about the conflict, depending on which primary source you choose. With so many potential “on the scene” reporters, the American public has a chance to be well-informed about the war. But with so many sources it will be particularly tricky to poll the public about any one aspect of the ongoing conflict. You might be asking about apples while they’ve read and watched oranges.

    https://www.msnbc.com/news/876126.asp?cp1=1

    Above articles are quoted from Reason Express reasonexpress@reason.com 2/25/03

    ”Roots (Food for Thought)”

    – They’re young – But Still Adults

    By Brian Doherty

    Associate editor, Reason magazine

    Assemblyman Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, has reintroduced a publicity-driven, needless bill to raise the smoking age in California to 21. If the bill passes, it would give California the highest smoking age in the nation. Currently in California and in 46 other states anyone 18 or over – that is, any adult – can legally buy and use tobacco (the smoking age is 19 in Alabama, Alaska and Utah).

    Over the past decade, the “war on tobacco” has increased in ferocity and casualties. We’ve seen increased taxes, advertising bans and huge jury awards against tobacco companies. Koretz defends his bill with standard rhetoric from this “war.” He argues that tobacco use eventually kills 400,000 Americans each year and that nearly 90 percent of smokers start their habit before age 21. On the surface, the gist of those arguments is true enough. But from that truth anti-smokers leap to many completely untrue suppositions. It is not true, for example, that you cannot stop smoking once you start. It isn’t true that people taking up smoking are unaware of the potential risks. It is not true that smoking on the whole costs “society” money above and beyond the costs borne by the individual smoker.

    It is true, though, that smoking can kill you and that most people start smoking when they are young.

    But it is the very truth at the heart of the anti-smoking crusade that should make all Americans nervous — if they value their liberty. Koretz says that because “our highest calling is to do things that save lives,” his bill is therefore justified. But this is a very dangerous legal philosophy for a limited government for a free people.

    Arguments of the “old enough to die for my country” variety may seem banal. But they express an important truth. The draft age is co-terminous with when we decide you are an adult citizen, with the rights and responsibilities thereof. Many 18-year-olds in the military are facing the possibility of heading to war in Iraq. If they are based in California, they wouldn’t be allowed to buy a pack of cigarettes — but we’ll send them across the globe to hunt down Saddam Hussein?

    Most Americans tend to believe that adults should have as much freedom as is compatible with not causing direct, provable harm to other people’s life or property. We have strayed far from this happy American principle of liberty, to be sure. For example, the drinking age is, thanks to the federal government’s threats to withhold highway funds, a uniform 21 across the nation. But such straying ought not be an excuse to give in to every other restriction on liberty that comes down the pike. The fact that smoking is such an unpopular liberty is all the more reason to fight fiercely for it. After all, it is the unpopular liberties that most need a principled defense.

    It is of course true that banning cigarette sales to a certain age group and preventing them from smoking are two very different things, but the restriction on freedom is still there nonetheless.
    There’s also one interesting wrinkle toward the end of Koretz’s bill, AB 221. Jails will be exempt. “The Director of Corrections may sell or supply tobacco” to any 16-year-old jailbird — with parental permission, of course.

    Drug law reformers have often noted the irony that not even in prisons can the government succeed in keeping out illegal drugs. Now prisoners ages 16 to 21 would officially be freer with regard to smoking than those of us outside, living in the outdoor prison that California increasingly resembles.

    Koretz’s arguments about the potential dangers of smoking are dangerously beside the point. So, for that matter, are arguments against the bill objecting only to the tax money California would lose in cigarette taxes — though a state in a budget crisis needs to think of such things.

    The real point: People over 18 years old are adult Americans. And if being an adult American means anything, it means being free to make decisions about one’s pleasures — and risks. That Koretz doesn’t see this means he doesn’t want to be our legal representative — he wants to be our daddy.

    And that’s the last thing adult Americans need, or want, from the government.

    Above article is quoted from Reason https://www.reason.com 2/26/03 gillespie@reason.com

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “If you are to stand up for your government you must be able to stand up to your government.” — Harold Caccia

    “An ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for the good of his country.” — Henry Wotton

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii. He can be reached at (808) 487-4959. For more information, see its Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    Learning to Respect Oneself

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    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    ”Self-Respect – Isn’t it Arrogant?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    I am a 55-year-old male and a recovering alcoholic for a while now. I hear all the time that I must learn self-respect so I don’t use booze to help me feel good. Isn’t it arrogant to respect me? Isn’t the right way to be respectful to other people?

    Recovering

    A: Dr. Gelb says . . .

    Dear Recovering:

    People who have no self-respect are not likely to experience self-pride and self-love. They will probably go through life feeling like a T-shirt with the footprints on it — people tend to walk all over them. Without self-respect it is difficult to respect others. Instead we are more likely to fear others. It is also difficult to achieve anything of importance without self-respect, self-worth and self-love, because these three components of the personality support the aggressive aspect of one’s nature to achieve things. Procrastinators also tend to suffer from lack of self-respect.

    If I were you I’d be very proud of myself and my achievements. As the saying goes, “Let no man put you down.” And then of course, “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words shall never harm me.”

    ”Unique – Why Can’t I be me?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    I’m a graduate student and some of my courses require me to be extroverted. It’s hard for me to express something in front of a group of my classmates and the Prof. I don’t have a problem being creative, but why do I get so worried about whether the group that’s watching me is disapproving of me.

    Approval-Seeker

    A: Dr. Gelb says . . .

    Dear Approval-Seeker:

    So many people struggle with the issues you describe, and “Me” is probably lost in all that fear, guilt, shame and inhibition that they are wallowing in. One of the most destructive fears is that of what others will think of us — the fear, for example, that others may judge or criticize us. I believe that it is possible to get a good light burning and walk into this darkness and find “me,” who is probably a scared little child. But with the adult’s strong light it is possible to find the child in the dark, and the moment the adult shines the light in the child’s face, this little person is likely to discover self-love, self-pride and self-respect, and can walk out of the dark with the adult, never again to be afraid of others and what they may think. This child can learn to turn ignorance into knowledge, to be curious about things and to challenge difficult tasks. And as the song says, “This little light of mine, I’m going to let it shine. … This little light of mine, I’m going to let it shine. …”

    Answers to questions in today’s column can be supplemented with excerpts from “Yesterday’s Children” (Q1-2: p. 12) written by psychologists Marti Barham, R.N., Ph.D. and Tom Greene, Ph.D. For more information visit my Web site at https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    ”’Suzanne J. Gelb, Ph.D., J.D. authors this daily column, Dr. Gelb Says, which answers questions about daily living and behavior issues. Dr. Gelb is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Honolulu. She holds a Ph.D. in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Human Services. Dr. Gelb is also a published author of a book on Overcoming Addictions and a book on Relationships.”’

    ”’This column is intended for entertainment use only and is not intended for the purpose of psychological diagnosis, treatment or personalized advice. For more about the column’s purpose, see”’ “An Online Intro to Dr. Gelb Says”

    ”’Email your questions to mailto:DrGelbSays@hawaiireporter.com More information on Dr. Gelb’s services and related resources available at”’ https://www.DrGelbSays.com

    Family, Friends, Community Rally for America-Those Pro-America, Pro-Military, Pro-President Gather in Kailua to Send a Message

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    Kathy Hashimoto watched her husband, 1st Force Recon Marine Major Mark Hashimoto, depart for Kuwait in preparation for a possible war in Iraq. Mark left behind not only his wife Kathy, but also his two young daughters, Elizabeth, 3 and Marie, 1. However the family believes the sacrifice being made is of the utmost importance to the safety and freedom of all Americans, and they make the sacrifice with a deep understanding of true patriotism and pride.

    As if it isn’t difficult enough to be apart from family and friends, Mark and many others in the U.S. military are being bombarded by anti-war propaganda played up by the American media, spun so it seems everyone in America is against the president and the U.S. military.

    “RFA Flag with Mountain centered”

    Kathy, and her friends who also have spouses in the military overseas, say they are growing sick of watching the American media and many liberals bash the United States, the military and President George W. Bush.

    “The anti-Americanism was really overrated and over-reported,” Kathy says. “I am not ashamed of our country. I am proud to be patriotic and so are many other people in our country.”

    “RFA Jan Kaeo centered”

    Kathy says she and other military spouses want their loved ones and others in the U.S. military to know that not all of America is against them and their action in the Middle East, rather the majority of Americans do support the president and his efforts to stomp out terrorism.

    “RFA Children centered”

    So Kathy, her sister Julianne Barcia, and her friend Jessica Mace, also married to men in the military, coordinated a “Pro-America Rally” to counter some of the bias and misinformation perpetuated in the national and local media.

    They created pro-troops and pro-American signs, brought U.S. flags, played patriotic music and decorated Kailua’s Pohakupu Park with red, white and blue balloons. The rally, held this afternoon, attracted more than 300 participants, including state legislators, community members, military personnel and their families.

    “We had a really good turnout. People we didn’t even know or talk to beforehand learned about the rally and just showed up,” Kathy says.

    “RFA Family at Rally centered”

    Kathy also was relieved there was no violence on the part of the “party crashers”

    Hero or Scoundrel – You Vote – Senate President Robert Bunda, D-North Shore-Bunda Pushes Legislation to Allow Landfill to be Built Over Oahu's Main Aquifer That Supplies Drinking Water to Up to 90 Percent of Oahu's People

    0

    Senate President Robert Bunda, D-North Shore, is lobbying his 24 fellow state Senators to pass a bill — SB 1532 — that will allow the construction of a landfill over Hawaii’s main aquifer in Kunia, which supplies drinking water to up to 90 percent of Oahu’s 1 million residents.

    Bunda reportedly told his fellow Senators the landfill is safe and will not contaminate the drinking water source for Hawaii. However, experts from such government agencies as the state Department of Health, the city Board of Water Supply, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and others, are adamantly against the plan.

    There has surprisingly been little publicity on the bill, in part because of how Senate leadership has carefully directed the progression of this legislation.

    The bill moved quickly and quietly through the state Senate, and in an unusual turn of events, skipped the Environment and Government Affairs committees where it was scheduled to be heard, and instead was re-referred to the Water Land and Agriculture. That committee, headed by one of Bunda’s loyalists, voted to pass the bill out to the full Senate for a vote, with three committee members in favor and two opposed.

    The bill will pass Thursday to the House –

    Hero or Scoundrel – You Vote – Senate President Robert Bunda, D-North Shore-Bunda Pushes Legislation to Allow Landfill to be Built Over Oahu’s Main Aquifer That Supplies Drinking Water to Up to 90 Percent of Oahu’s People

    0

    Senate President Robert Bunda, D-North Shore, is lobbying his 24 fellow state Senators to pass a bill — SB 1532 — that will allow the construction of a landfill over Hawaii’s main aquifer in Kunia, which supplies drinking water to up to 90 percent of Oahu’s 1 million residents.

    Bunda reportedly told his fellow Senators the landfill is safe and will not contaminate the drinking water source for Hawaii. However, experts from such government agencies as the state Department of Health, the city Board of Water Supply, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and others, are adamantly against the plan.

    There has surprisingly been little publicity on the bill, in part because of how Senate leadership has carefully directed the progression of this legislation.

    The bill moved quickly and quietly through the state Senate, and in an unusual turn of events, skipped the Environment and Government Affairs committees where it was scheduled to be heard, and instead was re-referred to the Water Land and Agriculture. That committee, headed by one of Bunda’s loyalists, voted to pass the bill out to the full Senate for a vote, with three committee members in favor and two opposed.

    The bill will pass Thursday to the House –

    Senate Debates Proposals to Build Landfill Over Pipeline to 90 Percent of Oahu's Drinking Water-Bill Will be Voted on Thursday

    0

    The 25 members of the Hawaii State Senate yesterday voted to pass an amendment to one of the most controversial bills of the session –

    Senate Debates Proposals to Build Landfill Over Pipeline to 90 Percent of Oahu’s Drinking Water-Bill Will be Voted on Thursday

    0

    The 25 members of the Hawaii State Senate yesterday voted to pass an amendment to one of the most controversial bills of the session –

    Let the People Decide on Local School Boards

    “Galen Fox Image”

    True education reform remains the number one issue before state Legislators. The House Republicans believe, as Gov. Linda Lingle and 75 percent of Hawaii’s people do, that the key to education reform is the creation of local school boards.

    Although the Democrats killed the governor’s bill designed to create local boards in committee, the concept remains alive. We have many friends across the aisles who believe as we do and we want to reach out to them to join us on the road to true educational reform in Hawaii.

    The facts show that smaller school districts are better for students than one large centralized district. State School Board Member Laura Thielen recently reported that various studies show states, including Georgia, Montana, Ohio, Texas, West Virginia, California and Washington state, found that large school districts are detrimental to student achievement. About one-half of Hawaii’s public schools are from low-income families. Local school boards would benefit them most.

    Despite multiple studies available to lawmakers and the state Department of Education proving smaller school districts benefit students, there are some people who have a vested interest in seeing the present system remains unchanged. They have testified against the Governor’s proposal and have issued false numbers about how much decentralizing would cost the taxpayers.

    They have even offered their own vision of decentralization that calls for 15 appointed advisory boards throughout the state, but they neglected to mention any costs.

    Former state Board of Education Member Kelly King of Maui, says the only reason the Board of Education is rushing to reinstate the advisory council system is “because they think it will pacify the public” who want elected school boards. The problem with this, she says, is the state already has tried advisory boards in the past and they were ineffective because fellow Board of Education members “ignored and devalued them.” Ms. King says the value of having actual local control, is accountability is much greater.

    In 1991, the Legislature passed and then Gov. John Waihee signed Act 332, which created a blue ribbon task force to conduct public information meetings across the state to discuss and debate the governance structure of public education in Hawaii and report its findings and recommendations to the Legislature.

    The task force submitted its final report to the 1992 session after scores of community meetings and an extensive survey. The task force members voted 11 to 2 to recommend the elimination of the existing statewide Board of Education in favor of elected county boards. Somehow, those in power with vested interest n the current system managed to scuttle every attempt to get this proposition on the ballot for the next general election to let the people decide.

    The 15-member task force was comprised of educators, parents, business people and was chaired by Lt. Gov. Benjamin Cayetano. Now, Gov. Cayetano’s successor is similarly committed to local elected school boards.

    The issue is true reform, and the answer is to break up the only statewide school district in the nation.

    ”’Rep. Galen Fox, R-Waikiki, is the House Minority Leader and can be reached at:”’ mailto:repfox@capitol.hawaii.gov