With Micah Kane in the running for Kamehameha Schools trustee, his record in managing the Hawaiian Home Lands trust is coming under public scrutiny.
Kane, formerly a Building Industry Association lobbyist and head of the Hawaii Republican Party, was named chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in 2002, in part to deliver on Gov. Linda Lingle’s campaign promise to shorten the waiting list for homestead awards.
Kane set a bold goal of awarding 6,000 residential leases during his tenure, compared to the 7,200 that had been granted over the entire prior history of the department. Even bolder was his plan to fund the agency’s operations and projects through revenues generated by commercial leases.
But with just 18 months left in his term, critics say Kane has missed his residential lease target and forgotten the original intent of the 200,000-acre Homelands trust–to rehabilitate Native Hawaiians by getting them back on their own land–in his quest to satisfy Lingle’s goal of making the department financially self-sufficient.
Big Island homesteader Wallace Beck said DHHL has repeatedly tried to get him to give up his 10-acre farm lot across from Home Depot in Panaewa so that it can be leased to industrial tenants instead. “Now that Hawaiian Homes sees the value of the land, they’re trying to get it from me,” said the 86-year-old Beck, who has farmed there for 50 years. “Most of my neighbors were evicted to make way for industrial lots and warehouses.”
Kane has also drawn criticism for supporting the governor’s de-funding philosophy by steadily reducing the agency’s share of general funds. When Kane was named chair, the agency was receiving $1.35 million in general funds. He requested none for the 2010 fiscal year.
“What kind of trustee neglects his beneficiaries?” asked attorney Alan Murakami of the Native Hawaiian Legal Corp., which last year sued DHHL and the governor for failing to request or secure sufficient public funding for the agency. A judge dismissed the claim, saying it was a political question that he couldn’t decide.
Kane, however, said he’s proud to have “weaned” DHHL off general funds, a strategy he pursued for two reasons. Accepting taxpayer funds to operate programs that “benefit a single class of people” could open up the department to an equal protection lawsuit, he said. Secondly, he believes that “financial self-sufficiency is political independence.”
“I don’t want the Legislature to get off the hook,” said Jerry Mauhili, former president of the Keaukaha-Panaewa Community Association, which previously sued DHHL over the loss of trust lands to a Hawaii County flood control project. “The attitude is always, we’ve given you land. You want money, too? We need to look at what can make us money and also what is due us from the state Legislature. The Hawaii Visitors Bureau is given millions annually and Hawaiian Homes has been neglected. We’re lost in the shuffle.”
Kane said he has pursued state support of DHHL programs through funding for capital improvement projects, such as roads and water lines that benefit “a broader sector” than solely the agency’s beneficiaries.
DHHL also receives $30 million annually under a $600 million settlement with the state over its prior uncompensated use of DHHL lands. That funding ends in four years. Kane has maintained that the general leases he’s pursued will help make up for the loss of those monies. During his tenure, the agency approved 19 new general land leases totaling $4.6 million annually and 102 new revocable permits that generate some $2.45 million each year. Another six properties are currently being marketed, and the agency expects to formalize leases on them over the next 18 months.
For Murakami, Kane’s rationale doesn’t make sense because the numbers don’t add up.
Even at $30 million a year, it would still take 76 years to exhaust a wait list of 18,000 persons, he said. Kane believes the general lease revenues will provide adequate funding to meet homestead demand. The agency also has partnered with Office of Hawaiian Affairs to float revenue bonds to help pay for future infrastructure costs.
Critics, however, contend that the agency’s recent infrastructure spending has primarily benefited commercial leaseholders.
“Hawaiian Homes hasn’t provided any infrastructure for agriculture,” said Molokai homesteader Glenn Teves. Nor has the department helped Molokai farmers purchase equipment so they can work their homestead awards, even though DHHL has a program for such purposes.
The Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement, which conducted a March 2009 budget analysis of the DHHL, also raised questions about the agency’s infrastructure spending. In its report, it requested “a breakdown of how the $410.9M in trust funds were expended, by year, with specific data for 2007 and 2008 wherein $143.8M and $142.0M was expended in each year respectively [and] breakdown by administration versus capital expenditures with a listing of the capital projects constructed.”
Although Kane has achieved his goal of generating additional commercial lease revenues, he has fallen short of awarding 6,000 new residential leases. Only about 2,500 have been awarded to date, a figure that includes some 1,436 “undivided interest awards” in future subdivisions where the infrastructure is still being developed.
DHHL maintains that the undivided interest program gives people a chance to get their finances in order so they’re ready when the lots are. But Murakami said it instead serves “to disguise their failure to perform” by artificially inflating the number of lease awards.
“These leases are real,” DHHL spokesman Lloyd Yonenaka said in an e-mail, noting that some families who got undivided interest awards in Kapolei are now residing in their homes.
Kane said the agency “can award demand” and currently has lots available on the Big Island and Kauai. But many of those on the waiting list, especially those that applied prior to 2003, have financial and social problems that prevent them from qualifying for home mortgages.
“When I started, I thought all we needed to do was build homes,” Kane said. “Then I realized we needed to build people, too. We’ve purposely pulled back on lease awards so we can focus on the families.”
Mauhili said home ownership could be made truly affordable if homesteaders were given 99-year mortgages that match the length of their land leases. “The purpose of the Trust was to get Hawaiians back on their own land, to keep them from being homeless,” he said.
Mauhili and others said their criticisms go beyond Kane and his predecessor Ray Soon. Both men were simply carrying out the wishes of the governors who appointed them–minimizing the state’s financial obligation to DHHL.
“What it always comes down to is this: we don’t have money and we don’t know when we’re going to get money so you folks just have to wait,” Mauhili said. “We’ve waited half a century and we’re still waiting. Don’t make us wait another half-century.”
http://honoluluweekly.com/feature/2009/05/something-else-in-stead/
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Monday, July 20, 2009
Micah Kane named Kamehameha Schools trustee
Pacific Business News (Honolulu)
Micah Kane, chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, has been appointed a trustee of Kamehameha Schools.
Kane, a Kamehameha graduate, was named to a five-year term starting Sept. 1 by Probate Judge Colleen Hirai.
He replaces retired Adm. Robert Kihune, whose term ended Friday.
Kane has served as chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands since 2003. He previously was chairman of the Hawaii Republican Party. He holds a master’s of business administration degree from the University of Hawaii.
Kane was one of three finalists. Also considered were Anthony Ching, executive director of the Hawaii Community Development Authority, and Ray Soon, a former Kamehameha Schools executive and former chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands.
The four Kamehameha Schools trustees with current terms are: Diane Plotts, Corbett Kalama, Doug Ing and Chairman Nainoa Thompson.
The position pays about $90,000 annually.
Kamehameha Schools, founded in 1883 by Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop as a nonprofit trust, operates schools on Oahu, Maui and the Big Island for more than 6,700 students of Hawaiian ancestry. It is the state’s largest private landowner with more than 360,000 acres.
http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/stories/2009/07/20/daily6.html
December 31, 2010
Olds picked as newest trustee for Kamehameha Schools
Janeen-Ann Ahulani Olds has been selected as the newest trustee for Kamehameha Schools/Bishop Estate, replacing Nainoa Thompson.
Olds, 47, has served as general counsel for Waimana Enterprises since 2008. Prior to joining Waimana, Olds worked as a private attorney specializing in international commercial law, insurance, banking and real estate.
Olds, who will begin her five-year term on Feb. 1, will join trustees Corbett Kalama, J. Douglas Ing, Micah Kane and Diane Plotts. Olds was one of three candidates who was selected by a screening committee and referred to a probate court judge, who approved Olds’ appointment last week.
Olds was unavailable for comment.
Olds will replace Thompson, who has served on the board since 2000. Thompson is a master navigator and the program director for the Polynesian Voyaging Society.
Thompson is the son of former Bishop Estate trustee Myron “Pinky” Thompson.
Trustees for Kamehameha Schools, which was established in 1883 by the will of Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop, receive annual compensation of $92,000 to $106,000. The nonprofit organization educates children of Hawaiian ancestry. It is one of the largest charities in the nation, and is the largest private landowner in Hawaii.
http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/print-edition/2010/12/31/scoops-whos-moving-buying-opening.html
 The Board of Trustees, from left: J. Douglas Ing, Janeen-Ann Ahulani Olds, Corbett A.K. Kalama, Diane J. Plotts and Micah A. Kāne. |
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The Trustees and Executives of Kamehameha Schools
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| The Board of Trustees |
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In accordance with the Will of Bernice Pauahi Bishop, the governance of Kamehameha Schools rests with a Board of Trustees (the Board). Composed of five individuals – equally vested with the responsibility and duty of collectively carrying out the testamentary Will of Bernice Pauahi Bishop – the sole purpose of the Board is to set policy. In accordance with Kamehameha's organizational structure, the day-to-day management of the institution rests with a board-appointed Chief Executive Officer and his/her chosen managerial staff.
Chairman J. Douglas Ing
Vice Chairman Micah A. Kāne
Secretary/Treasurer Janeen-Ann Ahulani Olds
Trustee Corbett A.K. Kalama
Trustee Diane J. Plotts |
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| Chief Executive Officer |
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In August 2000, the Board of Trustees authorized a structural reorganization of Kamehameha Schools that began with institutional governance. For the first time in the Schools' history, responsibility for the day-to-day management of Kamehameha's education and endowment operations was placed in the hands of a Chief Executive Officer (CEO).
Dee Jay A. Mailer |
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| The Vice Presidents |
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To maximize institutional inclusiveness and to broaden authority, accountability and efficiency, the CEO built a managerial team of executives – knowledgeable and respected within their respective fields – to represent each of Kamehameha's operational groups: Community Relations and Communications, Endowment, Campus Strategic and Academic Affars, Administration, Finance, Legal Services, and Strategic Planning and Implementation.
Vice President for Endowment Kirk O. Belsby
Vice President of Campus Strategic and Academic Affairs D. Rodney Chamberlain, D.Ed.
Vice President for Administration Sylvia Hussey
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Eric Marler
Vice President for Strategic Planning and Implementation Christopher J. Pating
Vice President for Legal Services Colleen I. Wong |
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| Education Executives |
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President & Headmaster - Kapalama Campus Michael J. Chun, Ph.D.
Headmaster - Hawai'i Campus Stan Fortuna, Jr., Ed.D.
Headmaster - Maui Campus Lee Ann DeLima |
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| Ke Ali'i Pauahi Foundation |
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Executive Director Kalei Stern
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JANEEN-ANN AHULANI OLDS Secretary/Treasurer Board of Trustees Kamehameha Schools | |
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Trustee Janeen-Ann Ahulani Olds
Janeen-Ann Ahulani Olds is an accomplished attorney that has practiced law in the state of Hawai‘i since 1988. Currently working as general counsel for Waimana Enterprises, Inc., Olds has been selected and listed nationally in “Best Lawyers in America” in the area of banking law.
Born in Kailua, O‘ahu, Olds spent much of her childhood in the continental United States before returning to the islands in time to graduate from Radford High School. She then went on to earn her bachelor’s degree at the University of Notre Dame before attending the Boston College Law School.
Prior to working at Waimana, Olds spent 20 years with the law firm Kobayashi, Sugita & Goda, LLP. Going from associate to partner to executive committee member to co-managing partner in her time there, Olds became one of the top corporate and real estate lawyers in the state.
She is active in her church and in the Notre Dame Club of Hawai‘i, serving as board member and president. Olds is married to Richard B. Stack and has two sons, both attending Kamehameha.
Return to Officers of KS
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