EXHIBIT H Puowaina, O‘Ahu Honolulu, O‘Ahu

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

EXHIBIT H Puowaina, O‘Ahu Honolulu, O‘Ahu PROFESSIONAL REGISTRATIONS & MARK ASSOCIATIONS: American Institute of KĀWIKA Certified Planners (AICP) Society for Hawaiian Archeology MCKEAGUE Hulu Mamo Hawaiian Civic Club AICP (2012-2013) Director of Cultural Planning State of Hawai‘i, O‘ahu Island Burial Council - Chair; Vice-Chair, ‘Ewa Moku Representative Mr. McKeague’s background, experience, and passion provides a unique and (2005-2012) knowledgeable approach to land use planning and cultural resource management. American Planning Association (APA) Mr. McKeague effectively administers and advocates a Native Hawaiian perspective in Hawai‘i Chapter - Member Current environmental and land use planning, and architectural design and space programming. PA’I Foundation- President; As the Senior Cultural Resource Manager for Kamehameha Schools, he was responsible Board Director (2001-2003), President (2003-Present) for the stewardship of cultural resources for 360,000 acres. Mr. McKeague brings 15 years of experience in facilitating local and national level planning efforts for private, EDUCATION: public, and non-profit sector clients. His work includes the preparation of Master NAGPRA & ARPA Application & Plans, Cultural Resource Management Programs, Environmental Impact Studies, and Requirement National Preservation Institute facilitating community dialogue. Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, Folk and Traditional Arts SELECTED PROJECTS: Outrigger Waikīkī Beach Walk - EIS, SMA Apprentice Program Department of Emergency Management Permit Cyril Lani Pahinui O‘ahu Coastal Communities Evacuation Waikīkī, O‘ahu Section 106: A Review for Experienced Planing Phase I Kālia Fort DeRussy Wastewater Systems Practitioners Island of O‘ahu Improvement - Project Cultural Resource National Preservation Institute CNMI State Standard Mitigation Plan Management Commonwealth of the Waikīkī, O‘ahu Consultation and Protection of Native Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) University of Hawai‘i Hilo Student Life and American Sacred Lands National Preservation Institute CNMI Emergency Operations Center - Events Center - Master Plan and EA NEPA EA Hilo, Hawai‘i Master of Urban and Regional Planning Saipan, CNMI Department of Hawaiian Home Lands - University of Hawai’i at Mānoa US Army Corps of Engineers CNMI Waimea Nui Master Plan Historic Preservation Graduate Emergency Operations Center Honolulu, O‘ahu Certificate Saipan, CNMI University of Hawai‘i, Hawai‘i Institute of University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Post-Storm Assessment for Marine Biology (Coconut Island) - Master Identification & Management of Typhoon Pongsona Plan, LRDP - EIS and Cultural Impact Traditional Cultural Places Guam, Rota Assessment Kāne‘ohe Bay, O‘ahu National Preservation Institute Office of Hawaiian Affairs - Strategic Management Framework for Kaka‘ako University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa C-MORE - B.A. Political Science Makai Master Plan and EA University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Honolulu, O‘ahu Honolulu, O‘ahu National Disaster Preparedness Hilton Hawaiian Village Improvements - Hawaii Film Studio - Master Plan, EA and Training Center Master Plan, EIS and Cultural Resource SMA Permit FEMA Certified HURRIPLAN Resilient Planning Honolulu, O‘ahu Building Design Coursework Waikīkī, O‘ahu Kalāhuipua‘a Fishpond - Environmental Department of Hawaiian Home Lands and and Cultural Restoration Plan Due Papakōlea Community Development Diligence Corporation - Native Hawaiian Education Puowaina, O‘ahu Cultural Center and Kūpuna Assisted ASEF Kalaeloa Solar Farm Living Center Master Plan Master Plan and EA EXHIBIT H Puowaina, O‘ahu Honolulu, O‘ahu G70.DESIGN ARCHITECTURE // CIVIL ENGINEERING // INTERIOR DESIGN // PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT Kawaihae Deep Draft Harbor Modification - NEPA EIS MARK North Kohala, Hawai‘i KĀWIKA Kawailoa Transfer Station - Culture Impact Assessment MCKEAGUE Hale‘iwa, O‘ahu Ocean Bay Hanamā‘ulu - EIS , CDUP and AICP General Plan Amendment Director of Cultural Planning Hanamā‘ulu, Kaua‘i Pan-STARRS Observatory - ‘Aiea Town Center - Cultural Resource NEPA EIS and CDUP Review Mauna Kea, Hawai‘i ‘Aiea, O‘ahu Pelekane Bay - EA and Ecological Board of Water Supply - Ko‘olau Loa Restoration Assessment Watershed Management Plan North Kohala, Hawai‘i Windward O‘ahu U of N Bencorp - BPBM Hōkūli‘a Archaeological Review - Cultural Impact Assessment Cultural Consultation and Policy Kona, Hawai‘i Development Waialua Town Master Plan - Hawai‘i Cultural Resource Review Department of Hawaiian Home Lands - Waialua, O‘ahu Moloka‘i Island Plan Kamehameha Schools - North Shore Plan Moloka‘i Island of O‘ahu Army Corps of Engineers - Kamehameha Schools - Islands Mass Management Tool, Cultural Resource Management Plan Hurricane Evacuation Studies State of Hawai‘i Hawai‘i, Guam, CNMI, and American Samoa Mokuhinia and Moku‘ula Cultural Landscape and Ecological Restoration Plan Hana Harbor Development Plan Lahaina, Maui Hana, Maui Kanu O Ka ‘Āina Learning ‘Ohana - Master Plan and EA Kamuela, Hawai‘i G70.DESIGN ARCHITECTURE // CIVIL ENGINEERING // INTERIOR DESIGN // PLANNING & ENVIRONMENT.
Recommended publications
  • Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific Region
    Fishery Ecosystem Plan for Pacific Pelagic Fisheries of the Western Pacific Region Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council 1164 Bishop Street, Suite 1400 Honolulu, Hawaii 96813 September 24, 2009 Cover Artwork Courtesy of Jan Michael Calma, John F. Kennedy High School, Tamuning, Guam EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA) authorizes fishery management councils to create fishery management plans (FMP). The Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council (Council) developed this Fishery Ecosystem Plan (FEP) as an FMP, consistent with the MSA and the national standards for fishery conservation and management. The FEP represents the first step in an incremental and collaborative approach to implement ecosystem approaches to fishery management for western Pacific pelagic species. Since the 1980s, the Council has managed fisheries throughout the Western Pacific Region through separate species-based fishery management plans (FMP) – the Bottomfish and Seamount Groundfish FMP (WPRFMC 1986a), the Crustaceans FMP (WPRFMC 1981), the Precious Corals FMP (WPRFMC 1979), the Coral Reef Ecosystems FMP (WPRFMC 2001) and the Pelagic FMP (WPRFMC 1986b). However, the Council is now moving towards an ecosystem- based approach to fisheries management and is restructuring its management framework from species-based FMPs to place-based FEPs. Recognizing that a comprehensive ecosystem approach to fisheries management must be initiated through an incremental, collaborative, and adaptive management process, a multi-step approach is being used to develop and implement the FEPs. To be successful, this will require increased understanding of a range of issues including, biological and trophic relationships, ecosystem indicators and models, and the ecological effects of non-fishing activities on the marine environment.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment for the Island of Saipan, CNMI
    Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment For the Island of Saipan, CNMI January 2014 Saipan Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment | i About This Document The Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment for the island of Saipan is the product of a year-long collaboration between the CNMI Division of Coastal Resources Management and the participating agencies and organizations of the CNMI Climate Change Working Group. Ongoing support for the Vulnerability Assessment and Climate Change Working Group was provided by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and contributions to the assessment stem from a wide range of federal and CNMI government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and community groups. Additional technical resources, tools, and expertise were leveraged from organizations throughout the Insular Pacific and beyond. The cumulative result of this diverse input is a project that meshes a community-based assessment and local knowledge with technical analysis and inquiry. This document presents the Vulnerability Assessment by highlighting its findings, as well as the process and information used to arrive at conclusions and recommendations. It is as much a framework for a mixed-methods assessment process as it is community narrative and practical study. Document Usage and Limitations This document is intended as an initial screening tool for prioritization of climate adaptation work on the island of Saipan. Usage of the Vulnerability Assessment should be limited to broad planning and policy purposes. Analysis of specific resources and geographic areas was conducted under potential future scenarios, which introduces inherent uncertainties and complicates field verification. As such, the findings, recommendations, and data within this document are not appropriate for application to site-specific engineering or other projects involving alterations to the physical landscape.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate Change in Guam: Indicators and Considerations for Key Sectors
    PIRCA 2020 PIRCA 2020 PIRCA Indicators & Considerations for Key Sectors Report for the Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment (PIRCA) Indicators and Considerations for Key Sectors CLIMATE CHANGE IN GUAM 1 PIRCA 2020 The East-West Center promotes better relations and understanding among the people and nations of the United States, the Pacific, and Asia through cooperative study, research, and dialogue. Established by the US Congress in 1960, the Center serves as a resource for information and analysis on critical issues of common concern, bringing people together to exchange views, build expertise, and develop policy options. The Center’s 21-acre Honolulu campus, adjacent to the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, is located midway between Asia and the US mainland and features research, residential, and international conference facilities. The Center’s Washington, DC, office focuses on preparing the United States for an era of growing Asia Pacific prominence. The East-West Center hosts the core office of the Pacific RISA grant, providing administrative and research capabilities for the program. The Pacific RISA is one of the 11 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments (RISA) teams that conduct research that builds the nation’s capacity to prepare for and adapt to climate variability and change. This work is supported by funding from NOAA. The Pacific RISA provided primary oversight of this and the 2012 PIRCA report. EastWestCenter.org PacificRISA.org ISBN: 978-1-932728-91-0 (print) ISBN: 978-1-932728-93-4 (electronic) DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.4037481 Recommended Citation: Grecni, Z., W. Miles, R.
    [Show full text]
  • Hagåtña Master Plan
    HAGATNA RESTORATION & REDEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY Hagåtña Master Plan PHASE 1 - RESEARCH REPORT JULY 15, 2005 Prepared By Hagåtña Master Plan Table of Contents Historical and Cultural Research Overview……………………………..2 Historical and Cultural Research Resource List…………………………..3 Economic Development Research Overview…………………………….4 Physical Characteristics Research Overview………………………………5 Physical Characteristics Overview and Resource List…………………….6 Maps of Hagåtña……………………………………………………………7 Infrastructure Engineering Resource List………………………………….11 Preliminary Assessment Infrastructure System Report…………………..12 Environmental Research Resource List……………………………………18 Preliminary Conditions Assessment Environmental Planning Report….19 1 Hagåtña Master Plan Historical and Cultural Research Historical and Cultural Research Overview During this research and data collection phase, historical and cultural resources have been listed together because of their natural correlation to each other. Included are graphics, written and oral histories, maps and photographs that help to illustrate the character, physical proportions, iconography, configurations and sequences of the street life in Hagåtña during the periods of; early history, pre-war and colonial times, wartime, post war and then into contemporary periods. The cultural resources gathered recount life in the city and how the Hagåtña residents and islandwide residents used and interacted in the city. Two groupings of activities became evident: the normal day-to-day activities of the city and then the importance of special events. As the seat of the Spanish colonial government, the US Military government of the island, and then into the civilian government special events included inaugurations, religious festivals like the “Santa Maria de la Camarin” procession and the village fiesta, school ceremonies and graduations, the post-war Liberation day parades and carnivals. The conventional pre-war day-to-day events again included activities related to the Catholic Church, and political events.
    [Show full text]
  • American Memorial Park
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Natural Resource Condition Assessment American Memorial Park Natural Resource Report NPS/AMME/NRR—2019/1976 ON THIS PAGE A traditional sailing vessel docks in American Memorial Park’s Smiling Cove Marina Photograph by Maria Kottermair 2016 ON THE COVER American Memorial Park Shoreline and the Saipan Lagoon, looking north to Mañagaha Island. Photograph by Robbie Greene 2013 Natural Resource Condition Assessment American Memorial Park Natural Resource Report NPS/AMME/NRR—2019/1976 Robbie Greene1, Rebecca Skeele Jordan1, Janelle Chojnacki1, Terry J. Donaldson2 1 Pacific Coastal Research and Planning Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands 96950 USA 2 University of Guam Marine Laboratory UOG Station, Mangilao, Guam 96923 USA August 2019 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colorado, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Report Series is used to disseminate comprehensive information and analysis about natural resources and related topics concerning lands managed by the National Park Service. The series supports the advancement of science, informed decision-making, and the achievement of the National Park Service mission. The series also provides a forum for presenting more lengthy results that may not be accepted by publications with page limitations.
    [Show full text]
  • Ingredients for a Tropical Cyclone /Typhoon
    Saffir-Simpson Tropical Cyclone Scale Examples of Satellite Imagery for Potential Damages Examples of Damage for Each (STCS) Each Category (structures, infrastructure, and vegetation) Category Tropical Storm Category A STCS is a scale that relates maximum tropical cyclone Damage only to the flimsiest lean-to type structure. TS CAT B TY CAT 1 Tropical cyclone is a general term that refers to Minor damage to banana and papaya trees. surface winds to potential damage and storm surge. A tropical depressions, tropical storms, and typhoons. similar scale has been used in the Atlantic for three decades. Guard and Lander (1999) adapted the Tropical Storm Category B TS CAT A TS CAT B Atlantic scale to tropical regions and added a tropical Major damage to huts made of thatch or loosely attached storm scale. STCS considers: tropical building corrugated sheet metal or plywood; sheet metal and materials/practices; tropical vegetation/agriculture; plywood may become airborne. Minor damage to weakening effects of termites, wood rot, salt spray; buildings of light materials. Moderate damage to banana and effects of the coral reefs on storm surge. and papaya trees. Damage to banana trees Weakened, unguyed Two tropical storm categories; five typhoon categories Typhoon Category 1 wooden power poles Corrugated metal and plywood stripped from poorly can break Note: Categories are based on 1-min. average maximum constructed or termite infested structures and may become sustained winds (MSW) and it’s corresponding 1-3 airborne. Few wooden, non-reinforced power poles tilted TY CAT 2 TY CAT 3 second peak gust. and some rotten power poles broken.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Cnmi Ssmp Appendices
    Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Standard State Mitigation Plan August 2018 Table of Contents Contents 1.0 – Executive Summary ................................................................................................................1 2.0 – Legal Authorities, Assurances, and Adoption ........................................................................3 2.1 Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 ............................................................................................3 2.2 Final Rule 44 CFR Part 201 ...................................................................................................4 2.3 Section 404 and 406, Post-Disaster Response and Recovery ................................................4 2.4 Authority and Adoption of the CNMI Standard State Mitigation Plan .................................5 2.5 Assurances .............................................................................................................................5 2.6 Governmental Mitigation Responsibilities ............................................................................5 2.7 Role of the Governor’s Office and CNMI Homeland Security and Emergency Management .................................................................................................................................6 2.8 Role of the State Hazard Mitigation Officer (SHMO)...........................................................6 3.0 – Hazard Mitigation Planning ....................................................................................................8
    [Show full text]
  • Hawaii and the US-Affiliated Pacific Islands. In
    Hawaii and the U.S.-Affiliated Pacific Islands J.B. Friday, Kathleen Friday, and Craig Elevitch J.B. Friday is the extension forester, University of Hawaii at Manoa, College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources Cooperative Extension Service; Kathleen Friday is the Forest Legacy/Stewardship program manager—Hawai’i and Pacific Islands, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region, State and Private Forestry; Craig Elevitch is the director of Agroforestry Net. Description of the Region systems. Continuous soil cover prevents erosion. Because the species diversity and structure of tree-based multistory gardens Hawaii and the U.S.-affiliated Pacific Islands (fig. A.1) include are similar to native forests, these agroforests protect water- a diversity of traditional and modern agroforestry systems that sheds and water quality, both in streams and near the shore. have developed across a broad range of environments, from The productivity over extremely long timeframes based only low coral atolls to high volcanic islands rising to 4,205 meters on local resources attests to their value as models for modern (m) (13,796 feet [ft]) in Hawaii. The peoples of Micronesia agroforestry systems that can be resilient to environmental and Polynesia settled their islands as many as 4,000 years ago stressors of the type that are projected to accompany climate (Athens and Ward 2004) and brought with them a basic suite change (table A.1). of agricultural plants. In the ensuing centuries, they developed highly sophisticated agroforestry systems tailored to meet food The most common traditional system is a tree-based multistory security needs within the local environments they inhabited.
    [Show full text]
  • Super Typhoon Pongsona December 8, 2002
    Service Assessment Super Typhoon Pongsona December 8, 2002 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Weather Service Silver Spring, Maryland Cover: Radar image of Pongsona, showing the wall cloud surrounding the eye, as it began to move over Guam at 3:21 p.m., Sunday, December 8, 2002. Service Assessment Super Typhoon Pongsona December 8, 2002 April 2003 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Donald L. Evans, Secretary National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Jr., Administrator National Weather Service John J. Kelly, Jr., Assistant Administrator Preface Super Typhoon Pongsona (Pong-sahn-WAH) was one of the most intense typhoons to ever strike the island of Guam. It was comparable to Super Typhoon Paka (1997) and was exceeded only by Karen (1962) and the Typhoon of 1900. Due to the magnitude of this event and its impact on Guam, a service assessment team was formed to examine the warning and forecast services provided to the Guam Civil Defense and local officials, the media, and the public. Service assessments provide a valuable contribution to ongoing efforts to improve the quality and timeliness of the National Weather Service products and services. Findings in this assessment will help to improve techniques, products, services, and the information provided to the American public. John J. Kelly, Jr. Assistant Administrator for Weather Services April 2003 ii Table of Contents Page Preface..................................................................... ii
    [Show full text]
  • Museum Management Plan: War in the Pacific
    Cultural Resources National Park Service Pacific West Region U. S. Department of the Interior March 2008 War in the Pacific National Historical Park American Memorial Park Museum Management Plan War in the Pacific National Historical Park War in the Pacific National Historical Park American Memorial Park Museum Management Planning Team Kent Bush Regional Curator, Retired Pacific West Region Bellevue, Washington Tammy Ann Duchesne Chief, Cultural Resources War in the Pacific National Historical Park/American Memorial Park Hagåtña, Guam Steve Floray Curator Pacific West Region Thousand Oaks, California Diane Nicholson, Regional Curator Pacific West Region Oakland, California (Team Leader) Scott Pawlowski Curator USS Arizona Memorial Honolulu, Hawai’i Deb Sheppard Museum Technician Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park Hawai’i Volcanoes, Hawai’i Brigid Sullivan Lopez Chief Conservator Northeast Museum Services Lowell, Massachusetts Department of the Interior National Park Service Pacific West Region 2008 War in the Pacific National Historical Park American Memorial Park Museum Management Plan Executive Summary This museum management plan for the museum and archival collections at War in the Pacific National Historical Park (WAPA), located on the island of Guam, and American Memorial Park (AMME), located on the Island of Saipan in the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, identifies the key collection management issues facing the parks at this time, and presents a series of recommendations to address those issues. This plan was developed by a team of experienced museum and archival collections management professionals working in cooperation with the parks’ management team and staff. The museum collections at War in the Pacific National Historical Park and American Memorial Park began soon after the parks were authorized and they have grown over the years, especially at WAPA.
    [Show full text]
  • FEMA Disaster Cost-Shares: Evolution and Analysis
    FEMA Disaster Cost-Shares: Evolution and Analysis Francis X. McCarthy Analyst in Emergency Management Policy March 9, 2010 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R41101 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress FEMA Disaster Cost-Shares: Evolution and Analysis Summary The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (The Stafford Act, P.L. 93- 288) contains discretion for the President to adjust cost-shares for the Public Assistance (PA) program, Sections 406 and 407 of the act, that provides assistance to states, local governments and non-profit organizations for debris removal and rebuilding of the public and non-profit infrastructure. The language of the Stafford Act defining cost-shares for the repair, restoration, and replacement of damaged facilities provides that the federal share “shall be not less than 75 percent.” These provisions have been in effect for over 20 years. While the authority to adjust the cost-share is long standing, the history of FEMA’s administrative adjustments and Congress’ legislative actions in this area, are of a more recent vintage. In all, there have been 222 cost-share adjustments of varying sizes and lengths of time. In 1998 FEMA promulgated, in regulation, a more consistent and open approach to cost-share adjustments. The overwhelming majority of these actions have been based on that regulatory authority and carried out by the executive branch through administrative actions. However, since 1997, and particularly in the wake of the difficult issues caused by the Gulf Coast storms of 2005, Congress has begun to exercise its authority to adjust cost-shares.
    [Show full text]
  • Pacific ENSO Update Quarter 4, 2015
    Pacific ENSO Update Page 1 Quarter 4, 2015 Vol. 21, No. 4 ISSUED: November 13, 2015 Providing Information on Climate Variability in the U.S.-Affiliated Pacific Islands for the Past 20 Years. http://www.prh.noaa.gov/peac CURRENT CONDITIONS The 2015 El Niño event has become strong, rivaling the strong El Niño events of 1982-83 and 1997-98. During the first half of 2015, many of the atmospheric effects of the current El Niño event were already exhibiting substantial deviations from average conditions. These included noteworthy extremes of rainfall and an abundance of early-season tropical cyclones. Early oceanic responses portending strong El Niño included a rapid oceanic surface and sub-surface warming and a dramatic lowering of the sea level across much of Micronesia. Oceanic indices used to diagnose El Niño, such as the SST anomaly in the Nino 3.4 region, reach their peak long after the atmosphere begins to exhibit wild weather patterns typical of El Niño onset. Whereas wild weather patterns (e.g., extreme rains and early season typhoons) arrive in the first half of the El Niño year, the oceanic response to El Niño peaks late in the El Niño year (around December). Through mid-October, the whole North Pacific Basin has seen a very high number of tropical cyclones (see the tropical cyclone discussion), with Hawaii and most of the islands of Micronesia experiencing multiple threats and various effects from the passages of these cyclones. During the 3rd Quarter, the island of Saipan in the CNMI was impacted by two tropical cyclones: (1) very intense Typhoon Soudelor in early August; and (2) a lesser storm (Tropical Storm Champi) in mid-October (see the Saipan LVS for more details).
    [Show full text]