January 2010 Malama

January 2010 Malama

SIERRA CLUB Cherish the Earth JOURNAL OF THE SIERRA CLUB, HAWAI`I CHAPTER A Quarterly Newsletter January - March 2010 Planting Native! Bold Policy Proposals Hey Mr. Green! Nate’s Adventures! National Ocean Policy Task Force Guest Entering the new year, Looking for ways to columnist what bold and realistic save the environment? Long-time Sierra Club Rick policy proposals can we Check out our advice volunteer Dave Raney Barbosa promote in order to column on short, easy describes the mission of SAVE A TREE! writes ensure a greener tips that you can use to the National Ocean about the Hawai`i? Learn about help save the Policy Task and some Receive your Malama the issues the Sierra Club environment. This Join Nate Yuen as he of the current electronically by going distribution, care, and is advocating month suggests how to describes a recent hike recommendations to cultural use of the native be green and save some along Wailuku River. being proposed. www.hi.sierraclub.org Ho`awa. Page 5 green! Click the link below Pages 8 - 9 Pages 10 - 11 “Email My Newsletter” Page 3 Page 6 private homes. Sandy areas -- where children build sand castles and Preserving sunbathers get “tan” -- are increasingly scarce and usually quite crowded. Sandy Hawai`i coastlines are dynamic. Beaches erode or accrete depending upon their location on the coast, their Beaches proximity to various things such as piers, sandwalls, the impact of storms, etc. Anyone who buys beachfront A Proposal to Protect Hawai’i’s property is made aware of the fact that Beaches for Our Keiki boundaries between private property and the public easement may shift over by Robert D. Harris time. This is an inevitable risk - just the same as someone buying property and Growing up in Kailua, I recall being able building a house in a floodplain, in an to run up and down the entire length of earthquake zone, or near a volcano -- Lanikai beach. To my chagrin, a that people should understand before significant portion of this pristine beach they invest money in developing that has disappeared in the past decade or so. Are sandy beaches in our future? Photo by area. To laterally access the entire Lanikai flicker user Mattsims under a creative coastline, you now must hop along sand commons license. There is a tension between public and bag revetments installed to “protect” Continued on page 4 The Sierra Club, Hawai`i Chapter, is Hawai`i’s largest grassroots environmental advocacy organization SIERRA CLUB F ROM THE D IRECTOR’ S D ESK Go green and we’ll plant a tree in your name. Sometimes I’m asked why the Sierra Club engages in advocacy -- including controversial lobbying and litigation -- instead of focusing solely on environmental education? First, let me stress the Sierra Club’s strong environmental education efforts. John Muir charged the Club to take people into the outdoors and let them see for themselves the beauty of the wild. The Club is actively fulfilling this mission (see Mark Glick’s column on page 7, for example). We lead hikes and service projects throughout the state on a weekly basis. This doesn’t include the numerous speaking opportunities, tabling events, and educational programs we participate in throughout the year. But the Club recognizes education, by itself, does not always solve some of the tough problems Hawai`i faces. For example, like a lot of other people growing up in Hawai`i, I was taught about the values of reducing, Make a statement with recycling, and reusing our waste. And yet, until 2005, Hawaii’s recycling rates were around 20%. Only one out your next bank statement. of five bottles were being recycled. Education alone simply wasn’t doing enough. To help restore Hawaii’s native forests, CPB has partnered with Hui K¯u Maoli Ola and Papahana Kuaola, two Significant change did not occur until a policy change -- organizations dedicated to protecting and perpetuating the bottle law -- was passed as a direct result of the Sierra Hawaii’s unique natural resources. Customers who Club’s lobbying efforts. Within one month, Hawai`i’s switch their paper statements to free online statements recycling rates improved to around 75%. Since 2005, will have a native Hawaiian tree donated in their name. Hawaii has recycled nearly four billion beverage Take a small step for the environment today, enroll containers. Yes, that’s 4 billion containers. an existing CPB account in online statements or visit centralpacificbank.com to find the right checking Obviously we can’t lead Hawai`i to a green future account for you. without education. But consistent and sustained change sometimes needs policy changes. That’s where the Sierra Club’s efforts make a difference. We try to find game- changers that incentivize “good” behavior while discouraging non-sustainable actions. It’s one of the things that separates us from other environmental 544-0500 toll-free: 1-800-342-8422 organizations. While sometimes our efforts lead to centralpacificbank.com controversy, we fundamentally believe positive change Planting offer through 1/31/10. One plant per account enrolled. sometimes requires a little pushing. Hope to see you on the trail, Robert D. Harris Member FDIC 2 ● January - March 2010 Mālama I Ka Honua HAWAII CHAPTER Inside are numerous reddish-black seeds which totally stand out against the bright orange inner surface of the seed capsule. by Rick Barboza Distribution: This plant is only found on the Ho’awa island of Hawai’i but throughout the leeward Pittosporum hosmeri side from Kohala to Ka’u in mesic forests. Cultural Uses: There isn’t much known about this plant from a cultural point of view but in nature it is interesting to see the seed capsules when they become ripe. At this point they open up and fold back, exposing the bright orange inner surface and dark seeds within. This is to attract birds that feed on the oily seeds and help the plant with seed dispersal. In fact this is one of the favorite foods of the nearly extinct Hawaiian crow the ‘alala. Landscape Uses and Care: Easily one of the nicest foliage plants native to Hawaii these plants do great in full sun to partial shade in well drained soil with little to moderate watering. The foliage along with the unique form of the flower clusters and stunning seed capsules make this an extraordinary plant. If left alone to grow it will be a large bush but full of foliage from bottom to top. Few pests bother this plant once it is established in the ground but prior to that happening watch out for mealy bugs, scale and the formation of sooty mold. If you notice these pests on the plant you can Endemic: Hawai`i Island Only simply treat it with a store bought pesticide and fungicide being sure to follow the directions on Description: These are usually small trees up to the bottle carefully. Right now beautiful about 20-25 ft. tall with long tear-drop shaped specimens of this plant in three gallon pots are leaves. The young leaves as well as the available at Hui Ku Maoli Ola native plant underside of the more mature leaves are usually nursery for $40. covered with minute, golden-brown hairs. Their flowers emerge as “manapua” shaped clusters Additional Info: This plant also goes by the which protrude right out of the stems. Once name ha’awa, a’awa, a’awa hua kukui. The pollinated, they develop into large nut shaped latter name ‘a’awa hua kukui probably stems capsules that are almost cubicle in form and from the fact that this plant’s fruit (hua) about three inches long and 1-2 inches wide. somewhat resembles that of a kukui nut. Rick Barboza co-owns Hui Ku Maoli Ola, a native Hawaiian plant nursery, with Matt Schirman. Contact him at 295-7777 [email protected] Mālama I Ka Honua January - March 2009 ● 3 SIERRA CLUB Preserving Sandy Beaches This ensures the property owner assumes beach. As we learn more about climate Continued from page 1 the risk of coastal erosion instead of the change and the risk of sea level rise, it’s private interests. While most are government or the public at large. not unfathomable to envision a Hawai`i empathic to private property owners who where sandy beaches are relatively rare could potentially lose property as a result The possibility that a property owner and highly overcrowded. of a storm or coastal erosion, we should might have to move their structure also recognize the public is significantly becomes a known and specified risk. The The status quo will also impact our impacted by the loss of beach access as a owner can factor this possibility in pocketbook. Private property owners result of beach walls or having to deciding whether to start construction, in will likely look to the government to subsidize property owners through evaluating the value of the property, or in protect their coastal structures, provide emergency response during storms, planning for eventual contingencies compensation for lost or damaged government removal of debris left over (such as through purchasing tailored properties, and the eventual cost of from the destruction of private property, insurance policies). repairing and moving public utilities. and so on. Such a cost could be catastrophic and For example, a owner contemplating a occur at the same time that Hawai`i’s Addressing the tension between public possible “move” of a structure might elect tourism suffers a downturn. Waikiki, for and private interests is a question of to build using a post and beam style of example, brings in hundreds of millions careful planning.

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