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From the Rock Island Riders’ MK200.com:

It is ironic that on May 26, two days before this year’s MK200 the Governor signed into law Senate Bill 1325 which disallows a new registration for “dirt bikes”. The bill was a part of the Governor’s package of bills submitted to the Legislature this past session.

A part of the new language in the law:

Except for motorcycles that are built on an aftermarket motorcycle frame, special interest vehicles, and reconstructed vehicles, any motor vehicle or device that is not certified by the manufacturer to be in compliance with all applicable Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards as of the date of manufacturer shall not be registered.

An aftermarket motorcycle frame is defined as:

“Aftermarket motorcycle frame” means a frame that is manufactured to replace the frame of a motorcycle that was certified by its manufacturer to be in compliance with all applicable Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards as of the date of manufacture, or the frame of a homemade motorcycle that was manufactured not for profit by a person who built the motorcycle as a hobby.

What this means is that if you wanted to make your KTM300 into a “chopper” you could do so by making your own frame; but who in their right mind would want to do that. There was no testimony on this bill at the Legislature except from the State Department of Transportation and the City and County of Honolulu who cited “public safety”. We don’t think that either of two agencies really thinks that your chopped KTM300 is safer in the frame you made yourself. It is doubtful that the motivation for this move came from either of those two anyway but from other entities who would like to “keep you on the reservation”.

In light of this, the RIR will probably change it’s policy of requiring street legal bikes next year. Stay tuned for future announcements.

Further reading:

Governor’s Message #1167: GM1167_

Testimony on SB1325: SB1325_SD1_TESTIMONY_TRN_03-21-11_

SB1325 history: SB1325-Measure History

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An interesting column from years ago in the Hawaii Tribune-Herald.

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HTH 7/1/10 Notable quotes

“Our concern is that
under NARS (Natural Area
Reserve System) control, public
land is essentially removed
from public use. We believe
that this public land should be
protected, but also available
for appropriate public use.
— Wayne Blyth of the Mauna
Kea Recreational Users
Group, which opposes adding
6,600 acres to the Puu Makaala
Natural Area Reserve.

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Kahu Ku Mauna (Guardians of the Mountain) is a nine-member council named by the Mauna Kea Management Board (MKMB). The council advises the MKMB, Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM) and UH Hilo Chancellor in Hawaiian cultural matters affecting the Mauna Kea Science Reserve. Members of Kahu Ku Mauna are selected on the basis of their awareness of Hawaiian cultural practices, traditions and significant landforms as applied to traditional and customary use of Mauna Kea and their sensitivity to the sacredness of Mauna Kea.

  • Chad Kalepa Baybayan is one of the few individuals capable of navigating open ocean voyages using only traditional Polynesian methods. Baybayan is a graduate of UH Hilo’s Ka Haka ‘Ula o Ke‘elikolani College of Hawaiian Language, and holds a Masters degree in Education from Heritage College. He also serves as project director for ‘Aha Punana Leo’s He Lani Ko Luna Community Based Learning Center and its voyaging canoe, Hokualaka‘i Voyaging Program.
  • Arthur Hoke is a former member and chair of the Mauna Kea Management Board. He also played an important role in the process of developing the Mauna Kea Science Reserve Master Plan as a member of Aha Hui Ku Mauna. A 29-year veteran of the Hawai‘i County Police Department, he retired as District Commander of the Laupahoehoe District.
  • Tiffnie Kakalia is the West Hawai‘i Program Coordinator for Na Pua No‘eau, Center for Gifted and Talented Native Hawaiian Children, UH Hilo. Kakalia plans and coordinates cultural and educational enrichment opportunities for youth and families in West Hawai‘i. Prior to her current position, Kakalia served as Na Lei Na‘au Program Coordinator for Kanu o ka ‘Aina Learning Ohana, Inc.
  • Larry Kimura is a professor of Hawaiian language and culture at the University of Hawai`i at Hilo. He co-chaired the Mauna Kea Advisory Committee 1996 to 1999, and served as a Hawaiian content advisor to ‘Imiloa: Astronomy Center of Hawai‘i.
  • Antoinette Keahiolalo Mallow currently serves as East Hawai‘i Program Coordinator for Na Pua No‘eau, Center for Gifted and Talented Native Hawaiian Children, UH Hilo. In her position, Mallow plans and implements enrichment programs for students grades 6-12 and their families in East Hawai‘i. Her interests include alternative medicine, the Hawaiian Civic Club of Laupahoehoe and Hilo Hawaiian Civic Club, Ahahui Kiwila Hawai‘i o Sand Diego, Nale O Na Ali‘i Benevolent Society, and the Native Hawaiian Education Association, amongst others.
  • Sean P. Naleimaile recently graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in anthropology from UH Hilo and is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in archaeology from UH Manoa. Naleimaile works as a media specialist at Hawai‘i Community College’s I Ola Haloa program, a Title III Native Hawaiian program, developing media-based curriculum materials for use in the Hawaiian Lifestyles Program.
  • Leilehua Omphroy is a respected kupuna who teaches young people about the significance of the Hawaiian culture and the importance of preserving the wahi pana (sacred places) of these islands. Omphroy holds Masters degrees in Education from Cal State University. She has shared her expertise with the state Dept. of Education, Alu Like, Lyman House Museum, World Indigenous Peoples Conference on Education, Kamehameha Schools, and the state Kupuna Hawaiian Studies programs, amongst others.
  • Hannah Kihalani Springer, former OHA Trustee from the island of Hawai`i, is a member of various organizations, including the Daughters of Hawai`i, Kaloko-Honokohau Advisory Council, Ka`upulehu Marine Resources Advisory Group, and West Hawai`i Fisheries Management Council, amongst others.
  • Ed Stevens, as a former game hunter and hiker, has acquired a vast knowledge of place names and landforms surrounding the upper regions of Mauna Kea. He maintains a deep level of personal interaction with various aspects of the mountain, and can often be seen visiting sites that are most significant to him. He is also Vice President of ‘Oiwi Lokahi O Ka Mokupuni O Keawe, a Hawaiian organization working closely with the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in developing land use plans for the Humu‘ula/Upper Pi‘ihonua parcels on the South Eastern slopes of Mauna Kea, along the Mana Road.
  • UHH Chancellor Rose Tseng established the Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM) and Mauna Kea Management Board (MKMB) in the fall of 2000. The Board in turn formed the Kahu Ku Mauna, a council made up of Hawaiian cultural resource persons who will serve as advisors to the Board’s deliberations.

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    Office of Mauna Kea Management

    Stephanie Nagata, Director
    Kukahauʻula (IFA) Building, Room 206
    640 N. Aʻohoku Place, Hilo, HI 96720
    Phone: (808) 933-0734
    Email: omkm@maunakea.hawaii.edu
    www.malamamaunakea.org
    The Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM) was established in August 2000 by UH Hilo Chancellor Rose Tseng in response to the adoption of the Mauna Kea Science Reserve Master Plan by the University of Hawaiʻi Board of Regents. As defined by the Master Plan, OMKM is responsible for ensuring compliance with the Master Plan, including the stewardship function for the entire Mauna Kea Science Reserve.

    Also in accordance with the Master Plan, the Chancellor appoints community members to serve on the seven-member Mauna Kea Management Board (MKMB) and nine-member Kahu Ku Mauna council, which serve as advisors to the Chancellor.

    OMKM, MKMB, and Kahu Ku Mauna share a jointly formulated mission statement: “Achieve harmony, balance and trust in the sustainable management and stewardship of the Mauna Kea Science Reserve through community involvement and programs that protect, preserve and enhance the natural, cultural and recreational resources of Mauna Kea while providing a world-class center dedicated to education, research and astronomy.”

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    Excerpts from the minutes of Mauna Kea Management Board Tuesday, November 27, 2007.

    Allan Ikawa, former member of the Board of Regents (BOR), was offered the floor. He gave a brief summary of the controversies and emotions that arose during the development and adoption of the Master Plan.
    In 2000, Billy Bergin, Allan Ikawa, and Nainoa Thompson were appointed by the Chair of the BOR to spearhead a committee to oversee the development of the Master Plan. Mr. Ikawa’s impression of the draft Master Plan was that it was not saleable, but felt in order for the plan to be accepted it was necessary to get buy in from everyone. But the University decided to go ahead with it anyway. Senator Inouye and his representative Bill Kikuchi established Aha Hui Ku Mauna comprised of Ed Stevens, Hannah Springer, Arthur Hoke, Pua Kanahele, Mauna Roy, Larry Kimura, and Ululani Sherlock. Also participating were legal counsel, Walter Kirimitsu, and BOR staff David Iha, and Carl Makino.
    There were three major issues. One was the sacredness of the mountain. The second was the misconception that the observatories were making a lot of money from observing time and neither the community nor the University was getting anything. The third and the biggest issue was that Manoa was telling the Big Island what to do. In the end the Master Plan called for everything to pass through the University of Hawaii at Hilo (UHH), thus giving people on the Big Island a say about the management of the mountain.
    The meeting to adopt the Master Plan was held on the Hilo campus. Ed Stevens took a lot of heat. People were cursing the regents to do the right thing. Although Nainoa Thompson wrote the resolutions supporting the Master Plan, he was unable read it, instead Alan and Billy Bergin ended up reading it.
    Mr. Ikawa asked that the University respect the Big Island and the individuals such as Ed Stevens and Arthur Hoke who gave up a lot of their time and put considerable amount of effort and passion. He stated the OMKM needed to be funded correctly. When President Dobelle was spending money, one of the first places he tried to cut was the office. Mr. Ikawa told Wick Sloan if he cut OMKM all hell was going break loose.
    Mr. Ikawa ended by saying let these people finish the job. They are on the right path. Mauna Kea has been here for a million years, another couple of years won’t hurt. You got to do it the right way. Once you go down the wrong path, it is going to take an eternity to bring it back to where you are right now.

    Entire document: MKMB Minutes11-27-07

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    Nelson Ho and Deborah Ward

    Giant telescopes belong in Chile, not Hawaii

    Sen. Daniel Inouye is pressuring the California Institute of Technology and the University of California to build their giant Thirty Meter Telescope on Mauna Kea instead of in Chile, a drier site preferred by many astronomers. To mollify native Hawaiians, Inouye wants Caltech and UC to fork over “mitigation funds” to Hawaiian programs at the Imiloa Astronomy Center, UH-Hilo and the Hawaii Community College.

    Inouye’s efforts strike us as disrespectful to our community, coming after decades of outcry fueled by 40 years of summit mismanagement, lease violations, and environmental and cultural damage to the mountain. They also come on the heels of state and federal court rulings against the last UC/Caltech project.

    Their Keck 6 Outriggers died after Big Island Judge Glenn S. Hara sided with Hawaiians and Sierra Club to void the project’s conservation district use permits because the Board of Land and Natural Resources failed to write a comprehensive plan “to conserve, protect and preserve the summit area of Mauna Kea.” A federal judge had earlier forced the Outrigger project to also follow U.S. law and complete a federal environmental review, the first Mauna Kea telescope to do so.

    UH immediately appealed Hara’s 2007 ruling, but abandoned that strategy last week. Instead, and repeating the error that led to the ruling, UH is rushing to cobble together yet another veiled development plan it claims will satisfy conservation district regulations – a bald-faced attempt to circumvent both the ruling and BLNR’s legal regulatory responsibility to write the plan.

    UH has denied its plan is part of a strategy to pave the TMT’s way, even as it works toward renegotiating the original summit lease to accommodate the observatory. Inouye is more honest about it in a recent letter to UH President David McClain. He says the plan “will provide a blueprint for Mauna Kea’s future” that includes the TMT.

    No matter. Sierra Club and the Hawaiian plaintiffs are prepared to litigate any continued illegalities – with UH’s plan, the lease, TMT’s EIS or the BLNR permits, if it comes to that.

    With the law and the citizens against them, how else could Inouye and TMT proponents force their will on Hawaii? Exempt the project from the National Environmental Policy Act and National Historic Preservation Act, as Sen. John McCain did to clear the way for Arizona’s Mount Graham telescopes? That would be foolish since Inouye has already had to apologize to Hawaiians for past heavy-handed politics to secure reviled projects, including bombing on Kahoolawe, the H-3 freeway and geothermal development on Kilauea.

    Years ago at a hearing, professor and cultural expert Pualani Kanakaole Kanahele wondered aloud if the Mauna Kea fight would eventually become “another Kahoolawe.” To avoid the kind of political embarrassment, public dismay and even civil disobedience that memories of Kahoolawe conjure up, three solutions to this conflict should be initiated:

    » Caltech and UC should resist Inouye’s pressure and take the TMT to Chile.

    » BLNR should write the conservation plan required by the laws and precedents upon which Hara’s ruling was based. Part of that plan should include strategies, timetables and performance bonds to dismantle observatories as they become obsolete and return the land to its original condition as the current lease requires.

    » BLNR also should start following state law and impose fair market lease rents on all existing telescopes, which now pay only one dollar a year. This would give BLNR the funds to live up to their legal responsibilities to manage Mauna Kea and repair damage already done. BLNR could then finally protect the legal rightholders to the conservation and ceded lands on Mauna Kea.

    Nelson Ho and Deborah Ward are co-chairs of Sierra Club’s statewide Mauna Kea Issues Committee.

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    UH Hilo Press Release

    UHH Home > News and Events > UH Hilo Press Releases

    Date: Friday, August 4, 2006
    Contact: Alyson Kakugawa-Leong, (808) 974-7642

    For Immediate Release

    New members join UH Hilo’s Mauna Kea management entities

    University of Hawaii at Hilo Chancellor Dr. Rose Tseng recently announced the appointments of new members to the Mauna Kea Management Board (MKMB) and the Kahu Ku Mauna Council.

    “One of the most important contributions made by the Master Plan is its commitment to include community input into the decision-making process, which it does primarily via the MKMB and Kahu Ku Mauna Council, both of which are comprised of individuals from the community,” Tseng stated. “We are indeed fortunate that something as important as the management of Mauna Kea is being overseen by people that hold broad knowledge and command respect in the community.”

    At its July meeting, the UH Board of Regents approved the appointments of Herring Kalua and Anthony Schinckel to the MKMB, effective August 1.

    Kalua was born and raised in Keaukaha. A graduate of Hilo High School and UH Hilo, he works for the State Department of Transportation as supervisor for Construction and Maintenance on the Big Island. Kalua is a former Hawaiian Homes commissioner, is active in numerous local educational and advisory committees, and served on the Mauna Kea Advisory Committee that developed the UH 2000 Mauna Kea Master Plan.

    Schinckel is director of operations of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Submillimeter Array (SMA). Since 1998, he has overseen all aspects of the SMA operation. Schinckel’s experience with Mauna Kea spans 18 years, when he first arrived in Hawai`i to work for the CalTech Submillimeter Observatory as a telescope engineer. During his tenure here, he has distinguished himself as an outstanding scientist, and a strong advocate of cooperation, compromise and respect between science, Hawaiian cultural interests and the environment.

    Kalua and Schinckel join Rob Pacheco, Harry Yada, Pat Bergin, Ron Terry, and Barry Taniguchi.

    Additionally, at its July meeting, the MKMB approved the appointments of three new members to the Kahu Ku Mauna Council.

    “The MKMB and Kahu Ku Mauna provide a vital link between the community and the University regarding meaningful, proper, and sensitive stewardship and oversight of Mauna Kea,” said Office of Mauna Kea Management Director Bill Stormont.

    Sean P. Naleimaile recently graduated with a bachelor’s degree in anthropology from UH Hilo and is currently pursuing a master’s in archaeology from UH Manoa. Naleimaile also works at the ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center of Hawai`i as a research assistant in the Hawaiian Heritage component of the Center.

    Chad Kalepa Baybayan is widely known as one of the few individuals who is capable of navigating long, open ocean voyages using only traditional Polynesian methods. He is a graduate of UH Hilo’s Ka Haka ‘Ula O Ke‘elikolani College of Hawaiian Language, and holds a masters degree from Heritage College. He also serves as project director for ‘Aha Punana Leo’s Hokualaka‘i Voyaging Program.

    Leilehua Omphroy is a respected kupuna who has dedicated the past 10 years of her life to teaching young people about the significance of the Hawaiian culture and the importance of preserving the wahi pana (legendary) of these islands. Omphroy holds a masters degree in education from Cal State University. She has shared her expertise with the State Department of Education, Alu Like, Lyman House Museum, World Indigenous Peoples Conference on Education, Kamehameha Schools, and the State Kupuna Hawaiian Studies programs, amongst others.

    Naleimaile, Baybayan and Omphroy join Council members Larry Kimura, Pua Kanaka‘ole Kanahele, Kaleo Kuali‘i, Reynolds Kamakawiwo‘ole, Kihalani Springer, and Ed Stevens.

    “We welcome each of the new appointees, and express our heartfelt appreciation for their willingness to contribute a community voice to help guide stewardship efforts on Mauna Kea,” Stormont said. “Each brings expertise, and passion, that will serve the mountain well.”

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    Click for a pdf file of the newsletter MKnews5

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    By USHA LEE McFARLING, TIMES SCIENCE WRITER
    March 18, 2001

    MAUNA KEA — When Ed Stevens drives the dusty track to this wind-swept summit atop Hawaii’s Big Island, he tries hard not to see the gleaming white and silver telescope domes set starkly amid this dormant volcano’s red rock.

    He tries not to see where precious cinder cones–homes to goddesses–were flattened and paved for the hulking Western machines. He tries not to see a blindingly white radio antenna dish within a stone’s throw of an ancient rock shrine that resembles Stonehenge.

    “I go up there and I don’t see them. Because if I see them I get angry,” said Stevens, 70, who regularly drives two hours from his house in Kona to worship at Mauna Kea. In the naturalistic religion of Hawaiians, Mauna Kea–the White Mountain–is the highest temple in Polynesia, where, amid the snow, Hawaiians placed shrines and practiced burial rituals so secret that it is taboo to speak of them to outsiders.

    But he can’t ignore the newcomers completely. “You hear this humming,” he said. “It’s so intrusive when you are trying to commune with these entities. These benefactors.”

    The mountain is equally sacred to astronomers: With its astonishingly clean, clear and dark skies, it is the best place on the planet to view the universe. This desolate peak holds the world’s densest concentration of telescopes: 13, including the world’s two largest.

    When the first telescopes rose from the mountain–one a year in 1968, 1969 and 1970–there was not a peep of dissent from Hawaiians. Thirty years and nearly $1 billion worth of telescopes later, though, Hawaii is a very different place.

    A once fledgling Hawaiian movement has grown into a vocal political power in the islands. There are calls for secession from the United States, a return of native Hawaiian lands and, on Mauna Kea, a moratorium on telescopes and even their removal.

    Hostage to the dispute is a high-profile National Aeronautics and Space Administration/Caltech project that is crucial to developing the world’s next generation of telescopes, a project that could be the first to image distant planets that might harbor life. The $50-million project is already a year behind schedule. If some Hawaiians have their way, it will not be built at all.

    The emotionally charged debate over modern and ancient uses of this rocky pinnacle is much more, though, than a fight over a telescope or a mountaintop. To many Hawaiians, nothing less than the future of their homeland is at stake. And it is a perfect example of the often fumbling progress of science in a multicultural world.

    Once prized for the clean industry and jobs they brought to this economically challenged island, astronomers are now lumped in with the missionaries, whalers, plantation owners and golf-course developers who have taken turns carving up this island.

    One of the angriest is Kealoha Pisciotta, who, at 30, is as old as the age of modern astronomy in Hawaii.

    Pisciotta was one of the first Hawaiians to work at a telescope. She spent long, frigid nights at the summit as a telescope technician, steering the European/Canadian James Clerk Maxwell sub-millimeter telescope toward distant clouds of dust and gas so that astronomers could study the newborn stars cloaked within.

    On the way to her high-tech job, Pisciotta would take part in an age-old Hawaiian tradition. She would stop to worship on the flanks of the mountain, bringing small offerings to her family stone, or aumakua.

    But that stone has been desecrated. Once, it was taken to the town dump. Once, it was carted off by a fellow telescope employee. And once it was overturned, strewing Pisciotta’s aunt’s ashes on the ground. Now the stone is missing for good, and Pisciotta, angry that astronomers did not do more to protect her stone, has resigned her position at the telescope.

    Today, Pisciotta is angry that astronomers pay Hawaii just $1 per year to use land seized by Americans a century ago. She claims that, in their race to build bigger and better telescopes, the scientists have trampled not only on rare insects, native birds and the mountain’s fragile geological landscape, but also on centuries of religious and cultural tradition.

    “It truly is not Hawaiians versus astronomy,” said Pisciotta, who is still proud of her work on the telescope but can barely contain her exasperation at astronomers. “But they never once have said, ‘We screwed up and we’re sorry.’ They never once said, ‘Thank you for letting us use your sacred temple.’ ”

    Hawaiians imbue many natural phenomena–volcanoes, rocks, the ocean–with religious significance. Mauna Kea, at 13,769 feet, is so sacred because it is the closest thing in Hawaii, indeed in all of Polynesia, to the heavens. The towering volcano is considered the piko, or navel, of Hawaii, from which all else arose.

    The mountain holds more than 90 shrines and burial sites. None is at the very top, which is considered too sacred even for shrines and certainly for Western machines. A 1996 fire that killed three workers building the Subaru telescope on the mountain was seen by some as a curse, an ominous warning from the gods.

    There is much gray area in this collision of unlikely forces. The scientists’ goals are lofty ones: to view the stars and answer some of the most riveting questions of our time, questions about the origin of the universe and the beginnings of time.

    “These are not greedy guys trying to build a hotel,” said Tom Peek, an amateur astronomer, teacher and writer who resigned his job as a stargazing guide on the mountain because he was distraught at how Hawaiian issues have been treated by astronomers. “But their moral compasses become confused because they are blinded by the excitement of discovery.”

    What astronomers want from Mauna Kea they can get nowhere else in the Northern Hemisphere–pristine, transparent skies unsullied by pollution, dust, water vapor and city light. The otherworldly summit sits high above cloud layers and much of the Earth’s distorting atmosphere. The smooth shape of the volcanic cone and the stable temperatures of the Pacific Ocean mean that air flows smoothly over the telescopes. And it is far easier to reach than two other areas with good viewing: the Chilean Andes and the South Pole.

    The mountain’s crown jewel is the Keck telescope complex: twin behemoths with 10-meter mirrors that are the world’s largest gatherers of light. The summit is managed by the University of Hawaii’s Institute for Astronomy. Keck is jointly run by NASA, Caltech and the University of California.

    These monster “light buckets” trump the orbiting Hubble space telescope for data-gathering capability. They have imaged some of the faintest, most distant objects in the universe and unleashed a string of scientific hits. Using Keck, a Caltech team proved that galaxies formed shortly after the Big Bang, much earlier than expected.

    Andrea Ghez, a leading UCLA astronomer, used the machine to pinpoint a massive black hole at the center of our own galaxy. One UC Berkeley team defied odds and used Keck to detect barely perceptible planets around other suns. Another Berkeley team measured supernovae racing away from our galaxy and showed, to the astonishment of many, that the universe is still expanding.

    It is a coveted machine and an expensive one. Viewing time costs $1 per second, or $30,000 per night. And Keck is just beginning to flex its optics. Keck’s proud director, Fred Chaffee, describes the machine as “Mozart at age 7.” The instrument is likely to help answer a host of what scientists call “origins questions”–just how did our solar system form? And our galaxy? And the universe? And, perhaps most pressing of all: Are we alone?

    Proud of what they do, and convinced of its importance, many mainland astronomers chafe at the way they have been represented by islanders.

    “It annoys me to see astronomers portrayed as tyrants who come in to exploit Mauna Kea. That’s very unfair,” said Richard Ellis, a cosmologist at Caltech who uses the Keck to study the origin and evolution of galaxies. He recently turned down the directorship of the Institute for Astronomy because he believed that political issues, including the Mauna Kea dispute, were compromising the ability to do first-rate science there.

    “We’re searching for truth and knowledge, the kinds of things that have motivated countries for centuries. We don’t need to apologize. We need to explain what we do.”

    Yet the accusations cannot be completely denied.

    “It comes as a shock, but there’s an element of truth there, isn’t there?” said Robert A. McLaren, a Canadian who oversees astronomy on Mauna Kea for the University of Hawaii’s Institute of Astronomy. “Just because you have a noble purpose and you don’t mean [to cause] any harm doesn’t mean you don’t.

    “The desire is there to do a much better job,” he said. “What’s not negotiable is the desire to have a world-class observatory.”

    Litter Complaints

    The imbroglio at the summit started with something very small: a few pieces of construction trash blowing down from the telescopes. In 1994, Sierra Club members noticed the debris and called Nelson Ho, a club leader, to complain.

    “I’m an amateur astronomer myself,” said Ho, a seasoned environmental leader who approached astronomers as colleagues. But the Mauna Kea astronomers, he said, brushed off his complaints. The trash was not cleaned up until 1995, after Ho enticed a local newspaper to write a front-page article.

    By then, Ho was looking into the telescopes in detail and criticizing astronomers for taking shortcuts, ignoring environmental laws and sneaking projects in with little or no public review.

    In 1996, an entomologist discovered that construction at two telescopes had destroyed critical habitats for the Weiku bug, a quarter-inch creature found only atop Mauna Kea, feasting on wind-borne insects and protected from freezing by a strange biological antifreeze.

    Others were angry that the telescope builders had placed their machines too close to pu’u, or cinder cones with religious significance, even flattening some of them.

    And there was an outcry over how astronomers tallied telescopes. Astronomers said that arrays of telescopes, even those with two dozen components, should count as one telescope because such an array is a single scientific instrument. Hawaiians argued that, from a land-use perspective, each machine should be counted separately and to do otherwise is to play a shell game.

    “We can count,” Pisciotta said.

    In 1998, the state published a scathing audit on summit management that backed many of the Hawaiians’ claims, but that is still hotly contested by the university’s McLaren. It accused the University of Hawaii of neglecting historical, cultural and natural resources on the mountain and focusing primarily on building telescopes and boosting its own research program.

    In response, the university hired consultants to create a new master plan to govern the mountain. They asked for public input at open hearings. It was like uncorking a bottle of anger, frustration and tears.

    “It is inconceivable to me, people on this committee could even consider asking for anything more, except forgiveness,” a stern Pisciotta said in May 1999 as she joined a long line of those who came to speak.

    It took more than a year of discussion and committee meetings to draft the master plan. The effort involved one of Hawaii’s most powerful figures, Sen. Daniel K. Inouye; the university’s board of regents; and a panel of Hawaiian elders led by Stevens.

    On June 16, the regents approved the plan. It allows astronomers three new telescopes, not five. A new management board that includes Hawaiian representation will oversee stewardship of the mountain. Oversight will be based not on the neighboring island of Oahu, but in the nearby city of Hilo, soothing notorious inter-island politics that have further mired the debate.

    But many Hawaiians remain deeply unsatisfied. A good deal of the wording is vague. And much remains to be negotiated, including each new construction proposal, including the Caltech/JPL project now in limbo.

    Anger flared anew late last year when UC Santa Barbara publicized plans to build a 30-meter telescope, the California Extremely Large Telescope, and place it, perhaps, atop Mauna Kea.

    That was proof, Hawaiians said, that astronomers would arrogantly move forward despite local concerns. Astronomers on Mauna Kea, and many at Caltech familiar with the controversy, cringed at UC Santa Barbara’s announcement, calling it premature and badly timed.

    Astronomers are still reeling from the hostility that has been directed at them, anger that still echoes in letters to local newspapers. For three decades, astronomers had been golden children on the island, featured in one governor’s campaign literature as the future of a modern Hawaii and touted for bringing about $142 million into state coffers each year.

    “This is not to minimize or try to downplay the feelings we’ve heard recently,” McLaren said in a recent interview. “All I’m saying is, it was so different from what we’d experienced in the past.”

    Bonding Agent

    In 1970, when Kealoha Pisciotta was born and the mountain bore just three small telescopes, Hawaiians weren’t allowed to speak their own language in schools. And their voices, even when it came to protecting their precious Mauna Kea, were muted.

    “Native Hawaiian self-esteem was so low, they didn’t know how to argue. They didn’t know how to object,” said Nainoa Thompson, 47, a modern Polynesian navigator who has re-created the long-distance ocean voyaging techniques of his ancestors, navigating by the stars among Hawaii, Tahiti and Easter Island.

    Through these journeys, Thompson has become a potent symbol of the resurging pride in Hawaiian culture. But he still cringes when he recalls that his grandmother was beaten for speaking her native Hawaiian language in school.

    Pualani Kanahele, the daughter of a revered cultural leader on the Big Island, cringes too, and weeps openly when discussing the mountain. She won’t even look up at Mauna Kea now, because she did nothing to stop the telescopes, which she, like many here, call pimples. “I have to stand up to my grandkids,” the anguished Kanahele said at one hearing, “and say, ‘I never did anything.’ ”

    Telescopes may seem an unlikely bonding agent for a budding indigenous political movement. But the fight against development on the mountain is bringing together Hawaiians of all types, not only cultural practitioners, activists and environmentalists, but also grandmothers, students, engineers and even retirees who pledge to throw their bodies in front of construction equipment.

    “If you’re going to push on this,” warned Mililani Trask, an outspoken lawyer and community activist who recently served as president of Ka Lahui Hawai’i, a Hawaiian nation proposed by pro-sovereignty groups, “we’re going to push you back.”

    The Hawaiian independence movement has gained much momentum since 1993, when Congress and President Bill Clinton formally apologized for the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy 100 years before. A year later, the Navy returned a small island, Kahoolawe, that it had long used as a bombing range. And Hawaiians are still fighting to regain control of 1.8 million acres of ceded lands that once belonged to Hawaii’s queen.

    The Mauna Kea Astronomy Precinct sits squarely on those ceded lands.

    The battle over telescopes has become a chance to reclaim, symbolically and practically, ground that their people lost long ago.

    “Mauna Kea is the center of our spirituality,” said Thompson, who also sits on the University of Hawaii’s board of regents. “For it to be the place we debate this issue is not by chance.”

    Chaffee, the director of the Keck, agrees. “This isn’t about astronomy,” he said. “We’re just the most visible thing. We’re a lightning rod for years and years of distrust.”

    Links to Astronomy

    The challenges of conducting science in a multicultural world vex scientists who are used to getting their way.

    In Arizona in the late 1980s and early ’90s, astronomers circumvented environmental and cultural preservation laws by winning a congressional exemption to build telescopes on Mt. Graham, a mountain considered sacred by many Apaches.

    Last year, in a very different outcome for science, then-Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt ordered the bones of the 9,300-year-old Kennewick Man returned to five American Indian tribes–to the emotional wails of scientists who called the decision a death blow to anthropology.

    In Hawaii, as in all melting pots, there are unexpected synergies. Hawaiians have a strong link with astronomy: The first Hawaiians, the skilled Polynesian voyagers, navigated by the stars. Today, Hawaiian elders speak easily of galactic nebulae and supernovae. Astronomers, likewise, can relate oral Hawaiian legends set on the mountain. Telescope director Chaffee takes lessons in the Hawaiian language.

    Still, an almost unfathomably deep culture clash remains. The very traits that make for a successful scientist today–a dispassionate, detached view of the world and an extremely narrow focus on a single question–are characteristics that many Hawaiians mistrust.

    “You can’t have a one-track mind; all you want to do is look up in the sky at those things and not care about anything else,” said Larry Kimura, an assistant professor in the budding Hawaiian language program at the University of Hawaii at Hilo who helped head the committee that drafted the master plan. “You don’t just start plopping things all over the place–your million-dollar machines–without thinking of giving anything back.”

    Many Hawaiians say the astronomers have been especially callous in naming the machines. A large telescope now on the drawing board has been dubbed “GOD,” for giant optical device. Auxiliary telescopes planned for the Keck telescope are called “outriggers”–a nod to boats used by Hawaii’s legendary sea voyagers that native Hawaiians see as condescending.

    Kimura’s cultural connection to the mountain is a personal one: His family is one of many that participate in the ritual of depositing the umbilical cords of their children in the sacred waters of Mauna Kea’s Lake Waiau–a way to connect the newly born to their spiritual home.

    “We are not just people of yesterday,” said Kimura from an office where fragrant ginger flowers sit atop a turquoise computer. “We are also people of today.”

    Hawaiians are not the only ones frustrated by cultural differences. McLaren is among astronomers who feel blindsided by Hawaiian complaints that did not surface when the telescopes were being planned. (Objections raised initially in the 1970s and ’80s centered on environmental issues and access to the mountain for hunters and hikers.)

    “With our Western ways, we speak up. That’s not necessarily the Hawaiian way,” McLaren said.

    But he does admit that the astronomers who planned the mountain should plead guilty to cultural ignorance.

    “They didn’t put those [telescopes] up there because science is more important than Hawaiian culture,” he said. “They put those things up there because they didn’t think of Hawaiian culture at all.”

    Tricky Technology

    For astronomers, passage of the master plan was a victory, but a humble one. Said Keck Director Chaffee, “It’s what we’ve been working on for three years–to get to the starting line.”

    Though he is hovering behind the starting line, it is obvious Chaffee wants to sprint.

    When the controversy over the mountain broke, Chaffee was in the middle of a major effort to beef up the powerful Keck. The project is the $50-million Keck Interferometer. It aims to ring the two massive Keck telescopes with four to six smaller “outrigger” telescopes and then to pool the light from all of those instruments. Astronomers are almost giddy at the prospect; it would mean the combined telescopes could image distant objects about 10 times more sharply than they can today and could start making maps of nearby stars and their planets.

    The Caltech/JPL interferometer project is a linchpin of the NASA Origins project, an energetic push to find other planets that might harbor life.

    The technology is tricky. Precisely merging a number of speeding light beams has been a major challenge for JPL engineers. Last week, they linked the light from the two large telescopes for the first time.

    Proof that linking a number of telescopes together can work on the ground is the first step in developing a new generation of space interferometers that could detect Earth-sized planets and eventually build a “Terrestrial Planet Finder” that could image those planets in a search for life.

    A permit to build the new telescopes–which must be granted by Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources–will be the first test of the fragile agreement on the mountain.

    As NASA gets closer to asking for its permit, opposition gets louder.

    The Sierra Club, which has praised NASA for conducting recent environmental reviews on Mauna Kea, nevertheless wants a full environmental impact statement, a process that could take months. Last month, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs dismissed NASA’s plans to mitigate damage to the summit as “vague and ambiguous at best.”

    “While NASA searches for other life forms in space,” deputy administrator Colin Kippen Jr. wrote to NASA officials, “it is ironic that its search may extinguish an entire species of the Weiku bug here on Earth.”

    Ahahui Ku Mauna, the panel of elders led by Ed Stevens that has been negotiating with astronomers, announced last month that it would not support the Keck project until it receives assurances that astronomers would give something back to Hawaiians. Council members are seeking long-term funding of programs that could help the native Hawaiian community.

    For now, no one can predict which way the decision will go.

    With so much at stake, Chaffee, and even the top NASA administrator in charge of the project, Rick Howard, are both willing to go slowly.

    “We’re trying hard to listen to concerns,” said Howard, a senior executive at NASA’s Washington headquarters who formerly managed the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory on Mauna Kea. “No one had been listening to them for 100 years.”

    Astronomers also have started sharing their science–making school presentations and hiring Hawaiian students, in hopes that they will spur a new generation of Hawaiian-born astronomers. An $11-million astronomy facility in Hilo, dedicated Feb. 23, will help foster a new degree program in astronomy offered at the university’s Hilo campus.

    The Mauna Kea Visitor Center now offers cultural programs for the hordes who ascend in the evening to gaze at the stars through small telescopes put out for the public.

    But the astronomers’ main focus–and their fear–remains pinned on the mountaintop. The Keck outriggers have become hugely symbolic.

    To Chaffee, they are a chance to move ahead, painstakingly, and get the process right by “meeting both the spirit and the letter of the law.” The tiny telescopes have already generated more paperwork than their massive brothers, Kecks I and II.

    Astronomers don’t want to squander their claim, or their right to be on a mountain they find so precious. “I’ve got to look, not just at Keck, but at the future of astronomy in this part of the world,” Chaffee said.

    To Hawaiians, the outriggers could open the door to a slew of new interferometry projects, and to telescopes multiplying like rabbits across their sacred landscape.

    “We were asleep too long,” Stevens said. “We won’t go to sleep again.”

    (BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

    Sacred vs. Scientific Values

    The telescopes on Mauna Kea sit amid more than 90 cultural sites,shrines and burial grounds, held sacred by Hawaiians who consider the dormant volcano a temple. The telescopes are at the summit, where conditions are best for astronomical viewing. Most cultural sites are slightly below the summit, which is considered by Hawaiians too holy even for the construction of shrines.

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