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    Grassroot Perspective – April 24, 2003-Health Care Interventionism: A Case Study; A Retrospective on Johnson's Poverty War; How Not to Be Poor; Social Security And Stockmarket Risk

    0

    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Health Care Interventionism: A Case Study

    By Christopher Westley

    Ludwig von Mises Institute

    We are often told that 40 million Americans lack health insurance, and
    that this is a scandal caused by greedy health care providers in the
    private sector constantly raising health care costs. This simply must be
    true because it is told to us by Those Who Care. Of course, there is
    much more to this story than the storytellers let on. Many of the
    uninsured are uninsured by choice, and not by necessity. Health care
    costs rise in response to providers trying to recover losses emanating
    from government interventions into an alarmingly socialized medical
    industry. (That prices tend to fall in industries marked by scant
    intervention leads one to the conclusion that if “public servants”
    really cared about helping the poor and sick, they would simply go
    away.)

    CONTACT: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL
    36832, 334/321-2100, fax 334/321-2119, email mailto:mail@mises.org
    https://www.mises.org.

    – A Retrospective on Johnson’s Poverty War

    By Adam Young

    Ludwig von Mises Institute

    Only mass production can raise the standard of living for the masses and
    eliminate poverty. Government can never reduce poverty since it does not
    produce, but only consumes and squanders wealth. Lyndon Johnson’s silly
    “war” on poverty impoverished those it claimed to help and impoverished
    all Americans with lost opportunities and lost liberty by weakening and
    obstructing those institutions that encourage, facilitate and reward
    productivity and exchange. The War on Poverty was in reality a State
    sponsored war on the opportunities of the poor and on all Americans.

    CONTACT: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL
    36832, 334/321-2100, fax 334/321-2119, email mailto:mail@mises.org
    https://www.mises.org.

    – How Not to Be Poor

    By Blake Bailey

    Brief Analysis No. 428, National Center for Policy Analysis

    About 31 million Americans live in households with incomes below the
    poverty level, according to the latest U.S. Census data. Poverty is more
    than a lack of income. It is also the consequence of specific behaviors
    and decisions. The 2001 Census data clearly show that dropping out of
    high school, staying single, having children without a spouse, working
    only part time or not working at all substantially increase the chances
    of long-term poverty. Certain behaviors are a recipe for success. Among
    those who finish high school, get married, have children only within a
    marriage and go to work, the odds of long-term poverty are virtually
    nil.

    CONTACT: National Center for Policy Analysis, 12655 N. Central Expy.,
    Suite 720, Dallas, TX 75243, 972/386-6272, fax 972/386-0924,
    https://www.ncpa.org.

    – Social Security And Stockmarket Risk

    By Matt Moore

    Brief Analysis No. 429, National Center for Policy Analysis

    Over the long term, stock market investment can provide the foundation
    for a safe and secure retirement. Over the lowest-earning 35-year period
    in history, the market’s average annual rate of return was 2.7 percent
    per year. Even workers retiring in a year equal to this worst-oftimes
    scenario would receive benefits greater than the current Social Security
    system can afford to pay them.

    CONTACT: National Center for Policy Analysis, 12655 N. Central Expy.,
    Suite 720, Dallas, TX 75243, fax 972/386-6272, 972/386-0924,
    https://www.ncpa.org.

    Above articles are quoted from Heritage Foundation, The Insider February
    2003 https://www.heritage.org

    ”Roots (Food for Thought)”

    New York Times Calls for Return of DDT

    Author: James M. Taylor

    Published: The Heartland Institute 02/01/2003

    By virtually all accounts, the New York Times is one of the most liberal
    mainstream newspapers in the United States. That is why a house
    editorial in the December 22 edition has created quite a stir.

    “The world is losing the war against malaria,” states the Times’ unnamed
    editorial writer. “Malaria today kills more than a million people a year
    in Africa alone. One reason is that wealthy nations have limited the use
    of one of the best weapons, a pesticide that once saved hundreds of
    millions of lives.”

    That weapon is DDT.

    “Very little DDT is needed to spray houses twice a year,” added the
    Times. “The evidence about DDT’s effects on humans is inconclusive. The
    uncertainties must be weighed against a demonstrated effectiveness in
    fighting a disease that now kills 1 in 20 African children. DDT also
    costs one-quarter the price of the alternative, pyrethroids.”

    Until an effective substitute for DDT is found, argues the Times,
    “wealthy nations should be helping poor countries with all available
    means — including DDT.”

    A Life-Saving Chemical

    During World War II, American scientists adapted a Swiss moth-killing
    chemical into the single most effective weapon ever invented in the war
    against mosquitoes. The development and widespread use of DDT saved
    millions of lives worldwide and won its inventor a Nobel Prize.

    In the 1960s and 1970s, however, public relations campaigns launched by
    anti-chemical activist groups scapegoated DDT for such alleged harms as
    cancer in humans and weakened egg shells and declining bird populations.
    Scientific research discredited those claims. An EPA administrative law
    judge held as much shortly before the agency nevertheless gave in to
    special-interest pressure and banned DDT in 1972.

    “DDT is not a carcinogenic hazard to man,” concluded the judge after
    seven months of hearings and 9,000 pages of testimony. “DDT is not a
    mutagenic or teratogenic hazard to man. … The use of DDT under the
    regulations involved here does not have a deleterious effect on
    freshwater fish, estuarine organisms, wild birds, or other wildlife.”

    The EPA judge’s conclusions followed directly on the heels of a report
    by the National Academy of Sciences, which concluded: “To only a few
    chemicals does man owe as great a debt as to DDT. … [I]n a little more
    than two decades, DDT has prevented 500 million deaths due to malaria
    that otherwise would have been inevitable.”

    DDT Still Needed

    Although the use of DDT effectively eliminated malaria in the United
    States and other developed countries before falling victim to
    environmental activist groups, the children of third-world countries
    have not been so lucky. With DDT use limited by pressure from
    environmental activist groups, 1 in every 20 children dies from malaria
    in sub-Sahara Africa, according to Steven Milloy, adjunct scholar at the
    Cato Institute.

    Malaria and other previously defeated diseases are returning to the U.S.
    in the absence of DDT spraying. “About 1,200 cases of malaria are
    diagnosed in the U.S. each year,” noted Henry Miller, a fellow at the
    Hoover Institution, “and it won’t be long until West Nile virus
    infections far exceed that level.”

    “The practices of environmental advocacy groups are seriously degrading
    public health capabilities in the United States. Our public health
    threats are real, and growing,” said Donald Roberts, professor of
    tropical public health at the Uniformed Services University of the
    Health Sciences.

    It’s one thing for scientists to rebut the claims of anti-pesticide
    activist groups; it’s quite another for the New York Times to do so.

    “Today, malaria control relies mainly on insecticide-treated bed nets
    and drugs, most of which have lost effectiveness as malaria grows
    resistant,” states the New York Times. “DDT, which is sprayed on the
    inside walls of houses twice a year, is used in only about 24 countries.
    Wealthy nations that banned DDT at home will not pay for its use
    elsewhere. But the poorest nations depend on such donations. America
    used DDT to eradicate malaria, as did southern Europe and India.”

    James M. Taylor is managing editor of Environment & Climate News.

    Above article is quoted from Heartland Institute, Environment & Climate
    News February 2003 https://www.heartland.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “The quality of a university is measured more by the kind of student it
    turns out than the kind it takes in.” — Robert Kibbee

    “Our major universities are now stuck with an army of pedestrian,
    toadying careerists, Fifties types who wave around Sixties banners to
    conceal their record of ruthless, beaverlike tunneling to the top.”
    — Camille Paglia

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

    Grassroot Perspective – April 24, 2003-Health Care Interventionism: A Case Study; A Retrospective on Johnson’s Poverty War; How Not to Be Poor; Social Security And Stockmarket Risk

    0

    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    – Health Care Interventionism: A Case Study

    By Christopher Westley

    Ludwig von Mises Institute

    We are often told that 40 million Americans lack health insurance, and
    that this is a scandal caused by greedy health care providers in the
    private sector constantly raising health care costs. This simply must be
    true because it is told to us by Those Who Care. Of course, there is
    much more to this story than the storytellers let on. Many of the
    uninsured are uninsured by choice, and not by necessity. Health care
    costs rise in response to providers trying to recover losses emanating
    from government interventions into an alarmingly socialized medical
    industry. (That prices tend to fall in industries marked by scant
    intervention leads one to the conclusion that if “public servants”
    really cared about helping the poor and sick, they would simply go
    away.)

    CONTACT: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL
    36832, 334/321-2100, fax 334/321-2119, email mailto:mail@mises.org
    https://www.mises.org.

    – A Retrospective on Johnson’s Poverty War

    By Adam Young

    Ludwig von Mises Institute

    Only mass production can raise the standard of living for the masses and
    eliminate poverty. Government can never reduce poverty since it does not
    produce, but only consumes and squanders wealth. Lyndon Johnson’s silly
    “war” on poverty impoverished those it claimed to help and impoverished
    all Americans with lost opportunities and lost liberty by weakening and
    obstructing those institutions that encourage, facilitate and reward
    productivity and exchange. The War on Poverty was in reality a State
    sponsored war on the opportunities of the poor and on all Americans.

    CONTACT: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL
    36832, 334/321-2100, fax 334/321-2119, email mailto:mail@mises.org
    https://www.mises.org.

    – How Not to Be Poor

    By Blake Bailey

    Brief Analysis No. 428, National Center for Policy Analysis

    About 31 million Americans live in households with incomes below the
    poverty level, according to the latest U.S. Census data. Poverty is more
    than a lack of income. It is also the consequence of specific behaviors
    and decisions. The 2001 Census data clearly show that dropping out of
    high school, staying single, having children without a spouse, working
    only part time or not working at all substantially increase the chances
    of long-term poverty. Certain behaviors are a recipe for success. Among
    those who finish high school, get married, have children only within a
    marriage and go to work, the odds of long-term poverty are virtually
    nil.

    CONTACT: National Center for Policy Analysis, 12655 N. Central Expy.,
    Suite 720, Dallas, TX 75243, 972/386-6272, fax 972/386-0924,
    https://www.ncpa.org.

    – Social Security And Stockmarket Risk

    By Matt Moore

    Brief Analysis No. 429, National Center for Policy Analysis

    Over the long term, stock market investment can provide the foundation
    for a safe and secure retirement. Over the lowest-earning 35-year period
    in history, the market’s average annual rate of return was 2.7 percent
    per year. Even workers retiring in a year equal to this worst-oftimes
    scenario would receive benefits greater than the current Social Security
    system can afford to pay them.

    CONTACT: National Center for Policy Analysis, 12655 N. Central Expy.,
    Suite 720, Dallas, TX 75243, fax 972/386-6272, 972/386-0924,
    https://www.ncpa.org.

    Above articles are quoted from Heritage Foundation, The Insider February
    2003 https://www.heritage.org

    ”Roots (Food for Thought)”

    New York Times Calls for Return of DDT

    Author: James M. Taylor

    Published: The Heartland Institute 02/01/2003

    By virtually all accounts, the New York Times is one of the most liberal
    mainstream newspapers in the United States. That is why a house
    editorial in the December 22 edition has created quite a stir.

    “The world is losing the war against malaria,” states the Times’ unnamed
    editorial writer. “Malaria today kills more than a million people a year
    in Africa alone. One reason is that wealthy nations have limited the use
    of one of the best weapons, a pesticide that once saved hundreds of
    millions of lives.”

    That weapon is DDT.

    “Very little DDT is needed to spray houses twice a year,” added the
    Times. “The evidence about DDT’s effects on humans is inconclusive. The
    uncertainties must be weighed against a demonstrated effectiveness in
    fighting a disease that now kills 1 in 20 African children. DDT also
    costs one-quarter the price of the alternative, pyrethroids.”

    Until an effective substitute for DDT is found, argues the Times,
    “wealthy nations should be helping poor countries with all available
    means — including DDT.”

    A Life-Saving Chemical

    During World War II, American scientists adapted a Swiss moth-killing
    chemical into the single most effective weapon ever invented in the war
    against mosquitoes. The development and widespread use of DDT saved
    millions of lives worldwide and won its inventor a Nobel Prize.

    In the 1960s and 1970s, however, public relations campaigns launched by
    anti-chemical activist groups scapegoated DDT for such alleged harms as
    cancer in humans and weakened egg shells and declining bird populations.
    Scientific research discredited those claims. An EPA administrative law
    judge held as much shortly before the agency nevertheless gave in to
    special-interest pressure and banned DDT in 1972.

    “DDT is not a carcinogenic hazard to man,” concluded the judge after
    seven months of hearings and 9,000 pages of testimony. “DDT is not a
    mutagenic or teratogenic hazard to man. … The use of DDT under the
    regulations involved here does not have a deleterious effect on
    freshwater fish, estuarine organisms, wild birds, or other wildlife.”

    The EPA judge’s conclusions followed directly on the heels of a report
    by the National Academy of Sciences, which concluded: “To only a few
    chemicals does man owe as great a debt as to DDT. … [I]n a little more
    than two decades, DDT has prevented 500 million deaths due to malaria
    that otherwise would have been inevitable.”

    DDT Still Needed

    Although the use of DDT effectively eliminated malaria in the United
    States and other developed countries before falling victim to
    environmental activist groups, the children of third-world countries
    have not been so lucky. With DDT use limited by pressure from
    environmental activist groups, 1 in every 20 children dies from malaria
    in sub-Sahara Africa, according to Steven Milloy, adjunct scholar at the
    Cato Institute.

    Malaria and other previously defeated diseases are returning to the U.S.
    in the absence of DDT spraying. “About 1,200 cases of malaria are
    diagnosed in the U.S. each year,” noted Henry Miller, a fellow at the
    Hoover Institution, “and it won’t be long until West Nile virus
    infections far exceed that level.”

    “The practices of environmental advocacy groups are seriously degrading
    public health capabilities in the United States. Our public health
    threats are real, and growing,” said Donald Roberts, professor of
    tropical public health at the Uniformed Services University of the
    Health Sciences.

    It’s one thing for scientists to rebut the claims of anti-pesticide
    activist groups; it’s quite another for the New York Times to do so.

    “Today, malaria control relies mainly on insecticide-treated bed nets
    and drugs, most of which have lost effectiveness as malaria grows
    resistant,” states the New York Times. “DDT, which is sprayed on the
    inside walls of houses twice a year, is used in only about 24 countries.
    Wealthy nations that banned DDT at home will not pay for its use
    elsewhere. But the poorest nations depend on such donations. America
    used DDT to eradicate malaria, as did southern Europe and India.”

    James M. Taylor is managing editor of Environment & Climate News.

    Above article is quoted from Heartland Institute, Environment & Climate
    News February 2003 https://www.heartland.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quotes)”

    “The quality of a university is measured more by the kind of student it
    turns out than the kind it takes in.” — Robert Kibbee

    “Our major universities are now stuck with an army of pedestrian,
    toadying careerists, Fifties types who wave around Sixties banners to
    conceal their record of ruthless, beaverlike tunneling to the top.”
    — Camille Paglia

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

    From Breaking up to Being Smothered

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    “Suzanne Gelb Image”

    ”Breaking Up – Why Can’t I?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    I want to break up with my boyfriend and he won’t take no for an answer. Every time I talk to him about it, he talks me out of it. What can I say that will stick?

    Trying

    Dear Trying:

    In some instances, when a person wants to end a relationship and has trouble “getting the message across” to his/her friend, it is important that the individual make sure that s/he truly wants to end the relationship. That being the case, it is necessary to put a period at the end of the statement. If the person still receives calls from the friend, it is probably appropriate to remind them that, “I no longer want a relationship with you. It is over.”

    “Please don’t call me anymore,” said one former girlfriend in such a situation. After that her boyfriend continued to call and make contact, at which point she said nothing and hung up. That worked for a while because he stopped calling. But then the calling resumed, and so she changed her phone number. Good luck.

    ”Smothered – Why Won’t She Let Me Be?”

    Dear Dr. Gelb:

    My girlfriend is possessive and wants to spend every minute with me. On those few times that I socialize with my buddies without her, she calls me on my cell phone to check up on me all the time. If I turn my cell off, she calls my friends to check up on me. I love her, but this is too much. How can I get her to back off?

    Smothered

    Dear Smothered:

    It is interesting to evaluate the meaning of “too much.” When two people are serious about each other, they tend to want to be a part of each other’s lives as much as possible. There is a difference between sharing friendship and being in a committed relationship. If the goal is just to be friends, then the time spent together would be different from the time spent with a girlfriend or boyfriend, where there is an assumed commitment. It is important to keep this difference in mind when developing relationships.

    ”’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

    Legislative Hearing Notices – April 24, 2003

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    The following hearing notices, which are subject to change, were sorted and taken from the Hawaii State Capitol Web site. Please check that site for updates and/or changes to the schedule at

    “Hawaii State Legislature Sidebar”

    Go there and click on the Hearing Date to view the Hearing Notice.

    Hearings notices for both House and Senate measures in all committees:

    Hearing

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 9:00 AM HB133 HD1 SD3 RELATING TO CHILD PROTECTION. CONFERENCE

    4/24/03 9:00 AM SB1495 SD1 HD1 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR THE HAWAII DROUGHT PLAN. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM339 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Board of Public Accountancy, Gubernatorial Nominee LINDA D. HAMILTON, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM340 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Board of Public Accountancy, Gubernatorial Nominee REBECCA S. WILLIAMS, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM341 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Acupuncture, Gubernatorial Nominee GARY K. SAITO, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM342 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Acupuncture, Gubernatorial Nominee MIKE HASHIMOTO, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM356 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Electricians and Plumbers, Gubernatorial Nominee KEVIN H.M. CHONG KEE, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM357 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Professional Engineers, Architects, Surveyors, and Landscape Architects, Gubernatorial Nominee PETER T. DYER, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM358 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Professional Engineers, Architects, Surveyors, and Landscape Architects, Gubernatorial Nominee RANDALL M. HASHIMOTO, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM359 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Professional Engineers, Architects, Surveyors, and Landscape Architects, Gubernatorial Nominee SHAWN USHIJIMA, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM373 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Medical Examiners, Gubernatorial Nominee WENDELL K.S. FOO, MD, for a term to expire 06-30-06 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM374 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Medical Examiners, Gubernatorial Nominee RONALD H. KIENITZ, DO, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM375 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Medical Examiners, Gubernatorial Nominee PETER A. MATSUURA, MD, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    4/24/03 9:15 AM GM376 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Medical Examiners, Gubernatorial Nominee JOHN T. McDONNELL, MD, for a term to expire 06-30-07 CPH

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 10:00 AM HB507 HD3 SD1 RELATING TO EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIANS. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 10:30 AM HB391 HD2 SD2 RELATING TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM274 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, Gubernatorial Nominee BYRON W. BENDER, for a term to expire 06-30-07. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM275 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, Gubernatorial Nominee SHELTON G.W. JIM ON, for a term to expire 06-30-07. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM276 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, Gubernatorial Nominee TRENT K. KAKUDA, for a term to expire 06-30-05. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM277 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, Gubernatorial Nominee CATHERINE LAGARETA, for a term to expire 06-30-07. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM278 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, Gubernatorial Nominee EDWARD D. SULTAN, for a term to expire 06-30-07. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM279 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Board of Regents of the University of Hawai`i, ALVIN TANAKA, for a term to expire 06-30-07. EDU

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM370 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Statewide Independent Living Council, Gubernatorial Nominee KENNETH TERUYA AKINAKA, MRA, for a term to expire 06-30-06 HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM371 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the Statewide Independent Living Council, Gubernatorial Nominee PATRICIA LOCKWOOD, for a term to expire 06-30-07 HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM416 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee RENE BERTHIAUME, for a term to expire 06-30-06. HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM417 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee GENE R. DESCALZI, for a term to expire 06-30-06. HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM418 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee NANCY G. KINGHORN, for a term to expire 06-30-06. HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM419 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee RICHARD W. SMITH, for a term to expire 06-30-06. HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM420 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee VIRGINIA G. TOMPKINS, for a term to expire 06-30-04. HMS

    4/24/03 1:00 PM GM421 Submitting for consideration and confirmation to the State Rehabilitation Council, Gubernatorial Nominee BARBARA J. WARD, for a term to expire 06-30-04. HMS

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 2:00 PM SB317 SD2 HD1 MAKING AN APPROPRIATION FOR THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY COMMEMORATION OF THE KOREAN WAR COMMISSION. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 4:00 PM SB1394 SD2 HD1 RELATING TO CONFORMITY OF THE HAWAII INCOME TAX LAW TO THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE. CONFERENCE

    4/24/03 4:00 PM SB1397 SD1 HD2 RELATING TO SIMPLIFIED TAX ADMINISTRATION. CONFERENCE

    4/24/03 4:00 PM SB1400 SD1 HD1 RELATING TO TAX ADMINISTRATION. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 4:15 PM HB851 HD1 SD1 RELATING TO TAXATION APPEALS. CONFERENCE

    4/24/03 4:15 PM HB1154 HD1 SD2 RELATING TO UNCLAIMED PROPERTY. CONFERENCE

    ”Date Time Bill Number Measure Title Committee”

    4/24/03 4:30 PM HB1300 HD2 SD2 RELATING TO THE BUDGET OF THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS. CONFERENCE

    ”’To reach legislators, see:”’ “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance”

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii's Political Arena – April 23, 2003-Hack Attack; Improving Hawaii's Worst-in-the-Nation Business Climate; Rocky Road Ahead for Pot Hole Filling Mayor; Taxes, Taxes and More Taxes; Satellite City Halls, Parties Targeted in City Budget Crunch; Director Will Ask Governor to Veto Reform Bill; Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”Hack Attack”

    First an apology to our readers who attempted over the last couple of
    days to log onto HawaiiReporter.com. For the third time in a year,
    HawaiiReporter.com was targeted by a hacker. Good news, the security,
    which already was extremely tight, has been upgraded substantially to
    foil future hack attacks.

    The information on this and previous attacks has been turned over to
    federal authorities who oversee a special unit that investigates
    these kinds of incidents and prosecutes those responsible. These same
    federal authorities have successfully tracked and prosecuted hackers,
    including one recent case where an individual named Jason Starr, 23,
    of Erie, Penn., allegedly targeted OhanaNet, a Hawaii corporation
    with this Internet address and caused $8,352 in damages. If
    convicted, Starr faces a maximum term of one year in prison, a fine
    of $100,000 and restitution to the victims.

    Second, thanks to readers who have sent in emails expressing their
    concern over the temporary downing of HawaiiReporter.com.

    ”Improving Hawaii’s Worst-in-the-Nation Business Climate”

    Hawaii is rated as having one of the worst business climates in the nation.

    Ted Liu, director of the Department of Business, Economic Development
    and Tourism, will discuss what he plans to do to improve that poor
    rating at the Small Business Hawaii Sunrise Breakfast meeting
    sponsored by the Copy Shop in Hawaii Kai.

    The meeting, which is open to the public, is scheduled for tomorrow
    morning, Thursday, April 24, at Alan Wong’s Pineapple Room in Macy’s
    Ala Moana from 7 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. Call 396-1724 for more information
    and reservations.

    ”Rocky Road Ahead for Pot Hole Filling Mayor”

    When Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris was first elected in 1994, Oahu’s
    roads were in pretty good shape. Then Mayor Frank Fasi made sure of
    that by repairing more than 250 “road” miles per year.

    However, Harris, who was elected in 1994 and began serving his first
    4-year term in 1995, touting the theme that his administration was
    “doing more with less,” did not see the value in keeping up with the
    aggressive repair and maintenance schedule.

    Harris reduced substantially the number of road miles repaired
    annually over nearly a decade from 250 miles to just around 40 miles.
    That neglect caught up to him this year when Hawaii was ranked as
    having the worst roads in the nation.

    Former Mayor Frank Fasi says instead of paving the roads, Harris
    simply filled pot holes in the road. “All he did was patch, patch,
    patch,” Fasi says.

    Ironically, that patching gave the mayor the nickname “the pothole
    mayor” because he was on the radio weekly cheerfully taking calls
    from Hawaii drivers complaining about potholes in their neighborhood.
    He always promised to send a crew out right away to fill the pothole.

    Fasi points out that he insisted road repair costs were taken from
    the operating budget, whereas Harris borrows money to patch the pot
    holes, a pattern that has permeated every division of Harris’
    administration causing the city’s deficit to rise to nearly 20
    percent.

    “Harris says he does ‘more with less’ but he is so far behind on
    repair and maintenance of the roads that he actually has to rebuild
    1,750 lane miles just to catch up,” Fasi says.

    Fasi emphasizes smooth and well-maintained and well-constructed roads
    are important to ensure the safety of drivers and to prevent
    excessive wear and tear and damage to the cars of Hawaii’s many
    drivers.

    City Councilmember Charles Djou, who represents East Oahu and
    Waikiki, says the city dropped the repair schedule in 2000 to a low
    of 40 to 50 paved miles per year, increasing that repair schedule in
    2001 and 2003, saying now the city has to play catch up.

    Djou says when the city reduces the amount of roadway it is
    resurfacing, the average driver will not realize the roads are not
    being maintained right away, but they will see the deterioration over
    the nearly one decade they were neglected.

    ”Taxes, Taxes and More Taxes”

    While the Democrats in the Legislature continue to push forward the
    largest tax increase in Hawaii’s history in the final days of the
    session, Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris is doing his part to make sure
    the residents on Oahu get hit with another tax whammy. Harris, just
    like his Democrat counterparts in the state Legislature, is
    attempting to pass the largest-ever tax increase in the city’s
    history, only he is using property taxes to do so.

    According to Honolulu City Councilmember Djou and City
    Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi, in addition to the tax increase,
    Harris also has proposed a number of fee increases, some of them
    dramatic, to fund city services.

    Djou, taking matters into his own hands, has proposed mild cuts to the mayor’s budget now before the Council for approval, emphasizing the mayor is unnecessarily and irresponsibly increasing his budget by 5.5 percent. If the mayor cuts just 2 percent of his 5.5 percent increase in spending, Djou says the city will be fiscally responsible and Hawaii residents will not be faced with any tax increase to balance the budget.

    “I am not saying my proposal will be no pain and all gain,” Djou
    says. “There will be cuts to some programs and services. But they
    will not lead to the collapse of the city, as the mayor is alleging
    in the press.”

    ”Satellite City Halls, Parties Targeted in City Budget Crunch”

    City Council Chair Gary Okino also voiced his concerns over the
    budget troubles the city is facing, saying the Council is considering
    recommending the city close some of the 11 Satellite City Halls
    throughout Oahu.

    The city administration opened three additional Satellite City Halls
    since Harris was elected, raising the number from 8 to 11.

    Harris has continuously touted the benefits of these mini-city centers
    serving the public, but his recent fee increase proposal tied to
    service at these same Satellite City Halls led City Councilmember
    Charles Djou and other council members to criticize the mayor for
    purporting to serve the public, while punishing the public
    financially for using the Satellites for such services as car
    registration.

    Okino, Djou and City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi also
    discussed cutting other programs to help balance the city budget,
    such as the “Brunch on the Beach” and “Sunset on the Beach” parties
    the city hosts in Waikiki and other areas around Oahu in order to
    save taxpayers money.

    All agree the parties may in fact generate business in the community
    where the parties are being held, but say they don’t want the city
    subsidizing the parties when so many other basic services are being
    neglected.

    ”Director Will Ask Governor to Veto Reform Bill”

    State Campaign Spending Director Bob Watada will ask Gov. Linda
    Lingle to veto a campaign spending bill before House and Senate
    conference committee members should it pass by May 1 in its current
    draft.

    Watada, who has lobbied hard to get campaign finance reform measures
    through the Legislature, says the legislation is more damaging then
    helpful, and will only create more loopholes in the state Campaign
    Spending laws.

    Lingle, who also lobbied hard for campaign finance reform, will have
    to choose between passing a bill that is severely flawed and creates
    provisions for candidates to legally “buy votes,” or kill the bill,
    and have Democrats in the Legislature blame her for killing the
    “reforms” they put forth. Their strategy is extremely transparent.

    Both were working to break the link between contractors and
    businesses seeking government contracts who make substantial
    contributions to candidates and politicians in office, in return for
    being awarded those contracts.

    ”Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii”

    Erin Brockovich, made famous in the award-winning movie starring
    Julia Roberts, will be in Hawaii on June 22 to speak to the American
    Businesswomen’s Association-Imua Chapter.

    Brockovich, who will be celebrating her birthday on the day of the
    speech, will speak for about an hour on the toxic tort case she
    headed that resulted in a record-breaking settlement of $333 million
    for 634 plaintiffs in Hinkley, CA.

    The superstar, who is launching her own television series, and is the
    author of a book entitled “Life’s a Challenge, but You Can Do It,”
    has ties to Hawaii. The law firm she works for is involved in a
    lawsuit over water quality in Central Oahu.

    Her law firm also plans to open a branch in Hawaii.

    The public is invited and can purchase tickets for $75 to attend the
    luncheon program by calling 545-1909 or by logging on to
    https://www.erinbrockovich.wallstreetwebmasters.com

    Companies also are welcome to sponsor the event at various levels
    ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per sponsorship, in kind or in cash.
    HawaiiReporter.com, Small Business Hawaii and Hawaii Woman Magazine
    have already signed up as sponsors.

    ”’To reach legislators, see:”’ “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance”

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at”’ mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com ”’Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii’s Political Arena – April 23, 2003-Hack Attack; Improving Hawaii’s Worst-in-the-Nation Business Climate; Rocky Road Ahead for Pot Hole Filling Mayor; Taxes, Taxes and More Taxes; Satellite City Halls, Parties Targeted in City Budget Crunch; Director Will Ask Governor to Veto Reform Bill; Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”Hack Attack”

    First an apology to our readers who attempted over the last couple of
    days to log onto HawaiiReporter.com. For the third time in a year,
    HawaiiReporter.com was targeted by a hacker. Good news, the security,
    which already was extremely tight, has been upgraded substantially to
    foil future hack attacks.

    The information on this and previous attacks has been turned over to
    federal authorities who oversee a special unit that investigates
    these kinds of incidents and prosecutes those responsible. These same
    federal authorities have successfully tracked and prosecuted hackers,
    including one recent case where an individual named Jason Starr, 23,
    of Erie, Penn., allegedly targeted OhanaNet, a Hawaii corporation
    with this Internet address and caused $8,352 in damages. If
    convicted, Starr faces a maximum term of one year in prison, a fine
    of $100,000 and restitution to the victims.

    Second, thanks to readers who have sent in emails expressing their
    concern over the temporary downing of HawaiiReporter.com.

    ”Improving Hawaii’s Worst-in-the-Nation Business Climate”

    Hawaii is rated as having one of the worst business climates in the nation.

    Ted Liu, director of the Department of Business, Economic Development
    and Tourism, will discuss what he plans to do to improve that poor
    rating at the Small Business Hawaii Sunrise Breakfast meeting
    sponsored by the Copy Shop in Hawaii Kai.

    The meeting, which is open to the public, is scheduled for tomorrow
    morning, Thursday, April 24, at Alan Wong’s Pineapple Room in Macy’s
    Ala Moana from 7 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. Call 396-1724 for more information
    and reservations.

    ”Rocky Road Ahead for Pot Hole Filling Mayor”

    When Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris was first elected in 1994, Oahu’s
    roads were in pretty good shape. Then Mayor Frank Fasi made sure of
    that by repairing more than 250 “road” miles per year.

    However, Harris, who was elected in 1994 and began serving his first
    4-year term in 1995, touting the theme that his administration was
    “doing more with less,” did not see the value in keeping up with the
    aggressive repair and maintenance schedule.

    Harris reduced substantially the number of road miles repaired
    annually over nearly a decade from 250 miles to just around 40 miles.
    That neglect caught up to him this year when Hawaii was ranked as
    having the worst roads in the nation.

    Former Mayor Frank Fasi says instead of paving the roads, Harris
    simply filled pot holes in the road. “All he did was patch, patch,
    patch,” Fasi says.

    Ironically, that patching gave the mayor the nickname “the pothole
    mayor” because he was on the radio weekly cheerfully taking calls
    from Hawaii drivers complaining about potholes in their neighborhood.
    He always promised to send a crew out right away to fill the pothole.

    Fasi points out that he insisted road repair costs were taken from
    the operating budget, whereas Harris borrows money to patch the pot
    holes, a pattern that has permeated every division of Harris’
    administration causing the city’s deficit to rise to nearly 20
    percent.

    “Harris says he does ‘more with less’ but he is so far behind on
    repair and maintenance of the roads that he actually has to rebuild
    1,750 lane miles just to catch up,” Fasi says.

    Fasi emphasizes smooth and well-maintained and well-constructed roads
    are important to ensure the safety of drivers and to prevent
    excessive wear and tear and damage to the cars of Hawaii’s many
    drivers.

    City Councilmember Charles Djou, who represents East Oahu and
    Waikiki, says the city dropped the repair schedule in 2000 to a low
    of 40 to 50 paved miles per year, increasing that repair schedule in
    2001 and 2003, saying now the city has to play catch up.

    Djou says when the city reduces the amount of roadway it is
    resurfacing, the average driver will not realize the roads are not
    being maintained right away, but they will see the deterioration over
    the nearly one decade they were neglected.

    ”Taxes, Taxes and More Taxes”

    While the Democrats in the Legislature continue to push forward the
    largest tax increase in Hawaii’s history in the final days of the
    session, Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris is doing his part to make sure
    the residents on Oahu get hit with another tax whammy. Harris, just
    like his Democrat counterparts in the state Legislature, is
    attempting to pass the largest-ever tax increase in the city’s
    history, only he is using property taxes to do so.

    According to Honolulu City Councilmember Djou and City
    Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi, in addition to the tax increase,
    Harris also has proposed a number of fee increases, some of them
    dramatic, to fund city services.

    Djou, taking matters into his own hands, has proposed mild cuts to the mayor’s budget now before the Council for approval, emphasizing the mayor is unnecessarily and irresponsibly increasing his budget by 5.5 percent. If the mayor cuts just 2 percent of his 5.5 percent increase in spending, Djou says the city will be fiscally responsible and Hawaii residents will not be faced with any tax increase to balance the budget.

    “I am not saying my proposal will be no pain and all gain,” Djou
    says. “There will be cuts to some programs and services. But they
    will not lead to the collapse of the city, as the mayor is alleging
    in the press.”

    ”Satellite City Halls, Parties Targeted in City Budget Crunch”

    City Council Chair Gary Okino also voiced his concerns over the
    budget troubles the city is facing, saying the Council is considering
    recommending the city close some of the 11 Satellite City Halls
    throughout Oahu.

    The city administration opened three additional Satellite City Halls
    since Harris was elected, raising the number from 8 to 11.

    Harris has continuously touted the benefits of these mini-city centers
    serving the public, but his recent fee increase proposal tied to
    service at these same Satellite City Halls led City Councilmember
    Charles Djou and other council members to criticize the mayor for
    purporting to serve the public, while punishing the public
    financially for using the Satellites for such services as car
    registration.

    Okino, Djou and City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi also
    discussed cutting other programs to help balance the city budget,
    such as the “Brunch on the Beach” and “Sunset on the Beach” parties
    the city hosts in Waikiki and other areas around Oahu in order to
    save taxpayers money.

    All agree the parties may in fact generate business in the community
    where the parties are being held, but say they don’t want the city
    subsidizing the parties when so many other basic services are being
    neglected.

    ”Director Will Ask Governor to Veto Reform Bill”

    State Campaign Spending Director Bob Watada will ask Gov. Linda
    Lingle to veto a campaign spending bill before House and Senate
    conference committee members should it pass by May 1 in its current
    draft.

    Watada, who has lobbied hard to get campaign finance reform measures
    through the Legislature, says the legislation is more damaging then
    helpful, and will only create more loopholes in the state Campaign
    Spending laws.

    Lingle, who also lobbied hard for campaign finance reform, will have
    to choose between passing a bill that is severely flawed and creates
    provisions for candidates to legally “buy votes,” or kill the bill,
    and have Democrats in the Legislature blame her for killing the
    “reforms” they put forth. Their strategy is extremely transparent.

    Both were working to break the link between contractors and
    businesses seeking government contracts who make substantial
    contributions to candidates and politicians in office, in return for
    being awarded those contracts.

    ”Erin Brockovich is Coming to Hawaii”

    Erin Brockovich, made famous in the award-winning movie starring
    Julia Roberts, will be in Hawaii on June 22 to speak to the American
    Businesswomen’s Association-Imua Chapter.

    Brockovich, who will be celebrating her birthday on the day of the
    speech, will speak for about an hour on the toxic tort case she
    headed that resulted in a record-breaking settlement of $333 million
    for 634 plaintiffs in Hinkley, CA.

    The superstar, who is launching her own television series, and is the
    author of a book entitled “Life’s a Challenge, but You Can Do It,”
    has ties to Hawaii. The law firm she works for is involved in a
    lawsuit over water quality in Central Oahu.

    Her law firm also plans to open a branch in Hawaii.

    The public is invited and can purchase tickets for $75 to attend the
    luncheon program by calling 545-1909 or by logging on to
    https://www.erinbrockovich.wallstreetwebmasters.com

    Companies also are welcome to sponsor the event at various levels
    ranging from $1,000 to $10,000 per sponsorship, in kind or in cash.
    HawaiiReporter.com, Small Business Hawaii and Hawaii Woman Magazine
    have already signed up as sponsors.

    ”’To reach legislators, see:”’ “Representatives at a Glance” and “Senators at a Glance”

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at”’ mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com ”’Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Lifetime Value of Your Clients-The Key to Doubling Your Profits

    0

    What’s the lifetime value of your clients? If you are able to answer this question with a precise calculation, you’ve got a serious advantage over your competitors.

    Sadly, most business leaders don’t have a clue what this term means, and even fewer know exactly what this figure is for their business. As a result, the business owners (and by association, their employees) don’t come anywhere close to making as much money as they could.

    In the next few minutes we’re going to provide you the critical information you need to be sure you don’t fall into this category of business owners. Once exposed to this powerful proven concept you’ll realize how you can literally shoot your net profits through the roof. With this new way of looking at your business your mind will open to a flood of breakthrough ideas that will help you increase the long-term stability and profitability of your business.

    ”Calculating Your Client’s Lifetime Value”

    The client’s lifetime value (LTV) can be easily understood by looking at the total dollar value of your average customer over the entire course of time they do business with you.

    Let’s look at an example of how the owner of a day spa calculated the lifetime value of her clients so you can follow the same formula for your business.

    Working with her business coach, Tina determined that her clients stayed with her an average of three years. She had a total of approximately 1,500 steady clients at the time of her initial calculations. Her net profits over the past three years was $780,000. (* Note: it is crucial that you use net profits here and not gross sales or total revenues.)

    ”Customer’s Lifetime Value (LTV) = $780,000 / 1,500”

    This told her that each new customer she got was worth an average of $520.00 in net profits.

    ”Revolutionize Your Decision Making”

    Now that Tina knows her LTV = $520, she’ll be able to make better business decisions. Anytime she is choosing between different hi-impact marketing principles, she’ll know how to calculate her results to determine if her overall profits will increase or decrease as a result of each advertising decision.

    The business owner who overspends (or more commonly, under-invests) without making decisions related to LTV will go out of business faster than the owner of the exact same type of business who calculates the LTV and makes decisions based on this accurate long range benchmark.

    For example, if Tina runs an ad that costs $1,000 and she gets just 15 new clients coming in and spending $60 per sale, her revenue (15 x $60 = $900) won’t cover her advertising costs. Her competitors might consider this a losing proposition. But effective entrepreneurs like Tina who know their precise LTV will actually jump at this winning proposition.

    Tina understands that every new customer she brings in represents an average lifetime value of $520 in net profits. This allows her to see that all she’s invested is a mere $66.27 per customer to get at least a $520 return. (This is calculated by taking her initial $1,000 investment in advertising and dividing it by the 15 new clients she’s just attracted to her business.)

    Your marketing perspective is critical to outlasting your competition. When you realize that your clients are an ongoing revenue source rather than a one-time sale, you can shift your marketing focus.

    ”A Better Way …”

    This one simple strategy from our new TeleCourse “Small Business, BIG Profits” can be used to increase your leads and sales without spending more on your advertising or marketing than you need.

    This new understanding allowed Tom (the owner of an art gallery,) to quadruple his profits once he shifted his marketing perspective. Working with his coach, he implemented new strategies to harness the power of repeat clients who purchase from him again and again.

    When Tom first started working with his coach, he was adamant that his business couldn’t take advantage of this concept (LTV) because he thought his business was reliant mostly on visiting tourists coming into his shop once or twice during their stay.

    But once he realized how to turn his “one-time clients” who physically came into the store into repeat clients who buy from him again and again using the power of the Internet — Tom easily tripled his profits in a little over 16 months time. Plus, each month Tom doubles his profits, he has the ability to increase his business by 10 times or more because of the snowball effect of the LTV principle.

    Once you understand how to attract more repeat sales using the Internet after clients are no longer physically near your store, you’ll be in another league among savvy entrepreneurs. As you implement each low-cost, hi-impact strategy you learn, you’ll quickly see your profits rising. You’ll feel a sense of relief knowing that you’ll be in business for a long time to come, provided you are continuously staying on top of cutting edge trends in business, and applying them before your competition does.

    Business Strategy Tip: Start thinking of your clients with this new perspective. You’ll be amazed at how new ideas will enter your mind as a result of shifting your focus.

    Learn everything you can about how to take advantage of the Internet to increase your profits. Most business owners are surprised to learn how they can increase their profits by having their own Web site, especially when they previously thought of their company as a “brick and mortar” type of business. There are so many ways businesses can use the Internet to increase their profits. Knowing these strategies constitutes 80 percent of your success. The other 20 percent is implementing the strategies in a systematic way based on proven methods that work.

    ”’Deborah Cole Micek is a Business Growth Strategist with RPM Success Group, Inc. (http:www.RPMsuccess.com) and facilitator of the new TeleCourse “Small Business, BIG Profits” — the complete manual of low-cost, hi-impact marketing. She can be reached at”’ mailto:Deb@RPMsuccess.com ”’or toll free at 888-334-8151.”’

    Options Become Fewer as Legislature Races Budget Deadline

    0

    As the clock counts down the time before the adjournment of this year’s legislative session, the options to balance the state general fund budget become fewer and fewer.

    It appears that while legislators in the upper house of the Senate may believe that the public is willing to pay more in taxes, especially if it is to be used to fund education. their counterparts in the House are not ready to commit political suicide with the approval of a tax increase.

    On the other hand, it appears the administration may be reconsidering its initial hard-line stance on tapping the hurricane relief fund. Certainly, the administration has put together its laundry list of cuts in spending, but lawmakers and administrators of the department of education do not appear to be willing to go along with those reductions in spending.

    As a result, as the budget conference committee convenes with just under two weeks in which to accomplish its task, the options available have begun to dwindle. That shortfall between available resources and the demand for state spending was a major impetus behind legislators conceding to the changes made to the infamous Act 221 high technology tax credits. What is ironic is that while lawmakers and administration officials wring their hands and search under every stone for overlooked revenues, they are supporting even bigger give-aways to “stimulate” the economy.

    Stimulate the economy while raising taxes has to be an oxymoron. New or increased taxes do not a robust economy make. And that’s the real problem facing lawmakers with the battle of the budget. At a time when the economy is literally crawling out of some of the most devastating events from the war in the Middle East to the SARS epidemic to a national economy that continues to stumble along, taking more money out of the hands of investors and consumers is just the wrong thing to do for the economy.

    While some may argue that the money will be ploughed back into the economy when spent by government, that is not quite true as in the case of the long-term care insurance contributions. In order for that money to grow so that it can support future claims, it will have to be invested outside the state as there are few, if any, investments in the state that will pay the kind of returns needed to support the social insurance program.

    As for the other moneys that would be raised, one can almost be assured that the use of those funds will not be the most efficient. Somehow when money flows through a huge bureaucracy like state government, you know that you are not going to get the maximum bang out of that buck.

    Then there is the other side of the table — the agencies that just refuse to believe there is no money. They put up a stiff upper lip and decry lawmakers every time there is a hint that spending might be cut. Bureaucrats, as well as union officials, argue that if this or that program is not fully funded, there are going to be dire consequences. Where do these people get the idea that the money pit is bottomless? And if their program is not reduced, the money to fund their program will have to come from another program or worse yet, taxes will have to be increased to assure full funding of their program.

    The point of the matter is that unless lawmakers, administrators, rank and file, and union leaders work together, the problem will not be solved. Taxes will have to be raised because all parties did not have the will to do what needs to be done, that is to find a more efficient way to operate state government. This means working together and not arguing over spending reductions. It means pointing out which cuts do not make any sense and which cuts will have the lease impact on the crucial health and safety of our community.

    The options are dwindling. Taxes can be raised to balance the budget, but what are the economic implications of that action? Conversely, what if precise, well-tailored cuts are made to state government? Will those spending cuts actually jeopardize the health and welfare of the community or will it just be another service that the public could do without? Bureaucrats that just dig their heels in are just that, bureaucrats and not problem solvers. Raising more taxes so these bureaucrats can be sated is throwing good money after bad. Raising taxes is not the answer nor is a one-time bail out like tapping the hurricane fund. It is about time for lawmakers and administration officials to set priorities for the state, for the state cannot be all things to all people especially when there is no money to be had without turning up the tax burden heat.

    ”’Lowell L. Kalapa is the president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii, a private, non-profit educational organization. For more information, please call 536-4587 or log on to”’ https://www.tfhawaii.org

    Honesty in Government

    There are few things more important to our form of representative democracy than honesty in government. Without such honesty one can never know for whom one is actually voting, what interests that person truly represents, and what policies that person will advocate once elected to office. Anyone can say anything, but actions ultimately are all that matter.

    Honesty is a quality that emanates from the integrity of an individual. It is no coincidence that the word, “integrity,” has the same root as the word, “integer,” which means “to be whole.” Personal integrity requires a person be consistent, of a whole, of a single piece. To the contrary, we say a person who isn’t consistent is duplicitous, meaning not single but doubled. In everyday parlance we call this two-faced.

    To be found to have lied once is proof of lack of integrity. Thus nothing a liar subsequently says can be trusted because one can never know which face, which side one is now viewing. Truth is coherence with reality and lies are a denial, a falsification of reality. For government representatives this is all important because the public must be able to trust that the person, or the party, is telling the truth when it gives the public reasons for actions taken. The words must correspond to the action.

    Nowhere is this more important than in the area of taxes because the money to pay taxes is bought by the sweat of one’s brow, and the investment of a portion of a person’s very life, the time it took to make the money. Time is money, as the old saying goes, but this is only partly correct. Time is life, literally.

    To place political expediency ahead of honesty in government is to demonstrate a lack of integrity and a duplicity that throws into question everything such legislators do. It also demonstrates a contempt for the very electorate that put them in office. It is a belief that the truth does not matter, the lie will not be discovered, or if it is revealed, as long those who are being duplicitous are of the proper political persuasion the voters simply will not care. Only political triumph counts. It is political cynicism at its worst.

    That Hawaii’s Democrats are determined to pass the deceptively named “long-term-care” tax, and that the Republicans are steadfastly opposed to it, is common knowledge. There is no doubt as to the views of either side of the aisle on this subject. But as reported in HawaiiReporter.com on 4/15/03:

    “Two Republicans Reps., Galen Fox and Barbara Marumoto, had their votes improperly recorded as ‘yes’ when they spoke against the proposal, but were counted as ‘yes’ votes. House leadership would not allow either to fix their improperly recorded vote, although the error was discovered moments after the record was taken.”

    https://www.hawaiireporter.com/story.aspx?6f941b2f-2e23-4ef8-bafe-531d8b5adab2

    Representative Marumoto confirmed this story first hand on the Rick Hamada radio show at the Capitol on Thursday at the No New Taxes rally.

    In a publicly recorded vote, where the views of the participants are common knowledge, the majority party leadership subverted the truth for their own political gain. What this clearly reveals is that the Democrats aren’t even concerned with winning the argument honestly. It isn’t the process of democracy that counts here, only the proper political outcome. In other words, the ends justify the means.

    When discovered, within moments, the House leadership refused to allow the Representatives to correct the improperly recorded votes. This is so transparent as to be beyond belief. There isn’t even an attempt to disguise what is going on here. It is the unabashed exercise of parliamentary power purely for political expediency. This then is the true character of the majority leaders in the House in this state. This is the extent of their integrity.

    The question then becomes, if they are so blatantly dishonest in such a public forum, how can anything else they say be believed? Hasn’t the Democrat majority proved that the truth means nothing? Only the extent and maintenance of their political power is of any concern.

    When the same majority says that the “long-term-care” tax isn’t just another scheme creating a special fund to be raided for the general fund at some point in the future, how can they be believed? If they cannot be trusted to maintain the integrity of the legislative process, how can they be trusted to maintain the integrity of such tax programs in the future?

    The answer is, they can’t.

    As this session wraps up and the final votes taken, this Legislature will have to be watched very carefully. They have proven they are capable of anything. They have proven that they will not even honor their own words.

    https://www.hawaiireporter.com/story.aspx?46095f5a-375c-4cd1-b7f6-9b905630e34e

    The “New Beginning” that Gov. Lingle ran on has been all but thwarted. Despite all the flowery words at the beginning of the session it has been business as usual, with a vengeance. Hawaii’s residents are going to have to have long memories to hold these legislators accountable come the next election. The Democrats are counting on the voters to fail in this regard and for things to carry on as usual. They have been playing the same game for so long they can’t conceive the idea that such means will fail. They don’t think integrity matters.

    Ultimately it will come down to what the electorate values more: Truth, honesty and integrity; or the pandering of the Democrats. If the voters continue to vote the same ticket, elect the same people, and endorse the same methods that have been exercised in this last session, then the Hawaiian people will never see the “New Beginning” that they voted for last year. Hawaii will continue to struggle economically despite the incredible potential it contains. And the people will have no one to blame but themselves.

    It all starts with being honest about exactly what is going on in government in this state. Maybe then the electorate will demand honesty in government, something clearly lacking at this time.

    ”’Don Newman is a free-lance writer in Honolulu. He can be reached via email at:”’ mailto:newmand001@hawaii.rr.com

    Taxes – Back to Basics

    The Democrats in the Hawaii state Legislature have proposed approximately $460,000,000 in ”’new”’ taxes.

    There are approximately 1 million residents of our state.

    Divide: $460,000,000 divided by 1,000,000 = $460. That means that every resident of Hawaii will have their tax burden increased by four hundred and sixty dollars. Taxes will be ”’increased”’ by that amount — added to the existing tax burden.

    Ignore the explanations that say:

    *Tourists will pay it.

    *We can get Federal money.

    *Only the rich will pay it.

    *Businesses will pay it.

    *I don’t pay any taxes.

    Truth is, ”’you”’ will pay it. Four Hundred and Sixty dollars for each person. That means $460 for you, $460 for your spouse (if you’re married) and $460 for ”’each”’ of your children (if you have any).

    Don’t worry. You won’t get a bill from the Department of Taxation for $460, payable upon receipt. No, it will be taken from you, your spouse, and children in innumerable little snippets. A few cents more for a gallon of gas. A dime added to the cost of a Bento lunch. A quarter added to the cost of a “T” shirt. Everything at Sears, Costco, Macy’s, City Mill and Zippy’s will cost a little bit more. Just a little bit, but it will eventually add up to $460 ”’every year,”’ for ”’every person”’ who lives in Hawaii.

    There is no other source for the money. Federal money, you say? Where does Federal money come from? ”’Us!”’ We send it to Washington, they remove a major portion of it for their cost of collecting and handling it, then they send some back to us, accompanied by “iron-clad” instructions on how it ”’must”’ be spent. And the Fed’s get really irritated when we don’t seem to appreciate it. They don’t seem to remember that it once was ”’our money!”’

    Only the rich will pay it. No. The rich pay more than their fair share, because only the rich can. But if they send, say, 25 percent of their income back to the government in taxes, they won’t have that money to spend on cars, boats, beautiful homes, clothes, cameras, computers, hot tubs, etc., which are all built by other taxpayers — who suddenly find themselves unemployed.

    Well, let’s tax “business” instead. While a business may be able to pay taxes without increasing prices, it rarely does. It almost always adds the tax to the price, unless a competitor’s lower prices make it impossible. However, if a profit cannot be made because of competition and/or taxes, the business will either close or be sold. It is simply not worthwhile, or possible, to run a business at a loss. Something will change, eventually. Look at Aloha and Hawaiian Airlines. Both are losing money, both are cutting back on flights, raising ticket prices, and losing customers. If they also had a serious competitor, they both would collapse. More taxpayers out of work, collecting unemployment (which is, of course, paid by ”’other”’ working taxpayers), etc.

    You don’t care because you don’t pay any taxes? Oh, yes you do. Even if you are “all cash, under the table,” you still pay plenty of taxes. And you will ”’really”’ pay if you get caught! But if you buy gas, food, pay rent or mortgage payments, go to a movie, eat out, etc., you are taxed a lot for those privileges.

    What is the answer? Again, it’s simple and basic. Cut government spending. Cut it at every level: City, State, Federal. Only let the government do what it needs to do, not what it wants to do. Keep regulations simple, and to a minimum. Each government regulation costs tax money to create, enforce, and monitor compliance. And the companies and individuals who are regulated spend a LOT of money trying to comply. If a regulation isn’t really helping, simplify or eliminate it. (Like Quarantine or Gasoline Price controls, maybe?)

    Once spending is cut, the need for additional taxes will evaporate — or at least be a lot harder to justify. Just like at home: If you can’t earn more (increase taxes), you have to cut spending. Putting it on your credit card (deficit spending) is ”’not”’ a good idea.

    Tell your legislators to quit trying to buy votes by passing out ”’your”’ money to everyone else. Tell them “No More Taxes!” And when the legislators realize they can get re-elected by ”’cutting”’ spending, we will all be much better off, and will have more money to spend in our own personal “pursuit of happiness.”

    ”’Bud Weisbrod is a resident of Honolulu and can be reached via email at”’ mailto:weisbrod@myexcel.com