After months of canceled meetings, the Hawaii County Board of Ethics is at full strength again following County Council confirmation Wednesday of two Kona nominees. ADVERTISING After months of canceled meetings, the Hawaii County Board of Ethics is at full
After months of canceled meetings, the Hawaii County Board of Ethics is at full strength again following County Council confirmation Wednesday of two Kona nominees.
The Ethics Board, which is supposed to meet monthly, has met only twice in the past eight months because it wasn’t able to get its three members together to form the required quorum for a vote.
A shortage of members on the board, coupled with a pending high-profile complaint against Mayor Billy Kenoi, kept pressure on the administration to fill the five-member panel. The complaint deals with Kenoi’s misuse of his county credit card, or pCard, at bars and for personal purchases.
The next Ethics Board meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. Wednesday.
The confirmation of G. Rick Robinson and Darnel “Pili” Kalele follows the withdrawal of another nominee after encountering resistance from the council last month. Hilo councilmen Dennis “Fresh” Onishi and Aaron Chung questioned the involvement of Ethics Board Chairwoman Ku Kahakalau in recruiting and endorsing the new nominees.
“We want to eliminate the perception that this is now becoming a club that is being assembled,” Chung said Wednesday.
After questioning the nominees Wednesday, Onishi and Chung were satisfied the candidates were not recruited by a sitting member of the Ethics Board. Robinson and Kalele were confirmed by 8-0 votes, with Chairman Dru Kanuha abstaining because there is a citizen complaint against him pending with the Ethics Board.
The Council did receive a letter of endorsement for Robinson from Kahakalau, but he told the Council he wasn’t recruited by her. He said he just completed a five-year term on the Water Board, and looking at the list of available commissions, he thought his training as a hearings officer would come in handy on the Ethics Board.
“I chose ethics on my own initiative because I thought it is a board that needs some help,” Robinson said.
He served two terms on the Civil Service Commission, now the Merit Appeals Board. Robinson is a member of the Kona Coffee Cultural Festival and Council, the Kona Soil and Water Conservation District and the Kona Farm Bureau, and said he’s not affiliated with any political party.
Kalele replaces nominee Josephine Ibarra of North Kona, who apparently was recruited by Kahakalau. Ibarra withdrew her nomination after questioning by the Council.
When asked if she was recruited by the Ethics Board chairwoman, Kalele responded, “Who is that,” thus gaining a chuckle and a show of support from Onishi.
Kalele is the volunteer coordinator for Habitat for Humanity of West Hawaii. A former volunteer with the Hawaii Food Basket, she stated in her application she is not affiliated with any political party.
She told the Council she was born and raised in Kailua-Kona, ran barefoot through the streets and didn’t attend college until later in life.
“You can’t learn ethics in a book,” she said. “My manao, my kuleana, is what I’ve learned from my kupuna.”
South Kona/Ka‘u Councilwoman Maile David praised Kalele for her forthright manner.
“You will bring a cultural ethic to this board,” David said. “I think you are exactly what we need on this commission.”
The two West Hawaii nominees address concerns by the Council and some members of the public that the Ethics Board had no West Hawaii representation.
The board handles ethics complaints from residents about public officials. It also provides advisory letters to public officials about ethics issues, such as whether they can take on outside jobs. And it reviews annual gift disclosures and financial disclosures of a host of officials and county employees in certain positions.
Email Nancy Cook Lauer at ncook-lauer@westhawaiitoday.com.