Bio-tech on the ballot

Today, voters in both Maui County and Kauaʻi County face decisions that will impact the bio-tech industry and the chemical companies that dominate it.

Will Caron / Pesticide concerns / Read
Chemical companies spend record amount of money to defeat Maui ballot initiative

Monsanto, Dow, the Hawaii Crop Improvement Association and a D.C.-based bio-tech non-profit organization have raised almost 100 times more money to defeat Maui County's GMO moratorium initiative than its proponents have spent to see it passed.

Will Caron / Pesticide concerns / Environmental Leader <
Fear + manipulation = ease of privatization

How the campaign to convince Hawaiʻi voters to authorize the routing of public funds to private preschools threatens equity in our schools, and what we need to do to get back on track toward a successful public school system.

Jeanne Marie Iorio & Clifton Tanabe / Public education system / Read
Saving UH from itself

A long-time University of Hawaiʻi professor outlines the three primary overhauls needed to save the University system and turn the failing Mānoa campus around.

Dr. Joel Fischer / UH System Woes / Read
Preschool amendment fails our children

While early learning programs are vital to our childrens' futures, the current proposal (Ballot Questions 4) to allow public dollars to fund private preschool operations is not the way we ought to go about creating those programs.

Kris Coffield / Public education system / Read
Independence for French Polynesia?

U.N. General Assembly discusses plans for genuine process of self-determination for French Polynesia / Ma'ohi Nui

Will Caron / Indigenous issues / Overseas Territories Review <
Kaka’ako community group urges HCDA overhaul

Kakaʽako Ūnited has sent a letter to the gubernatorial candidates asking that the next Governor of Hawaiʻi change the way HCDA does business.

Will Caron / Kakaako / Read
Private islands, super-yachts and Marine Protected Areas

How Marine Protected Areas have given rise to a surge of profit-seeking Eco-tourism investments.

Craig Santos Perez / Read
Mānoa faculty demand System reform

A group of UH Mānoa faculty members have sent testimony to the Board of Regents urging the board to fix serious flaws at the System level.

Will Caron / UH System Woes / Read
Bley-Vroman says Advertiser is wrong on campus budget shortfall

The new Mānoa Chancellor disputes the Star-Advertiser's claim today that campus officials are projecting a $31 million budget deficit for next year.

On Tuesday, October 7, the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa administration held a “Campus-wide Conversation” at Kuykendall Auditorium that focused on an informational briefing on the University budget, past, present and future. The meeting drew a packed house of students, faculty, staff, alumni and other members of the community. Vice Chancellor for Administration, Finance and Operations Kathy Cutshaw and newly appointed interim Chancellor Robert Bley-Vroman fielded questions, took suggestions and listened as some voiced continuing concerns over the future of the system’s flagship campus.

The Chancellor sent out an email thanking all the participants for showing up or streaming the conversation live. In his email, the Chancellor also says that the front-page article in today’s Star-Advertiser “UH-Manoa to be $31M in the red,” is factually incorrect in its headline and second paragraph, which states, “Manoa officials are projecting a $31 million deficit for the fiscal year that ends June 30, despite efforts to curb spending.” 

“As we clearly pointed out in the presentation on Tuesday, we do not expect a negative bottom line in fiscal year 2015 and, in fact, are working very hard to deal with a shifting funding landscape in which public funding and other revenue sources are falling faster than tuition dollars,” said Bley-Vroman.

Click to view the budget PowerPoint.

Both Bley-Vroman and Cutshaw will visit the Mānoa Faculty Senate during its next meeting on Wednesday, October 15, according to the agenda, presumably to continue conversations about the budget situation and hiring freeze.

 

Will Caron / UH System Woes / Read