Posted on: Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Marines close Bellows for June
Illegal activities cited, but some say military seeks permanent ban
By Eloise Aguiar
Advertiser Staff Writer
The Marine Corps said yesterday it is temporarily closing weekend
public beach access at Bellows Air Force Station to curtail illegal
activities, but residents contend the military is trying to push
locals out permanently.
The public has been allowed access to the area on weekends for more
than 20 years, first by the Air Force and now by the Marines.
The area will be closed all weekends in June while the Marines seek
ways to better prevent activities such as drug use, fights, large
campfires, trash dumping, off-roading on the beach, alcohol use and
vehicle break-ins.
The goal is to have the camp and beach open again for the July 4
weekend, the Marines said in a news release.
The decision was first announced at a hastily called community
meeting Friday because of events on the previous Monday, Memorial
Day, at the Marine Corps Training Area, Bellows.
Wilson Ho, Waimanalo Neighborhood Board chairman, who was invited to
the meeting with Marine Corps Base Commander Col. Robert Rice along
with city, state and federal representatives, said the Marines
demanded immediate action, including around-the-clock police presence.
"They want zero tolerance," Ho said, adding that the decision was
more like martial law, where demands were presented then the
attendees were dismissed.
In their news release confirming the decision, the Marines said the
training area "will remain closed to all visitors throughout the
month of June due to persistent unsafe and environmentally
destructive activities on the beach and in the camping area."
Ho said the Marines talked about infractions that involved less than
1 percent of the people who were at Bellows on Memorial Day, yet they
want to punish everyone.
This was the first he's heard of any increase in problems at Bellows,
he said, adding that the Marines attend every neighborhood board
meeting and have never brought up the problem.
popular camping beach
Bellows is the most popular camping beach on the island and typically
the city grants permits weeks in advance.
The 1,049-acre training site is owned by the Marines, who use it for
military exercises during the week but open portions of it to public
camping and beach access on weekends.
Joe Ryan, a Waimanalo resident, said the June closure is a sham and
really had to do with reducing traffic impact at the base, where 48
new cabins are being proposed.
The Waimanalo neighborhood board is objecting to the new cabins
because they will add to bumper-to-bumper traffic in the town every
weekend.
A recently released draft environmental assessment for the cabins
revealed that future projects at the base include a water park and 18-
hole golf course. The neighborhood board also recently learned that
the base wants to widen the bridge across the stream that could
accommodate heavy building equipment.
Closing the base to campers and beach users reduces the number of
automobiles in the area and opens the door for future expansion
because traffic impact won't be an issue, Ryan said.
But a letter inviting city, state and federal officials to the
meeting on Memorial Day weekend said crime was the issue. A federal
officer arrested a suspect who allegedly had approximately 16 grams
of marijuana and stopped four people for allegedly dumping
construction debris in a stream, said Christopher E. Blanchard, chief
of staff at Marine Corps Base, Hawaii.
Criminal behavior has increased, causing concern for Commander Rice,
Blanchard wrote in a May 27 e-mail.
The camping area has been licensed to the city for recreational
camping on weekends since 2004, Blanchard said.
"It is clear that the commander does not intend to renew that
agreement if corrective action is not taken," he said.
Mayor Mufi Hannemann met with members of his staff about the issue
yesterday morning, said Bill Brennan, city spokesman.
"(Hannemann) expressed a willingness to meet himself with a
representative from the Marines to better understand their concerns,"
Brennan said in an e-mail. "Mayor Hannemann believes, however, it
would be unnecessary and a mistake for the Marines to close Bellows
to the public, as the city is already working to improve conditions
at the park."
Brennan said police statistics show no increase in crime in the
Bellows area over last year. In 2008 the Honolulu Police Department
handled 163 cases, of which 125 occurred on weekends. From Jan. 1 to
May 28, 2009, HPD had 70 cases, of which 57 occurred on weekends.
lawmakers' reactions
Some residents said they suspect recent statements calling for the
return of the base to Native Hawaiians have brought about this decision.
"We've been squawking about the land issues, land access and land
rights," said Andrew Jamila Jr., a Waimanalo Neighborhood Board
member who was at the Friday meeting. "We've been complaining. We
don't have access, now this. It all coincides with what we've been
arguing about."
Representatives from Hawai'i's Congressional delegation were at the
meeting, along with state Rep. Chris Lee, D-51st (Lanikai, Waimanalo).
Lee said neither the city nor the Marines wanted to shut down the
base, but safety concerns have led to this temporary solution.
"What the miliary really wants is to have the base open to the public
as it has been, but at the end of the day make sure that the city
promotes some sort of supervision," Lee said.
Congresswoman Mazie Hirono said she discussed the temporary closure
with Rice and supports it.
"Bellows is a popular recreational spot and the 4th of July weekend
is quickly approaching," Hirono said. "We are all working toward the
common goals of further protecting the pristine 'aina, while also
keeping the beach area safe for all of its visitors."
You need to be a member of maoliworld to add comments!
Interesting to hear certain individuals within the Waimanalo neighborhood board state that the motives of Marine Corps Base Hawaii is to discontinue public access within the joint use area after hearing some of these same individuals state that conditions within the joint use area has been deteriorating for sometime. Complaints abound by the truck loads from the Pono users of this area.
The lease agreement between Marine Corps Base Hawaii and the city states that the city would implement certain park rules and identify and mitigate issues....mind you the lease agreement was signed by the city in 2003. It took the Marines to get them to refocus their attention on the issues taking place during the joint use period. Mind you this is a public safety issue, it has nothing to do with military training or preventing future public access. I personaly observed on numerous occassions 4x4 vehicles moving about on the beach between beach goers and campers at all hours of the day and night, ground fires that can be scene from Makupu they were so large, and the unchecked alcohol and drug use not to mention many fights and other forms of public disruptions to include the intentional dumping of trash ...Auwe! where's the common sense here. The temporary solution to close the beach and public access was Pono for the Aina...it gave it time to lick it's wounds and heal...it also allowed those responsible for careing for the area to refocus, identify and initiate those measures that would improve the quality of use and curtail the Pilikea. I spent the 4th of July weekend out there, I have never experianced a more quiter and relaxed time there, everyone I spoke to had positive things to say....it's all Pono, lets keep it that way.
Maikai No, maybe the Military Power of the U.S.A. needs to close Hawaii from public access and make Hawaii Pono once more. ALOHA OE, U.S.A. o Pomaikaiokalani
Replies
The lease agreement between Marine Corps Base Hawaii and the city states that the city would implement certain park rules and identify and mitigate issues....mind you the lease agreement was signed by the city in 2003. It took the Marines to get them to refocus their attention on the issues taking place during the joint use period. Mind you this is a public safety issue, it has nothing to do with military training or preventing future public access. I personaly observed on numerous occassions 4x4 vehicles moving about on the beach between beach goers and campers at all hours of the day and night, ground fires that can be scene from Makupu they were so large, and the unchecked alcohol and drug use not to mention many fights and other forms of public disruptions to include the intentional dumping of trash ...Auwe! where's the common sense here. The temporary solution to close the beach and public access was Pono for the Aina...it gave it time to lick it's wounds and heal...it also allowed those responsible for careing for the area to refocus, identify and initiate those measures that would improve the quality of use and curtail the Pilikea. I spent the 4th of July weekend out there, I have never experianced a more quiter and relaxed time there, everyone I spoke to had positive things to say....it's all Pono, lets keep it that way.