WARS AGAINST THE WORLD Affecting Hawaii, the U.S., and the World Today..................Since the Criminal Assumption of a Neutral, Non-Violent, Friendly Nation, the Hawaiian Kingdom/Ko Hawaii Pae Aina

- Highlights to be Researched Further -

by Amelia Gora, a Royal person (2012)

The following information is posted for many researchers to gather up and research for themselves and to verify the facts found which shows who the real terrors were in the World through historical facts uncovered by studying the history of the Hawaiian Islands.

Although the ancient people of our Hawaiian Islands have been around for 3,000+ years, scrutinizing the 1810 period of Kamehameha who had formed one of the many Monarchy governments in the World is a good start.

1810 - Kamehameha formed the Monarchy government.

1812 - Kamehameha with leaders of Aetearoa and the Samoan Islands formed the Pacific Empire, a democratic group united.

1818 - Kamehameha's oldest son Kaoleioku died.

1819 - Kamehameha, a makaula/seer died. He instructed his chiefs to set aside the kapu system.

1820 - American mercenaries/missionaries arrived.

1822 - Secret Treaty of Verona, a treaty/pact made by Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, with England, U.S. and the Vatican to break down Monarchy governments worldwide and to start a New World Order/ One World Order was made.

See:

1916 - Congress Record - Sen. Owen Treaty of Verona  
5 min - Jan 16, 2009 - Uploaded by ForgottenHistoryUSA 
books.google.com Because I can find no official online primary source for the 1916 Congressional Record, I have linked to a copy of "Where is ...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UBXHSFr4bw 

1824 - Liholiho/Kamehameha II and his wife Kamamalu died, exposed to disease, died in England. They had delivered the remains of England's Captain James Cook to England's government.

Kauikeouli/Kamehameha III ruled. He secured the lands under the allodial system, which gave rights to the alii, people, the Konohiki, and "rights of native tenants" forever. Non natives - whites, foreigners were given "freehold" "fee simple" which were less than allodial titles. Exceptions were Kamehameha III's cousins who descended from Englishmen John Young, and Isaac Davis counselors of his father Kamehameha who married Alii women.

1875 - a Fraud Deed was made affecting Pearl Harbor and used in the Treaty of Reciprocity signed by King David Kalakaua who had no interest in the lands of Halawa which was conveyed to John Young's and Isaac Davis wife Grace Kamaikui.

King Kalakaua deeded already deeded lands of Halawa which included Pearl Harbor to deceased ancestors Grace Kamaikui and Mataio Kekuanaoa.

1878 - Fear of the Japanese by the U.S. was documented. The Pacific Cable Company was formed by Charles Reed Bishop and Friends.

Reference: CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF HAWAII, ABROAD, AND THE UNITED STATES by Amelia Gora and http://www.archive.org/details/valorofignorance00leahuoft  for free download



The valor of ignorance, with specially prepared maps : LeaHomer ... 
Mar 18, 2010 ... The valor of ignorance, with specially prepared maps ([1909]). Author:LeaHomer, 1876-1912. Subject: Eastern question (Far East); ...
www.archive.org/details/ valorofignorance00leahuoft - Cached - Similar

Many problems existed over the Pearl Harbor Reciprocity Treaty and criminally pursued by the U.S. representatives interested in taking over a neutral, non-violent, friendly nation.

References: King Kalakaua's files on microfilm at the Archives, Main Library etc. under the title KING KALAKAUA'S HAWAII, etc. also researchs posted over time by Amelia Gora, and covering some of the other papers/thesis written by researchers, students moving towards their Masters/PhD., etc.

1892 - Treasonous persons in a concerted effort moved to dethrone Queen Liliuokalani - ranging from Senator Daniel Akaka's ancestor Thomas Akaka; U.S. President Obama's ancestors the Joseph Booth's; Lorrin Thurston making plans in Makua with American government Representative in Makua Valley, the same valley where the U.S. military blows up depleted uranium as if to rid the evidence of their crimes, etc.

Masons/Freemasons arrived by the hundreds to help the plans along.

1893 - U.S. Congress with the U.S. President Benjamin Harrison gave a standing order to take over the Hawaiian Islands

Reference: http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F00617FD345B1A738... 



PEARL HARBOR COALING STATION.; IMPERATIVE NECESSITY THAT THE ...  
OOO appropriated for the improvement of coaling stations to allow ships to enter theharbor. This sum is in the Treasury Department at the disposal of the ...
query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res... - Similar 

WOULD OCCUPY PEARL HARBOR.; President Said to Favor Establishing a ...  
... fund of $250000 placed at his disposal to establish coaling stations for ...
query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res...

and now I leave you with the DOOZEY................

There was no transfer of Halawa lands to the U.S. by our Hawaiian alii.

but, in 1901, a Deed by the Oahu Railway and Land Company is on record as the first deed to the United States of America for 635 acres of Halawa on December 6, 1901 and recorded at the Bureau of Conveyances, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii on December 13, 1901.

NOW, WHO'S CALLING WHO A TERRORIST? hmmm...................go research, dig, have fun........because now you will understand why the entity State of Hawaii are MAJOR PIRATES SUPPORTED BY THE PIRATES OF THE WORLD: the U.S., England, and the bankers (Morgan bankers, Bank of England, etc.) who departed from the Law of Nations, which Queen Liliuokalani documented that was breached by the U.S., and moved to form the CFR/Council on Foreign Relations which is the basis of the United Nations which moves to Plunder Upon All Nations and Divvy the assets, and form their One World Order/New World Order! Now, do your homework too............

nforming many because..............

 

Something STINKS...............(.and I know it's NOT ME) WICKED TO THE MAX!

aloha.

eyes 068

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v =SpwSxHiiNSw

 

www.theiolani.blogspot.com

Researcher (history, genealogy(ies), and legal), Writer, Editor, Publisher of the IOLANI - The Royal Hawk news on the web from Hawaii.

The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.


************************************************************************

OAHU RAILROAD SYSTEM IN COLLUSION WITH THE U.S.


The Oahu Railway and Land Company, or OR&L, was a narrow gauge common carrier railroad that served much of the Hawaiian island of Oahu until its dissolution in 1947.

Contents

  [hide

[edit]Origin

The OR&L was founded by Benjamin Dillingham, a self-made businessman who arrived in Honolulu as a sailor in 1865. After falling from his horse and breaking his leg while riding in the countryside, Dillingham was forced to stay in Hawaii and recuperate. He decided to make the island kingdom his home. Dillingham had a great deal of business acumen and soon became quite wealthy and influential in the early Honolulu community. Among his development ideas, he conceived in the 1870s of the arid ʻEwa Plain as an excellent location for human settlement. However, there were two problems: a lack of water and, more significantly, a lack of transportation. A trip from Honolulu to the ʻEwa by horse-drawn wagon was an all-day affair. The key was to build a railroad. Around the time Dillingham was dreaming of his railroad, another businessman, James Campbell successfully dug ʻEwa's first artesian well in 1879, effectively solving the water problem. Campbell, who had purchased 40,000 acres (16,200 ha) of ʻEwa land thought he might start a cattle ranch, but quickly realized that ʻEwa's rich volcanic soil (which overlays a massive ancient coral reef) combined with year-round sunshine and a supply of water was ideal for growing sugar cane. Within a couple of years sugar plantations were sprouting up in this southwestern part of Oahu. The need for transportation between the harbor and ʻEwa was becoming essential.

[edit]Early phase of OR&L

While Dillingham's dream of large-scale settlement on the ʻEwa Plain would have to wait until the last decades of the twentieth century, his plan for a railroad to the area came together quickly. He leased Campbell's ʻEwa and Kahuku land to start two sugar plantations and obtained a government railroad charter from King David Kalākaua on September 11, 1888. After securing the capital, Dillingham broke ground in March 1889 with a goal of connecting the 12 miles (19 km) between Honolulu and ʻAiea (as demanded in the charter) by fall 1889. On November 16, 1889, the king's birthday, the OR&L officially opened, giving free rides to more than 4,000 curious people.

By 1892 the line was 18.5 miles (29.8 km) long, reaching ʻEwa sugar mill, home of Dillingham's ʻEwa Plantation Company property. Although progress stalled during the chaos of the late Kingdom and early Republican periods, by 1895 the railroad had passed through what would become the junction of Waipahu, traversed the ʻEwa plain, and was skirting the Waiʻanae coast to a sugar mill there. After issuing gold bonds in January 1897 the company extended the railroad around Oahu's rugged Kaʻena Point to Haleiwa on the north shore by June 1897, where Dillingham built a hotel. By December 1898 the main line was complete, stretching past Waimea Bay and Sunset Beach all the way to Kahuku and the Kahuku sugar mill past the island's northernmost tip. Although a circle-island line was proposed, it was never seriously considered. In 1906 an 11-mile (18 km) branch line was constructed from Waipahu up the Waikakalua Gulch to Wahiawa and the pineapple fields of central Oahu. The railroad had taken its final shape.

[edit]OR&L to World War II

The OR&L was not only a sugar cane railroad. While it served several sugar mills and plantations, it also hauled end products, equipment and workers. The sugar plantations sometimes had their own lines. As a common carrier, the OR&L carried freight, passengers, mail and parcels. For instance, besides sugar and pineapples, the railroad hauled garbage from Honolulu to a dump on the Waiʻanae Coast, sand from Waiʻanae to Honolulu during the development of Waikiki, and served the major military bases:Pearl HarborHickam FieldBarber's Point Naval Air StationSchofield Barracks, and Wheeler Army Airfield. The railroad was profitable, even during the Great Depression, and was a significant mode of communications and transportation until the 1930s. As with railroads in the mainland, private automobiles and public roads led to a decline in traffic, especially passengers. Leading up toWorld War II the OR&L had all but abandoned its passenger operations, focusing on its profitable freight operations.

[edit]OR&L and World War II

World War II was arguably the OR&L's most important period, but would prove to be the company's undoing. After the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, the OR&L became a major player in wartime transportation. The railroad carried out its regular freight operations as well as handling massive amounts of military-related traffic. The OR&L became the chief transporter of civilian base workers, sailors, soldiers, airmen and marines, both from Honolulu to their bases, or from those bases back to Honolulu for coveted R&R. In 1944 and 1945 the OR&L carried nearly two million riders.

[edit]Postwar finale

Oahu Railway and Land Company
Right-of-Way
A portion of the track is preserved
Oahu Railway and Land Company is located in Hawaii
Nearest city: Nanakuli, Hawaii
Coordinates: 21°21′14″N 158°1′40″W Coordinates21°21′14″N 158°1′40″W 
Area: 63 acres (25 ha)
Built: 1889
Architectural style: Narrow gauge railroad track
Governing body: U.S. Navy
NRHP Reference#: 75000621[3]
Added to NRHP: December 1, 1975

By the end of the war most of the rolling stock, right-of-way, and facilities were worn out. The company's executives pondered whether or not to continue operations. With the end of hostilities wartime traffic dried up. Moreover, Oahu's road network had been upgraded significantly, and thus for the first time there was serious road competition. The company plugged along for the remainder of 1945 and into 1946 transporting servicemen. Nevertheless, passenger traffic and gross revenues dropped more than fifty percent. The railroad's fate was sealed by the 1946 Aleutian Islands earthquake and the resulting 55-foot (17 m) tsunami that struck on April 1, 1946.

Overlooked by most historians is the fact that from September 1, 1946, through November 18, 1946, 22,000 sugar workers struck 33 of Hawaii's 34 sugar plantations.[4] Only the Gay & Robinson Plantation on Kauai remained in operation—it was non-union and privately owned, and is one of only two that remain in operation today (the other is Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar on Maui). The strike had a major impact on Hawaii, and OR&L's freight dropped to record lows. Although the OR&L rebuilt the tracks destroyed by the tsunami and continued operations during the strike, the decision was made to shut down the entire operation at the end of that year. On December 31, 1947, a final excursion carrying company President Walter F. Dillingham (Benjamin Dillingham's son), along with numerous guests, departed from Kahuku behind American Locomotive Company steam engine number 70 through 71.4 miles (114.9 km) of countryside back to the Honolulu station.[5] The OR&L was finished after fifty-eight years. The OR&L replaced its railroad with a truck transport operation.

Most of the system was dismantled in the years following the company's dissolution, although the double-tracked mainline from Honolulu to ʻAiea remained intact until around 1959. Four of the locomotives, 250 freight cars, and a huge quantity of track and supplies were sold to an El Salvadoran railroad in 1950. The Hibiscus & Heliconia Short Line Railroad (H&HSL RR) was formed in 1948 by local rail fans and modelers. Ben Dillingham gave the group a 1st class coach #47 and an observation car #48, formerly the private parlor car named Pearl. The Kahuku Plantation Co. allowed the group to use their tracks from near Kawela Bay toPunaluu. The group ran excursions infrequently, renting a steam locomotive from Kahuku Plantation. In 1950, the last steam locomotive was retired and the H&HSL RR then used one of two ex-Navy diesels. In 1954, the plantation abandoned its railroad in favor of trucks thus ending the H&HSL RR. Due to a lack of money and enthusiasm the group was unable to remove their two coaches from the property, so a plantation official had them torched. The OR&L's Honolulu harbor branch, renamed the Oahu Railway, was used until December 31, 1971 for industrial operations. It served a Kalihi stockyard (until 1961), but chiefly hauled incoming Molokai pineapples from the wharves to the Libby, McNeil and Libby and California Packing Corporation (Del Monte) canning plants. The final section of the line was taken over by the US Navy in 1950. The Navy, especially during the Korean Warand the Vietnam War, ran ammunition trains between the West Loch of the Pearl Harbor Naval Base, through the ʻEwa Plain, to the Lualualei Naval Ammunition Depot on the Waiʻanae coast, preserving one of the most famous and scenic stretches of the railroad. The Navy switched to trucks, and the railroad property was abandoned in 1970.

[edit]Historic preservation

In that same year a small group of railroad fans on Oahu learned of the abandonment and petitioned the Navy to turn the line and equipment over to them. This body became the Hawaiian Railway Society (HRS) in 1970. Nicholas Carter, a charter member of the HRS and one of its founders worked with others in the early 1970s, nominating the former OR&L mainline from ʻEwa to Nānākuli to the National Register of Historic Places. On December 1, 1975, U.S. Senator Hiram Fong reported that this had been done. Today the tracks are owned by the State of Hawaii, while the HRS is the line's caretaker. The HRS continues to maintain and extend the right-of-way while running excursion trains from its station in ʻEwa. Currently, trains are scheduled for Sunday afternoons, running past the new Second City of Kapolei, through the heart of the Koʻolina golf resort, and up the Waiʻanae Coast, presently only as far as Kahe Point. However, the tracks east of Fort Weaver Road have been pulled up, so trains can only operate on the line west of that.

OR&L equipment preserved at Travel Town

Three cars were preserved at Travel Town Museum in Griffith Park, California. Coach #1,combination car #36 and caboose #1, all built circa 1900 at the OR&L shops, were donated to the museum by the OR&L in 1953.[6]

[edit]Steel guitar

It is alleged that the steel guitar was invented by Joseph Kekuku when he picked up a railroad spike and slid along the strings of his guitar whilst walking beside the line in the 1880s, perhaps the line of this very railroad.[citation needed]

[edit]References

  1. ^ (Chiddix & Simpson 2004, pp. 19–21)
  2. ^ (Chiddix & Simpson 2004, p. 260)
  3. ^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic PlacesNational Park Service. 2009-03-13.
  4. ^ Holmes, T. Michael (1994). "The Territory of Hawaii" . The Specter of Communism in HawaiiUniversity of Hawaii Press. p. 37.ISBN 9780824815509.
  5. ^ (Chiddix & Simpson 2004, p. 312)
  6. ^ Notes On Your Visit to the Travel Town Museum. Travel Town Museum

[edit]Bibliography

  • Best, Gerald M. (1978), Railroads of Hawaii: Narrow and Standard Gauge Common CarriersGolden West Books
  • Chiddix, Jim; Simpson, MacKinnon (2004), Next Stop Honolulu, Honolulu: Sugar Cane Press, ISBN 0-9706213-1-0
  • Treiber, Gale E. (2003), Hawaiian Railway Album WWII Photographs1, The Railroad Press
  • Treiber, Gale E. (2005), Hawaiian Railway Album WWII Photographs2, The Railroad Press



1894

 
U.S. in collusion with the Oahu Railway.
                                                     1901
Oahu Railway deeded Halawa lands to the U.S. Government.  Oahu Railway did not have titles to the lands.
                                      1947
Oahu Railway disbands.
                                                      1960

The Honolulu High-Capacity Transit Corridor Project (HHCTCP) is the official name for the plan to construct an elevated rapid transit line serving theCity and County of Honolulu on the island of Oahu. Plans for a mass transitline to connect Honolulu's urban center with outlying areas began in the 1960s,[1] but funding was not approved until 2005.[2] The controversy over the rail line was the dominant issue for local politics leading into the 2008 Honolulu elections,[3] and culminated in a city charter amendment which left the final decision to the citizens of Oahu.[4] The amendment passed with 53% of voters in favor.[5] A ground-breaking ceremony to signal the beginning of construction was held on February 22, 2011.[6][7]

The project, as planned, will construct an elevated rapid transit line from the edge of Kapolei, near the proposed site of the University of Hawaii-West Oahu campus, to Ala Moana Center. The line will pass through communities along southern Oahu, via Honolulu International Airport and downtown Honolulu. The plan also includes extensions west through Kapolei, and a link through Salt Lake. In addition, there will be extensions east to the University of Hawaii-Manoa campus and Waikiki.[8] The line will use 128 ft (39 m) trains carrying about 390 passengers each, similar in size to light rail systems elsewhere in the United States (such as the MAX in Portland, Oregon and the Gold Line in Los Angeles) as opposed to larger trains typically found on rapid transit systems like the New York City Subway.[9]

                                                     1970
Oahu Rail ended business in the Hawaiian Islands.
                                                     

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  •   1970
    Hawaii Railway Society was organized.
                                                         

    Burial issues

    A likely problem that will arise during construction of the rail line in the downtown Honolulu area is that historic human remains will be uncovered. The Oahu Island Burial Council (part of the State Historic Preservation Division, within the State of Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources) refused to participate in signing a programmatic agreement on October 21, 2009 over concerns about likely issues regarding burial sites located along the line's proposed route over Halekauwila Street in Kakaʻako. Three construction projects in the area since 2002 have each encountered unforeseen human remains that led to delays, and archaeologist Thomas Dye has stated, "The council is absolutely right that you should expect to find burials on Halekauwila Street."[53]

    The Burial Council's core contention is the city's decision to conduct an archaeological survey of the rail line's route in phases, meaning construction on a majority of the line will be complete by the time the survey in the Kakaʻako area is performed, which in turn increases the likelihood that any remains discovered will be moved instead of being allowed to remain in situ.[54] In response to the Burial Council's concerns, the city agreed to begin conducting an archaeological survey of the area in 2010, two years earlier than originally planned.[53] The state Department of Land and Natural Resources later signed the city's programmatic agreement on January 15, 2011, over the continuing concerns of the Burial Council.[55]

    The city's decision to conduct the archaeological survey in phases subsequently led to a lawsuit filed on February 1, 2011 by theNative Hawaiian Legal Corporation on behalf of cultural practitioner Paulette Kaleikini. The suit, which names both the city and the State of Hawaii as defendants, contends that state law requires the full length of the rail line to have an archaeological survey conducted before any construction takes place, and seeks to void the environmental impact statement and all construction permits issued for the project.[56] Kaleikini's lawyers filed on February 18 a request for an injunction to stop work on the project until the case is resolved.[7] The suit was dismissed on March 23, 2011 after Circuit Court Judge Gary Chang ruled that state and federal laws allow the archaeological surveys to be conducted in phases.[57]

    Delays

    Construction on the HHCTCP rail line was originally scheduled to begin in December 2009, but did not occur owing to delays in the in project review process, including delays in obtaining federal approval of the environmental impact statement.[58]

    In January 2010, Governor Lingle publicly recommended that the city alter plans for the rail line after news reports on FTA documents where the federal agency raised issues over declining tax revenues in connection with a global economic recession,[59]and commissioned a study by the state to review the project's finances in March.[60] The state financial study, publicly released on December 2, 2010, indicated that the project would likely experience a $1.7 billion overrun above the $5.3 billion projected cost, and that collections from the General Excise Tax would be 30% below forecasts. Lingle's successor, Neil Abercrombie, publicly stated that the financial analysis would not affect his decision to approve or disapprove of the project, saying that the state's responsibility is limited to the environmental review process, and that decisions regarding the project's finances belong to the city and the FTA.[61] Governor Abercrombie subsequently approved the project's final environmental impact statement on December 16, 2010.[62] The Honolulu City Council held a hearing on January 12, 2011 about the state's financial review, but the hearing was not attended by any state officials, who had been invited to testify.[63]

    Honolulu mayor Peter Carlisle speaking at the project's groundbreaking ceremony

    On January 18, 2011, the FTA issued a "record of decision," indicating that the HHCTCP has met the requirements of its environmental review and that the city is allowed to begin construction work on the project.[42] The record of decision allows the city to begin negotiating with owners of land that will be purchased for the project, to begin relocating utility lines to make way for construction of the line and stations, and to purchase rolling stock for the rail line.[64][65] A ground-breaking ceremony was held on February 22, 2011 in Kapolei, at the site of the future East Kapolei station along Kualakai Parkway.[6][7]

    Route

    City and state politicians at the project's groundbreaking ceremony

    The proposed rail line has thirty-six stations and runs from Kapolei to Ala Moana Shopping Center in Honolulu, where it will split into spurs leading to the University of Hawaii at Manoa campus and Waikiki. The line will fork near Aloha Stadium into two routes, one passing Honolulu International Airport, and the other moving through Salt Lake, before reuniting at Middle Street in Kalihi. The city currently plans to build the section of the line between eastern Kapolei and Ala Moana Shopping Center, excluding the portion passing Salt Lake, with a total of twenty-one stations along the route.[8] The city council initially decided to build the Salt Lake route before the airport route, the result of a compromise with City Councilmember Romy Cachola, whose constituents include Salt Lake residents.[66][67] After the city charter amendment on rail transit passed, the City Council reconsidered the decision, and decided to re-route the rail line to pass by Pearl Harbor and the airport.[68][69] The line will be served by 128 ft (39 m) long trains, each with a capacity of 390 passengers.[9] The trains will operate with up to twenty departures per hour.[70]

    The line is scheduled to open in three phases between 2015 and 2019:[71][72]

    • December 2015: East Kapolei – Aloha Stadium
    • October 2017: Aloha Stadium – Middle Street
    • March 2019: Middle Street – Ala Moana Center

    The rail line, as currently planned, will be built starting from suburban areas in Kapolei and Ewa, and progressing towards the urban center in Honolulu. This is because the first phase includes a baseyard for trains, and a planning decision by the city to delay the major infrastructure impacts associated with construction in the urban center to later phases of the project.[73] Future extensions are planned to eventually service the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, and Waikiki, as well as Kalaeloa.[72]

    On October 21, 2009, the city announced Kiewit Pacific Co. had won the $483 million contract to build the first two stages of the line, bidding $90 million under the expected price. The stations will be tendered separately. Construction is scheduled to begin in December 2009, pending approval of the environmental impact statement by the state and federal governments and approval of funding from the Federal Transit Administration. Bids for the next section from Pearl Highlands and Aloha Stadium are expected in November 2009.[72][74]

    The same manufacturers built trains for a similar project in Copenhagen.

    Rolling stock for the line will initially include 80 cars in 40 two-car consists, built by a joint venture between AnsaldoBreda and Ansaldo STS named Ansaldo Honolulu. (AnsaldoBreda and Ansaldo STS previously collaborated on the construction and operation of vehicles for the Copenhagen Metro.)[75] Each car will be 64 ft (20 m) long, weigh 72,000 lb (33,000 kg), and have 36 seats with a listed total capacity of 195 people.[9] The cars will be powered by a third-rail electrification system.[76] The two competing bidders for the rail car contract, Bombardier Transportation and Sumitomo Corporation of America, have filed protests over the award.[77]

    Planned stations

    On September 29, 2009, Oahu Transit Services and the City & County of Honolulu announced plans to build an intermodal transit center that will be located at TheBus' facilities at Middle Street. The $8.2 million dollar project, called The Middle Street Intermodal Center, whose location will take up a large portion of the Middle Street-Kamehameha Highway intersection, is scheduled to open in October 2010. The newly expanded facility will incorporate TheBus, HandiVan, bicycles, cars, walking and the future light rail line, that, once completed in 2017 (after the line expands from the Aloha Stadium portion to the Middle Street station stop during its fourth phase), will include a bridge and walkway for passengers who want to make connections to the rail line from the transit center. In addition, the center will also have a 1000-car parking facility, an enclosed transit layover bay for waiting passengers, an electronic information billboard, a customer service center, two restroom buildings, a utility building and security office.[78]

     

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