I will try to bring up dates to everyone as the city, sheriffs, special HPD units, crime labs and their Christian churches and Hawaiian organizations get together to bulldoze and trash frail humans.  

I am looking at two issues one Ocean Resources Management Plan (ORMP) Chapter 205A of the Hawaii Revised Statues (HRS).  ORMP being one and the second are the houseless at Harbors.  At least school is out, so no need be concern for two months about students missing school days which could send them into the abyss and never recover from educational neglect.  Just do be clear I am gathering information, and sharing what I know with Makaainana, in other words, I am not part of the working group.  Others that do have the time and resources should seek legal council in this situation to add to your intentions.  

The 1969 Stratton Report is an important piece of information, and one fisherman from Waianae did attend that meeting back in 1972.  The nations economy, in my opinion, like the Kinship brother's Jonathan and Nathan seems to be the backdrop for this thinking.  With the Patriot Act one needs to be careful and take note of what the 'State' is doing.  

The third, thing that I am concern is the Nuclear Isotopes that are dangerous to our environment and Waianae was hit badly with the USA's manipulation of EPA 9 and their definition of debris, construction, and permits.  Keep in mind the labor unions cannot go on military bases to check on the health of the truckers that trucks these debris that have nuclear isotopes in the mix.  What am I talking about?  Truckers drive into the military base pickup a load with contaminated Nuclear Isotopes and bring it to Waianae.  Ocean dumping, and our aina of this 'hewa' contaminates are the way of life since WWII, therefore, Waianae citizens today are complacent to the dangers of these former actions.  Patriotic notions run deep in the spirits of the Armed Forces Veterans.  The contaminates were suppose to remain on site, however, the Pentagon made the decision to remove their nuclear contaminates for the safety of their military families.  Waianae community is their dumping grounds.  Nuclear Isotopes are nano particles and they float until a human usually children breath (induce) these isotopes into their lungs and store them their for the duration of their lives.  Phlegm cannot dislodge the nano particles--it's a death sentence.  At least we can learn from the Micronesia's how to live and suffer until death do us part.  

Getting back to houseless, they are the victims of this nuclear isotopes one can observe their early deaths because of the fact that they were front line and living under the stars.  The had taken into their lungs the nano particles from the source point--the back of the truck bed as it rolled down Farrington Highway.  Our houseless according to the 'Splintered Paddle Law' do lay beside the roadside in safety.  Yeah right!

Here is a pretty good article that one can read: 


INSTEAD OF BRINGING IN TSUNAMI DEBRIS
Japanese investors interested in mining pozzolan on Pagan

After Gov. Benigno R. Fitial and Lt. Gov. Eloy S. Inos pressed Japanese investors yesterday about their decision to pick Pagan over other Northern Islands to bring tons of tsunami debris from Japan, the visiting businessmen had a startling answer: to be able to mine millions of tons of pozzolan on the island and ship them off to Japan.

Rep. Froilan Tenorio (Cov-Saipan), who was also in the same meeting with Fitial and Inos, later said that the CNMI will be able to generate more revenue from accepting millions of metric tons of tsunami debris from Japan than in selling pozzolan from Pagan.

Pozzolan is a siliceous volcanic ash used to produce hydraulic cement.

“We can find other buyers of pozzolan, but in my opinion we'll get much more from bringing in debris from Japan. The Japanese government pays for the disposal of tsunami debris. So this private company is the one talking to the Japanese prefectures that still could not recover because they don't know where to put the debris,” Tenorio told Saipan Tribune.

Isamu Tokuichi, executive director of Asia Mining Development PTE Ltd., and Yukio Oita, chief executive officer and representative director of Kankyo Kaizen Kiko Co. Ltd, led a six-member investor team in meeting with Fitial, Inos, and Tenorio on Capital Hill.

Tenorio, after the meeting, said Tokuichi and the rest of the group are firm in buying tons of pozzolan and sell them in Japan.

Tokuichi's Asia Mining Development is willing to invest some $20 million in equipment alone to mine pozzolan on Pagan.

But to offset hefty costs of shipping tons of pozzolan, these Japanese investors are willing to bring tons of tsunami debris from different tsunami-ravaged Japanese prefectures-for a fee-on their way to Pagan.

Inos, in an interview after the meeting, said these “ideas” from the visiting Japanese investors are interesting.

But he said the Fitial administration has not received any business plan from the group.

“We don't have anything from them. So we asked them to give is some kind of project plan, business plan,” Inos said in an interview after signing 10 of 11 proclamations yesterday afternoon.

Inos said the Fitial administration is not rendering any decision just yet.

“We didn't tell them 'no', if that's what you mean, but we didn't tell them 'yes' either,” he added.

He said the administration would like to know more about the types of materials the Japanese investors plan to bring and international laws governing transportation of debris from one country to another, among other things.

The investors reiterated that they would bring non-toxic and non-radioactive debris from the March 2011 tsunami in Japan.

“They're only interested in Pagan, and they want to buy pozzolan, which will be loaded into ships that will be empty after bringing debris to the island,” Tenorio said.

Tenorio, a former governor and speaker, said the Japanese investors are expected to share more about their plans after they fly from Pagan today.

“They intend to lease the whole island but maybe after their trip to Pagan and realize it's a big island, they might just opt to lease only a portion of it. They were talking about millions of metric tons of debris,” Tenorio added.

Tenorio said if this undertaking gets off the ground, it would mean millions of dollars of fresh revenues for the CNMI's ailing economy and also help Japan in its recovery.

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