Pubdate: Wed, 01 Oct 2003 Source: Honolulu Weekly (HI) Contact: 2003 Honolulu Weekly Inc Website: http://www.honoluluweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/197 Author: Robert M. Rees Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Peter+Carlisle THE COUNCIL'S MONTHLY PASS Perhaps inspired by an opening invocation that compared the City Council to the great visionaries of the Old Testament's Book of Numbers, the Council outdid itself at its monthly meeting of Sept. 24. Right off the bat, by a vote of 9-0, it passed Bill 53 to increase bus fares but retain services. The consensus came hard. As Donovan Dela Cruz noted, "The problem is we are listening, but listening to everyone." The bill was crafted by Ann Kobayashi and Nestor Garcia (pictured), but what saved the day was a fare "circuit-breaker" installed in a floor draft by Dela Cruz and Barbara Marshall. It provides that those who meet federal guidelines for "extremely low income" are eligible for a monthly bus pass at only $30. This bureaucratic nightmare won't work, but it insulates the Council from complaints that it wasn't listening to the needy. The Council smartly rejected Mike Gabbard's attempt - made at the suggestion of City Prosecutor Peter Carlisle and U.S. Attorney Edward Kubo - to curtail freedom. Resolution 03-212 urged the state Legislature to support a less stringent wiretap law, mandatory drug testing in schools and repeal of Act 161 that requires probation for certain first-time nonviolent drug offenders. Carlisle, perhaps forgetting that Garcia as a state representative had been instrumental in passing Act 161 in 2002, described the new law as "bunk" and as "a transparent attempt to empty prisons of people who should be there." The tough testimony in favor of the resolution from Carlisle and state Attorney General Mark Bennett didn't help because both failed to mention the Drug Summit's refusal of the week before to support what Carlisle and Bennett were recommending. Some found this omission to be disconcerting and wondered if the Council and the Drug Summit shouldn't be in accord. It was Garcia, with a second from Marshall, who moved to send the resolution back to committee. Charles Djou, a former representative who had opposed Act 161 while in the Legislature, saw the motion to recommit as a personal affront to Carlisle. Said the right-wing Djou, "Our own City Prosecutor wants this. We should be voting on whether to back him up." The vote "to back up Carlisle" was 7-2 against. The resolution will be recommitted for 30 days, but it will be back again in October when the Council will take another pass at it. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk