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Events

18 events matching Culture, Sports

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Monday, May 18, 2026

5:00 PMSportsCultureKids

ʻOhana Game Night

O‘ahu – Nānākuli, 89-070 Farrington Hwy., Waianae, 96792, United States

Join us for ʻOhana Game Night! We’ll have a variety of games for all ages, featuring both classic board games and newer favorites like Uno, Sorry!, Connect 4, Chutes and Ladders, Throw Throw Burrito, Splendor, and more. Anyone who requires an auxiliary aid or service for effective communication, or a modification of policies or procedures to participate in a program, service, or activity should contact library staff as soon as possible. Advance requests 48 hours or more before the event are encouraged, but not required. All programs are subject to change.

5:00 PMCultureEducationKids

Lei Day

Hawai‘i – Pāhoa, 15-3070 Pahoa-Kalapana Rd, Pāhoa, HI, 96778, United States

It’s May so that means it’s time to make leis! Come and learn how to create one. Supplies provided, but we also will be accepting donations of flowers and ti leaves. Program is suitable for ages 6 and over. All children must be accompanied by a parent or an adult caregiver. Anyone who requires an auxiliary aid or service for effective communication, or a modification of policies or procedures to participate in a program, service, or activity should contact library staff as soon as possible. Advance requests 48 hours or more before the event are encouraged, but not required. Program schedules are subject to change. Events will not be held on State holidays.

5:30 PMCultureEducationFree

Hawaiian History Talk Story-Kamehameha I and the Conquest of the Kingdom

Hawai‘i – North Kohala, 54-3645 ‘Akoni Pule Hwy, Kapa'au, HI, 96755, United States

Come listen to local historian Boyd Bond talk about King Kamehameha’s conquest to unite the islands and form the kingdom of Hawaii. Anyone who requires an auxiliary aid or service for effective communication or a modification of policies or procedures to participate in a program, service, or activity should contact library staff as soon as possible. Advance requests 48 hours or more before the event are encouraged, but not required. All programs are subject to change.

7:00 PMMusicSportsTheater

26. Wahiawā-Whitmore Village NB Regular Meeting

Wahiawā District Park (Halekoa Building), 1139-A Kilani Avenue, Wahiawā , Hawaiʻi, 96786, United States, Honolulu

WAHIAWĀ - WHITMORE VILLAGE NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 26     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA MONDAY, MAY 18, 2026 at 7:00 P.M. WAHIAWA DISTRICT PARK – MEETING ROOM 1129 KILANI AVENUE WAHIAWA, HI 96786 AND ONLINE VIA WEBEX Meeting Link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=m95be2302a88b88c96c999e18fb242525 Meeting Number / Access Code: 2485 886 5182 Password: NB26 (6226 from phones and video systems) Join by Phone: United States Toll +1-408-418-9388 Phone: Chair will ask if there are any participants on the phone, state your name and position on issue/concern. Video: Raise your hand, Chair will recognize you and ask to state your name and position on the issue/concern. Neighborhood Board 26 Rules of Decorum: Listed under Agenda Item V and shall be followed by all participants. Written testimony: All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817. Fax: (808) 768-3711. Email: nbtestimony@honolulu.gov. Meeting Materials: Find an archive of handouts and referenced materials for Neighborhood Board No. 26 at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Yd5HUNwQV4zDLyFMyvEkED-_DA0Xxgd7 Meeting Recordings: https://www.youtube.com/@NeighborhoodCommissionOffice/search?query=wahiawa Sign-In: Attendees are encouraged to sign the NCO Sign-In Sheet. Virtual attendees: identify themselves and the organization they represent. Rules of Speaking: 1. Anyone wishing to speak shall do so at the microphone, by identifying themselves and addressing their comments to the Chair, and are encouraged to keep to the two (2) minutes rule. 2. Those giving reports shall also do so at the microphone and are urged to keep their reports to three (3) minutes. Presentations are allowed ten (10) minutes. 3. Please silence all electronic devices. NOTE: The Board may take action on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (HRS92), specific issues not noted on this Agenda cannot be voted on, unless added to the agenda. A two-thirds (2/3) vote of six (6) of this nine (9) member Board is needed to add an item to the agenda. Items may not be added if they are of major importance and will affect a significant number of people. OPENING CEREMONIES AT 6:58 P.M.: Aloha and Pledge of Allegiance I. CALL TO ORDER AT 7:00 P.M.: Chair Jeanne Ishikawa II. FIRST RESPONDER MONTHLY REPORTS A. Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) B. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) III. LEILEHUA HIGH SCHOOL VALEDICTORIANS AND MIGHTY MULE AWARD Presenter: Jason Nakamoto, Principal, Leilehua High School IV. MONTHLY REPORTS (Limited to three (3) minutes each) A. Federal/Military 1. Congressmember Jill Tokuda Nicole Grey 2. United States Army Lt. Lexi Cox 3. United States Navy Daniel Sanford B. Government Agencies 1. Board of Water Supply (BWS) Nicole Rodwell 2. State Dept of Transportation Fawn Yamada V. RESIDENT’S CONCERNS & COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS (Please state your name and organization. Limited to two (2) minutes each.) VI. PRESENTATIONS: Rules of Decorum: All participants at this meeting shall extend the spirit of aloha to one another. There shall be no displays of disrespect to one another. Public comments can be made, within the stated time limits and without interruption, unless the comments are offensive and/or out of order, and are “not conducive to civil discourse.” A. Update on Whitmore Wastewater Receiving Facility Presenter: Michael Cummings, P. E.; Honolulu Dept of Environmental Services, City & County of Honolulu VII. ELECTED OFFICIALS (Limited to three (3) minutes each) A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi Kevin Auger B. Councilmember Matt Weyer Kelly Anaya C. Governor Josh Green D. Senator Donovan Dela Cruz Malachi Burrows E. Representative Amy Perruso VIII. BOARD BUSINESS A. Approval of Minutes 1. Regular Meeting of March 16, 2026 B. Chair’s Report and Board Actions 1. Call for Disclosure by Board Members (meetings, events, etc.) 2. Correspondence and Distribution. C. Committee Reports 1. Education: Erin Mendelson, Committee Chair 2. Military: Ethan Roesler, Committee Chair 3. Transportation/OMPO: Joe Francher, Committee Chair 4. Water: Jeanne Ishikawa, Committee Chair 5. Hawaiian Affairs: Yvonne Yoro, Committee Chair IX. ANNOUNCEMENTS: A. Board Meetings: Our next Wahiawā-Whitmore Village Neighborhood Board No. 26 meeting will be held on Monday, June 15, 2026 at 7:00 P.M. at the Wahiawa District Park’s Hale Koa Meeting Room. Please check the website for any updates on our meeting schedule. B. May Training Advisory for Army Range on O’ahu For the community’s awareness, the training is as follows: • May 13-19, 26-30, 31: Artillery, mortar, and demolitions, live fire training on Schofield Barracks (Day and Night Live Fire, including late evening and early morning. 5a.m. – midnight • May 18-21, 26-27. East Range: Range and Jungle tactics, Small Arms Blank fire: 6a.m. – 6 p.m. daily. C. Information Contacts: • City Streets Pothole Hotline: #808.768.7777 • State Streets Pothole Hotline: #808.536.7852 • HART Maintained Roads Pothole Hotline: #808.566.2299 • City’s Refuse Inspector Office #808.768-5220. • Schofield Noise Complaints: #808.656.3487(email: usaghi.comrel@gmail.com) or the 25th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office at (808) 655-4756 or email usaghi.comrel@gmail.com X. MAY MESSAGE: Aloha Everyone: The month of May brings forth many memorable moments to share with family and friends… this is the time when flowers bloom and blossom with beautiful colors and sweet smells of lei…this is the time of celebrations of Lei Day…Parades…Graduations… But, this is also the time when we can pause for a moment to remember and thank all those who volunteered, our family and friends, heroes and volunteers, present and past…whoever served and sacrificed for us… For those known and for the Unknown, thank you for your service. XI. ADJOURNMENT ‘Olelo: WWV NB26 meetings are videotaped for re-broadcast on ‘Olelo on the following dates: 1st Tuesday on Focus 49 at 9:00 p.m. and 1st and 3rd Saturdays on View 54 at 6:00 a.m. A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapalama Hale, Suite 160, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96817; Telephone (808) 768-3710 Fax (808) 768-3711. Agendas and minutes are also available on the internet at www.honolulu.gov/nco. All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817. Fax: (808) 768-3711. Email: nbtestimony@honolulu.gov. If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov as soon as possible, preferably at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. If a request is received with fewer that three (3) business days remaining before the meeting, we will try to obtain the auxiliary aid/service or accommodation, but it may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD MONDAY, MARCH 16, 2026 at 7:00 P.M. WHITMORE VILLAGE COMMUNITY PARK - 1259 WHITMORE AVENUE, WAHIAWĀ, HI 96786 AND ONLINE VIA WEBEX Video recording of Meeting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJAIJCfs1Zw Meeting Materials: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Yd5HUNwQV4zDLyFMyvEkED-_DA0Xxgd7 CALL TO ORDER -- [0:00:40]: Chair Jeanne Ishikawa called the Wahiawā-Whitmore Village Neighborhood Board No. 26 meeting to order at 7:00 p.m. Quorum was established with 9 members present. Note: This 9-member Board requires 5 members to establish quorum and to take official Board action. Members Present: Jeanne Ishikawa, Joe Francher, Jyun Yamamoto, Ethan Roesler, Yvonne Yoro, Erin Mendelson, TJ Cuaresma, Michelle Umaki, and Sylvia Manley-Koch. Members Absent: None. Guests: Lieutenant Scott Vierra; (Honolulu Police Department); Chief Jose Jaen (United States Navy, filling in for Daniel Sanford); Nicole Gray (Congresswoman Jill Tokuda); Kevin Auger (Mayor Rick Blangiardi); Kelly Anaya (Councilmember Matt Weyer); Charles Miller (Senator Donovan Dela Cruz); Representative Amy Perruso; Barbara Natali and Kira Ramos (G70 / DLNR); Jun Yang, Brandon Misuda, and Alan Ong (Office of Governor, Statewide Office on Homelessness and Housing Solutions); Sierra Martin (KWO Homeless Outreach); Michael Cummings (City and County of Honolulu, Dept. of Environmental Services); Patrick Watson (Honua Consulting); George Grace and John Sakamoto (waste haulers); Joseph Simpliciano (Kingdom Pathways); Nani Brown; Tom Lanchenko; Andrew Phomsouvanh; Jeffrey Jones (Neighborhood Commission Office). Note: Name not included if not legible or stated for the record. There were approximately 77 participants. FIRST RESPONDER MONTHLY REPORTS – [0:00:13] Honolulu Police Department (HPD) – [0:00:17]: Lieutenant Scott Vierra provided the report and highlighted the following: • February 2026 Statistics: 2 assaults; 0 robberies; 0 burglaries; 2 unauthorized entries into motor vehicles; 31 motor vehicle collisions (MVCs); total calls for service: 875. • Safety Tip / HPD Website: Lt. Vieira invited the community to visit https://www.honolulupd.org/, noting it contains a wealth of information including live dispatch calls updated every 15 minutes, 24-hour calls for service, and online reporting options such as graffiti reporting. He noted an uptick in graffiti in Wahiawa. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:02:28] 1. Power Outage Signage: Aquino asked whether HPD could place signage near Camp for the next power outage, noting that visitors tend to drive through intersections rather than stopping. Lt. Vierra acknowledged the outage was prolonged and that at least some intersections lacked signage, and stated he would bring it up. He also commended the Wahiawa community for driving slowly and cautiously along California Avenue during the outages. Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) – [0:04:15]: No representative present. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Ew0985-djtw5RXF309Pv19GNz3UgDmZ5/view?usp=drive_link MONTHLY REPORTS – [0:04:25] Chair Announcement – [0:04:28]: Chair Ishikawa announced that the Department of Environmental Services (ENV) notified the board that afternoon they would be unable to attend due to ongoing citywide and statewide issues. Their presentation will be rescheduled for a future meeting. Congressmember Jill Tokuda’s Office – [0:05:01]: No representative present. United States Army – [0:05:11]: 1st Lt. Julia Gogal provided the report and highlighted the following: • Hiring Fair: US Army Garrison Hawaii is holding their next hiring fair on March 17th at Mililani High School cafeteria from 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. • Prescribed Burns: Still scheduled for April 13th–19th on Schofield Barracks training range area. • Concert on the Lawn: US Army Garrison Hawaii MWR is presenting a concert featuring the 25th ID Band at Palm Circle, Fort Shafter on March 26th from 6:00–8:00 p.m. • Community Concerns Line: For any concerns, call US Army Garrison Hawaii at (808) 787-1528. • Follow-up – Alternate Evacuation Routes (East Range Road): Emergency evacuation planning for Oʻahu is coordinated through the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency (HIEMA) and the City and County of Honolulu Department of Emergency Management (DEM). These agencies maintain the official evacuation plans and work with federal, state, county, and military partners. The Army does not itself develop or implement large-scale civilian evacuation routes. Any discussion regarding evacuation planning must begin with HIEMA and DEM. • Follow-up – Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle (CRB) Insecticide Studies: The Army does not conduct its own studies; it follows state guidance. The injectable insecticide is soluble in water because it is injected rather than sprayed, minimizing risk to soil and surrounding environment. Flowers are removed from treated trees to minimize pollinator risk. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:08:16] 1. Follow-up Appreciation: Francher thanked Lt. Gogal for the follow-up on both the emergency evacuation routes and Nani Brown’s question regarding the CRB tree injections. 2. Kolekole Pass Opening: Cuaresma asked Lt. Gogal to keep the board updated as discussions develop regarding opening Kole Kole Pass, not just for periodic hikes but as a regular route. The board member stated the community would like the opportunity to participate in those discussions and asked to be notified when such discussions occur. Lt. Gogal agreed to do so. 3. CRB – Community Research: Brown reported she had contacted a professor at the University of Hawaii regarding the CRB injection. The professor, Alberto, confirmed he would keep her in the loop on further studies. Per current information, the insecticide is stable in water (not soluble), meaning it does not break down and remains present in water. It does break down in sunlight. Brown noted that with heavy rains, treated trees would be leaching the chemical. 4. Suggestion to Invite University of Hawaii to Present: Manley-Koch suggested the board reach out to the University of Hawaii to invite them to present on the topic, rather than placing the burden of research on one community member. She noted Kelly Anaya had been helpful in the past regarding Royal Palm trees. Chair Ishikawa agreed to add this to the agenda. United States Navy – [0:13:42]: Daniel Sanford provided the report and highlighted the following: • Hawaii Navy Week: The United States Navy just completed Hawaii Navy Week on both the Big Island and in Honolulu. Weather was rough, but events and community service were carried out on both islands. • Community Boat Tours: Ongoing project offering Pearl Harbor tours for civic organizations, school organizations, or any interested community members. Tours include a historical lesson about the Navy during WWII and current operations. Contact: (808) 473-2890. • Saturday Shipboard Tours: Available every Saturday on active duty naval vessels. Community and board members are welcome. • Kolekole Pass – MOU Signed: The United States Army, Navy, Hawaii Department of Transportation, Hawaii Emergency Management Agency, and the City and County of Honolulu signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for the next 10 years to open the Navy Annex connecting Schofield and the Navy Annex. This route was opened during the July tsunami warning, allowing approximately 700 people to evacuate safely. An annual exercise is conducted; neighborhood boards are welcome to participate by driving the pass. The Navy will keep the board informed. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:17:04] 1. Ships in Port: Francher asked about large ships currently in port, specifically aircraft carriers or destroyer tenders. Sanford confirmed no aircraft carriers are currently present (they typically stop once or twice a year for deployment or return), no destroyer tenders are currently present, and the main vessels are guided missile destroyers, which offer regular Saturday tours. The USS Hawaii came in for a change of command during Hawaii Navy Week. 2. Kolekole Pass – Community Memories: Manley-Koch shared that she used to drive over Kole Kole Pass every weekend as a child to go to the beach, calling it a beautiful drive, and expressed interest in seeing it open to the public again for regular transportation. Chair Ishikawa added that the board used to participate in the annual Kolekole Pass walk, which was organized well and enjoyed by families, and offered to help get it going again. Board of Water Supply (BWS) – [0:19:24]: Nicole Rodwell appeared online and highlighted the following: • February Water Main Break: One water main break occurred in the Wahiawa area on February 27th when an 8-inch water main broke at 215 Kellogg Street. • World Water Month: March is World Water Month. World Water Day is March 22nd, an annual UN observance raising awareness about the 2.2 billion people living without access to safe water. This year’s theme is “Where Water Flows, Equality Grows.” The public can visit boardofwatersupply.com/WWD throughout March for stories and videos about the global water crisis produced by the UN. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:21:09] 1. Mahalo to BWS Crews: Cuaresma extended appreciation to BWS crews who were seen working throughout the community over the past couple of days following the storm to restore clean water connections. State Department of Transportation (DOT) – [0:22:19]: Chucky Santiago, new DOT representative and Whitmore Village resident (on temporary assignment), provided the report and highlighted the following: • Whitmore Sidewalk: No updates, but work is ongoing. • Parking Issues / DOT Right-of-Way: The sidewalk in question is within the DOT right-of-way; unfortunately, nothing can be done about the parking issues at this time. • Homeless Shelter Under Bridge near Schofield: Santiago spoke with the deputy director, who plans to coordinate with the Army and HPD to facilitate cleaning out that area. This was delayed due to the recent storm but will be pursued. • Traffic Study – Kamehameha Highway Intersections: Santiago asked the traffic division to look at Kilani, Whitmore Avenue, and California Avenue intersections, given the significant backup during traffic times. Solutions or suggestions will be brought back to the board for feedback. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:24:30] 1. Highway Grass Cutting: Umaki asked how grass cutting on highways works and who checks for compliance. Santiago explained that the district office is responsible for periodic inspections and these areas are contracted out. He encouraged the community to call the district office or director’s office directly to report overgrown areas, noting that community calls carry more weight than just internal complaints. 2. Future DOT Attendance: Yoro thanked Santiago for coming and asked if he would be presenting at future meetings. Santiago confirmed he would, at least for the immediate future, noting he is currently on temporary assignment. 3. Second Access Road to Whitmore: Yamamoto asked if anyone is working on a second road to Whitmore. Santiago noted discussions have included using Saratoga Road connecting near a light intersection, but it requires working with the military and has been discussed for decades without resolution. He confirmed it is not in the 2050 Oʻahu Regional Transportation Plan (ORTP). Board members noted they have been on committees regarding additional ingress/egress and that the conversation needs to move forward, especially given proposed developments such as the egg cracking facility on Kilani Avenue. 4. DOT Homeless Encampment Updates: Cuaresma requested that Santiago keep the board updated on DOT’s homeless encampment activities, noting the board and community are active in supporting those in need. 5. Traffic Study – Kilani Avenue / Egg Cracking Facility: Cuaresma asked Santiago to look into whether a traffic study is being done along Kilani Avenue in connection with the egg cracking facility being developed there. The CCDC team was recently at the Wahiwa Value Added Center market but had no information on traffic plans. Cuaresma noted large trucks will be involved and a facility is planned for Whitmore, which will worsen existing congestion. 6. Community Contact for Whitmore Traffic Concerns: Cuaresma asked what email address the community can use to share Whitmore traffic concerns that can be forwarded to OMPO. Joe Francher, as Transportation Committee Chair, indicated he would bring congestion data to the next OMPO meeting and requested information be sent to nco@honolulu.gov. He stated he would raise the issue at the senior committee to explore funding. 7. Stormwater from Farms along Farrington Highway: Cuaresma asked about DOT’s plans related to stormwater from farms along Farrington Highway in Waialua that flooded multiple homes during the recent storms. Santiago stated he would speak with the planning office about what is in the works. Representative Perruso (online) noted a meeting is scheduled for Saturday at 2 p.m. at St. Michael’s Church for impacted farmers and asked that a DOT representative and planner attend to speak to the five identified locations of stormwater diversion into farm ditches. 8. Pedestrian Bridge Grading Already Underway / Community Meeting Notice Request: Maruyama asked if work has begun on the pedestrian bridge. Santiago confirmed some grading work has already been done, with environmental work still ongoing. A community information meeting is planned within the next month but the location is still being determined. 9. Pedestrian Bridge Survey Data: Brown stated she reviewed DOT’s own survey data at wahiwapedbridge.com, which showed that 4,142 surveys were sent out and only 345 returned. Of those, 36% (124 people) said yes and 53% said no. In a community of over 40,000 people, that equals 0.003% in support. DOT describes this as “resounding support.” Brown stated the Wahiwa Neighborhood Board, the Wahiwa Civic Club, and the community have all said no to the project. IV. RESIDENT’S CONCERNS & COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS – [0:55:58] Lake Wilson Cleanup – [0:56:23]: A resident expressed concern about Lake Wilson and asked if the community could organize a cleanup day once or twice a year, similar to one done a few years ago that involved two flatbed trucks and volunteer boats. Chair Ishikawa confirmed the board did conduct such a cleanup and offered to connect with the community member afterward to discuss restarting the effort. Agribusiness Development Corporation (ADC) Update – [0:58:56]: Wendy Gaty, Executive Director of ADC (in her second year), thanked the board and community for their partnership. She provided the following updates: • Wilikina Parcel: ADC has held the Wilikina parcel since Executive Order 4558 on April 23, 2018 (approximately 8 years). • Board Meeting Rescheduled: Due to rain events, the board meeting for March will be on Tuesday, March 31st at 9:00 a.m. (instead of the usual 3rd Wednesday or Thursday). • Act 237 – Food and Product Innovation Network (FPIN): Passed last legislative session, added the FPIN to ADC’s statute (Hawaii Revised Statute 163D-5). This allows ADC to create shelf-stable food products from surplus agricultural production. Gaty introduced Anella Akana, new Climate Resilient Food and Product Innovation Network Manager, a local girl from the community. Questions, comments, and concerns followed: 1. ADC Audit and PIG Committee: Cuaresma expressed concern about a Permitted Interaction Group (PIG) formed to address the state audit’s 59 recommendations, noting that ADC Board Chair Jason Watts appeared to mock the process during a board meeting. He felt it was hurtful given that the community had lived through ADC’s mismanagement. Gaty apologized sincerely on behalf of ADC and stated the new board takes transparency very seriously. She noted she had proactively sent a letter to the state auditor addressing all 59 recommendations in November 2023 (shortly after starting in August 2023). Congressional District 1 Candidate Introduction – [1:08:23]: Au Bellati, 20-year member of the state legislature, introduced herself as a candidate for Congressional District (CD) 1. She noted there are two precincts in Wahiawa within CD1 and is hosting community dinners and talk stories throughout the district. Events have been held in Waipahu and urban Honolulu; Hawaii Kai and Mililani events are planned. She invited the community to future events. Crystal Dombrow – Dam Safety and Mitigation Concerns – [1:09:40]: Dombrow expressed concern about the high reservoir levels and asked about immediate mitigation measures ahead of upcoming rain. She described being trapped during the previous storm with two rivers on either side of her. Chair Ishikawa noted ENV had sent information to be read at the end of resident concerns. Sierra Martin – KWO Homeless Outreach Report – [1:12:02]: Sierra Martin (Kealahou West Oahu Homeless Outreach) reported the following: • February Statistics: 42 individuals encountered; 29 resistant to services; 7 new enrolled families; 13 housed; 8 community concern reports. • Storm Response: During the recent storm, call volume jumped to nearly 100 due to weather. KWO opened their two shelter properties in Kailua (one emergency, one transitional) accommodating up to 12 people. Martin expressed frustration that the district park did not open until the day after the storm despite being listed as open on that day. She noted insufficient emergency evacuation shelter options were available in real time, over 50 people were unreachable at Karsten Bridge due to flooding, and a major lack of volunteers (understandably) limited response capacity. She thanked those involved in opening Wahiawa District Park as a shelter. • Request for City Coordination Contact: Martin requested Chair Ishikawa connect KWO with the city contact who coordinates emergency shelter openings, as KWO was not notified until the day after. Chair Ishikawa agreed. • New Staff Member: KWO welcomed Makanani, a Wahiawa resident and former case manager at Lambridge, as a new outreach staff member. Makanani (KWO) – Parking/Visibility Concerns – [1:22:17]: Makanani introduced herself and raised two traffic/visibility concerns as a Wahiawa resident: • Street behind Surfing the Nations (near Walgreens): Cars are blocking visibility at the exit, making it dangerous. HPD has cleared it recently, but cars are returning. Chair Ishikawa stated she would follow up with HPD. • End of Olive Street turning right to Cypress Street: Cars are parked illegally, blocking the turn. Chair Ishikawa confirmed this is a known area and will follow up. ENV Public Service Announcement Read by Chair Ishikawa – [1:24:25] Due to ongoing heavy rainfall, the City and County of Honolulu’s Department of Environmental Services (ENV) is asking residents to conserve water to help reduce the strain on the wastewater system. ENV is monitoring the inflow and infiltration into the wastewater system placing additional pressure on pump stations and treatment facilities. Conserving water during this time helps lower the risk of sewer system overflows. ENV also reminds the public not to drain flood water or street runoff into sewer manholes. Crews are actively monitoring conditions and responding as needed. Residents and visitors are encouraged to stay informed by signing up for HNL Alert and visiting honolulu.gov or following ENV on social media. Whitmore Wastewater Receiving Facility Update / Department of Emergency Management (DEM) – [1:26:25] Note: ENV was unable to attend the meeting to present on the Whitmore Wastewater Receiving Facility due to ongoing citywide and statewide issues. Their presentation will be rescheduled for a future meeting. However, Dr. Randal Collins, Director of Emergency Management (City DEM), joined online to answer questions regarding emergency management and the recent flooding events, including Lake Wilson/Wahiawa Dam safety concerns. Dr. Collins highlighted the following: • Dam Operations: DEM has been in frequent meetings with Dole (dam operators) throughout the severe weather. DLNR is the dam’s regulatory authority. DEM’s focus was on variables such as rate of rainfall, reservoir elevation, and coordinating with all agencies. The reservoir reached 87.9 feet before leveling out. DEM issued a “get ready to go” notice at 82.7 feet (targeting 83 feet) because evacuating takes approximately 1 hour to stage responders and approximately 2 hours to execute, requiring a minimum 3-hour lead time ahead of any threatening elevation. • Damage Assessment: DEM is currently conducting a damage assessment from the last storm to support Hawaii’s request for a federal presidential disaster declaration, allowing FEMA reimbursements. • Upcoming Storm: DEM was in contact with the National Weather Service; there is a potential for heavy rain starting as early as Thursday and into the weekend. Confidence in the forecast is still low. DEM is monitoring closely and will respond as the situation develops. Dam operators are working to lower reservoir levels in a proper manner. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:27:05] 1. Dam Safety Concerns: Yoro asked DEM about safety concerns for residents in relation to the dam and whether updates were available from Dole or DLNR. Dr. Collins confirmed he had been in meetings with Dole but noted that dam management and regulation is DLNR’s responsibility. He offered to answer questions about DEM’s operations surrounding the event. 2. Wahiawa as an Evacuation Destination: Yamamoto observed that during both the July tsunami warning and the recent flooding, Wahiawa’s population significantly swells as people from the Leeward Coast and North Shore come uphill. He asked whether the shelter at Wahiawa District Park was adequate for such an influx and whether planning accounted for the volume. Dr. Collins explained that for tsunamis, DEM’s focus is evacuation (moving people out of the tsunami zone), not sheltering—they cannot activate shelters in time for a local tsunami. 3. Evacuee Planning: Francher asked whether planning should include a designated area in Wahiawa to absorb cars and people evacuating from the North Shore during tsunamis or floods. Dr. Collins acknowledged that assembly areas were designated on July 29th for that purpose and noted that “free choice” limits mandating people to specific locations, but acknowledged the need for continued planning. 4. Food Provided at Shelters: Mendelson asked if food is provided at shelters during emergencies. Dr. Collins confirmed that the Salvation Army provided food to all city shelters during the most recent activation. 5. DEM Plans for Upcoming Storm: Cuaresma asked about DEM’s plans given another possible storm system approaching. Dr. Collins confirmed staff are doing damage assessment, monitoring the weather service, working to lower reservoir levels, and will respond to the new storm accordingly as forecast confidence grows. 6. Dam Confidence During Storm: Maruyama asked how confident DEM was that the dam would not breach during the storm and how long evacuation would take. Dr. Collins stated that no conversation ever raised structural integrity concerns—DLNR and Dole did not flag any structural issues. DEM’s focus was on rate of rainfall and reservoir elevation. The evacuation timeline is approximately 1 hour to stage responders and 2 hours to evacuate, requiring a 3-hour lead before a critical elevation is reached. The reservoir peaked at approximately 87.9 feet, not reaching threatening levels. Questions, comments, and concerns followed: 1. Food Insecurity and 14-Day Supply (June): A board member raised concerns about whether food-insecure families have anywhere near the recommended 14-day emergency supply. Anaya agreed this is a critical gap and stated the city’s food bank report includes a relevant section. She noted that collaboration across all levels of government is needed to fill these gaps. 2. Redistribution of Food from Stores During Power Outages: A board member asked whether grocery stores that had to dump refrigerated food during the power outage could have that food redirected to shelters. Anaya said she loved the idea and that it aligns with the city’s food systems plan focused on minimizing waste and improving access. 3. Bus Fare Increase and Skyline: A board member asked whether the bus fare increase also covers Skyline. Anaya confirmed rates apply to all modes as part of the integrated system. She noted an ordinance requires recouping a certain percentage of bus costs through fares, and that the city subsidizes a significant portion of the roughly several hundred million dollar system. 4. Sewer System Failures During Storm: A board member noted the sewer system was overwhelmed during the recent storm, with manhole covers flooding wastewater into the ocean in areas like Kailua Bay and Waialua. She asked what the sewer rate increase will address. Anaya stated ENV will be presenting on their integrated plan at the City Council Energy, Environment, and Sustainability Committee meeting tentatively on March 31st. Big-picture infrastructure is in desperate need of repair; Sand Island treatment plant alone is a multi-billion dollar project. She noted a relief program is being finalized for residents earning below 80% of the area median income, and shared information about rebates available on the city website. 5. Hawaii Food Bank Encouragement: Chair Ishikawa encouraged community members to donate to the Hawaii Food Bank, noting that COVID showed how vulnerable the island’s food supply is. Anaya added that volunteering with organizations like Meals on Wheels, especially before large storms to deliver food to kupuna homes, is also a meaningful contribution. VI. ELECTED OFFICIALS – [1:46:50] Mayor Rick Blangiardi – [1:46:52]: No representative present. Councilmember Matt Weyer (District 2) – [1:46:58]: Councilmember Weyer provided the report and highlighted the following: • Encouraged all residents to sign up for HNL Alert by texting “HNL ALERT” to 888777. • Noted the city’s newsletter contains damage assessment information that the city is collecting. • Highlighted that the USGS website has real-time gauges for the dam and nearby streams, which community members can monitor themselves. The spillway activates at approximately 80 feet; alert levels begin around 82–83 feet; evacuation orders may follow around 84 feet; breach risk occurs around 88–90 feet. • Encouraged signing up for the dam evacuation map available through DEM’s assessment tool. • Supported the state’s acquisition of the dam and acknowledged the spillway is too small and the dam is earthen. • Raised the issue of food insecurity during extended power outages and disasters, noting that over 165,000 (one in four households on Oʻahu) are food insecure. • Proposed a city budget amendment to allocate funds for food access and noted the city is finalizing its first food systems plan. • Announced Route 51 expansion adding late-night service to the airport between 10:30 p.m. and 3:45 a.m. • Bill 54 Follow-up (Bus Fare Increase): Bus fares increased to generate an additional $4 million. Anaya confirmed that three council members voted no. She clarified this was to balance the subsidy amount rather than cut services. She advocated that the city should strive to make buses free for the community, noting that over half of bus riders don’t have cars and rely on the bus for necessities. • Gondola Project / Filming: Filming was on adjacent private property; Anaya will confirm details with DPP regarding land use questions. • No Camping Sign: Request submitted to the department as of February 25th. Governor Josh Green – [2:18:32]: No representative present. Chair Ishikawa noted she had questions to send back. Senator Donovan Dela Cruz (District 17) – [2:18:55]: Charles Miller provided the report and highlighted the following: • High Court Groundbreaking: Senator Dela Cruz attended and spoke at the High Court groundbreaking. The storefront High Court program has been located on portables off Center Street for approximately 60 years and is currently temporarily housed on California Avenue next to the Value Added Center. The new building is expected to be completed in Summer 2027. • Hawaii Internship Summit: Senator Dela Cruz attended the first Hawaii Internship Summit; a Halomo intern from Hawaii was honored. The senator also gave keynote remarks. • Legislative Session Update: The budget has crossed over to the Senate. Senate bills are now being heard in the House and House bills in the Senate. • 123 Mango Street Update: Funding has been allocated and released by the governor to a nonprofit. The Senator’s office is working with the Office of Community Services to deliver the funding as quickly as possible so the solution can move forward. • Wahiawa Irrigation System / Dam Transfer: The DLNR board was scheduled to consider the Dole transfer agreement last Friday but the meeting was canceled due to office closures. No rescheduled date yet; expected to occur in March. ADC is also considering the Dole transfer agreement. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [2:20:40] 1. Waterway Debris / Dam Concern (Maruyama): Maruyama raised her unresolved concern about chopped logs flowing into Lake Wilson from work being done near the dam (possibly related to the pedestrian bridge grading) and the risk of those logs damaging the dam. She had contacted DLNR, Dole, and Senator Dela Cruz’s office (Charles Miller) with no resolution. Miller confirmed he had communicated with her and would follow up with Dole directly. Chair Ishikawa acknowledged there is a pending sale which may complicate action in the interim. 2. Dam / Spillway Transfer – ADC vs. DLNR (Francher): Francher asked whether the state’s intent is for DLNR or ADC to take over the dam from Dole. Miller confirmed both DLNR and ADC will work on the dam together, with DLNR as the primary and ADC also involved. 3. Pedestrian Bridge – Senator’s Role (Umaki): Umaki noted Senator Dela Cruz was instrumental in the pedestrian bridge being built and asked why it is moving forward given community opposition. Miller stated this predated his time in the senator’s office and committed to providing an answer at the May board meeting. Board members asked Miller to relay that neither Whitmore nor Wahiawa residents want the bridge. 4. 123 Mango Street – Total State Expenditure (Cuaresma): Cuaresma asked how much money has been spent on 123 Mango Street in total. Miller indicated the funding was just under a million dollars through CIP/GIA over the last couple of years. Cuaresma clarified her understanding that Achieve Zero/Alaya Bridge received state funds to purchase the property, and now another nonprofit is being funded to purchase the same property. Miller acknowledged confusion about exact ownership (building owner appears to be Rod/Nikki Winter, not Achieve Zero) and stated a different nonprofit is working to acquire the property using state funds through the Office of Community Services. Cuaresma asked Miller to report at the next meeting on the full total state expenditure on 123 Mango Street. 5. Dam/Spillway – Purchase Cost and Two Owners (Cuaresma): Cuaresma asked how much the state will pay to purchase the dam and spillway. Miller stated he would bring that information back. Cuaresma also noted that there are two owners of the dam/spillway—Dole and Sustainable Hawaii LLC—and asked Miller to look into the status of negotiations with both. Miller was only aware of Dole and agreed to investigate. He confirmed the Dole transfer is expected to be finalized in June 2026. Representative Amy Perruso (District 46) – [2:30:12]: Representative Perruso provided the report and highlighted the following: • LNG (Liquified Natural Gas) Alert: Rep. Perruso alerted the community to legislative discussions around the governor’s plan to adopt LNG. During an info briefing, independent experts identified a fundamental spreadsheet error—the plan assumed LNG has no cost. With that assumption corrected, the transition would cost the state $300–$400 million rather than saving $1.2 billion. A follow-up info briefing with the state energy office is scheduled for Friday. Rep. Perruso noted that ratepayers will bear the cost of LNG infrastructure, which will become obsolete by the 2045 clean energy deadline. Sierra Club and Our Hawaii have been raising concerns. Hawaii Free Press also published an article on the issue. • House Budget: The House passed its budget today. Rep. Perruso expressed strong support for the approach, which is sensible and supportive of working families. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [2:33:02] 1. Where to Learn More About LNG (Mendelson): Mendelson asked where to find more information about LNG. Perruso suggested Sierra Club, Our Hawaii, and social media; also noted Hawaii Free Press had a good article. She confirmed the Friday briefing will generate more public information. VII. BOARD BUSINESS – [2:36:25] Approval of Minutes 1. Regular Meeting of Monday, January 26, 2026 – [2:36:35] A motion was made and seconded to approve the minutes of Monday, January 26, 2026. The motion was ADOPTED unanimously. 2. Regular Meeting of Monday, February 23, 2026 – [2:37:09] Board member Umaki identified two corrections before a motion was made: • Page 4 of 8, under Presentations, Questions and Comments #5 (Raise in Property Value): The speaker was Umaki, not Manley-Koch/Sylvia. • Page 5 of 8, under Questions and Comments #1: The speaker was Umaki, not Manley-Koch/Sylvia. A motion was made and seconded to approve the minutes of Monday, February 23, 2026, with the two noted amendments. The motion was ADOPTED unanimously. B. Chair’s Report and Board Actions – [2:39:30] 1. Call for Disclosures by Board Members – [2:39:41] The following disclosures were made: • A board member disclosed attendance at a YNI Neighborhood Board meeting online (while commuting home from work). • Yoro disclosed attending a Hawaiian Electric (HECO) presentation at the State Capitol in her professional capacity. During the presentation, she noticed items concerning to the community (renewable zones and potential placement of renewable energy projects in certain districts). She asked the presenters about presenting to the board and will forward their contact information to Chair Ishikawa. • A board member (military committee) disclosed being contacted by Tom Lanchenko to serve on an advisory board with the Hawaiian community and Army concerning burials on military property. The matter was referred to the Chair to determine if Board approval is needed. C. Committee Reports – [2:40:25] 1. Education (Mendelson): It’s spring break. No report. 2. Military (Yamamoto): No report. 3. Transportation/OMPO (Francher): No meeting report. Francher requested that Whitmore traffic congestion information be sent to the OMPO for review at the next senior committee meeting. 4. Water (Yoro): No meeting held; however, Yoro and Roesler had conversations about Hawaiian cultural community opportunities. A planned event was cancelled due to rain. 5. Hawaiian Affairs (Cuaresma and Roesler): See disclosure above regarding the advisory board concerning burials on military property. VIII. ANNOUNCEMENTS • Next Board Meeting: The Board is on recess in April 2026. The next Wahiāwā-Whitmore Village Neighborhood Board No. 26 meeting will be on Monday, May 18, 2026 at 7:00 p.m. at Wahiawa District Park Meeting Room. Please check the board’s website for schedule updates. • March 2026 Army Training Advisory: March 16–27, 30–31: East Range – Range and Jungle Tactics, Small Arms Blank Fire, 6 a.m.–6 p.m. daily March 16–27, 30–31: East Range – Aviation Training/Rappel Master School, 6 a.m.–6 p.m. daily March 28–31: Artillery, Mortar, and Demolitions Live Fire Training, Schofield Barracks, 5 a.m.–6 p.m. daily (Day and Night Live Fire, including late evening and early morning hours) To report concerns: (808) 787-1528 or usag.hawaii.comrel@army.mil (Monday–Friday, 8 a.m.–4 p.m.) • Wahiawa Lions Club Annual Benefit Breakfast: Sunday, March 15, 2026, 7:00–11:00 a.m. at Leilehua High School Cafeteria. Tickets: $10. Includes eggs, sausages, rice, muffin, Dole pineapple chunks, and a drink. • 2026 Annual Kunia Orchid Show at Leilehua High School Gym – Free Admission: Friday, March 20: 9 a.m.–5 p.m.; Saturday, March 21: 9 a.m.–4 p.m. • Notice from Hawaiian Electric: Within the next several weeks, a pole will be replaced or installed at 1766 Walea Uka Place. • Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s 2026 Town Hall – April 30, 2026 at 6:30 p.m.: For Waipahu, Kunia, Waipio, Mililani, Mililani-Mauka, Wahiawa, Pearl City, and ʻAiea. Location: Kanoelani Elementary School (Outdoor Pavilion). Information Contacts: • City Streets Pothole Hotline: (808) 768-7777 • State Streets Pothole Hotline: (808) 536-7852 • HART Maintained Roads Pothole Hotline: (808) 566-2299 • City’s Refuse Inspector Office: (808) 768-5220 • Schofield Noise Complaints: (808) 656-3487 or usaghi.comrel@gmail.com • 25th Infantry Division Public Affairs Office: (808) 655-4756 or usaghi.comrel@gmail.com Chair’s Message: Aloha everyone! Hope all is well with you and your ʻohana. This New Year 2026 is flying by fast! We’re already into March with several issues currently being discussed and others being worked on for possible resolution. Your continued support and participation in our Neighborhood Board No. 26 is important, not only to our neighbors, but to our overall Wahiawa-Whitmore communities as well. Please join our meetings, in-person/virtually/phone/etc. Together, we’ll care for, and love, our Wahiawa and Whitmore Village communities. Mahalo and take care! IX. ADJOURNMENT – [2:43:09]: The meeting was adjourned at approximately 9:45 p.m. Submitted by: Jeffrey Jones, Neighborhood Assistant, NCO Reviewed by: Dylan Buck, Community Relations Specialist, NCO Finalized by: To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

7:00 PMCultureEducationCommunity

31. Kailua NB Planning, Zoning & Environment (PZ&E) Committee Meeting

Kailua Recreation Center, 21 South Kainalu Drive, Kailua, Hawaiʻi, 96734, United States, Honolulu

KAILUA NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 31     PLANNING, ZONING, AND ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEE MEETING AGENDA Tuesday, May 19, 2026 7:00 to 9:00 pm In-person at the Kailua District Park Multipurpose Room or District Meeting Room Chair: Donna Wong. Members: Jennifer Barra, Kelli Ann Kobayashi, Levani Lipton, Kalama Souza, Steve Trecker, and Gary Weller. 1. Call to Order 2. Approval of Minutes 3. Announcements 4. Resident and Community Concerns 5. Kihapai Hale 734-735 Kihapai Place city owned affordable housing project https://www.hawaiicdc.com/projects/kihapai-hale-kailua-oahu a. Does the city need to develop a tsunami evacuation plan? 6. 330 Kuulei Rd. (Kuulei LLC) apartments - 60-foot building; in Koolaupoko Sustainable Communities Plan 40-foot commercial zoning height limit. Being constructed. 7. Kalaheo Hillside 8. Kawainui-Hamakua Master Plan Project 9. Marine Corps Base Hawaii 10. Dog park at Hamakua a. DLNR is conducting an Environmental Site Assessment of the property 11. Ka'iwa Ridge ("Lanikai Pillbox") Trail 12. Adventist Health Castle 13. Kailua Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant and Ocean Outfall 14. Kailua public schools land transferred from City and County to State DOE 15. New landfill location a. At Mayor Blangiardi's Windward Town Hall 5/8/25 meeting the Mayor said that the next landfill will not be at either of the 2 quarry sites 16. Manuiwa o ka Malanai proposed Fisheries Management Plan 17. Iwi kupuna Kailua 18. Kailua municipal parking lot changes a. Archaeological study begins March 2026 b. Will excavate 15 test sites c. Eight parking stalls will be closed at a time 19. Building permit application in Kaopa silt basin 20. Charter amendment # 148 a. Amending the Charter to add historic preservation as an allowable use of monies in the Clean Water and Natural Lands Fund and rename the fund Land, Natural Resources, and Historic Preservation Fund to better reflect the purpose of the fund. 21. Kinai`Eha programs at the Kawailoa Youth and Family Wellness Center Campus 22. Blackstone 23. Bill 44 (2025) Relating to Affordable Rental housing https://hnldoc.ehawaii.gov/hnldoc/document-download?id=24784 a. Status: passed 1st reading. Not heard by ZP committee b. Adds business zoning district where affordable rental housing projects are permitted 24. Bill 53 (2025) Relating to Affordable Housing https://hnldoc.ehawaii.gov/hnldoc/document-download?id=25571 a. Status: passed 1st reading. After 8/19/25 held indefinitely. b. Requires a new affordable rental housing project to provide 1 parking stall for every 2 units within the project c. Requires all project developers to make a presentation to the relevant neighborhood board 25. Bill 72 (2025) Relating to Affordable Housing https://hnldoc.ehawaii.gov/hnldoc/document-download?id=26456 a. Status: passed 1st reading. Not heard by any committee b. Adds the business zoning districts as a zoning district in which affordable rental housing projects are permitted 26. Bill 17 (2026) - Relating to Affordable Rental Housing https://hnldoc.ehawaii.gov/hnldoc/document-download?id=26972 a. Changes the maximum building height from 60 feet to the lesser of the maximum height for the underlying zoning district or special district, or 60 feet. 27. Bill 18, CD1 (2026) - Relating to Affordable Housing https://hnldoc.ehawaii.gov/hnldoc/document-download?id=27355 a. Status: Passed 1st Reading, 3/3/26 hearing was held by the HPP Committee, was Amended by a CD1, but not approved out of Committee. Bill 18, CD1 was postponed to a date and time to be determined by the Committee Chair. b. Summary: Amends the maximum building height to 60 feet or the maximum height for the underlying zoning district or special district, whichever is greater. 28. Bill 7 Ordinance 19-8 (ROH Chapter 32) https://codelibrary.amlegal.com/codes/honolulu/latest/honolulu/0-0-0-37103 The original intent of Bill 7 (2019) was two-fold. First, to increase the supply of affordable housing rental housing in low-rise multifamily dwellings in apartment, apartment mixed-use, and business mixed-use zoning districts, and reduce the proliferation of monster homes in the residential zoning districts. Second, to make changes to the Building Code by creating new standards for special mid-rise residential construction to allow for the development of smaller parcels in high-density districts a. Bill 7 Kailua housing projects (1) 330 Kuulei Road (a) Target population: family & homeless (b) 5 stories, 38 units. Length of Affordability: 61 years (c) Area Median Gross Income (AMGI) 30% to 100% (d) Rents range from $642 (1 bedroom) to $2,237 (2 bedroom) (e) Completion December 2025 (f) Commercial area 1,992 sq ft (g) No on-site parking. Parking available in adjacent municipal lot, commercial lots, and street parking. (2) 528 Wailepo Street (a) Not for sale 7,248 sq ft lot. Estimated value $1,841,400 (3) 58 Kihapai Street (a) Zoned A-2 (4) 614 Wailepo Street (a) Multifamily, 38 units, new construction. Affordable for 61 years (b) 4 story elevator serviced (c) Available from 30% Area Gross Media Income (AGM) to 60% AGM (d) Property owner AHE Group - Makani Maeva 29. New Business 30. Adjournment   Planning, Zoning & Environment (PZ&E) Committee April 2026 Meeting Report Chair, Donna Wong 1. A committee meeting was held in-person on April 21, 2026, chaired by Donna Wong, and attended by committee members Jennifer Barra, Steve Trecker, and Gary Weller, KNB member Bill Hicks, and Thomas Dye, Graham Hart, and Brandon Large. 2. Graham Hart and Brandon Large provided a presentation on the SMA Major application for 60 Kaapuni Drive. BOARD MOTION: After the presentation Steve moved, and Gary seconded that “The Kailua Neighborhood Board recommends that the following conditions be added to the 60 Kaapuni Drive SMA Major application before it is approved by the Council Zoning and Planning Committee.” The motion passed by all present. a. Condition: all artificial light from exterior light fixtures from directly illuminating or projecting across property boundaries toward the shoreline and ocean waters except as otherwise permitted by HRS 205A-7.1(b) and that light fixtures be fully shielded and exterior lighting to be turned off when human activity is not occurring in the illuminated area. b. Condition: that all projects site work and construction activities are limited to daylight hours (from sunrise to sunset) to avoid collisions and fatalities during seabird fledging season from September 15 through December 15. c. Condition: require that a visual survey for seabirds and burrow nests must be conducted prior to any construction activities d. Condition: if wedge-tailed Shearwater or any sea birds’ nests or burrows are found sometime between late October through the end of November, work must be discontinued for 100 to 115 days until all fledging’s have left their nests e. Condition: that barbless fencing must be used for all fence construction to avoid the entanglement of Hawaiian hoary bats. f. Condition: that a 300-foot buffer must be observed if a monk seal pup is present g. Condition: that landscaping must not extend seaward of the shoreline as depicted in the current certified shoreline survey for the shoreline lot, or in the event there is no current certified shoreline survey for the lot, seaward of the shoreline as defined in HRS 205A h. Condition: require that the landowner acknowledge that “bed and breakfast home and transient vacation units”, as defined in HOR Chapter 21, of the LUO are not allowed. i. Condition: require the landowner to acknowledge that land makai of the regulatory shoreline is State public land within the State Land Use Conservation District and must remain available for public use and recreation activities. j. Condition: during any penetration of the ground an archaeological monitor or consultant must be present. k. Condition: during any penetration of the ground an archaeological monitor or consultant must be present. 3. Thomas Dye, a member of the Oahu Historic Preservation Commission, discussed the Commission’s concerns regarding the prevalence of iwi kupuna in Kailua’s jaucas sand deposits. 4. BOARD MOTION: After discussion on Bill 53 Jennifer moved and Gary seconded that “The Kailua Neighborhood Board supports Bill 53 for the following reasons: a. The bill requires an applicant to present affordable rental housing project to the neighborhood board within 60 days b. The bill requires 1 parking space for every 2 units. (Currently no parking spaces are required.) c. The housing project will have an on site resident manager unit. 5. The committee discussed but took no action on Bills 44, 72, or 18. To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

7:00 PMSportsArtsFood

35. Mililani Mauka-Launani Valley NB Regular Meeting

Mililani Mauka Elementary School, 95-1111 Mākaʻikaʻi Street, Mililani, Hawaiʻi, 96789, United States, Honolulu

MILILANI MAUKA - LAUNANI VALLEY NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD No. 35     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA TUESDAY, MAY 19, 2026, at 7:00 P.M. MILILANI MAUKA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CAFETERIA 95-1111 MĀKAʻIKAʻI STREET, MILILANI HI 96789 AND VIA WEBEX WebEx Link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=mda3110550817610029390c6f72decace Meeting number / Access Code: 2490 158 5754 Password: NB35 (6235 from phones and video systems) Join by phone: +1-408-418-9388 (United States Toll) Meeting Materials Link: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1zCauqWgTX4syd8vO3Ci5UCL_ePiRXlbE Video Recordings: http://www.youtube.com/@NeighborhoodCommissionOffice Rules of Speaking: Anyone wishing to speak is asked to raise their hand, and when recognized by the Chair, to address comments to the Chair. All dialogue at the meeting will be conducted by use of the microphone. Those joining the meeting on WebEx are reminded to mute their speakers until they wish to be recognized by the Chair. Anyone not following these rules will be ruled out of order by the Chair. Those providing Presentations to the Board are encouraged to do so via a PowerPoint presentation, with a projector and provide handouts for the board and the community. The public concerns and comments are limited to three (3) minutes each. Please silence all electronic devices. Note: The Board may take action on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (HRS 92), specific issues not noted on this agenda cannot be voted on, unless allowed for under HRS 92. A two-thirds (2/3) vote (5) of this 9- member Board is required to meet quorum requirements. I. CALL TO ORDER: Vice Chair Dean Hazama II. PRESENTATION OF THE COLORS & PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE: Scouts BSA Troup 664 III. MEETING DECORUM: Vice Chair Keith Tamashiro IV. MONTHLY REPORTS A. Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) B. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) C. Board of Water Supply (BWS) D. Military Representative Report V. BOARD BUSINESS A. Neighborhood Commission Office Presentation – Larry Veray (NCO) B. Update on Mililani High School Teacher Housing Project – Cheri Nakamura (HSFA) C. Update on Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between DOE and C&C Parks on Community use of the Mililani Middle School Parking Lot. VI. RESIDENT/COMMUNITY CONCERNS: Any community member can come forward and express any comment or concern within decorum. Please, limit your comments to three (3) minutes each per issue for items not on the agenda. VII. ELECTED OFFICIALS A. Office of Governor Josh Green – Melanie Martin B. Office of Congressman Ed Case – Nestor Garcia C. Office of the Mayor Rick Blangiardi – Carrie Castle D. Office of Councilmember District 8, Val Okimoto E. Office of Councilmember District 2, Matt Weyer F. Office of Senator District 17, Donovan Dela Cruz G. Office of Representative District 38, Lauren Matsumoto H. Office of Representative District 46, Amy Perruso I. Office of Representative District 37, Trish La Chica J. State Department of Transportation – Casey Abe VIII. APPROVAL OF BOARD MEETING MINUTES: Tuesday, April 21, 2026, Regular Meeting Minutes IX. REPORTS A. Committees a) Education – Steven Melendrez/Anna Hudson b) Military and Civil Defense – Keith Tamashiro c) Parks and Recreation – Susan Miyamoto d) Planning, Permitting and Zoning – Stanton Oishi & Dana Agader e) Transportation – Dean Hazama f) Recognition and Service Awards – Alice Rogers X. ANNOUNCEMENTS A. The next Mililani Mauka/Launani Valley Neighborhood Board meeting will be held on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, at 7:00 p.m. at Mililani Mauka Elementary School, and via WebEx. XI. ADJOURNMENT A map of the subdistrict boundaries is at – https://www8.honolulu.gov/nco/boards-and-sub-district-boundary-descriptions/ Capital Improvement Projects (CIP) and Budget Planning. Suggestions for projects in the Neighborhood Board district and adjacent areas are welcome at any time to prepare for planning actions and the next fiscal year. A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapālama Hale, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, by telephone on (808) 768-3710, fax (808) 768-3711, or e-mailing nco@honolulu.gov Agenda documents and minutes are also available online at https://www8.honolulu.gov/nco/ All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours of the meeting, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the Board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, fax (808) 768-3711, or email nbtestimony@honolulu.gov If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov as soon as possible, preferably at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. If a request is received with fewer than three (3) business days remaining before the meeting, we will try to obtain the auxiliary aid/service or accommodation, but it may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date.   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2026 at 7:00 P.M. MILILANI MAUKA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CAFETERIA – 95-1111 MĀKAʻIKAʻI STREET, MILILANI, HI 96789 AND VIA WEBEX Video recording of this meeting can be found at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvMHuaIw0iY Reports & other meeting materials can be found at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1zCauqWgTX4syd8vO3Ci5UCL_ePiRXlbE I. CALL TO ORDER – [0:00:16]: 7:00 p.m. Vice Chair Keith Tamashiro called the meeting to order at 7:00 p.m.; Quorum was established with seven (7) members present. Note – This nine (9) member Board requires five (5) members to establish a quorum and to take official Board action. Board Members Present: Dana Agader, Theresa Kuehu, Steven Melendrez, Susan Miyamoto, Stanton Oishi, Alice Rogers, Keith Tamashiro. Board Members Absent: Dave Fields and Dean Hazama. Guests: Lieutenant R. Baysa (Honolulu Police Department); Captain R. Bump (Honolulu Fire Department); Steven Norstrom (Honolulu Board of Water Supply); Mike Donnelly (Military Representative); Deputy Director Carrie Castle (Mayor Rick Blangiardi); Pua Smith-Kauhane (Councilmember Val Okimoto); Kelly Anaya, Councilmember Matt Weyer (City Council District 2); Charles Miller (Senator Donovan Dela Cruz); Melanie Martin (Governor Green); Casey Abe (Hawaiʻi Department of Transportation); Representative Lauren Matsumoto (State House District 38); Representative Amy Perruso, Yvonne Yoro, Zaz (State House District 46); Tosa Lobendahn (Representative Trish La Chica); Joy Aiwohi, Paul C., Diana Hayden, Raul Schuett, John Mathias, R. Bloxson, Shirley Yamada (Resident); Camilia Epa Gomes (Neighborhood Commission Office). Note: Name was not included if not legible. There were 31 total participants. II. PRESENTATION OF THE COLORS & PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE – [0:00:22]: Scout BSA Troop 664 led the Pledge of Allegiance. III. MEETING DECORUM – [0:02:12]: Vice Chair Keith Tamashiro recited the rules of speaking. IV. MONTHLY REPORTS – [0:02:54] Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) – [0:03:07]: Captain R. Bump from Mililani Mauka Fire Station highlighted the following: • March 2026 Statistics: 11 activated alarms (no fire); and 38 medical responses. • Safety Tip: Evacuation planning — have an emergency preparedness plan in place. Familiarize yourself with at least two escape routes from your home. Sign up for notifications at https://hnlalert.gov and bring a 14-day disaster supply kit go-bag. Visit https://www.honolulu.gov/dem/build-a-kit/ for printable checklists. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zeOmsz1D6GCSAhBeoWB5gic1kJ3MDj11/view?usp=sharing Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:04:45] 1. Flash Flood/Kona Storm Impact: Member Rogers asked whether HFD was involved in the Haleiwa/Waialua flooding. Captain Bump confirmed he was not on duty during that event, noting there were some downed trees in Mililani during the first Kona Low but no significant flooding in the Mililani area. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) – [0:05:38]: Lieutenant R. Baysa from District 2 Wahiawa Police Station, highlighted the following: • March 19 – April 19, 2026 Statistics: 1 assault, 0 burglaries, 0 robberies, 4 car break-ins, and approximately 378 calls for service. • Safety Tip: Provided business security tips. • HPD Data Dashboard: Microsoft Power BI • Crime Mapping: https://www.crimemapping.com/ Board of Water Supply (BWS) – [0:08:42]: Steven Norstrom shared there were no main breaks and shared tips on easy ways to save water this summer. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wly173MAZ3OugeYyNIvIWD7jzTs_HOJC/view?usp=sharing Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:08:02] 1. Contamination Concern Post-Flooding: Member Melendrez asked whether BWS issued any contamination alerts for Oʻahu aquifers following the Kona Low floods. Mr. Norstrom confirmed a boil water notice was issued for the North Shore area as a precautionary measure, and that all tests came back negative. 2. Water Seepage on Wikao Street: Member Kuehu reported a recurring water seepage issue in the middle of the road on Wikao Street in Mililani Tech Park near Spectrum, which has caused worsening potholes. Mr. Norstrom agreed to investigate and report back at next month’s meeting. Military Representative Report – [0:08:45]: Mike Donnelly highlighted the following: • Job Fair: May 18, 2026 at Helemano Military Reservation, Training Room, 8:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Opportunities in golf course operations, food service, and child youth services. Visit https://www.himwr.com • Training for April 2026: Small unit tactics (blank fire, East Range, daytime); Aviation training (fast-rope/extraction exercises, Thursday, 6:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., East Range); Artillery, mortar, and demolitions live-fire training at Schofield Barracks, April 24–30 (24/7). • Prescribed Burn in April 2026: Postponed to the week of May 11–15, 2026, due to saturated ground conditions following Kona Low storms. The burn is controlled and managed with drones, UTVs, personnel 24/7, and a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter on standby. • Change of Command: July 23, 2026 – Colonel Sullivan transitions command to Colonel Luce. • Community Concern Hotline: Please call or email for questions or concerns or to be added to the distribution list at (808) 787-1528 or email usag.hawaii.comrel@army.mil. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/14isyVnMfx-Wt2VB74gCJPZXJFgsJa9Rr/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:15:02] 1. Lake Wilson/Wahiawa Dam Flooding: Member Rogers asked whether Schofield experienced flooding and if the Army would be involved in city efforts regarding Lake Wilson/Wahiawa Dam. Mr. Donnelly confirmed flooding occurred inside the installation (interior building damage) and that the Army maintains situational awareness and coordination with City/County DEM and HIEMA regarding the dam, but deferred the dam’s future to the state and city. 2. Prescribed Burn Explanation: Member Kuehu asked what a prescribed burn is and why it is necessary. Mr. Donnelly explained that it is a controlled, intentional burn used to eliminate invasive guinea grass (which exceeded 5’7” in height) to prevent wildfires from training-area tracers from spreading beyond the impact zone. 3. Military Housing Availability: Member Kuehu raised concerns about service members and the off-base rental market. Mr. Donnelly explained the Army maintains a 98%+ on-base occupancy rate (over 60% of soldiers live on base), that not all service members can be housed on base, and that landlords, not the military, set rent rates. He agreed to research and follow up on BAH policy when soldiers rent off-base. 4. Aviation Training and Civilian Impact: Member Melendrez asked about large aircraft usage during exercises. Mike Donnelly confirmed only helicopters for April; large fixed-wing aircraft (C-17s, C-130s) are anticipated for the fall JPMRC exercise. Flight paths are governed by FAA and prevailing winds. Mike Donnelly acknowledged community concerns and committed to carrying those concerns forward to exercise planners. V. BOARD BUSINESS – [1:39:28] Neighborhood Commission Office Presentation – [0:39:36]: Vice Chair Tamashiro shared the presenter was unable to attend and that it will be rescheduled for next month. Update on MOU Between DPE and C&C on Community Use of Mililani Middle School Parking Lot – [0:39:48]: Carrie Castle (Mayor’s Representative) reported that as of April 16, 2026, the City received an edited MOU from the Department of Education via email. The document is now under review by the City’s legal counsel. Ms. Castle expressed hope that the MOU would be finalized by the May board meeting. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:41:20] 1. MOU Completion Timeline: Member Melendrez asked when the City’s review would be completed. Ms. Castle expressed hope that a final resolution would be reached by the next board meeting in May. VI. RESIDENT/COMMUNITY CONCERNS – [0:42:20] 1. Board Member Conduct – Unauthorized Sign Removal – [0:42:57]: Resident John Mathias raised concerns about a board member who, on or about February 14–15, 2026, removed over 30 signs from the public right-of-way along Meheula Parkway. He stated that board membership does not authorize the removal of private property and called on the board to formally oppose such actions or risk being viewed as complicit. 2. Board Member Conduct – Pledge of Allegiance – [0:47:38]: Resident John Mathias also raised concerns that the same board member did not stand during the Presentation of the Colors and Pledge of Allegiance, characterizing it as a failure to uphold the oath and courtesies expected of board members. 3. Launani Valley Landslide and HOA Negligence – [0:49:54]: Resident Joy Aiwohi reported she experienced two mudslides – one in May 2024 and another during the recent Kona Low storms – affecting four homes. The hillside and drainage ditch, owned by Launani Valley Community Association (LVCA), were allegedly poorly maintained. LVCA President Melanie Sato and Hawaiiana Management Company informed residents that no further action would be taken. Ms. Aiwohi requested city intervention for immediate hillside stabilization and property repair. Board Member Melendrez suggested pursuing remediation through the HOA’s PVL (Professional and Vocational Licensing) compliance. 4. Launani Valley Mudslide – Neighboring Property Damage – [0:54:18]: Resident Diana Hayden confirmed similar damages: black mold, moisture in floors, plastic covering their downstairs, and family confined to upper floors. Her husband had alerted the LVCA on March 14, 2026, prior to the storms, that the drainage canal was not being maintained. The HOA’s insurance agent characterized the damage as flooding, which the Schuett family disputes. Board Member Kuehu expressed personal support and visited both affected families on-site. The resident provided her email if anyone is willing to help them with their situation dianalhayden88@gmail.com. VII. ELECTED OFFICIALS – [1:03:50] Office of Governor Josh Green – [1:04:20]: Melanie Martin highlighted the following: • Kona Low Storm Tax Relief: State Department of Taxation extended the tax filing deadline to July 20, 2026 for flood victims (Form L115 required). • Federal Major Disaster Declaration: President Trump approved federal relief providing FEMA support, individual and public assistance including debris removal, emergency work, and infrastructure repair. • State Legislature: Currently in conference committee; session ends May 7, 2026. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:05:44] 1. Launani Valley Damage Claims Contact: Member Rogers asked if residents could contact the Governor’s office about Launani Valley damages. Ms. Martin suggested starting with HIEMA before reaching the Governor’s office and offered to research the correct contact for filing claims at both state and federal levels. 2. PVL Commissioner Inquiry: Member Melendrez asked who the current PVL (Professional and Vocational Licensing) Commissioner is. Ms. Martin offered to find out. Office of Congressman Ed Case – [1:08:32]: No representative present at this time. Office of Mayor Rick Blangiardi – [1:08:50]: Carrie Castle highlighted the following: • Kona Low Storm Recovery Website: https://www.oneoahu.org/ - a city resource hub featuring federal assistance programs, real property tax relief (application deadline June 30, 2026), housing/rental resources, health/social services referrals, disaster recovery support, and a community resource fair at Ala Moana this Saturday, 9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. • Unpermitted Business Signs Follow-up: City Department of Planning and Permitting (DPP) does not have authority to authorize homeowner associations to remove unpermitted signs from private property. • Servpac Data Center at Mililani Tech Park: DPP confirmed no conditional use permit was required, as data centers fall under “general office use,” which is permitted in the district. • Assistance Flyer: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iSex3KUV73ABHQByrJmLElwe-_UMrvkg/view?usp=drive_link • Post Disaster FAQ: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cJZxk9rtvxq-OWp7nn9HXauoHdiXBS5V/view?usp=drive_link • Emergency (Temporary) Storm Debris Storage FAQ: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1SIsGIVA5CxWuPBCxv3WgQizrTR7-99Aq/view?usp=drive_link • Health Information Following Floods: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1wGMweHTVHLRt2TJenPWrCg782uG7xi2X/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:13:03] 1. Contact Information: Member Melendrez asked if there is a phone line that people can call to ask for Kona Low Storm assistance. Ms. Castle encouraged residents to go on the website to look at all the resources available. Contact phone number on the website is (808) 768-4141. 2. Launani Valley Land Ownership Clarification: Member Kuehu clarified that the City and County of Honolulu does not own any land within Launani Valley. The majority of the hillsides are owned by LVCA members; portions are owned by Castle & Cook (fire berm), the State, and the military further back in the valley. Some areas are maintained by original developer Wai Huna Joint Ventures. Office of Councilmember District 8, Val Okimoto – [1:23:54]: Pua-Smith Kauhane highlighted the following: • Bill 34 (Flood Hazard Areas): Proposed amendments to align with updated FEMA requirements, maintaining the National Flood Insurance Program and community rating system for affordable flood insurance. • Resolution 26-074 (COVID Hazard Pay): Authorizes $16,777,253 in COVID hazard pay for Teamsters and Allied Workers Union members, funded federally. Currently in committee; expected to go to full Council next month. • Resolution 26-075: Urges the city to implement weekly soil testing at Patsy Mink Central Oʻahu Regional Park (debris storage site from Kona floods) with public results within 24 hours. • To View City Council Bills, Resolutions, Agendas, and Other Communications: https://hnldoc.eHawaiʻi.gov/hnldoc/ • Submit Testimony for Bills/Resolutions: https://hnldoc.eHawaiʻi.gov/hnldoc/testimony • Honolulu City Council Meeting Schedule: https://www.honolulucitycouncil.org/meetings • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-j4gH3ghyCOhkpZ2AoYdMpN6d_ol0hv/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:26:22] 1. COVID Hazard Pay Timeline & Funding: Member Melendrez asked when Resolution 26-074 would be voted on and whether funds were available. Pua confirmed it will go to full Council after committee approval, likely next month, and that funds are believed to be budgeted (to be confirmed). Office of Councilmember District 2, Matt Weyer – [1:29:38]: Councilmember Weyer highlighted the following: • Keiki Bus Passes: Applications open until May 12, 2026. Visit https://hawaiipublicschools.org/ • COVID Hazard Pay: Federal funding partially mixed with general city funds; covers public sector union contracts and OTS bus drivers. • Newsletter Highlights: Central Oʻahu Regional Park Aquatic Center improvements; https://www.oneoahu.org/ resources including property tax remission, BWS discounts, and a match-donation portal connecting flood-affected homeowners with contractors and volunteers. • Budget Concerns: Dismantling of the Office of Economic Revitalization (OER) – a 20-position reduction, leaving only 7 staff. Matt Weyer expressed concern about losing OER’s capacity to administer small business recovery, agricultural grants, and disaster response programs. • Food Insecurity: $1M proposed for Kupuna feeding program to address food insecurity among the approximately 168,000 food-insecure individuals on Oʻahu. • District 2 Helpline: 808-768-5002 or email mweyer@honolulu.gov. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TlJnH409ZHuzrNGWz1CfLdKDlYrvv-kE/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:38:00] 1. North Shore Ambulance Station Location: Member Melendrez asked where will the new ambulance station be located in the North Shore. Matt Weyer responded that they will be located at the Shark’s Cove First Responders Center (to be confirmed after the final acquisition). 2. Unsheltered Residents’ Vehicle Damage Resources: Makanani Rivera (KWO Outreach) asked where unsheltered individuals displaced from Waialua by flooding could get help with inoperable vehicles. Councilmember Weyer recommended calling 211 (Aloha United Way) and offered to follow up by email. Office of Senator District 17, Donovan Dela Cruz – [1:40:55]: Charles Miller highlighted the following: • Agriculture CTE Program: Senator Dela Cruz filmed a segment with Principal Murphy at Mililani High School highlighting the Agriculture CTE program, aired on HiNow Daily. • New High Core Groundbreaking: March 11, 2026, as part of the alternative learning program. LMW Complex Teacher Promise Celebration: Senator attended the event honoring a counselor from Mililani Middle School. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:41:44] 1. Agriculture CTE at Leilehua: Member Kuehu asked whether the CTE agriculture program was also at Leilehua. Miller confirmed Leilehua has a similar ag program, noting the segment highlighted McKinley School for Adults partnering with Mililani High School. Office of Representative District 38, Lauren Matsumoto – [1:43:05]: Representative Matsumoto highlighted the following: • Mid-Session Survey: Mailer sent to District 38 residents; also available online at https://repmatsumoto.com/. Deadline May 5, 2026. Approximately 350 responses received. Survey covers controversial bills currently moving through the legislature. • Legislative Update: Headed into conference committee. Key issue is the 2024 historic income tax cuts – the House and Senate have differing approaches to addressing the budget constraints. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/10ePGMIWoeKTjQaYtimWbbO0T57f2DTEi/view?usp=drive_link Office of Representative District 46, Amy Perruso – [1:45:55]: Representative Perruso highlighted the following: • Conference Committee Update: Approximately 420 bills passed both chambers and are being assigned conferees; process expected to finish by next Friday. Visit https://capitol.hawaii.gov and subscribe to bills for notifications. • Community Mahalo: Acknowledged Mililani community’s generosity in organizing supply drives for flood-impacted Waialua, particularly crediting Danielle Bass for organizing a significant relief effort. Office of Representative District 37, Trish La Chica – [1:49:05]: Tosa Lobendahn highlighted the following: • Legislative Update: 21% of bills still moving; in conference committee. Five bills and four resolutions alive, including HB 1782 (AI regulation to protect minors). • Budget Highlights: Funding for Mililani Public Library; planning funds for potential Cole Ridge Elementary School; continued Mililani educational housing funding; kitchen upgrades across Leilehua-Mililani-Waialua complex (mahalo to Senator Dela Cruz). • Community Events: Alcohol awareness rally (with Rep. Matsumoto); Earth Day Art Contest winner from Mililani Middle School; YMCA Mililani fun run event. • District Updates Page: https://reptrishlachica.com/district-updates • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1C10KzAebLKRox8BaPfXfqiaUPlFs3L9a/view?usp=drive_link State Department of Transportation, Casey Abe – [1:52:19]: Casey Abe highlighted the following: • H-2 On-Ramp Improvements: New signs installed on H-2 northbound on-ramp; advanced pedestrian crossing sign relocated on H-2 southbound on-ramp. Lighting crew is replacing a damaged light standard. • ADA Compliance Issue: Pedestrian push buttons on H-2 northbound on-ramp are non-compliant with ADA requirements. Reconstruction will require programming design and construction funds in the next legislative session. • H-1 Eastbound AM Shoulder Lane, Exit 10 Off-Ramp Truck Definition: Per HRS §291-114(E), a pickup truck is defined as having an open bed with a tailgate and max gross weight of 11,000 lbs. Trucks with four tires may use the AM shoulder lane; six or more tires are prohibited. Working with the Pearl City Neighborhood Board and Senator Elefante to convert the existing 5:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m. shoulder lane into a 24/7 travel lane (restriping/resigning planned for this summer). • H-1 Eastbound AM Shoulder Lane Conversion: The Pearl City On-Ramp to Aiea/Honolulu Off-Ramp segment has no current conversion plans. The board may advocate by emailing DOT Deputy Director for Highways Robin Shishido and copying Casey Abe. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:57:39] 1. Federal Requirements for Shoulder Lane Removal: Member Kuehu asked if there are federal minimums for shoulder lanes. Casey Abe explained that a design exception was obtained from the Federal Highway Administration to allow the conversion, meaning no pull-off shoulder will remain on that segment. VIII. APPROVAL OF BOARD MEETING MINUTES – [1:59:12] Tuesday, February 17, 2026 Regular Meeting Written Summary for Video Record – [1:59:37]: Hearing no objections, the Tuesday, February 17, 2026 Regular Meeting Written Summary for Video Record was approved as written; 7-0-0 (Aye: Agader, Kuehu, Melendrez, Miyamoto, Oishi, Rogers, Tamashiro; Nay: None; Abstain: None) – [1:59:45]. IX. REPORTS – [1:59:55] Committees – Education – [1:59:58]: Chair Melendrez presented the Mililani Middle School report and highlighted the following: upcoming events for soccer and track teams; Japan Study Tour teacher fundraiser; and Blazer School Tours. • Community Meetings: Are at Mililani Middle School every 2nd Tuesdays of the month – PTSO at 5:00 p.m. and SCC at 6:00 p.m. in the Admin Building main conference room. All community members welcome. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TLg7QVeDVC7v-p1J6-YTnqDs5NGdRjZ5/view?usp=drive_link Committees – Military and Civil Defense – [2:03:10]: No report at this time. Committees – Parks and Recreation – [2:03:14]: No report at this time. Committees – Planning, Permitting and Zoning – [2:03:21]: No report at this time. Committees – Transportation – [2:03:28]: No report at this time. Committees – Recognition and Service Awards – [2:03:35]: No report at this time. X. ANNOUNCEMENTS – [2:03:43] Next Meeting – [2:03:43]: The next Mililani Mauka/Launani Valley Neighborhood Board regular meeting will be held on Tuesday, May 19, 2026 at 7:00 p.m. at Mililani Mauka Elementary School and via WebEx. XI. ADJOURNMENT – [2:04:47]: The meeting was adjourned at 9:05 p.m. Submitted by: Camilia Epa Gomes, Neighborhood Assistant, NCO Reviewed by: Dylan Whitsell, Deputy, NCO Finalized by: To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

7:00 PMSportsFoodCulture

12. Nuʻuanu-Punchbowl NB Regular Meeting

Kapālama Hale Room 153, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Room 153, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96817, United States, Honolulu

NU‘UANU - PUNCHBOWL NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 12     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA May 19, 2026, 7:00 P.M. Join by web conference: Meeting link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=mc7a7040282033e0d2de2bc5b0070f6b9 Meeting number/Access code: 2497 187 9026 Password: NB12 (6212 from phones and video systems) Join by phone: +1-408-418-9388 United States Toll Please ensure that your computer or phone is muted unless you are speaking. Join at the Physical location: Kapālama Hale 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Room 153, Honolulu, HI 96817 *This is an alternative meeting location open to public participation. Meeting Materials: Find a monthly archive of handouts and referenced materials concerning to the Nuʻuanu Neighborhood Board No.12 at: Board Google Drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Th_r5SpEofyVf6k1XoeuiP9z_Xfa77xN Board Meeting Recordings: https://www.youtube.com/@NeighborhoodCommissionOffice/search?query=Nuʻuanu Rules of Speaking: Anyone wishing to speak is asked to raise his/her hand, and when recognized by the Chair, to address comments to the Chair. Our public and elected officials giving reports are encouraged to keep their comments to less than three (3) minutes, board member’s comments limited to two minutes for each order of business, presenters are limited to 10 (ten) minutes for the presentation portion and community member input is limited to two (2) minutes per participant. Please silence all electronic devices. Note: The Board may take action on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (HRS Ch. 92), specific issues not noted on this agenda cannot be voted on, unless added to the agenda. A two-thirds (2/3) vote (10) of this 15-member Board is needed to add an item to the agenda. Adding an item to the agenda, however, is not permitted if (1) the item to be added is of reasonably major importance and (2) action on the item by the board will affect a significant number of persons. Determination of whether a specific matter may be added to an agenda must be done on a case-by-case basis. I. CALL TO ORDER – Rae Gee, Chair II. ROLL CALL - Zhoydell Magaoay, Neighborhood Assistant III. STATUS REPORTS – Three (3) minutes maximum, questions to follow. Reports can be found on the board’s shared drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Y5eCxbwTKi-vMx3VSZYqwwhbV_WumRpq A. Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) 1. April 2026 report found on the NB#12 shared drive. B. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) 1. District 1 Report - Central Oʻahu (Downtown Honolulu, Liliha St. (below School St.)., Punahou St. (Roundtop Dr. - Ala Moana Beach & Aloha Tower, & Pali Highway)) 2. District 5 Report – Kalihi (Āliamanu to the Pali Highway (west to east) and from the rim of the Koʻolau Range to the central southeastern shoreline of Oʻahu.) C. Neighborhood Security Watch/Community Policing Report – Paula Kurashige D. Board of Water Supply (BWS) – Jimmy Yanos 1. Dowsett Avenue/Puiwa Road WSI Project update 2. 2800 Pacific Heights Road BWS Water Tank - Update of the BWS plan to restore the grass. IV. BOARD VACANCIES – Subdistricts 1 (Punchbowl) and Subdistrict 2 (Pacific Heights/Pauoa/ Papakōlea) Invitation to the public to serve and call for candidates to volunteer. A. There are four (4) vacant positions for Subdistrict 1 (Punchbowl). Appointment is through June 2027, three minutes per candidate. B. There is one (1) vacant position in Subdistrict 2. Appointment is through June 2027. Community update. C. Conversion of Vacant Seats from Subdistricts to At-Large Vacancies Discussion V. REPORTS FROM NON-BOARD EVENTS – Brief announcements by board members and the public on events, activities and general information directly relating to the Nuʻuanu Punchbowl neighborhood areas. A. Papakōlea Community Updates – Mike Lum/Lilia Kapuniai B. Oʻahu Metropolitan Planning Organization Statewide Transportation Project Updates – no update. VI. RESIDENTS’/COMMUNITY CONCERNS - Limited to three (3) minutes each. A. Nuʻuanu Valley Park – Requests sent to the City Department of Parks and Recreation – resident Mike Ellis 1. Park’s pathway lights change request from high-pressure sodium to LED CIP project update; 2. Hau Tree & Monkey Pod Tree Canopy Trimming DPR Div. Urban Forestry Division (11/10/25 request) Update; and, 3. Map of the Park vs Queen Emma Summer Palace Properties to determine landscape and maintenance responsibilities. B. 2502/2424 Pacific Heights Road Sidewalk/Drainage repair update – resident Beatrice Ku C. Pali Highway/Pacific Heights Road Hwy 61 S. Kuakini Street Off-Ramp Turn Around - Rubbish Dumpster Noise Issue - residents near 1912 Pacific Heights Road D. 3148 Alika Avenue Stream Grate Hazard to Ducks State Jurisdiction – Paula Kurashige VII. OFFICIAL’S REPORTS - Limited to five (5) minutes each, reports should relate to issues of interest to residents of the Nuʻuanu and Punchbowl areas. A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s Representative – Director Kim Hashiro B. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam - Lisa Leonardo C. Governor Josh Green’s Representative – Kayla Setzler D. District 13 Senator Karl Rhoads E. District 27 Representative Jenna Takenouchi F. Federal Elected Officers & Other Elected Officials G. Office of Hawaiian Affairs Update VIII. MEETING MINUTES A. Approval of the draft meeting minutes from February 17, 2026 and April 21, 2026 IX. PRESENTATIONS – Ten (10) minutes per speaker. Questions to follow. Discussion or action as needed. A. TMK 2-2-013: 054 - 322 ʻAuwaiolimu Street – Proposed Meeting Facility – Louisa Sinipata, Esq. X. BOARD BUSINESS – For discussion/action. Five (5) minutes per item. A. Update on the Pali Highway Transportation Projects – Ryan Nakata, Department of Transportation (DOT) 1. Wood Street Crosswalk Noise Issue & Study Scheduling and Update - resident Mark Oyama 2. Pali Highway and Wood Street Crosswalk 4-inch High Curb Trip Hazard Design Team Update – resident Pat Taira 3. Pali Highway Crosswalk Flashing Pedestrian Beacons Installation Project Status – resident Pat Taira 4. DOT Traffic Delineators & the Potential Switch to a Different Material. 5. 2024 Pali Highway Resurfacing Project Update - ADA Sidewalks Compliance Assessment Report findings 6. Pali Highway Rockfall Safety – Pauoa Road/2004 Pacific Heights Road/Highway 61 On-Ramp Kailua-bound Direction request for DOT to mitigate future rockfalls B. Punchbowl Cesspools Projects Update – Mike Lum XI. ANNOUNCEMENTS A. Next Regular Board Meeting- The Nu'uanu-Punchbowl Neighborhood Board No. 12 will hold its next meeting on June 16, 2026 at 7:00 p.m. XII. ADJOURNMENT   A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this Board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapālama Hale, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96817; Telephone (808) 768-3710 Fax (808) 768-3711; or Email nco@honolulu.gov. Agendas and minutes are also available on the internet at www.honolulu.gov/nco If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. It may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date. All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the Board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160 Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96817. Fax: (808) 768-3711. Email: nbtestimony@honolulu.gov Subdistrict 1: Starting at the Tantalus Drive Bridge (over Kanahā), north along the Honolulu Watershed Forest Reserve Boundary, thence west along the Forest Reserve Boundary to its northwest corner, thence southwest in a straight line just south of Kekuanonii Street to Pauoa Stream, thence west along Pauoa Stream to the bridge at Lusitana Street, thence along Lusitana to Pauoa Road, thence northwest on Pauoa Road to Pacific Heights Road, thence southwest along Pacific Heights Road to Kuakini Street and northwest along Kuakini to Nuʻuanu Avenue, thence southwest on Nuʻuanu Avenue to the H-1 Freeway, thence southeast along the H-1 Freeway to Pele Street, thence east on Pele Street and continuing to the rim of Punchbowl Crater, thence east along the rim of Punchbowl Crater to a line connecting the rim and the southwest corner of Stevenson Intermediate School, thence southeasterly along that connecting line to Prospect Street, thence east along Prospect Street to Nehoa Street, thence east along Nehoa Street to ʻAuwaiolimu Street, thence north on ʻAuwaiolimu Street to Kahanā Stream, thence north along Kahanā Stream to the Tantalus Drive Bridge along the Forest Reserve Boundary. Subdistrict 2: Beginning at the junction point of the Koʻolau Ridge and a ridge (Puʻu Konahuanui), south along the face of the ridge on the east side of Pauoa Flats, thence south along the Forest Reserve Boundary to Pauoa Stream, thence west along Pauoa Stream to the intersection of Pauoa Road and Pali Highway, thence north on Pali Highway to the Nuʻuanu Stream Bridge, then in a northern direction to Bluff Ridge following a path between Pacific Heights and Nuʻuanu Valley, thence north along Bluff Ridge (following a path between Pacific Heights and Nuʻuanu Valley, thence north along Bluff Ridge) to the Koʻolau Range. Subdistrict 3: From the northern crest of the Koʻolau Range south to Kapālama-Waolani Stream Divide (ridge) to Waolani Stream, then in a straight line east to ʻAhi Place, thence east on ʻAhi Place to Nuʻuanu Avenue, thence south on Nuʻuanu Avenue to Kuakini Street, thence east on Kuakini to Pacific Heights Road, thence north along Pacific Heights Road to Pauoa Road, thence west along Pauoa Road to Pali Highway, thence north on Pali Highway to Nuʻuanu Stream Bridge, thence in a northern direction to Bluff Ridge following a path between Pacific Heights and Nuʻuanu Valley, and north along Bluff Ridge to the Koʻolau Range.   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2026 at 6:30 P.M. PAUOA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CAFETERIA DINING ROOM — 2301 PAUOA ROAD, HONOLULU, HI 96813 AND VIA WEBEX TELECONFERENCING Video recording of this meeting can be found at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OzWH77LZ5E Reports and other meeting materials can be found at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Th_r5SpEofyVf6k1XoeuiP9z_Xfa77xN CALL TO ORDER - [0:01:40]: Chair Rae Gee called the Nuʻuanu-Punchbowl Neighborhood Board No. 12 meeting to order at 6:33 p.m. No quorum was established with five (5) members present. Note: This 15-member Board requires eight (8) members to establish quorum and to take official board action. ROLL CALL - [0:02:07]: Neighborhood Assistant Zhoydell Magaoay conducted roll call. Members Present: Audrey Hidano, Paula Kurashige, Kaulana Lee, Vice Chair Michael Lum (arrived at 6:35 p.m.), Chair Rae Gee, Kathy Grebe (logged on at 6:44 p.m.), Patrick Smith (arrived at 6:45 p.m.), and Sylvia Young Members Absent: Secretary Jill Easley Allen and Treasurer Larry Smith Guests: Sergeant Brian Sekiya (Honolulu Police Department - HPD District 1); Sergeant Robert King, Lieutenant Sean Yamashita (HPD District 5); Jimmy Yanos (Board of Water Supply – BWS); Haleina Beltran (Senator Karl Rhoads's Office); Representative Jenna Takenouchi; Hailama Farden (Office of Hawaiian Affairs); Mark James (Honolulu Board of Realtors); Stanley Muraoka, Ronald Higa, Tricia Nakamatsu, Pili Lee Loy, Emy Yamauchi-Wong, Ricky Wong, Holly Okamura, Jordan Kapono Nakamura, Lei Ahu Isa, Keala Chock, Marly Chock, Mark Oyama, Mike Ellis, Gary Kikuchi, Annie M. (Guests/Residents); Zhoydell Magaoay (Neighborhood Commission Office). Note: The names of any attendees who were illegible were not included. There were 30 total participants. Vice Chair Lum arrived at 6:35 p.m. There were six (6) members present. STATUS REPORTS - [0:04:05] Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) - [0:04:34]: No representative was present at tonight's meeting. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/19_MF5DuktlepW-q7cJhjapi-knvX4AdI/view?usp=drive_link Honolulu Police Department (HPD) - District 1 (Central) - [0:05:20]: Sergeant Brian Sekiya reported the following statistics. March 2026 Statistics: There were three (3) motor vehicle thefts (no change from previous), four (4) burglaries (previous: 1), two (2) thefts (previous: 3), zero (0) unauthorized entries to motor vehicle (UEMV) (no change), zero (0) assaults (previous: 4), zero (0) sex assaults, one (1) graffiti case (previous: 0), one (1) drug case (no change), 23 motor vehicle collisions (no change), and 585 total calls for service (previous: 527). Questions, comments, and concerns followed - [0:07:18] 1. Homeless Encampment at Lusitana Street Intersection: Member Young asked whether residents could request removal of individuals sleeping on the sidewalk at the Pauoa Road, Kanealii Avenue, and Lusitana Street intersection, following a property owner fencing off their driveway. Sergeant Sekiya confirmed officers would conduct nightly checks and advised residents to call 911. Chair Gee noted the issue occurs around the clock, and Sergeant Sekiya agreed to relay the concern to the day watch Sergeant. Honolulu Police Department (HPD) - District 5 (Kalihi/Pali Corridor) - [0:10:48]: Sergeant King reported the following statistics for the areas of beats 571, 572, and 573. March 2026 Statistics: There were two (2) aggravated assaults (previous: 0), one (1) robbery (previous: 0), one (1) burglary (previous: 2), zero (0) robberies (no change), two (2) sex assault cases/rapes (previous: 1), two (2) simple assaults (previous: 1), eight (8) thefts (previous: 5), three (3) unauthorized entries into a motor vehicle (previous: 5), and 779 total calls for service (previous: 833). Questions, comments, and concerns followed - [0:12:13] 1. Community Safety Report and Scam Awareness: Member Kurashige thanked District 5 officers and noted ongoing scam problems in Beat 573, including a letter fraudulently promising $13,000 originating from Canada/North Carolina. She advised residents to turn scam materials over to police and warned against responding to phone calls impersonating law enforcement. Neighborhood Security Watch/Community Policing Report - [0:12:16]: Member Kurashige raised the ongoing issue of license plate YAB-246, a white Toyota whose driver has been entering residents' yards and stealing flowers, and urged vigilance against drug activity in the neighborhood. Member Grebe logged on at 6:44 p.m. There were seven (7) members present. Member Patrick Smith arrived at 6:45 p.m. There were eight (8) members present. Quorum was established. Board of Water Supply (BWS) - [0:18:19]: BWS representative Jimmy Yanos reported that the Alika Avenue main break has been resolved with permanent paving restoration expected by mid-April, and that grass at the Pacific Heights pumping station is gradually recovering from thatch removal. The Dowsett Avenue/Puiwa Road WSI project has received State Historic Preservation Division (SHPD) approval, with design updates underway to improve corrosion protection, and work expected to begin by September 2026. One main break occurred in March 2026 at 65 Gartley Place. Yanos also reminded residents that water conservation remains important despite recent storms, encouraging efficient watering, shorter showers, and use of BWS rebates for water-efficient appliances, with more tips at www.boardofwatersupply.com/sevenways. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1a4tygu_XJQdAsvj_Hr4BmLiviQiPRl9O/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed - [0:22:20] 1. Dowsett/Puiwa Project Design Clarification: Member Hidano questioned an apparent contradiction in Yanos's report, noting that one section described "updating the design" while another referred to it as "a new design," and asked whether the change would require a new bid and whether BWS was dealing directly with suppliers and manufacturers instead of the general contractor. Yanos acknowledged the need to follow up with his team. Member Hidano pressed further, asking whether the original design involved an error during the SHPD and DPP review process. Yanos agreed to follow up and provide clarification. 2. BWS Water Conservation Rebate Program: Member Young shared that she benefited from the BWS appliance rebate program, receiving replacement toilets and a refund within seven days, and encouraged others to take advantage of it. 3. Nuʻuanu Stream Grates and Brown Hawaiian Ducks: Member Kurashige asked whether BWS installs the stream grates in Nuʻuanu and whether funds are available to modify or replace them, as brown Hawaiian ducks are reportedly getting trapped. Yanos was unable to provide a direct answer. 4. Acknowledgement: Member Smith thanked the Board of Water Supply on behalf of the Pacific Heights community for their diligent efforts in restoring the grass over the past several months. 5. Water Leak Detection Tablets: Resident Ahu Isa asked where to obtain water leak detection tablet packets for toilets, similar to those distributed at a previous meeting by a BWS representative. Yanos offered to bring them to the next meeting. BOARD VACANCIES - Subdistricts 1 & 2 - [0:29:56]: Four seats remain vacant in Subdistrict 1 (Punchbowl) and one in Subdistrict 2 (Pacific Heights/Pauoa/Papakōlea), all with appointments through June 2027, with no candidates coming forward at the meeting. Member Young provided geographic descriptions of both subdistricts for the audience. A discussion item on converting vacant subdistrict seats to at-large vacancies was briefly noted by Chair Gee but postponed due to time constraints. REPORTS FROM NON-BOARD EVENTS - [0:34:21] Papakōlea Community Updates - [0:34:37]: Vice Chair Lum reported there was no update to provide. Lilia Kapuniai was not present. This item will be deferred to the next meeting. Oʻahu Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) Updates - [0:35:01]: Chair Gee reported that she was unable to attend the April 1, 2026 MPO meeting. However, she noted that on March 30, 2026, the Oʻahu MPO Policy Board adopted the Oʻahu Regional Transportation Plan (ORTP) for 2050, a list of federally funded transportation projects. The Unified Planning Work Program, which covers planning projects eligible for federal funds, is open for public comments through April 29, 2026. Chair Gee directed the public to the MPO website at www.oahumpo.org/ORTP for more information. RESIDENTS'/COMMUNITY CONCERNS - [0:37:22] 1. Nuʻuanu Valley Park – Safety Lighting, Monkey Pod Tree, and Hau Tree Maintenance: Resident Mike Ellis reported that the safety lighting, dangerous monkey pod tree, and hau tree concerns at Nuʻuanu Valley Park remain unresolved, with no update received since his last report. He emphasized that the monkey pod tree's root system poses an imminent safety risk and could fall at any time, and that the existing orange-tinted pathway lights are insufficient for evening park use. He also raised concerns about hau tree encroachment near the basketball/pickleball courts along the Queen Emma Summer Palace boundary, noting that the property line between city and the estate has never been formally established. Member Kurashige added that she had called the Queen Emma Summer Palace multiple times without resolution and urged the city and county to determine the property line. Chair Gee noted the concern and confirmed it would be flagged for the Mayor's representative at the next meeting. 2. West O'ahu Aggregate Dumpster Noise at 1912 Pacific Heights Road: Chair Gee shared an email from a resident at 1912 Pacific Heights Road complaining about West O'ahu Aggregate trucks staging dumpsters at a nearby turnaround area at 3:00–4:00 a.m., with engines running and employees speaking loudly, except on Sundays. Member Smith confirmed the turnaround is located at the Pacific Heights/Pali Highway off-ramp. Chair Gee noted this appears to be a city issue and confirmed the Neighborhood Commission Office would follow up and raise it with the Mayor's representative at the next meeting. 3. 2502/2424 Pacific Heights Road – Sidewalk and Drainage Damage: Chair Gee shared a resident complaint about a damaged sidewalk near 2502/2424 Pacific Heights Road where a vehicle fell into a gap, and referred the matter to the Department of Facility Maintenance and Mayor's Representative Director Hashiro. Member Patrick Smith added that the damage stems from flooding and drainage issues caused by a repaving project that partially blocked drainage channels. Member Young noted that since Pacific Heights Road is a City road, the adjacent grassy strip may be the landowner's responsibility, potentially complicating repairs. o Photo: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nQjxzjl3Zw5WixFSYBddIF_vTxwMXZEG/view?usp=drive_link OFFICIALS' REPORTS - [0:51:44] Mayor Rick Blangiardi's Representative - [0:51:59]: Director Kim Hashiro was unable to attend tonight. Chair Gee read the NCO memo highlighting the city's launch of www.OneOahu.org for Kona Low storm recovery resources, ongoing debris cleanup on the North Shore, and postponement of Mayor's town hall meetings due to weather. Other updates included a city food drive, a new glass recycling program, affordable kūpuna housing opening in ʻĀiea, a new DTS Deputy Director Hong Li, a public input opportunity for the next HPD Chief of Police, and increased Skyline ridership following Bill 60. Chair Gee noted that the Henry Street rental business matter remains ongoing after a canceled meeting; DTS is investigating the left turn signal at Pauoa/Pacific Heights Road; ʻAuwaiolimu Street was restriped to narrow travel lanes with further monitoring planned; and overgrowth at 2077 Puowaina Street was cut, with heavy equipment now scheduled for mud and debris removal. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam - [0:58:32]: Lisa Leonardo was unable to attend tonight. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NVrgUdZMvjCZWSlTDrh1t6vTHaonytCP/view?usp=drive_link Governor Josh Green's Representative - [0:58:54]: Kayla Setzler was unable to attend tonight as she was off-island. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zuKPtAV71VuE_0FN4bGnhgsg7EdB8HYY/view?usp=drive_link District 13 Senator Karl Rhoads - [0:59:28]: Haleina Beltran reported on behalf of Senator Rhoads. She noted a reported case of measles in Hawaiʻi and encouraged residents to ensure they are up to date on the MMR vaccine. She also noted that RSV and Influenza B are currently prevalent and recommended that residents over 60 who have not been vaccinated for RSV and Influenza B do so. She also highlighted the CDC National Wastewater Surveillance System website at www.wastewaterscan.org, which allows residents to identify infectious diseases prevalent in their zip code by testing of local wastewater. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/19BNY-tLPtMi1JJ4dYSBfMM2TsTMQsn6i/view?usp=drive_link District 27 Representative Jenna Takenouchi - [1:01:27]: Representative Takenouchi shared several updates: a recap of the March 11, 2026 speeding town hall with HPD, DOT, and DTS has been circulated; Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) published guides to help Kona Low storm survivors navigate insurance claims; Department of Education (DOE) A-Plus after-school program registration opens April 22, 2026 at 3:00 p.m. for public school students in grades K–6; and National Prescription Drug Take Back Day is April 25, 2026 from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Hawaiʻi State Capitol, Kahala Times Supermarket, and Pearl City Police Station. • Town Hall Meeting Recap: https://drive.google.com/file/d/18DC6I_7GlvoklYrp4e7zhMeY0tdHfdx8/view • Storm Resources: o Department of Commerce & Consumer Affairs - Insurance Claims Resources: www.caa.hawaii.gov/ins/ or call (808) 844-3222 o Federal Assistance – www.floodsmart.gov o Hawaii Electric Company Claims: Visit www.hawaiielectric.com/safety-and-outages Select "Power Outages," and then "File Damage Claim." o A+ Program Registration & Information: https://hawaiicommunityengagement.com/after-school-plus/ o Prescription Drug Take Back Day: https://ag.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/News-Release-2026-20.pdf Questions, comments, and concerns followed - [1:06:41] 1. Prescription Drug Drop-Off Label Removal: Member Young asked whether labels should be removed from medications before drop-off. Representative Takenouchi confirmed that all identifying information including name and prescription details should be removed before surrendering medications. Federal Elected Officers & Other Elected Officials - [1:07:52]: No federal elected officials or other elected official representatives were present at tonight's meeting. Member Kurashige departed the meeting at 7:40 p.m., leaving seven (7) members present and no quorum. Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) - [1:10:08]: OHA Senior Director Hailama Farden introduced himself and expressed interest in partnering with neighborhood boards serving large Hawaiian communities. He highlighted four (4) legislative priorities: a bill clarifying burial council expense reimbursements, a historic preservation measure closing loopholes from Act 293 (2025), a reef fish protection bill limiting aquarium collection (with OHA supporting a statewide ban), and the Mauna ʻAla Commission bill — all heading to conference. He also noted upcoming OHA trustee elections, a Waialua storm relief hub opened in partnership with the Salvation Army and others, and trustees currently in Washington D.C. regarding military lease discussions. Farden committed to quarterly board reports and offered to attend meetings upon request. Questions, comments, and concerns followed - [1:15:28] 1. OHA Position on City Charter Amendments: Member Patrick Smith asked whether OHA has taken a position on any of the proposed City Charter amendments, specifically one (Proposal 239) regarding a requirement for Hawaiian education. Farden stated he was not aware of OHA's current position and offered to discuss it with Member Smith after the meeting. MEETING MINUTES - [1:17:11]: Due to loss of quorum, the approval of the February 17, 2026 meeting minutes was deferred to the next meeting. Member Kurashige noted one correction prior to departing: on page 2 of 5, the license plate number is incorrectly listed and should read YAB-246. PRESENTATIONS - [1:17:31]: None. BOARD BUSINESS - [1:17:41]: The following items were discussed only, as no quorum was present. Wood Street Crosswalk Noise Issue & Study Scheduling: Resident Mark Oyama reported that DOT's noise lab confirmed it would contact him to schedule a second sound test; however, he noted that measuring rumble strip noise is inherently difficult with no standardized federal methodology. He further noted that the lack of a clear reference point on Pali Highway made comparison testing difficult. Resident Oyama stated the last update from DOT's sound team was that they are considering some action but no date has been set. Chair Gee confirmed the item will remain on the agenda and Mr. Nakata will continue to be invited. Pali Highway and Wood Street Crosswalk 4-Inch-High Curb Trip Hazard: No update from DOT's design team was available. The item remains on the agenda. Pali Highway Crosswalk Flashing Pedestrian Beacon Installation: Chair Gee noted that at Representative Takenouchi's March town hall, DTS Director Sniffen indicated plans to install flashing pedestrian beacons at Pali Highway crosswalks. Mr. Nakata was not present to confirm. The Board will follow up at the next meeting. DOT Traffic Delineators & Potential Switch to Different Material: Resident Oyama noted that delineators near his residence have been repaired but continue to be knocked down and replaced repeatedly. He also noted that DOT's prior noise test returned a sound reading that could potentially cause permanent hearing damage with even limited exposure, underscoring the need for further review. 2024 Pali Highway Resurfacing – ADA Sidewalk Compliance Assessment Report: Mr. Nakata was not present to report. The item remains pending and will be brought back at the next meeting. Pali Highway Rockfall Safety – Pauoa Road/2004 Pacific Heights Road/Highway 61 On-Ramp (Kailua-bound): Mr. Nakata was not present to report. The item remains on the agenda. Punchbowl Cesspools Projects Update - [1:25:35]: Vice Chair Lum reported there is no update at this time. The Punchbowl area continues to rely on cesspools with no sewer connections or funding currently in place. ANNOUNCEMENTS - [1:25:49] Next Regular Board Meeting: The Board will return to its regular virtual format on Tuesday, May 19, 2026 at 7:00 p.m. via WebEx and in-person at Kapālama Hale. Members of the community may attend either virtually or in person. Moment of Silence – Governor George Ariyoshi: At the request of Member Kurashige, the Board observed a brief moment of silence in memory of former Governor George Ariyoshi, who passed away at age 100. Kuakini Medical Center Community Resources Fair: A community resources fair will be held on May 16, 2026. National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) Food Drive: The NALC food drive is scheduled for May 2026. The deadline to volunteer has passed. Thank You to Pauoa Elementary School: Chair Gee and the Board expressed appreciation to Principal Tim Hosoda of Pauoa Elementary School for graciously opening the school cafeteria at no cost for the Board's first in-person meeting since the COVID-19 pandemic, noting his personal attendance to support the event. Introduction – Mark James (Honolulu Board of Realtors): Member Patrick Smith introduced Mark James, representing the City Affairs Committee of the Honolulu Board of Realtors, which monitors City Council actions related to taxation, land use, and housing. Mr. James noted he lives in Pacific Heights and plans to attend future meetings. ADJOURNMENT: The meeting was adjourned at approximately 8:03 p.m. Submitted by: Zhoydell Magaoay, Neighborhood Assistant Reviewed by: Dylan Whitsell, Deputy Finalized by: Jill Easley Allen, Secretary & Rae Gee, Chair To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

6:00 PMSportsArtsFood

15. Kalihi-Pālama NB Regular Meeting

Kapālama Hale Room 153, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Room 153, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96817, United States, Honolulu

KALIHI - PĀLAMA NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 15     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 2026 AT 6:00 P.M. KAPĀLAMA HALE, 925 DILLINGHAM BOULEVARD, ROOM 153 HONOLULU, HI 96817 AND VIRTUAL VIA WEBEX WebEx Link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=m87b646203f9cad03ba885a37cda93aaf Meeting Number / Access Code: 2495 468 8292 Password: NB15 (6215 from phones and video systems) Join by phone: +1-408-418-9388 United States Toll Meeting Materials: Find a monthly archive of handouts and referenced materials concerning to Kalihi-Palāma Neighborhood Board No. 15 at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1jZWmXmsk6bquFmxc5Ch_JqHL1wlHZrRL Recordings: Recordings of Board meetings can be found at: http://www.youtube.com/@NeighborhoodCommissionOffice Rules of Speaking: Anyone wishing to speak is asked to click the “raise hand” icon, and when recognized by the Chair, to address comments to the Chair. Remarks should not exceed one minute-thirty seconds and one question per speaker, additional questions be posted in the chat or emailed to presenters. Please ensure your microphone is muted unless you are speaking. Please state your first and last name for the record before moving into your comments/question, etc. Written testimony may also be submitted via email using the contact information listed on the Neighborhood Commission Office website. Purpose: The purpose of neighborhood boards and the neighborhood plan is to increase and assure effective citizen participation in the decisions of government. Notes: The Board may take action on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) 92), specific issues not noted on this agenda cannot be voted on unless added to the agenda. A two-thirds (2/3) vote, nine (9) of this thirteen (13) member Board is needed to add an item to the agenda. Adding an item to the agenda, however, is not permitted if 1. The item to be added is of reasonably major importance and 2. Action on the item by the Board will affect a significant number of persons. Determination of whether a specific matter may be added to an agenda must be done on a case-by-case basis. Please silence all electronic devices. I. CALL TO ORDER: Chair Evelyn Cullen A. Roll Call II. CITY MONTHLY REPORTS: Three (3) minutes each A. Honolulu Fire Department B. Honolulu Police Department – District 1 C. Honolulu Police Department – District 5 D. Board of Water Supply – Iris Oda E. Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART) – Gabby Camacho III. RESIDENTS’ AND COMMUNITY CONCERNS (Three (3) Minutes each): Meeting participants may present their community concerns at this time. Note – Due to the State “Sunshine Law,” concerns not listed on the agenda may be presented, but no Board action can be taken. Items brought up may be placed on a future agenda for discussion/action. IV. PRESENTATIONS (Limited to maximum 10-Minute Presentation) A. Costco Presentation – Former Sizzler/Burger King Site, Ernie Martin, Atty. representing Costco B. H1 Widening Project – Honua Consulting, Patrick Watson V. CITY ELECTED OFFICIALS: Three (3) minutes each A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s Representative – Deputy Director Stephen Courtney, Department of Information Technology (DIT) B. Councilmember Radiant Cordero C. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam VI. COMMUNITY UPDATES A. U.S. Army Garrison Hawaiʻi Military Report – Selina Gentkowski VII. STATE ELECTED OFFICIALS: Three (3) minutes each A. Senator Karl Rhoads (District 13) B. Senator Donna Mercado Kim (District 14) C. Senator Glenn Wakai (District 15) D. Representative Michael “Cov” Ratcliffe (District 28) E. Representative Shirley Templo (House District 30) F. Governor Josh Green’s MD Representative – Dreana Kalili, Hawaiʻi Department of Transportation (HDOT) VIII. CONGRESSIONAL OFFICIALS A. Congressman Ed Case – Tristan Fujimoto IX. BOARD BUSINESS A. Filling of Two (2) At-Large Vacancies B. Approval of Regular Meeting Minutes: Wednesday, March 18, 2026 and Wednesday, April 15, 2026 C. Neighborhood Plan §2-14-106 Three Absences Notice for Board Member – Ken Farm D. Neighborhood Plan §2-14-106 Three Absences Notice for Board Member – Erich Mitamura E. Neighborhood Plan §2-14-106 Three Absences Notice for Board Member – Randy Jadulang F. Resolution Addressing Ongoing Safety and Nuisance Concerns at 901 Gulick Avenue X. ANNOUNCEMENTS A. The Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 will recess its regular meeting in June 2026. The next Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 meeting is scheduled to be on Wednesday, July 15, 2026 at 6:00 p.m. at the Kapālama Hale, Room 153. B. The Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 recordings can be seen on ʻŌlelo Channel 49 or at www.olelo.org/live at the following times: 1st Monday of each month at 9:00 p.m. and 2nd and 4th Thursday of each month at 11:00 a.m. XI. ADJOURNMENT A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapālama Hale, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96817, by telephone on (808) 768-3710, fax (808) 768-3711, or e-mailing nco@honolulu.gov. Agenda documents and minutes are also available online at https://www.honolulu.gov/nco/boards. All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours of the meeting, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the Board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, fax (808) 768-3711, or email nbtestimony@honolulu.gov, or complete the form on https://www.honolulu.gov/nco/board-testimony. If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov as soon as possible, preferably at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. If a request is received with fewer than three (3) business days remaining before the meeting, we will try to obtain the auxiliary aid/service or accommodation, but it may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date.   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2026 at 6:00 P.M. KALIHI WAENA ELEMENTARY SCHOOL LIBRARY 1240 GULICK AVENUE, HONOLULU, HI 96819 AND VIRTUAL VIA WEBEX Video recording of this meeting can be found at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLSaBNL4x9U Reports & other meeting materials can be found at: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1jZWmXmsk6bquFmxc5Ch_JqHL1wlHZrRL I. CALL TO ORDER – [0:00:12]: Chair Cullen called the Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 regular meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. A. Roll Call – [0:00:38]: Quorum was not established at the start of the meeting with four members present. Chair Cullen also announced the Rules of Speaking. Note: This 13-member Board requires 7 members to establish a quorum and to take official action. The Board proceeded informally until quorum was confirmed. Members Present: Evelyn Cullen, Diosa Mae, Lloyd Pohano, Lynn Vasquez, Evangeline Tolete (6:02 p.m.), Patricia Hoopii (6:06 p.m.), and Donald Guerrero (6:13 p.m.). Members Absent: Ken Farm, Randy Jadulang, Willis Moore, and Erich Mitamura. Guests: Fire Fighter J. Irvine (Honolulu Fire Department); Sergeant Piros (Honolulu Police Department – District 5); Sergeant Lyle Wakabayashi (Honolulu Police Department – District 1); Iris Oda (Board of Water Supply); Gabrielle Camacho (Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation); Deputy Director Stephen Courtney(Mayor's Representative); Councilmember Radiant Cordero; Lynn Robinson (Office of Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam); Selena Gentkowski (U.S. Army Garrison Hawaiʻi); Senator Donna Mercado Kim (District 14); Senator Glenn Wakai (District 15); Representative Michael "Cov" Ratcliffe (District 28); Dre Kalili (Governor’s Representative); Haleina Beltran (Office of Senator Rhoads); Office of Representative Templo; Dale Vanderbrink (Ala Moana Neighborhood Board); Jesica Daga and Toru Matthew(Hawaiʻi State Federal Credit Union); Patrick Watson (Honua Consulting); Dan Larkin (Principal, Kalihi Waena Elementary School); Fata Fatea, Kirsten Liana, Lisa Rene Jaso, Donald Sakamoto (Citizens for a Fair ADA Ride), Dana Yap, P.M. Azinga, Patrick Smith, Thomas Beck, Alan Kumalae, Ronald Higa, An Vo, Dana Yap, Patrick Smith, Cardenas Pintor, Lex Ahu Isa, Thomas Beck, Kekoa Kealoha, T. Nakamatsu (Residents and Community Members); ʻŌlelo Virtual; Melissa Urubio (Neighborhood Commission Office). Note: Names were not included if not legible. There were approximately 50 total attendees. II. FILLING OF ONE (1) AT-LARGE VACANCY – [0:02:40]: This item was postponed to the next meeting due to the lack of quorum. III. ELECTION OF OFFICERS – [0:02:51]: This item was postponed to the next meeting due to the lack of quorum. IV. CITY MONTHLY REPORTS – [0:03:01] A. Honolulu Fire Department – [0:03:12]: Fire Fighter J. Irvine reported March 2026 statistics: one structure fire, zero wildland or brush fires, two cooking fires, five nuisance fires, 26 activated alarms with no fires, 207 medical emergencies, two motor vehicle collisions with a pedestrian, seven motor vehicle crash collisions, no mountain or ocean rescues, and two hazardous material incidents. He also shared the monthly fire safety tip on evacuation planning, urging residents to create an emergency preparedness plan with at least two escape routes, a meeting place, and a go bag, while staying informed via hnlert.gov and accessing additional resources at honolulu.gov/dem/buildakit. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1i_pulxbJQQJjIkhHFjHcLNFXlSqxwFGM/view?usp=drive_link Member Tolete joined the meeting at 6:02 p.m. – 5 members present. A. Honolulu Police Department – District 1 – [0:06:06]: Hearing no objections, Chair Cullen moved to the Honolulu Police Department District 5 report, noting the Board could return to District 1, as Sergeant Lyle Wakabayashi was present online but experiencing audio issues. Member Hoopii joined the meeting at 6:06 p.m. – 6 members present. Member Guerrero joined the meeting at 6:13 p.m. – 7 members present. The Board established quorum. B. Honolulu Police Department – District 5 – [0:06:38]: Sergeant Piros reported March 2026 statistics: five aggravated assaults (compared to three in February), 14 auto thefts (compared to 10), 13 burglaries (compared to 12), two robberies (compared to one), two sex assault cases (compared to one), 12 assault cases (compared to six), 25 theft cases (compared to 20), six unauthorized entries into motor vehicles (compared to two), and 2,683 total calls for service (compared to 2,557 in February). Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [0:08:03] 1. Game Rooms Near Schools and Fine Cap Increase: P.M. Azinga raised concerns about the number of game rooms operating near schools in the district, requesting that the principal be notified when police conduct raids and that those raids be scheduled after school hours. She also noted that the current $150,000 fine cap on landlords who allow game rooms is insufficient, as game rooms can earn $10,000 a day, and requested the fine be raised to $500,000. Sergeant Piros acknowledged the concerns, confirmed the department has been successful in permanently shutting down game rooms in the Kalihi area, and committed to passing the requests to his command. [0:11:06] Hearing no objections, Chair Cullen took the agenda out of order to hear Item IV-B: Honolulu Police Department District 1. Honolulu Police Department – District 1 – [0:11:13]: Sergeant Lyle Wakabayashi reported March 2026 statistics: three motor vehicle thefts (compared to one in February), one burglary (compared to zero), two thefts (same as February), zero unauthorized entries into motor vehicles (compared to one), two assaults (compared to one), zero sex assaults, zero graffiti, one drug case (compared to two), 17 motor vehicle collisions (compared to 14), and 300 total calls for service (compared to 304 in February). [0:12:43] Hearing no objections, Chair Cullen continued with City Monthly Reports hearing Item IV-D: Board of Water Supply. C. Board of Water Supply – [0:12:53]: Iris Oda reported four main breaks in the Kalihi-Pālama area during March 2026: on Monday, March 2, 2026 near 1814 Democrat Street; on Monday, March 9, 2026 near 1159 Gulick Avenue; on Thursday, March 19, 2026 near 1305 Nakuina Street; and on Friday, March 20, 2026 near 1302 Nakuina Street. She also announced that Sunday, April 12, 2026 to Saturday, April 18, 2026 is Detect-a-Leak Week, encouraging residents to fix household leaks to conserve water and reduce utility bills, with a free outreach event offering toilet leak detection dye tablets on Sunday, April 18, 2026 from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at Kahala Mall. She also provided follow-up answers regarding a water main replacement project on Kaili Street and Beckley Street anticipated to begin within six months, facility tour requests available by emailing kpahinui@hbws.org, and a correction that the January main break occurred on January 15, 2026 near 909 Kaʻamahu Place with the cause still undetermined. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gzx7GcNJhbvc6uTbUGlzHtQuRcnq_9aA/view?usp=drive_link [0:18:33] Chair Cullen announced that quorum was established with 7 members present. D. Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART) – [0:18:56]: Gabby Camacho reported that the first guideway column of Segment 3 was completed near Nimitz Highway and Fort Street, standing as the first of 148 columns with an underground shaft exceeding 100 feet deep, while foundation work for the Chinatown Station also began this month. She announced that the second neighborhood design workshop for the Mokauea and Kūwili Stations is scheduled for Thursday, April 23, 2026 from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. at Honolulu Community College Cafeteria, where attendees can review prior feedback, view updated renderings, and submit input. She also noted that the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation monitors weather service announcements and takes precautionary measures during storms, including securing work zones and clearing drainage systems. V. RESIDENTS' AND COMMUNITY CONCERNS – [0:22:16] 1. Kalihi Valley Athletic Club – Care Week: Faatea Faatea introduced the Kalihi Valley Athletic Club’s "Care Week," a community sporting event running from Monday, May 4, 2026 to Saturday, May 9, 2026, featuring kickball, basketball, volleyball, softball, and pickleball, with opening ceremonies at Kalihi Valley District Park and closing ceremonies at Kalākaua District Park. He shared that the event aims to foster relationships, unite churches, address crime through community building, and provide job opportunities, including a job fair on Saturday, May 9, 2026 at Kalākaua District Park. 2. Kalihi Waena Elementary School Updates: Principal Dan Larkin thanked the community for their support and highlighted the successful Farrington Alumni Governor’s Bash, while announcing the first Farrington Complex-wide elementary esports tournament on Friday, April 17, 2026 at Kalākaua Middle School with 66 student participants. He noted that graduation will be held the second Saturday before the end of May and reminded residents that statewide testing runs through the second-to-last week of May, requesting they avoid school campuses between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. during that period. Member Hoopii echoed appreciation for the Governor’s Bash and congratulated Member Diosa and the Farrington groups for their efforts. 3. H1 Gulick Street Overpass Closure Presentation Request: Patrick Watson requested to present at the next meeting on the H1 Ola Lane to Likelike Highway project’s construction impacts near Kalihi Waena Elementary School, including traffic plans, project timeline, and contact information, noting the Gulick Street overpass closure is estimated to begin in late June 2026, subject to change due to recent storm impacts. Chair Cullen agreed to add the item to the next agenda and invited Board members and community members to submit questions in advance. 4. Saturday Events and Traffic Notice: Dana Yap announced several events on Saturday, April 18, 2026 that may impact traffic in the area including the Kapālama Kai community cleanup from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m.; a memorial service at the Farrington High School auditorium from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. for Coach Harry Pacarro; and an event at Bishop Museum. He encouraged community members to be aware of potential traffic. 5. Cardenas Pintor’s Resignation from Neighborhood Board: Cardenas Pintor, formerly a Board member, addressed the Board from the audience to announce his resignation from the Neighborhood Board the prior week. He expressed gratitude for the experience and thanked everyone who supported and elected him. 6. Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART) Rail Americans with Disabilities (ADA) Accessibility Concerns: Lisa Rene Jaso, a legally blind Kalihi resident, raised concerns about the rail system’s non-compliance, noting nine months of unsuccessful attempts to get a response from the City or the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation, and emphasized that unsafe sidewalks and rail access points affect both people with disabilities and children walking to nearby schools. 7. Ongoing Nuisance Near Hawaiian Snow: Kirsten Liana appeared for the fourth time to report that the ongoing nuisance near Hawaiian Snow at the corner of Gulick Avenue and Waterhouse Street has worsened, with the area now becoming a known gathering spot with increased loitering, drinking, smoking, and public urination. She noted that on the night of Saturday, April 4, 2026 into the early morning of Sunday, April 5, 2026, two separate fights occurred in the area, one of which resulted in a stabbing. She also raised concerns about inconsistency in dispatch response, with more pushback during daytime calls. She noted she submitted a proposed resolution to Chair Cullen and requested it be reviewed for placement on the next agenda. Chair Cullen acknowledged the concern and committed to allowing City representatives to respond during their reports. 8. Traffic Warning Near Farrington High School: Member Hoopii provided a fair warning to community members that sheriffs are stationed at the entrance to Farrington High School on King Street from 7:00 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. and will issue citations to vehicles turning into the school during those hours. 9. Inaccessible Bus Stops: Donald Sakamoto, president of Citizens for a Fair Americans with Disabilities (ADA) Ride and a 26-year paratransit rider, highlighted inaccessible bus stops along the Dillingham Boulevard construction area, and urged the Mayor’s Representative and City Council to take action before someone is injured. VI. PRESENTATIONS – [0:43:17] A. Resolution Urging the Establishment of a Vacant Lot Property Tax Surcharge – Dale Vanderbrink (Ala Moana Neighborhood Board) – [0:43:37]: Dale Vanderbrink, Second Vice Chair of the Ala Moana-Kakaʻako Neighborhood Board, presented a resolution urging a vacant lot property tax surcharge targeting corporations and high-net-worth individuals in urban areas near the rail corridor, noting that vacant and abandoned lots create public safety hazards including homeless encampments, fire risks, and vandalism. He noted that the proposed surcharge would increase over time for lots vacant five or more years, with an initial grace period for owners to develop or find active use, generating new City revenue if development does not occur. Chair Cullen noted the item was for presentation and discussion only, and a motion was made to add it to the next month's agenda. • Presentation: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LsmgN81iFP4pwq3-slAbubW3j2XdLeoI/view?usp=drive_link B. Hawaiʻi State Federal Credit Union – [0:53:57]: Jesica Daga of the Hawaiʻi State Federal Credit Union (HSFCU) Kapahulu branch presented an overview of their services which is member-owned and open to State and City and County of Honolulu employees and their immediate family members across 14 branch locations. She noted that they offer a range of financial products including personal, auto, home, and business loans, with highlights including a 2.5% cash back credit card with no annual fee and a new Always Savings Account offering 5% interest on balances up to $5,000. She also added that new members who open a savings account, checking account, and debit card may receive a $50 promotional bonus. Lastly, she shared that in 2025, Hawaiʻi State Federal Credit Union employees volunteered 1,584 hours and contributed $379,354 to support local communities. VII. CITY ELECTED OFFICIALS – [0:57:47] A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi's Representative – Deputy Director Stephen Courtney, Department of Information Technology (DIT) – [0:58:04]: Deputy Director Stephen Courtney reported that the City is actively conducting cleanup and recovery efforts following three consecutive severe weather systems, with a recovery website launched at oneoahu.org where residents can report home damage, find assistance, and access health and safety tips, while storm debris may be brought to City transfer stations open daily from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. He highlighted several initiatives from the Mayor’s March 2026 newsletter, including a new Ememrgency Medical Technician (EMT) training academy, the Green Recycling Organic Waste (GROW) food scrap composting pilot program, new affordable kūpuna housing in ʻEwa, a community input process for selecting the next Police Chief, and increased Skyline ridership following the passage of Bill 60. He also addressed an ongoing public nuisance at Gulick Avenue and Waterhouse Street, advising residents to call 911 when criminal activity is observed, and encouraged the use of the HNL 311 app for non-emergency reporting. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:03:26] 1. Ongoing Nuisance Near Hawaiian Snow – Follow-Up: Chair Cullen invited Board members to discuss how to move Kirsten Liana’s concern forward. A motion was made to add her resolution to the next month’s agenda. Member Hoopii noted that Liana had raised the same concern four times and urged the Mayor’s office, City Council, and other officials to take prompt action rather than deferring the matter to future meetings. 2. Abandoned Vehicles: Member Hoopii raised concerns about abandoned vehicles on Kalihi Street, Mokauea Street and Democrat Street that have been parked for months, preventing residents from parking near their homes. Deputy Director Courtney suggested using the HNL 311 app to report the vehicles. 3. HNL 311 App Overview: Member Diosa asked Deputy Director Courtney to explain the HNL 311 app, which he described as a phone application where residents can report non-emergency issues such as broken street lights, illegal dumping, and potholes by taking a photo, tagging the location, and selecting from preset issue categories. He also noted that reports are automatically routed to the appropriate City Department without the user needing to identify which department handles the issue. B. Councilmember Radiant Cordero – [1:11:00]: Councilmember Cordero addressed abandoned vehicle concerns by expressing support for expanding the large vehicle and boat removal contract in the upcoming budget cycle, and apologized to Kirsten Liana for delays while noting her office has been coordinating with the Department of Planning and Permitting and Honolulu Police Department to address the nuisance at Gulick Avenue and Waterhouse Street. She explained that Department of Planning and Permitting cannot issue a notice of violation since the nuisance is not caused by the Hawaiian Snow business itself, and that her staff will work with Honolulu Police Department to review property setback maps and determine enforcement options, including potentially having the property owner trespass the individuals. She also shared updates on HNL Alerts and HNL 311, submitted a request for tennis court lighting at Kalākaua District Park, noted the Kalihi Ahupuaʻa bike ride has been rescheduled with details available on her social media and website, and provided information on budget amendments being submitted on Thursday, April 16, 2026. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cQF-GCplTQoozlmlpxRbYUqkkf-HwVDr/view?usp=drive_link Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:18:39] 1. Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation Rail Americans with Disabilities (ADA) Violations: Lisa Rene Jaso asked why Councilmember Cordero’s office had not followed up on the rail Americans with Disabilities violations since September, noting that a staff member told her the issues were fixed when they were not. Councilmember Cordero acknowledged the concern, noted the office had referred the matter to Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation in November, and committed to following up for a status update. 2. Property Responsibility at Gulick and Waterhouse – Ongoing Nuisance: Kirsten Liana asked for clarification on whether the responsibility for the nuisance gatherings falls on the Hawaiian Snow property owner or the City, based on a prior meeting’s discussion that the area is partially City property. Councilmember Cordero explained she plans to sit down with Honolulu Police Department to review the Department of Planning and Permitting setback map and use that information to determine enforcement options on both the unimproved sidewalk and the private property, and reiterated that the property owner trespassing those individuals is also part of the solution. C. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam – [1:23:40]: Lynn Robinson reported that the Department of Design and Construction began parking lot improvements at Beretania Community Park on Monday, April 13, 2026, with construction running 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. for approximately one year, during which the lot will be closed, and upon completion will feature 56 public stalls, 15 maintenance stalls, Americans with Disabilities (ADA) compliant upgrades, and four new white shower trees; questions about the project may be directed to the Department of Design and Construction at 808-768-8400. She also endorsed the HNL 311 app for reporting non-emergency issues and encouraged District 6 residents to contact Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam’s office if issues remain unresolved. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:27:07] 1. Game Rooms – Legislative Follow-Up: Patrick Smith asked whether there had been any proposals to increase fines or occupancy repercussions for game rooms. Lynn Robinson confirmed that Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam has collaborated with the Honolulu Police Department Narco-Vice Unit and Department of Planning and Permitting for two years on a multi-pronged enforcement approach, whereby narco-vice gathers evidence and the Department of Planning and Permitting issues notices of violation with significant fines to landlords of illegal game rooms. She also shared that residents may report game rooms anonymously to the Councilmember's office or narco-vice. VIII. COMMUNITY UPDATES – [1:30:00] A. U.S. Army Garrison Hawaiʻi Military Report – [1:30:30]: Selena Gentkowski of the U.S. Army Garrison Hawaiʻi Public Affairs Office announced two upcoming public hiring fairs on Tuesday, April 21, 2026 and Monday, May 18, 2026 at Aliamanu Military Reservation, running from 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., with applicants advised to bring two references, proof of identification, a social security card, and a resume, and benefits including retirement, recreational facilities, discounted childcare, and commissary and Post Exchange privileges. She also noted that prescribed burns at Schofield Barracks ranges were rescheduled to Monday, May 11, 2026 to Friday, May 15, 2026 due to overly wet conditions. IX. STATE ELECTED OFFICIALS – [1:32:05] A. Senator Karl Rhoads (District 13) – [1:32:14]: Haleina Beltran reported that Senator Rhoads is focused on health issues, noting confirmed measles cases in Hawaiʻi and urged residents to ensure their Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (MMR) vaccine is up to date, as well as Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) and flu vaccinations for those 60 and older. She also introduced WastewaterSCAN.org, a website that tests wastewater across zip codes to help residents monitor infectious disease prevalence in their area. • Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cULyP-n_JASsZnSnIPT4Ps1m_sqU9bJh/view?usp=drive_link B. Senator Donna Mercado Kim (District 14) – [1:34:06]: Senator Kim reported key legislative deadlines, noting that the final deadline for bills to move back to their respective houses is Thursday, April 16, 2026, with conference running from Monday, April 20, 2026 through Friday, May 1, 2026. She provided bill updates including Senate Bill 2877, Senate Concurrent Resolutions 197 and 199, and Senate Bill 2657. She also announced a town hall co-hosted with Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam on Monday, April 20, 2026 at Kapalama Elementary School cafeteria from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Lastly, she noted that A+ registration begins Wednesday, April 22, 2026 and Art at the Capitol will be held on Friday, April 17, 2026 from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1G8Iyeese2eOBJDPAgJLkt9O5WRKd1sO2/view?usp=drive_link C. Senator Glenn Wakai (District 15) – [1:39:41]: Senator Wakai reported that the Legislature is in its final stages, highlighting efforts to preserve the 2024 historic tax cuts (Act 46) which would reduce state income tax from $5,000 to $1,400 for individuals earning approximately $90,000, with the Senate proposing to fund continued tax relief by cutting government vacancies unfilled for five or more years rather than pursuing tax increases. He also noted the passage of a bill to significantly reduce vehicle registration fees for Oʻahu residents, who currently pay $300 to $500 compared to under $100 on neighbor islands, and recognized Farrington student Aaliyah Gabriel for her service as an ambassador to Okinawa through the Pacific Asian Affairs Council. • Newsletter: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WHftveOYCiMAZ6WjYjFLdGzl1pG2ktYV/view?usp=drive_link Member Hoopii left the meeting at 6:43 p.m. – 6 members present. The Board lost quorum. D. Representative Shirley Templo (House District 30) – [1:43:03]: Representative Templo’s representative reported that the Legislature is in the crossover phase finalizing the supplemental budget, with community survey results identifying cost of living and public safety as top concerns, followed by education and affordable housing, and a community literacy labs bill still moving through the Legislature. The representative also announced that Hawaiʻi Public Housing Authority Section 8 applications will open on Monday, April 20, 2026, that the Kalihi Safety Task Force will meet on Wednesday, April 22, 2026 from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Parents and Children Together (PACT), and extended congratulations to newly appointed Representative Michael Ratcliffe. E. Governor Josh Green's MD Representative – Dre Kalili, Hawaiʻi Department of Transportation (HDOT) – [1:46:46]: Dre Kalili noted that the administration has been focused on storm preparedness and recovery across the state over the past month. She also announced the 2026 Hawaiʻi Quality of Life Survey, available to all state residents at www.health-study.com, and encouraged all residents to participate. Questions, comments, and concerns followed – [1:47:46] 1. Governor Green's Clean Energy Agenda and Natural Gas Contract: Thomas Beck asked whether Governor Green’s 2030 clean energy agenda remains in effect, citing a reported contract with a Japanese company to supply natural gas to Hawaiian Electric, which he noted appears inconsistent with a 100% carbon-free goal. Dre Kalili stated she would check with the Governor’s office and provide a written response ahead of the next meeting. Member Guerrero left the meeting at 7:49 p.m. – 5 members present. F. Newly Appointed Representative Michael "Cov" Ratcliffe (House District 28) – [1:49:09]: Representative Ratcliffe introduced himself as the newly appointed State House Representative for District 28, appointed on Monday, April 13, 2026, thanking Chair Cullen for her questions at the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART) Iwilei Station town hall, congratulating Member Diosa on the Governor’s Bash, and acknowledging Representative Templo for drafting a Tamashiro Marketplace certificate. He also noted a bill establishing that a majority of filled seats shall constitute quorum for Neighborhood Boards when vacancies exist. X. CONGRESSIONAL OFFICIALS – [1:52:47] A. Congressman Ed Case – Tristan Fujimoto – [1:52:48]: No representative was present. XI. BOARD BUSINESS – [1:52:59] A. Neighborhood Plan §2-14-106 Three Absences Notice for Board Member – Ken Farm – [1:53:08]: Patrick Smith, Neighborhood Commission Chair, explained that under the Neighborhood Plan, the Chair should ask the member in question if they wish to make a reply, and if not present, the Chair may call for a motion to vacate the seat. A motion was made to table the matter to the next month's meeting due to lack of quorum. B. Neighborhood Plan §2-14-106 Three Absences Notice for Board Member – Erich Mitamura – [1:55:34]: This item was postponed to the next meeting due to the lack of quorum. C. Re-Establishment of Committees and Committee Chairs – [1:55:54]: This item was postponed to the next meeting due to the lack of quorum. D. Approval of Regular Meeting Minutes: Wednesday, March 18, 2026 – [1:56:15]: This item was postponed to the next meeting due to the lack of quorum. XII. ANNOUNCEMENTS – [1:56:52]: Chair Cullen announced that the next Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, May 20, 2026 at 6:00 p.m. at Kalihi Waena Elementary School Library. She also shared that the Kalihi-Pālama Neighborhood Board No. 15 recordings can be seen on ʻŌlelo Channel 49 or at www.olelo.org/live at the following times: 1st Monday of each month at 9:00 p.m. and 2nd and 4th Thursday of each month at 11:00 a.m. XIII. ADJOURNMENT – [1:57:18]: The meeting was adjourned at 7:57 p.m. Submitted by: Melissa Urubio, Neighborhood Assistant, NCO Reviewed by: Robert Whitsell, Deputy, NCO Finalized by: Evelyn Cullen, Chair To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

6:00 PMSportsArtsFood

10. Makiki-Tantalus Regular Meeting

Makiki District Park (Arts & Crafts Building), 1527 Keʻeaumoku Street, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, 96822, United States, Honolulu

MAKIKI-LOWER PUNCHBOWL-TANTALUS NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 10     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2026 AT 6:00 P.M. MAKIKI DISTRICT PARK (OLD MAKIKI COMMUNITY LIBRARY, 2ND FLOOR) 1527 KE’EAUMOKU STREET, HONOLULU, HI 96822 (https://maps.app.goo.gl/tn2vhKmnhhBafkJy5) AND ONLINE VIA WEBEX Meeting Link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=mf66d21b6ef825a3d0e117ed0856d527b Meeting Number / Access Code: 2500 575 4786 Password: NB10 (6210 from phones and video systems) Join by Phone: +1-408-418-9388 (United States Toll) Meeting Recordings: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfqRwVpRrookChkQxjZlnB_r8en78zV4Q Meeting Materials: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1su4uYFuTVRMZYxBlR8WnaR0cDMcjbHjE Purpose: §2-13-101 [Neighborhood Plan of 2008, City Charter] “Purpose. The purpose of this neighborhood plan and the neighborhood boards is to increase and assure effective citizen participation in the decisions of government.” Community Vision Statement: “A safe and healthy community with a lei of parks connected by roads, sidewalks, and public transportation; where daily life is not interrupted by loud vehicles and other obnoxious noises; where all community members are valued, including the least fortunate; and where residents are proud to live.” Rules of Speaking and Notes: Anyone wishing to speak is asked to raise their hand. When recognized by the Chair, address comments to the Chair. Speakers are encouraged to keep their comments under 3 minutes, and those giving reports are urged to keep their reports under 3 minutes. Please silence all electronic devices. The Board may take action on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (HRS 92), specific issues not noted on this agenda cannot be voted on, unless added to the agenda. A two-thirds (2/3) vote of this 17-member Board is needed to add an item to the agenda. No item shall be added to the agenda if it is of reasonably major importance and action thereon by the board will affect a significant number of persons. Description of Board Boundaries: www8.honolulu.gov/nco/boards-and-sub-district-boundary-descriptions Subscribe to Receive Meeting Agendas via Email: www8.honolulu.gov/nco/newsletter-subscription Subscribe to Receive City News Updates via Email: www.honolulu.gov/mayor/newsletter-signup 1. CALL TO ORDER – Chair Nathan Char (nathanielchar@gmail.com) 2. ROLL CALL – Neighborhood Assistant Curtis Hayashi (curtis.hayashi@honolulu.gov) 3. HONOLULU FIRE DEPARTMENT (HFD) (HFDNHB@honolulu.gov) 4. HONOLULU POLICE DEPARTMENT (HPD) (www.honolulupd.org/contact-us) A. Discussion of Tipsy Pig II with Liquor Commission Representatives – Anna Hirai (liquor@honolulu.gov) 5. BOARD OF WATER SUPPLY (BWS) – Michele Harman (www.boardofwatersupply.com/contact) 6. ELECTED OFFICIAL REPORTS (Limited to 3 minutes each) A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi (www8.honolulu.gov/mayor/contact-the-mayor) – Megan Johnson B. Councilmember Scott Nishimoto (www.honolulucitycouncil.org/district-5-scott-nishimoto) – Taylor Date C. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam (www.honolulucitycouncil.org/district-6-dos-santos-tam) – Robin Henski D. Governor Josh Green’s Representative – Russell Pang (russell.wk.pang@hawaii.gov) E. State Senator Carol Fukunaga (District 11) (senfukunaga@capitol.hawaii.gov) F. State Representative Della Au Belatti (District 26) (repbelatti@capitol.hawaii.gov) G. State Representative Kim Coco Iwamoto (District 25) (repiwamoto@capitol.hawaii.gov) H. State Representative Ikaika Olds (District 23) (repolds@capitol.hawaii.gov) I. State Representative Andrew Garrett (District 22) (repgarrett@capitol.hawaii.gov) 7. COMMUNITY CONCERNS FROM RESIDENTS (Limited to 3 minutes each) Questions for HFD, HPD, BWS, city officials, and state officials should be asked after their respective reports. Residents, not board members, can share comments and concerns that are not listed on the agenda. Per the “Sunshine Law” (HRS 92), concerns not on the agenda may be presented, but the Board cannot take action. 8. BOARD BUSINESS/PRESENTATIONS A. Approval of Written Summary for Video Record: Thursday, April 16, 2026 (Draft Written Summaries: www4.honolulu.gov/docushare/dsweb/View/Collection-11258) B. Adopting the Resolution in Support of Funding and Construction of a Perimeter Fence for the Makiki Community Garden – Amanda Kirby C. Discussion of Traffic Safety in Wake of Hit and Run Traffic Death on Kewalo Street D. Discussion of Cleaning Canals of Makiki E. Establishing a Candidate Forum PIG (Permitted Interaction Group) 9. BOARD/COMMUNITY REPORTS (Limited to 3 minutes each) A. Nice Neighborhoods Committee – Harris Nakamoto (junfour@gmail.com) Committee Agendas: www4.honolulu.gov/docushare/dsweb/View/Collection-15372 B. O‘ahu Metropolitan Planning Organization (OMPO) – Adam Kirchmann (adamkirchmann@gmail.com) Citizen Advisory Committee (CAC): oahumpo.org/citizen-advisory-committee 10. BOARD ANNOUNCEMENTS A. Next Regular Meeting: The Makiki/Lower Punchbowl/Tantalus Neighborhood Board No. 10 is scheduled to meet on Thursday, June 18, 2026 at 6:00 p.m. at Makiki District Park (Old Makiki Community Library, 2nd Floor) and online via Webex. B. Broadcast, Social Media, and Board Info: The meetings can be viewed on ʻŌlelo FOCUS 49 on the first Friday at 9:00 p.m. and third Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (https://olelo.org/tune-in). Follow us at http://www.facebook.com/MakikiNB and visit https://www8.honolulu.gov/nco/nb10 for Makiki Neighborhood Board info. 11. ADJOURNMENT A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapālama Hale, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, by telephone on (808) 768-3710, fax (808) 768-3711, or emailing nco@honolulu.gov. Agenda documents and minutes are also available online at http://www.honolulu.gov/nco/boards. All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours of the meeting, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the Board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, fax (808) 768-3711, email nbtestimony@honolulu.gov, or complete the form on https://www.honolulu.gov/nco/board-testimony. If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov as soon as possible, preferably at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. If a request is received with fewer than three (3) business days remaining before the meeting, we will try to obtain the auxiliary aid/service or accommodation, but it may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date.   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 2026 AT 6:00 P.M. MAKIKI DISTRICT PARK (OLD MAKIKI COMMUNITY LIBRARY, 2ND FLOOR) – 1527 KE’EAUMOKU STREET, HONOLULU, HI 96822 AND ONLINE VIA WEBEX Meeting Recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWbIwbnj_I4&list=PLfqRwVpRrookChkQxjZlnB_r8en78zV4Q Meeting Materials: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1su4uYFuTVRMZYxBlR8WnaR0cDMcjbHjE 1. CALL TO ORDER [0:00:00]: Chair Char called the meeting to order at 6:00 p.m. 2. ROLL CALL [0:00:00]: Neighborhood Assistant Hayashi conducted roll call. Quorum was established with 14 members present. This 17-member Board requires nine members to establish quorum and to take Board action. Members Present: Nathaniel Char (Chair), Linda Dela Cruz, Nancy Depicolzuane, Grant Dubyak, Arthur Eberhardt, Janel Fujinaka, Kimberley Gallant, Richard Kawano, Amanda Kirby, Adam Kirchmann, Chuck Lee, Samuel Mitchell (joined at 6:56 p.m.), Eric Salassa, and John Steelquist (Vice Chair). Members Absent: Harris Nakamoto and Bronson Silva (Secretary). Guests: Firefighter Youth (Honolulu Fire Department); Sergeant Wakabayashi and Major Paul Kumorō (Honolulu Police Department); Jimmy Yanos (Board of Water Supply); Anna Hirai, Seth Nerry, and Glen Nishigata (Honolulu Liquor Commission); Robin Henski (Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam); Taylor Date (Councilmember Nishimoto); Russell Pang (Governor Green); Hector Venegas (Senator Fukunaga); Representative Kim Coco Iwamoto; Grace Kim (Representative Olds); Renee Espiau and Kelly Akasaki (Department of Transportation Services); Ian Ross, Claire Santos, Dr. Wayne McClellan, Tana Cambe, Richard Chan, and Tom Heinrich (Residents/Guests); Mike Buck (C.O.R.E.); Curtis Hayashi (Neighborhood Commission Office). Names were not included if not legible or stated for the record. About 55 participants joined the meeting. 3. HONOLULU FIRE DEPARTMENT (HFD) [0:05:37]: Firefighter Youth (Engine 3, 3rd Platoon) presented March 2026 statistics: 0 structure or wildland/brush fires, 5 nuisance fire calls, 4 cooking-related fire calls, 21 activated alarms with no fire, 126 medical incidents, 2 motor vehicle collisions, and 1 hazmat incident. Fire Safety Tip: Evacuation Planning — establish at least two home escape routes, plan a neighborhood evacuation path, designate a meeting place, prepare a go-bag, and sign up for alerts at HNLalert.gov. More information at fire.honolulu.gov and honolulu.gov/DM/buildalit. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [0:07:39]: 1. Hazmat Incident Details: Member Dela Cruz asked about the hazmat call. HFD stated the exact report was unavailable but noted it was likely an odor or reported gas leak. 2. Bagged Fire Hydrants: Member Kirby asked about three out-of-service hydrants on Pensacola Street. HFD confirmed it has no control over hydrant shutdown duration; fire engines carry onboard water and use hose lays to the nearest available hydrant. 3. Assistance for Disabled and Elderly Residents: Attendee Claire Santos asked how HFD identifies residents needing evacuation assistance. HFD recommended building managers maintain a resident assistance list in the knox box. During a fire, HFD’s priority is fire control; residents should shelter in place, block door cracks with wet towels, and call 911 to relay their unit number. 4. HONOLULU POLICE DEPARTMENT (HPD) [0:01:29]: Sergeant Wakabayashi presented March 2026 crime statistics compared to February 2026: motor vehicle thefts 13 (up from 6), burglaries 3 (down from 4), thefts 16 (down from 23), UEMV 8 (up from 4), assaults 8 (up from 3), sex assaults 0 (same), graffiti 0 (same), drugs 3 (up from 2), motor vehicle collisions 68 (down from 92). Total calls for service: 1,833 (up from 1,744). Old business: freeway racing forwarded to command for interagency action; mobile surveillance trailer permit in progress, planned for Tantalus area; Young Street/1125 complaint addressed. Coffee with a Cop: April 17, 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. at Nordstrom Ala Moana EBAR. Major Paul Kumorō introduced as acting District 1 commander through July. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [0:12:22]: 1. Canal Area Safety: Member Gallant raised concerns about homeless encampments in Makiki canals following an attempted murder and a murder in March. Major Okamoto committed to aggressive outreach and enforcement in canal corridors, coordination with city agencies for vegetation clearing, and removal of canal access ladders where possible. 2. King Street Crosswalk Signal: Member Eberhardt reported a malfunctioning crosswalk signal on King Street. Major Okamoto noted this falls under DTS jurisdiction and offered to follow up. 3. Tantalus Drive – Drifting, Dumping, and Vagrant Vehicles: Member Dubyak requested increased HPD presence on Tantalus Drive to address drifting, illegal dumping, and vagrant vehicles, citing a stolen U-Haul that sat with campers for a week. He also requested professional officer conduct at drifting scenes. Major Okamoto agreed to direct lieutenants to step up patrols and reinforce conduct expectations. 4. Tantalus/Roundtop Drive – Loud Exhausts and Racing: Member Salassa described nightly racing and drifting with illegally modified exhaust systems between 9:00 p.m. and 1:00 a.m. Major Okamoto confirmed officers can cite loud muffler violations and committed to increased enforcement and beat maintenance on Tantalus/Roundtop Drive. 5. Lunalilo/Pensacola Red Light Running: Member Lee reported persistent red light running and near-miss pedestrian incidents at Lunalilo and Pensacola Streets. Major Okamoto committed to citation enforcement projects targeting the intersection. 6. HPD–DTS Red Light Camera Collaboration: Member Fujinaka asked about expanding red light cameras at smaller intersections. Major Okamoto explained that a private contractor processes camera data for HPD’s traffic division; smaller intersections are not compatible with the camera system. He suggested inviting DTS to discuss expansion. 7. Beretania Street Late-Night Racing: Member Lee reported weekend motorcycle and car racing on Beretania Street, with vehicles running red lights at Ward/Beretania at high speed. Major Okamoto committed to enforcement action and will report statistics at the next meeting. 8. 1617 Alapaʻī Construction Parking Violations: Attendee Claire Santos reported construction workers at 1617 Alapaʻī illegally parking and blocking the narrow street with deliveries. Major Okamoto agreed to speak with the contractor (Island Structural Contracting/SealPro) about compliance. A. Discussion of Tipsy Pig II with Liquor Commission Representatives [0:30:30]: Anna Hirai (Assistant Administrator), Seth Nerry (Chief Investigator), and Glen Nishigata (Enforcement Supervisor) attended. Neighborhood Board No. 10 has 37 active liquor licenses: 16 restaurants, 14 retail, 5 dispensers, and 2 small craft producer pubs. In 2024–2026, the commission received 7 complaints and conducted 30 inspections of the Tipsy Pig premises. Violations cited: employee identification cards (fined) and liquor brought onto premises from outside. Noise, rubber burning, and motorcycle revving fall outside Liquor Commission authority. Investigators must personally observe a violation to issue a citation. Progressive discipline applies: a third violation of the same type within five years typically results in a suspension or revocation recommendation. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [0:36:00]: 1. Ongoing Violations and Lack of Consequences: Member Depicolzuane described five years of issues at the Tipsy Pig, including an employee found stashing a liquor bottle on her property on March 21, 2026, and managers regularly smoking marijuana outside. She cited an officer present for 25 minutes during an incident who took no action. She expressed frustration that liquor removal violations have not resulted in fines. 2. HPD Documentation Commitment: HPD committed to more aggressively documenting all police activity attributable to the Tipsy Pig and sharing documentation with the Liquor Commission to build an enforcement case. 3. Inviting the Licensee to the Board: Member Fujinaka asked about the threshold for license suspension and suggested inviting the Tipsy Pig to present to the board. Anna Hirai confirmed that repeated refusals to appear can be included in enforcement documentation. She offered additional information at liquor@honolulu.gov. 4. Advertised Events and Proactive Enforcement: Member Kirby noted the Tipsy Pig is advertising a JDM car night on April 25 and an electric fight night in June on Instagram. She asked about a proactive HPD plan and whether Liquor Commission investigators work covertly. Major Okamoto agreed to coordinate with patrol sector sergeants. Glen Nishigata confirmed investigators use uniforms for standard visits and conduct covert operations for suspected violations such as employee alcohol consumption or sales to minors. 5. Video Evidence and Complaint Documentation: Member Kirby asked whether resident video can support enforcement. Glen Nishigata confirmed third-party video, paired with a signed sworn statement submitted to the commission, can support an investigator’s report. Each complaint receives a complaint number. Business cards and the hotline (liquor@honolulu.gov) were made available. 6. Resident Testimony: Dr. Wayne McClellan (1255 Young Street) described weekly noise from the Tipsy Pig from 10:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, including a management vehicle with no muffler, and asked the board to address the noise ordinance. 7. Complaint Receipt and Documentation Process: Chair Char asked how complainants can confirm reports are received. Glen Nishigata confirmed each complaint is assigned a complaint number. Video submissions require a sworn statement on a Liquor Commission form. 8. Licensee Symposium: Member Mitchell asked whether board members may attend the Licensee Symposium on April 29, 2026 (7:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.). Anna Hirai confirmed the event is designed for licensees but invited interested board members to email liquor@honolulu.gov to request accommodation. Topics include new ID verification requirements, body camera updates, and licensing pitfalls. 9. Liquor Law Stringency: Member Fujinaka asked whether stricter liquor laws should be pursued at the council or legislature. Anna Hirai noted recent focus has been on DUI penalties and recommended contacting area legislators to gauge interest in stricter licensee accountability legislation. 5. BOARD OF WATER SUPPLY (BWS) [1:04:43]: Jimmy Yanos represented BWS. Follow-up from March: a long-term water supply presentation will be scheduled; CIP project maps were distributed for three district projects (Thomas Square 20″ watermain – construction March 2029; Water System Improvements in Mānoa – June 2030; Kōlowalu Avenue 16″ watermain – March 2030). Kolowalu/Pensacola watermain project is 54% complete; new estimated completion June 2027. The bike lane will remain open where work is not active. No main breaks in March. Fix a Leak Week (April 12–18): free toilet leak detection dye tablets available at BWS lobby, City Mill locations, satellite city halls, and at a Kahala Mall outreach event on April 18 (11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.). Questions, comments, and concerns followed [1:08:50]: 1. Bagged Fire Hydrants – BWS Leverage: Member Kirby asked whether BWS can require contractors to restore hydrant service when a project runs significantly over schedule. Jimmy Yanos agreed to check with the capital projects division. Chair Char noted only one hydrant is available for the entire Pensacola corridor from Wilder to the freeway. 2. Hydrant Shutdown Procedures: Member Kawano requested a summary at the next meeting of BWS procedures and safety considerations when taking a stretch of hydrants out of service. Jimmy Yanos agreed to report back. 6. ELECTED OFFICIAL REPORTS [1:11:39] A. Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s Representative [1:11:39]: Megan Johnson was unable to attend. Chair Char noted that questions for the Mayor’s office may be directed to Councilmember Nishimoto’s or Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam’s offices, or submitted to Neighborhood Assistant Hayashi for forwarding. B. Councilmember Tyler Dos Santos-Tam (District 6) [1:12:24]: Robin Henski represented the office. The April newsletter was shared in the chat. Two town halls: April 20 at Kapalama Elementary School and April 22 at Washington Middle School. Regarding Member Fujinaka’s prior question on OTS hazard pay, the City Council passed a resolution on the matter the prior Wednesday; negotiations are concluded. Robin is seeking additional distribution details. C. Councilmember Scott Nishimoto (District 5) [1:26:26]: Taylor Date represented the office. Upcoming events: Palolo Cleanup (April 19, 9:30–11:30 a.m., co-hosted with Representative Jackson Sayama); Sheraton Park Cleanup and Plant Party (April 19, 10:50 a.m.); Baseball Field Cleanup (April 25, 9:00–11:00 a.m.). Questions, comments, and concerns followed [1:15:45]: 1. Tantalus Cleanup: Member Dubyak announced a Tantalus Drive cleanup on May 2 (8:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.) and requested promotion through the office’s e-blast. D. Governor Josh Green’s Representative [1:13:54]: Russell Pang shared the April newsletter in the chat. The Department of Transportation is tentatively targeting June 2026 to begin repaving the Lunalilo Street corridor and the Ward and Keeaumoku overpasses, pending finalization. The Mānoa off-ramp/on-ramp repaving is a separate project under review. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [1:15:45]: 1. Left-Turn Signal at Ward Avenue Overpass: Member Eberhardt asked about a left-turn signal at the Ward Avenue overpass. Russell confirmed DOT engineers determined the intersection’s size and lane configuration do not support a left-turn signal at that location. 2. DOE Superintendent Salary and Student Performance: Member Lee asked Russell to obtain information from the Department of Education on the superintendent’s recent salary increase and request for two additional assistant superintendents, and on the department’s plan to improve student performance. Russell agreed to follow up with DOE on both items. E. State Senator Carol Fukunaga (District 11) [1:18:43]: Hector Venegas represented the office. Following the Kona low storms, Senator Fukunaga convened a working group of state and county officials, first responders, and community resiliency organizations. Two resulting bills: HB 2581 (amended – coordinated statewide community resiliency hub planning, including partnerships, outreach, accessibility, and funding opportunities) and HB 2443 HC1 SD1 (disaster services; passed the Senate on April 14, pending conference). State budget (SB 1800) includes funds to address road repair concerns in the district. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [1:22:01]: 1. Weather Analysis Request: Member Lee asked whether a comprehensive scientific analysis of increasingly severe weather in Hawaii has been requested from weather experts beyond attributing it to climate change. Hector Venegas noted the Senator’s office had responded citing first responders’ attribution to climate change. Member Lee asked the question be raised more broadly with other elected officials. 2. Mayor’s Attendance and Town Hall Cancellations: Member Dubyak expressed concern that the Mayor did not attend and has indefinitely postponed town halls, preventing residents from raising concerns about drainage, rail, and Tantalus. He asked the Senator’s office to engage the Mayor about fulfilling commitments to neighborhood boards. Chair Char acknowledged the absence appeared to be an exception. Hector agreed to pass the request along. F. State Representative Della Au Belatti (District 26) [1:25:51]: No representative was present. G. State Representative Kim Coco Iwamoto (District 25) [1:29:29]: Representative Iwamoto attended in person and presented her annual April district survey, covering: state building funding (bonds vs. cash vs. both); Aloha Stadium funding; military expansion funding; UH athlete name/image/likeness compensation; publicly funded elections; and ICE safeguards. Printed surveys were available at the meeting table. H. State Representative Ikaika Olds (District 23) [1:32:48]: Grace Kim represented the office and offered to accept questions. No questions were raised. I. State Representative Andrew Garrett (District 22) [1:33:31]: No representative was present. 7. COMMUNITY CONCERNS FROM RESIDENTS [1:33:50] Hit-and-Run Fatality on Kewalo Street: Ian Ross reported that Cruz Ochoa was struck and killed in a hit-and-run on Kewalo Street the prior week, the 13th traffic fatality on Oʻahu in 2026. A community vigil was underway at the time of the meeting. He asked the board to consider working with DTS and the community to install speed humps on Kewalo Street, citing the Ala Moana-Kākāʻako board’s successful advocacy following the death of Sarah Yara on Kapiolani Boulevard. Punchbowl Redistricting and Development Concerns: Attendee Claire Santos urged the board to consider reunifying the Punchbowl area under Neighborhood Board No. 12 (Nuʻuanu-Punchbowl) as part of boundary discussions. She cited developer interest in the area’s low-rise properties and the potential abuse of Bill 7 (referencing 1617 Alapaʻī) and called for a unified front to protect the historically significant neighborhood. 8. BOARD BUSINESS/PRESENTATIONS [1:38:02] A. Filling of Vacant At-Large Seat [1:38:02]: Two candidates came forward. Richard Ching (1099 Green Street), lifelong Makiki resident since 2004, Scoutmaster and Cubmaster for Troop/Pack 10 Makiki, active in Bill 7 project issues. Tana Cambe, Makiki resident since 2007, former board member, former Kaiser High School teacher, currently teaching at Halau Kumana Public Charter School. Neighborhood Assistant Hayashi conducted a roll call vote. Richard Ching was APPOINTED; 10-4 (Ching: Depicolzuane, Dubyak, Eberhardt, Fujinaka, Kawano, Kirchmann, Lee, Mitchell, Steelquist, and Char; Cambe: Dela Cruz, Gallant, Kirby, and Salassa). Richard Ching took the oath of office; 15 members present. B. Approval of Written Summary for Video Record: Thursday, March 19, 2026 [1:44:26]: One correction noted: a misspelling of “Nehoa” in the draft. Chair Char agreed to follow up with Neighborhood Assistant Hayashi. The written summary for March 19, 2026 was approved as corrected. C. Vote to Cancel the Recess of the May 2026 Neighborhood Board No. 10 Regular Meeting [1:44:39]: Mayor Blangiardi’s Town Hall scheduled for May 21, 2026 has been indefinitely postponed due to the recent Kona low storms. Member Steelquist moved to cancel the previously approved recess and restore the regular May 2026 meeting. No objections were raised. The motion was ADOPTED; 15-0-0 (Aye: Ching, Dela Cruz, Depicolzuane, Dubyak, Eberhardt, Fujinaka, Gallant, Kawano, Kirby, Kirchmann, Lee, Mitchell, Salassa, Steelquist, and Char; Nay: None; Abstain: None). The May 2026 regular meeting is reinstated for Thursday, May 21, 2026. D. Resolution to Inform the Neighborhood Commission and Neighborhood Board No. 12 (Nuʻuanu-Punchbowl) of Proposed Neighborhood Board No. 10 Boundary Amendments [1:45:59]: Chair Char MOVED and Member Fujinaka SECONDED to adopt a resolution indicating the board’s interest in potential boundary amendments. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [1:46:15]: 1. Community Engagement Reminder: Member Fujinaka requested that the commission allow ample time for community input on specific boundary proposals, particularly from residents in the Punchbowl area. 2. Process Clarification: Member Kawano asked about next steps. Chair Char explained that this resolution communicates interest; specific boundary changes will be developed and formally petitioned separately with community engagement. 3. Boundary Deadline Context: Tom Heinrich clarified that submitting the resolution preserves flexibility for implementation in the next election cycle; missing the deadline would delay action until the next commission review. 4. Resolution Availability: Resident Melie asked for a public copy of the resolution. Chair Char provided a copy when requested. Without objection, the resolution was ADOPTED; 15-0-0 (Aye: Ching, Dela Cruz, Depicolzuane, Dubyak, Eberhardt, Fujinaka, Gallant, Kawano, Kirby, Kirchmann, Lee, Mitchell, Salassa, Steelquist, and Char; Nay: None; Abstain: None). E. Walk the District PIG (Permitted Interaction Group) Report [1:50:26]: Member Kirby reported on two walks. Walk 1 (February 1): Makiki District Park area, dog park, and Makiki Street canal — topics included homeless encampments, debris, park use, and the underutilized underpass. Walk 2 (March 22): Wilder/Pensacola corridor, noting the Makiki Banyan Bill 7 building, downed cemetery trees, stalled Bill 7 project at 1411 Pensacola, bagged fire hydrants, bike lane and trash issues, faded Piikoi Street striping (causing wrong-way drivers), upcoming DTS restriping on Auwaiolimu Street, and improved pedestrian safety at Stevenson Middle School’s Prospect Street entrance. F. Discussion of and Feedback on Auwaiolimu Street Restriping with the Department of Transportation Services (DTS) [1:53:19]: Renee Espiau (Complete Streets Administrator) and Kelly Akasaki (Chief Traffic Engineer) presented. Auwaiolimu Street has a documented history of speeding. DTS issued a work order in 2018 to restripe the roadway to 10-foot lanes and add school zone signage, notified the board in 2019, and implemented the work in early 2026 following follow-up by Councilmember Dos Santos-Tam. Initial congestion occurred because makai-bound drivers had informally used two lanes past the Lincoln Elementary driveway, which the roadway does not legally accommodate. DTS lengthened the Nehoa Street signal phase, which has improved traffic flow. Parking along the curb is permitted provided it does not encroach into the striped travel lane. Updates: King Street bike lane permanent striping and delineators anticipated by early June; new red light cameras being rolled out through a state DOT–city partnership; King Street flashing beacon near Times Supermarket is being replaced. Questions, comments, and concerns followed [2:00:26]: 1. King Street Bike Lane – Cars Parking in Lane: Member Depicolzuane reported vehicles frequently parking in the King Street bike lane. Renee Espiau requested specific locations via email and confirmed a contractor is responsible for cone maintenance. 2. Tantalus Drive – Traffic Calming and Landslide: Member Dubyak asked DTS to inspect signage and an ongoing landslide near the hairpin turn on Tantalus Drive, where two cars have gone over the shoulder. Kelly Akasaki explained that speed humps require a maximum 8% road grade and are unsuitable for steep, winding sections; specific flat segments can be evaluated with a block address. Richard Chan (Papakōlea) noted FEMA indicated emergency road repairs can bypass normal permit processes and urged swift action to restore Tantalus Drive to full use. 3. Auwaiolimu Restriping – Vehicles in Shoulder Lane: Member Kawano referenced prior testimony about trucks mounting the curb near Papa Kōlea School. Kelly Akasaki confirmed DTS observations during peak drop-off (7:20–7:40 a.m.) found backup reaching past the Lincoln light, clearing in one to two cycles. DTS observed some vehicles driving in the striped shoulder lane and is evaluating delineator placement. 4. Community Inclusion in Future Decisions: A resident requested that DTS include the Papakōlea community in future discussions related to the restriping. 5. Roosevelt High School Event Parking: Member Lee raised concerns about unsafe parking on Auwaiolimu Street during school events. Kelly Akasaki agreed to coordinate with HPD for enforcement during large events. 6. Pensacola Street Bike Lane Delineators Missing: Member Mitchell reported all bike lane delineators above the freeway on Pensacola Street are missing, allowing wrong-way moped and motorcycle use. Renee Espiau offered to explore whether the contractor can install temporary cones similar to King Street. 7. Dillingham and Nimitz – Construction Lane Blockage: Member Dubyak reported Nan Inc. vehicles blocking lanes on Nimitz Highway near Aloha Tower and on Dillingham Boulevard for rail construction. Renee Espiau asked for a specific location and agreed to pass the concern along. 8. Speed Humps on King and Beretania Streets Near McKinley High School: Chair Char referenced a prior board resolution requesting speed humps on Beretania and King Streets. Renee Espiau noted a federally funded high-injury corridor planning study covering seven urban corridors, including King, Beretania, Wilder, Peʻepeʻe, and Young Streets. Community meetings are planned for late summer or early fall 2026; speed humps near schools would be considered. 9. Tantalus Drive – Nighttime Access Restriction: Member Kawano asked whether Tantalus Drive could be closed between 10:00 p.m. and 1:00 a.m. to deter drifters. Renee Espiau agreed to discuss the possibility with her team. G. Motion to Adopt a Resolution to Oppose Senate Bill 2423 Relating to Zoning [2:19:08]: Tom Heinrich confirmed SB 2423 was recommitted on March 10, 2026 and did not cross over to the House. HB 1734 has had no action since mid-February. As neither bill is currently moving, no action was taken. The item was set aside. 9. BOARD/COMMUNITY REPORTS [2:19:08] A. Nice Neighborhoods Committee [2:19:08]: Member Nakamoto was not present. B. Oʻahu Metropolitan Planning Organization (OMPO) [2:19:08]: Chair Char reported no significant updates since the March report. No changes to previously reported planned projects. 10. BOARD ANNOUNCEMENTS [2:19:27] A. Next Meeting: The Makiki/Lower Punchbowl/Tantalus Neighborhood Board No. 10 is scheduled to meet on Thursday, May 21, 2026 at 6:00 p.m. at Makiki District Park (Old Makiki Community Library, 2nd Floor) and online via Webex. B. Broadcast, Social Media, and Board Info: The meetings can be viewed on ʻŌlelo FOCUS Channel 49 on the first Friday at 9:00 p.m. and third Sunday at 3:00 p.m. (https://olelo.org/tune-in). Follow us at http://www.facebook.com/MakikiNB and visit https://www8.honolulu.gov/nco/nb10 for Makiki Neighborhood Board info. 11. ADJOURNMENT [2:20:06]: Chair Char adjourned the meeting at 8:20 p.m. Submitted by: Curtis Hayashi, Neighborhood Assistant, Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) Reviewed by: Dylan Buck, Community Relations Specialist, Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) Finalized by: To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

6:30 PMMusicSportsTheater

30. Kāneʻohe NB Regular Meeting

Windward Community College - Hale A'o 101-102, 45-720 Kea'ahala Road, Kāne'ohe, Hawaii, United States, Honolulu

KĀNE‘OHE NEIGHBORHOOD BOARD NO. 30     REGULAR MEETING AGENDA THURSDAY, MAY 21, 2026 AT 6:30 P.M. WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE – HALE A’O 45-720 KEA‘AHALA ROAD, KĀNEʻOHE, HI 96744 AND VIA WEBEX ONLINE PLATFORM Meeting Link: https://cchnl.webex.com/cchnl/j.php?MTID=m8f32dea97453c24a6b16cc874f162d17 Meeting Number / Access Code: 2489 742 2777 Password: NB30 (6230 when dialing from a phone or video system) Join By Phone: +1-408-418-9388 United States Toll Location WebEx from Phone: 1-408-418-9388,, 24897422777#,,6230# YouTube Recordings: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1DZJTKor6TTNYiqx5U-P2w Material: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bP-j4YYw0YCi4sBV5QEZ8TwVGavf7v_K?usp=sharing Rules of Speaking: To ensure the maximum opportunity for all attendees to be heard, the following guidelines apply: Anyone wishing to speak is asked to type their question in the chat box or raise their hand using the “raise hand” function in the online Zoom platform - which is indicated by a hand. If accessing the meeting using your phone and you have a comment, indicate this by pressing the symbols *3 – this will show the moderator that the person calling from that number wishes to speak. To mute/unmute your phone, press *6. Please wait until recognized by the chair to begin comments and address those comments to the chair. Please preface your comments by identifying yourself and your affiliation, if any. All official reports, comments or concerns shall be three (3) minutes or less. Please Kōkua: To help all attendees the opportunity to hear presentations & comments, please place your device on mute until you would like to speak. When you are recognized, unmute yourself and make your comments. The Board may act on any agenda item. As required by the State Sunshine Law (HRS 92), specific issues not noted on this agenda cannot be voted on, unless added to the agenda. A two-thirds vote (12) of this 17-member Board is needed to add an item to the agenda. Items may not be added if they are of major importance and will affect a significant number of people. I. CALL TO ORDER – Chair Mo Radke 6:30 – 6:31 II. FILLING OF VACANCIES ON THE BOARD: 6:31 – 6:36 Subdistrict 2 - Crown Terrace Subdistrict 9 - Keapuka Subdistrict 13 - Kokokahi Subdistrict 14 - Yacht Club Terrace III. CITY/STATE/COMMUNITY REPORTS AND DISCUSSION (3 minutes each) 6:36 ̶ 6:54 A. Honolulu Fire Department B. Honolulu Police Department C. Marine Corps Base Hawaii D. Windward Community College E. Office of Hawaiian Affairs F. Castle High School IV. BOARD BRIEFS & DISCUSSION (10 minutes each) 6:54 – 7:17 A. Presentation/possible vote – Kāneʻohe NB Emergency Preparedness Committee B. Discussion – 45-221 Ka Hanahou Circle – Mike Elhoff, Rob Walker, & Taylor Caster V. RESIDENT/ COMMUNITY CONCERNS (3 minutes each) 7:17 ̶ 7:40 VI. ELECTED OFFICIALS (2 minutes each for formal comments) 7:40 – 8:05 Note: The two minutes does not include community Q & A A. US Representative Jill Tokuda B. Governor Green’s Representative C. Mayor Rick Blangiardi’s Representative D. Council Member Esther Kia’aina Congressional, Governor, Mayor & City and County Q&A E. Senator Jarrett Keohokalole F. Senator Brenton Awa G. Representative Lisa Kitagawa H. Representative Scot Matayoshi I. Representative Mike Lee State Officials: Q&A VII. BOARD BUSINESS 8:05 – 8:10 A. Approval of Thursday, April 16, 2026 Meeting Minutes VIII. COMMITTEE REPORTS / ASSIGNMENTS 8:10 – 8:20 A. Attended Meeting Reports B. Subdistrict PIG C. Community Engagement Committee – Toma, Lam D. Emergency Preparedness Committee - Carstensen, Fleitell, Quitevis, Sakamoto E. Education Committee - VACANT F. Transportation - Lam, Sakamoto G. Military Affairs – Radke, Sakamoto H. Haiku Stairs - VACANT I. State Legislative – VACANT J. Environmental - VACANT K. HPD Liaison - Carstensen, Sakamoto L. Planning - Lam M. Homeless/Kauhale – Burbage, Bryant, Fleitell, Hewett IX. ANNOUNCEMENTS 8:20 – 8:25 Next Regular Board Meeting: Thursday, June 18, 2026 at 6:30 p.m. at WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE - HALE’AKOAKOA 101-105 - or using the virtual login credentials listed at the top of page 1 of this document. X. ADJOURNMENT 8:25 A mailing list is maintained for interested persons and agencies to receive this board’s agenda and minutes. Additions, corrections, and deletions to the mailing list may be directed to the Neighborhood Commission Office (NCO) at Kapālama Hale, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi 96817, by telephone on (808) 768-3710, fax (808) 768-3711, or e-mailing nco@honolulu.gov Agenda documents and minutes are also available online at http://www.honolulu.gov/nco/boards.html All written testimony must be received in the Neighborhood Commission Office 48 hours prior to the meeting. If within 48 hours of the meeting, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Board at the meeting. If submitting written testimony, please note the Board and agenda item(s) your testimony concerns. Send to: Neighborhood Commission Office, 925 Dillingham Boulevard, Suite 160, Honolulu, HI 96817, fax (808) 768-3711, or email nbtestimony@honolulu.gov If you need an auxiliary aid/service or other accommodation due to a disability or an interpreter for a language other than English, please call the Neighborhood Commission Office at (808) 768-3710 between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. or send an email to nco@honolulu.gov as soon as possible, preferably at least three (3) business days before the scheduled meeting. If a request is received with fewer than three (3) business days remaining before the meeting, we will try to obtain the auxiliary aid/service or accommodation, but it may not be possible to fulfill requests received after this date.   DRAFT REGULAR MEETING WRITTEN SUMMARY FOR VIDEO RECORD THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 2026 at 6:30 P.M. WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE – HALE AʻO - 101-102, 45-720 KEA‘AHALA ROAD, KĀNEʻOHE, HI 96744 AND VIA WEBEX Video Recording of Meeting Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lcgYQsbWPM Google Drive Link: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bP-j4YYw0YCi4sBV5QEZ8TwVGavf7v_K I. CALL TO ORDER - [0:00:39] Vice Chair Shizuma called the Kāne'ohe Neighborhood Board No. 30 meeting to order at 6:33 p.m and recited the rules of speaking. Quorum was NOT established with 8 members present. Note: This 17-member Board requires nine (9) members to establish quorum and to take official Board action. Members Present: Donald Sakamoto, Dale Carstensen, Neil Fleitell, Abe Toma, David (Keoni) Shizuma, Greg (Maka) Quitevis, Adriel Lam, Zachary Pilien, Patty Yamashiro (joined at 6:34 p.m.), Mo Radke (joined at 6:36 p.m.) and John Hewitt (joined at 6:49 p.m.). Members Absent: Lora Burbage and Elena Bryant. Guests: Fire Fighter Kubo (Honolulu Fire Department); Kristi Kaluhiwa (Marine Corps Base Hawaiʻi); Chancellor Ardis Eschenberg (Windward Community College); Diane Ako (Governor Green's Representative); Andy Kawano (Mayor Blangiardi's Representative); Tolua Samifua (Representative Tokuda’s Representative); Councilmember Esther Kia'āina, Irene Limos (Councilmember Kia'āina's Representative); Rich Seaman (Representative Kitagawa's Office); Tate Castillo (Representative Matayoshi’s Representative); Jonah McNear (Representative Lee’s Representative); Lisa Uyesato (Windward Neighborhood Security Watch Coordinators Group); Marie Samudio (KKCERT); Renee Omori, Jersey Livingston, Kaleoaloha Biven, Joseph Ooi, Cameron Pierce (Castle High School); Mac Curran (O’ahu Pentathlon); Patrick Smith (Neighborhood Commission); Sean Kekina (Office of Hawaiian Affairs); Robert Harter, Ale Rodas, Annette Tashiro, Darian, Frank Young, Jason, Karen R., Meiqi He, Mimi Factora, Neicy F., Sean O’Connor, Yongqi O. (Residents & Guests). There were approximately 49 total participants. II. FILLING OF VACANCIES ON THE BOARD - [0:02:30]: Item was discussed later in the meeting due to quorum not being established. III. CITY/STATE/COMMUNITY MONTHLY REPORTS AND DISCUSSION - [0:03:06] Honolulu Fire Department (HFD) - [0:03:06]: Fire Fighter Kubo reported the following: ● March 2026 Statistics: One structure fire, one nuisance fire, 16 activated alarms with no fire, 125 medical emergencies, one motor vehicle collision with a pedestrian, two motor vehicle crashes/collisions, one mountain rescue, one ocean rescue, and one hazmat incident. ● Fire Safety Tip – Evacuation Planning: Have an emergency preparedness plan, know at least two escape routes, designate a meeting place, sign up for HNL Alert, and prepare a go bag. ● Report: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TEIjGNkredft-1mUfGWxpB5eyrQaWsV0/view?usp=drive_link Member Yamashiro joined at 6:34 p.m.; 9 members present. Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [0:05:06]: 1. Access to Botanical Gardens via Washed-Out Road: Member Sakamoto asked how HFD would be able to respond to emergencies in the area behind Ko’olau Golf Course as the road was washed out during the first Kona Low — leaving a two-mile narrow, dark road through the botanical gardens park as the only access route for hikers and visitors to the area. Fire Fighter Kubo responded with a brief route response. 2. Fire Smart Presentation Follow-Up: Member Carstensen shared information about a Fire Smart Lance Mahi La Pierre presentation conducted during the week of April 6, 2026 in collaboration with HFD, highlighting Hawaii wildfire risk areas. He asked if it would be possible to have a presentation at the next meeting. Fire Fighter Kubo requested for information to be shared to his email so that he can forward the request. Chair Radke joined at 6:36 p.m.; 10 members present. Quorum was established. II. FILLING OF VACANCIES ON THE BOARD - (CONTINUED) - [0:07:38]: Subdistrict 2 - Crown Terrace: Seeing no volunteers. Subdistrict 13 - Kokokahi: Seeing no volunteers. Subdistrict 14 - Yacht Club Terrace: Seeing no volunteers. III. CITY/STATE/COMMUNITY MONTHLY REPORTS AND DISCUSSION - (CONTINUED) - [0:07:56] Honolulu Police Department - [0:07:56]: No representative present. The gavel was passed to Chair Radke at 6:38 p.m. Marine Corps Base Hawaiʻi – [0:08:19]: Kristi Kaluhiwa reported the following: ROTC (Reserve Officers' Training Corps) groups from Reno, Nevada are visiting units for potential recruitment; a Coastal Defense Study Group arrives in early May 2026; Change of Command is Thursday, May 21, 2026 with an incoming commander; RIMPAC (Rim of the Pacific) is this year — elevated noise expected, noise complaint line is active, a QR code postcard is forthcoming; an open base event with an all-nations canoe race is planned during RIMPAC. Windward Community College – [0:11:21]: Item was discussed later in the meeting. Castle High School – [0:11:29]: Item was discussed later in the meeting. IV. BOARD BRIEFS & DISCUSSION – [0:11:40] Presentation – O’ahu Pentathlon – [0:11:50]: Mac Curran (O’ahu Pentathlon Athlete Director) presented for the 5th consecutive year, seeking the board's blessing for the event on August 8–9, 2026. The 135-mile, five-stage race (swim, run, paddle, sandbag carry, and bike). Around 120 athletes are expected; no road closures or traffic control changes requested. Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [0:15:23]: 1. Registration Cost: Member Sakamoto asked about the cost of the registration fee. Mac noted that the fee is approximately $450 and subject to change. He also mentioned that if an individual registers early, they would get a discount. 2. Support: Chair Radke mentioned if there were no objections then the Board would approve their participation. III. CITY/STATE/COMMUNITY MONTHLY REPORTS AND DISCUSSION - (CONTINUED) - [0:17:16] Castle High School - (Continued) – [0:17:16]: Kaleoaloha Biven and Jersey Livingston reported the following: Auto Show (Auto Club) – Saturday, April 25, 2026, 9:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m., still accepting car exhibitors and vendors; Polynesian Music & Dance Hoʻike – Friday, May 2, 2026, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., shows at 11:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m., tickets $7. Windward Community College - (Continued) – [0:18:34]: Chancellor Eschenberg reported the following: Senior Bash (next day) with an estimate of 300 high school seniors from across the Koʻolau region for college-going activities and a concert; Harold Castle Foundation scholarships covering any unpaid tuition for Windward-side graduates; on-campus jobs for freshmen in the fall; Graduation on Friday, May 15, 2026; and the play J-Pop Killers coming up at Palikū Theater. Member Hewitt joined at 6:49 p.m.; 11 members present. IV. BOARD BRIEFS & DISCUSSION – [0:22:53] Presentation Neighborhood Commission Enhancements – [0:22:53]: Patrick Smith reported that most boards did not want boundary changes, the complaint process has been updated with more resolution options, and the Commission is reviewing potential changes such as limiting boards to nine members (no decision made). Boards with persistently vacant sub-districts can request conversion to at-large seats, and a legislative bill is moving to calculate quorum based on filled seats only. Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [0:26:29] 1. Term Limits: Member Sakamoto asked about Neighborhood Board term limits. Patrick Smith noted the commission opposed a prior charter amendment on term limits, believing the electorate should decide and that experienced members should not be removed arbitrarily. 2. Board Boundary Discussion: Vice Chair Shizuma summarized the PIG (Permitted Interaction Group) consensus: current boundaries are acceptable, with one consistently vacant subdistrict as the exception. Patrick Smith confirmed the commission is flexible and can accommodate various structural configurations if the board proposes a plan. 3. Quorum Calculation for Boards with Vacancies: Member Shizuma asked about a bill currently moving through the legislature regarding quorum requirements for neighborhood boards. Patrick Smith confirmed the bill and clarified that quorum would be calculated based on occupied seats only, meaning vacant seats would not be counted toward the quorum threshold. He added that a similar proposal is also in front of the City Charter Commission, which has put it on hold pending the outcome of the legislation. Presentation – OHA (Office of Hawaiian Affairs) – [0:30:31]: Sean Kekina shared that OHA's board approved nearly $4 million in relief for Native Hawaiian beneficiaries and community members impacted by the Kona Low storms. A resource hub was opened at the Waiʻalua courthouse in partnership with the Hawaiian Council. Three of OHA's six legislative bills are still alive: HB (House Bill) 2104 (Island Burial Councils — reduces quorum requirements, authorizes per-diem stipends); HB 2102 (Historic Preservation — closes a loophole exempting residential properties in nominally sensitive areas from burial review); and HB 2101 (Reef Fish Protection — permanently bans commercial aquarium collection except for educational or scientific purposes). Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [0:34:11]: 1. OHA Support for Disabled Kānaka Maoli: Member Sakamoto asked about programs for disabled Native Hawaiian youth and young adults. Keshawn Kina noted health is a core strategic pillar and directed inquiries to oha.org. 2. Storm Response Coordination: Marie Samudio asked about coordinated long-term recovery response across neighborhood boards and OHA. Keshawn Kina reiterated OHA's $4M commitment and resource hub. Patrick Smith acknowledged historically poor inter-board communication and stated the commission is working to improve coordination, including emergency preparedness and recovery. V. RESIDENT/COMMUNITY CONCERNS – [0:40:19] Mālama 96744 Graffiti Paint Out & Community Cleanup – [0:40:43]: Lisa Uyesato announced the cleanup is rescheduled to Saturday, April 25, 2026, 8:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. at Kāneʻohe District Park (pool side). Registration deadline: Thursday, April 23, 2026 by 2:00 p.m. All equipment provided. The Windward Neighborhood Security Watch Coordinators Group meeting follows the same day at 10:00 a.m. at Central Union Windward Church. ● Flyer: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Bb4eHx_6uEOYYqka0o8qaHuubLvkp5XD/view?usp=drive_link Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [0:42:51]: 1. Windward Neighborhood Security Watch Volunteer Numbers: Member Sakamoto asked Lisa Uyesato how many volunteers are currently participating in the Windward Neighborhood Security Watch program. Lisa responded that the organization is in the process of rebuilding and recruiting more residents. Chair Radke followed up by asking if the numbers were small, to which Lisa responded that she was not sure of the exact numbers. Chair Radke then used the opportunity to encourage community members to get involved, to which Lisa confirmed they could use the help. Down Trees & Infrastructure Maintenance – [0:44:15]: Member Lam raised concerns about fallen trees on Government land following the Kona low storms, citing a tree on Anchor Church’s property. He encouraged proactive, continuous maintenance of roads, waterways, and stream corridors — not just post-storm response. Member Carstensen noted these points were raised at a recent town hall and that council and legislative officials are aware. VI. ELECTED OFFICIALS – [0:47:19] U.S. Representative Jill Tokuda – [0:47:34]: Tolua Samifua reported the following: Presidential Disaster Declaration officially approved; constituents may apply at disasterassistance.gov (official guidance pending). The office is assisting constituents who lost federal documents (Social Security cards, passports, immigration documents) in the floods. Still following up on obstructed roadways impacting mail and meal deliveries. ● Disaster Assistance Programs for Flooding Victims: https://tokuda.house.gov/disaster-assistance-programs-for-flooding-victims ● Community Resources & Flood Response Guidance: https://tokuda.house.gov/community-resources-and-flood-response-guidance ● Major Disaster Declaration for Hawaii approved: https://www.disasterassistance.gov/ Governor Green's Representative – [0:51:09]: Diane Ako reported the following: Governor's Newsletter available at governor.hawaii.gov/newsletter; Childcare Programs (follow-up for Member Sakamoto) – (1) Childcare Subsidy Program for low-income families via DHS (Department of Human Services) - approved providers; (2) Preschool Open Doors for eligible 3–4 year olds, administered by PATCH Hawai’i; Kionaole Road near H-3 – contractor mobilizing, road expected to reopen in about 4 weeks with new concrete box culverts; IRS/State Tax Relief – Federal Tax deadline extended to Wednesday, July 8, 2026 (automatic); State Tax relief deadline Monday, July 20, 2026 (application required). Mayor Rick Blangiardi's Representative – [0:54:57]: Andy Kawano reported the following: Town halls indefinitely postponed due to storms; Mayor traveling to Mainland China/Taiwan to address the Chinese Cultural Plaza and explore bringing pandas to the Honolulu Zoo; City Budget – special meeting Friday, May 1, 2026, 9:00 a.m., third reading on Wednesday, June 3, 2026; Real Property Tax Relief – apply at realpropertyhonolulu.com. Andy also reported on the behalf of HPD that two Laulima 311 complaints were filed about a vehicle (License Plate EE128) parked at 45-657 Keneke Street creating unsafe conditions. Officers responded on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 and Monday, April 6, 2026, but found no violations — the vehicle was legally parked and no unsafe conditions were observed. All results were shared with the constituent via Laulima 311, with a recommendation to call 911 for immediate response in future situations. Councilmember Esther Kiaʻāina – [0:58:28]: Councilmember Kiaʻāina reported the following: Storm resource documents uploaded to board's Google Drive (Post-Disaster FAQs, Kokua opportunities, real property tax relief, flood insurance info); FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) Flood Insurance Rate Maps take effect Wednesday, June 10, 2026 — Bill 34 introduced to update City ordinance, expected passage by Wednesday, June 3, 2026; Kāneʻohe District Park sheltered evacuees (mostly from Waimānalo) during all Kona low storms; requesting five new positions for the Department of Emergency Management in budget amendments. ● City resources for Kona Low Storm recovery efforts - Website: http://www.OneOahu.org ● OneOahu resources: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1SM0KI4sCDhcbz4aC6X_IMrcGr39oTq-T/view?usp=sharing ● FEMA Oʻahu Updated Flood Insurance Rate Maps Take Effect Wednesday, June 10, 2026: Discounts May Be Available Flier: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vZ5cXs9Z5dV4o4uGLqksdXFWMAmS1JXq/view?usp=sharing Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [1:03:15]: 1. Near-Term Infrastructure vs. Long-Term Carbon Neutrality Goals: Member Lam questioned whether the City's long-term 2045 carbon-neutral goals are coming at the expense of near-term infrastructure maintenance priorities — such as roads, waterways, and transportation systems. He asked the Governor's and Mayor's offices to re-examine the assumptions behind the net-zero target and consider rebalancing priorities to better protect communities in the short term, especially in light of the recent storm damage that exposed gaps in infrastructure upkeep. 2. Kāneʻohe Library Reopening: Member Sakamoto raised concerns about the delayed library reopening, noting a claim of an ADA design issue arising after the original 2022 approval, and asked who is responsible for the delay. 3. Kawa Street Follow Ups: Member Sakamoto requested for follow up responses on the status of bus pads, street lightings, road repaving on Kawa Street near Zippy’s. Councilmember Kiaʻāina responded with updates on various phases of Kamehameha Highway. She also mentioned that the bus stop improvements are in the design phase. Andy Kawano responded that he was still awaiting responses from the Department of Facilities Maintenance and the Department of Design and Construction on five of the six follow-up items. On the one response received regarding street lights on Kionaole Road, the Department of Facilities Maintenance reported that the lights have been changed twice, but overgrown trees on privately owned properties are blocking the lights and need to be addressed by the property owners. 4. Maps for ADA Compliance: Member Sakamoto raised concerns about the accessibility of maps for individuals who are blind, referencing a Department of Justice mandate issued in October 2024 that required States and Counties nationwide to ensure documents and maps are ADA-compliant by April 24, 2026. 5. ADA Sidewalk & Audible Signal Issues: Member Sakamoto flagged a dangerous asphalt sidewalk near Whiskey Smoke 808 on Kamehameha Highway going towards the stream affecting a blind resident. The resident shared that it’s dangerous for her and other people to traverse on an eroding asphalt sidewalk with the ramp. Member Sakamoto also brought up a non-functioning audible crosswalk signal between Zippy's and Windward Mall. The ticking sounds aren't working as well as the entrance into the Kaneohe Bay Shopping Center across Kamehameha highway. 6. Pahia Road Crosswalk: Chair Radke raised the longstanding crosswalk issue at Pahia Road. Councilmember Kiaʻāina confirmed federal funding did not come through but has inserted funding for quick-build interim improvements in the current budget. Senator Jarrett Keohokalole – [1:15:27]: No representative present. Senator Brenton Awa – [1:15:39]: No representative present. Representative Lisa Kitagawa – [1:15:47]: Rich Seaman reported the following: Kāneʻohe Town Hall (Monday, April 13, 2026) drew 85+ attendees; Hawaiian Electric Company presented on REZs (Renewable Energy Zones); HB 2361 (Kāneʻohe Bay Regional Council) is alive in conference — requires DLNR (Department of Land and Natural Resources) administrative support, elected chairperson on rotating basis, quarterly meetings. Three weeks left in session. Representative Scot Matayoshi – [1:17:48]: Tate Castillo reported the following: 10+ bills moving into conference including workers' comp, license plate covers, fireworks safety, vaccine insurance, and crypto kiosk safety for kūpuna. Mālama 96744 cleanup rescheduled to Saturday, April 25, 2026 — register through PATCH Hawai’i. Representative Mike Lee – [1:19:41]: Jonah McNear reported the following: Representative Lee expressed gratitude for community resilience during the Kona low storms. The office is focused on recovery and infrastructure restoration. Legislative session nearing completion — a recap will be provided once the session concludes. Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [1:21:16]: 1. HB 1875 – Minor Gender-Affirming Surgery Without Parental Consent: Member Sakamoto expressed concern about legislation allowing minors to have gender-affirming surgery without parental consent, noting a child is still developing and parents should be involved. He would like to know the position of the representative. 2. Bail Reform: Member Sakamoto raised concerns about bail reform legislation, expressing those individuals charged with crimes including assault should not have bail waived. 3. SB 2151 – Governor's Emergency Order Authority: Member Sakamoto requested SB (Senate Bill) 2151 be deferred and returned with stronger, more clearly defined language. 4. SB 3048 – Conveyance Tax on Inherited Property: Member Sakamoto opposed a proposed one-time 6% conveyance tax on property transfers at death, calling it harsh and urging more work before passage. VII. BOARD BUSINESS – [1:26:15] Approval of March 2026 Meeting Minutes – [1:26:15]: Chair Radke announced that there were amendments that were sent to all Board Members (also included in the Google Drive). Member Sakamoto MOVED and Member Fleitell SECONDED to approve the March 2026 meeting minutes as amended - [1:26:35]. There was no discussion. The motion was ADOPTED; 11-0-0. (Aye: Sakamoto, Carstensen, Fleitell, Toma, Shizuma, Quitevis, Lam, Yamashiro, Radke, Hewitt, Pilien. Nay: None. Abstain: None.) – [1:27:09]. Church Signage & DPP Inquiry: Chair Radke acknowledged that this isn’t on the agenda, but no decision making is required. He shared that the Christmas parade had already received the board's approval in February 2026 and does not need to return for another presentation. He also reported that a local church placed a signage on a public-facing fence and was told by a City official to take it down. After reviewing the ordinance, Chair Radke found the rules unclear and inconsistent, noting that similar signs on nearby fences were not being enforced. He acknowledged that as Board Chair, inquiries to DPP (Department of Planning and Permitting) must be routed through the Neighborhood Commission Office rather than sent directly. The board is awaiting a formal response from DPP on how the church can legally display their banner. VIII. COMMITTEE REPORTS/ASSIGNMENTS – [1:29:59] Subdistrict PIG: Chair Radke shared that Vice Chair Shimuza provided an update earlier in the meeting. Transportation: Member Lam attended the O’ahu Metropolitan Planning Organization (OMPO) meeting which discussed a couple of projects that were being approved and there will be no meeting next month. Emergency Preparedness Committee: Member Sakamoto requested his name be added to the committee. He announced the upcoming Emergency Preparedness Fair at Windward Mall. Questions, Comments, & Concerns – [1:30:40]: 1. H-3 & Pali Highway Projects Removed from State DOT Plan: Member Sakamoto asked Member Lam what transportation projects were removed from the State DOT plan at the OMPO meeting. Member Lam responded that four projects along Likelike Highway, the Rock Tunnel, and H-3 had their funding removed and placed on a lower priority waitlist, and urged that near-term infrastructure needs be reprioritized over long-term 2045 carbon-neutral goals. IX. ANNOUNCEMENTS – [1:34:34] Next Regular Board Meeting: Thursday, May 21, 2026 at 6:30 p.m. at WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE - HALE AʻO - or using the virtual login credentials listed at the top of page 1 of this document. Neighborhood Commission Office Announcements: The City and County of Honolulu and Hawaiʻi Foodbank are Partnering up to Fight Against Hunger. Neighborhood Board Assistant Rachel Cristobal will be collecting donated canned goods at tonight’s meeting. Special Needs Elections: Member Sakamoto announced he was sworn in for a new term for the Mayor’s Honolulu County Elections Accessibility Needs Advisory Committee. He encouraged community members to vote in upcoming primaries. Emergency Preparedness Fair: Chair Radke reminded the Board about an Emergency Preparedness Fair that will be held at Windward Mall on Saturday, May 2, 2026. Members were encouraged to attend. X. ADJOURNMENT – [1:37:33] The meeting was adjourned at 8:10 p.m. Submitted by: Rachel Cristobal, Neighborhood Assistant, NCO Reviewed by: Dylan Whitsell, Deputy, NCO Finalized by: To view agenda and minutes, visit our board website. Event shows physical location; however, other options of participation may also include WebEx and phone.  If available, instructions for WebEx and phone can be found at the top of the agenda.

Family
21+
Free

Events sourced from Ticketmaster, UH Athletics, Hawai‘i State Public Library System, Hawaiian Humane Society, City & County of Honolulu, Home Depot Kids Workshops, Read To Me International, Hawaii Farm Bureau Foundation, and Windward Mall. Pacific Watch refreshes the listing hourly.