Hawaii
West Kauai to develop prospective dairy
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – With Hawaii down to just one commercial dairy farm and heavily relying on imports, a West Kauai area has been proposed as a new development site.
According to Honolulu Civil Beat, Aloun Farms, a local produce farm, wants to develop a 500 acre site in the agricultural area into a new dairy farm.
Six years ago, plans to build a dairy on Kauai’s south shore were terminated following fierce backlash from the tourism industry and environmentalists, arguing that cow manure would pollute the ocean and air quality with their proximity to beachfront pools.
Aloun Farms has since proposed a new location for the dairy far away from tourist land.
The new desired West Kauai area has roughly 6,000 residents and fewer than 100 hotel rooms.
Hawaii once had 160 dairies, now the state imports 90% of its milk, a product that is vulnerable to price fluctuations.
Currently, an imported half-gallon milk carton in an average Kauai grocery store last week ranged from $5.29 to $8.99. In Honolulu, typical grocery store prices for a milk carton spanned from $4.99 to $7.29.
Aloun Farms President and General Manager Alec Sou projected that his new West Kauai dairy could lower the price of milk to somewhere between $3 and $4 per carton.
With the collapse of the Kekaha Sugar Company five years ago, the article reports that there are thousands of neglected acres of land leftover that could house the proposed dairy.
The company expects its proposal to go over better than the last dairy farm proposed for the island.
To read the full Civil Beat article, click here.
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Hawaii lawmakers question timeline for bribery investigation completion
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaii lawmakers are raising questions about the timeline of Attorney General Anne Lopez’s investigation into a legislator who was recorded taking $35,000 in an FBI operation.
There is conflicting information being publicly released about the case’s completion.
Two representatives, Rep. Della Au Belatti and Rep. Kanani Souza, sent a letter to Gov. Josh Green asking him to clarify comments he made regarding the schedule when he appeared on Hawaii News Now’s Spotlight Now show in late January.
Green said he thought the case could realistically be completed by spring.
“I don’t see why — with the evidence that they’re getting from the federal government — they wouldn’t have a gigantic head start,” Green said. “I assume they’re going to have to do some interviews with anybody who is being accused of acting in a terrible way. But that interview or interviews should be quick.”
That would be during the legislative session and could be helpful for bills dealing with campaign finance reform.
View the letter from Reps. Belatti and Souza:
Lawmakers given a different timeline
However, the letter pointed out that Lopez does not appear to share the governor’s goal. The representatives wrote that the attorney general “has informed House Speaker (Nadine) Nakamura that she expects to have the investigation completed by August 2026,” long after the session is over.
The representatives called that timeline troubling, especially since the person who took the money could still hold elected office.
The Aug. 8 primary election also means the information may not be public when voters go to the polls, and the unnamed person could be up for reelection.
“We want the investigation to be complete by the spring so that we can take action as the legislature before our session ends in May,” said Souza.
Belatti questioned the conflicting schedule: “Not having the answers to these questions and not being able to administratively deal with the impacts that this person may still have on the legislative process is very troubling.”
In a statement, the spokesperson for Attorney General Lopez said the attorney general did not tell anyone it would be August 2026.
The statement said, “The Attorney General did not communicate a specific date, or even month, for when the investigation would be completed.”
A statement on behalf of Nakamura did not answer HNN Investigates’ question about the August 2026 detail. It said, “The Speaker has not received any investigative details that would influence the investigation.” The statement continued that Nakamura “has urged the Attorney General to prioritize and expedite the review.”
A spokesperson for the governor did not respond to questions about the timeline either, but said in their statement, “This needs to be resolved for the good of our public trust,” and called the situation ”deeply concerning, and accountability is essential – no one gets a free pass.”
Second letter seeks legislative action details
A second letter from five representatives was sent to Nakamura on Feb. 2, asking for more details on a petition that called for the legislature to conduct its own investigation into the matter.
The representatives wanted to know when it would be presented to the House for review and what procedures and rules would apply.
“We need to understand the circumstances so we can better write legislation as well as hold this $35,000 person accountable,” Belatti said.
Souza said the delayed response creates additional concerns about transparency.
“Right now the lack of timely response and the lack of a timely report, even a preliminary report, makes this look even more like a cover-up,” Souza said.
View the second letter from lawmakers:
Bills related to campaign finance reform are currently moving through the Capitol.
The mystery lawmaker was called an “influential state legislator” by federal prosecutors in a court record connected to a bribery case that sent former state Rep. Ty Cullen and former state Sen. Kalani English to prison. Businessman Milton Choy was at the center of the scandal, and died while in federal prison serving a three-year sentence.
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