News

Governor Ige Delivers State of the State Address

Play
Listen to this Article
5 minutes
Loading Audio... Article will play after ad...
Playing in :00
A
A
A

Governor David Ige. State of Hawai’i Governor’s Office photo

Governor David Ige delivered his fourth State of the State Address today and touched on key areas including the high cost of living, homelessness, and unemployment. Gov. Ige did not speak about the false ballistic missile alert that went out to people in Hawaiʻi on Saturday, Jan. 13, 2018.

“The State of our State is strong,” he said. “We are a resilient people and the future is bright.”

Gov. Ige touched on his successes as being Hawaiʻi’s governor and what improvements still need to be made.

“So many of us are living paycheck to paycheck, relying heavily on our extended family to make ends meet,” he said. “Owning a home, is out of reach for many families, with housing costs rising faster than wages.”

Gov. Ige also mentioned that traffic is affecting families and the quality of life, and that “the growing gap between those doing well and those who are not should concern all of us.”

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

Ige pointed to a number of his administration’s key accomplishments including:

  • Exceeding the orignal goal of adding air conditioning to 1,000 Hawai‘i classrooms; ” we exceeded our original goal, and we’re at 1,200 classrooms and counting.”
  • The state is on track to meet its goal of adding 10,000 new housing units by 2020, at least 40% of which are affordable
  • Homelessness is down 9% statewide – the first decline in eight years.

In his address, Gov. Ige recognized various Big Island community members and companies including:

  • Hawai‘i Island farmer Richard Ha (see Climate Change below)
  • Hu Honua Power Plant on the Big Island (see Climate Change below)
  • Big Island’s Tina Fitch and her start-up Switchfly (see Business Innovators below)

He also noted that “Hawai‘i will not stand for the hateful and hurtful policies of the Trump White House.” Adding that the state is doing more than any other state to stand up for what is right including DACA and the Paris Climate Accord. He said Hawai‘i is trying to stop what is wrong, “such as the travel ban and stopping transgender members of the military from defending the flag.”

Below is a text of the Governor’s address with highlights of each topic that was brought up.

Employment and Unemployment Rate

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

“We have the lowest unemployment rate in the nation. We are strong financially. Our bond rating is the highest it’s ever been in our history, making it possible for us to get the most bang for our buck when we borrow money.

This saves the state tens of millions of dollars, allowing us to make critical investments in our schools, housing and highways.

Even though tourism is up and unemployment is low, many of our residents are living paycheck to paycheck, one health emergency or car repair away from a crisis.

Some people may have two or three jobs to make ends meet. The challenge is not just creating jobs, it’s about creating quality jobs and the training to go with them.

I’m working to transform our economy to give residents a diversity of employment opportunities that pay higher wages and lead to a better quality of life.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

ʻOhana also means that you should be able to put food on the table and be home with your family to eat it. That means jobs that pay well and commutes that work.

Governor David Ige meets with community members at Thursday’s community lava meeting, held at the Pahoa High School cafeteria. Photo credit: Christopher Yoakum.

Education

“I also promised to empower our schools so they can focus on 21st century skills and critical learning. In meetings around the state, community members, teachers, staff and principals expressed frustration about top-down mandates and a one-size-fits-all approach to schools.

And so, with more than 3,000 parents, teachers and community members from around the state, we created a new Blueprint for Education.

This blueprint for change is now in the hands of new DOE leadership.

I also recognized that it is not enough just to say to our teachers, “We respect how hard you work.” That’s why, we have given our educators the pay raises they have long deserved.

My grandparents came to Hawaiʻi in search of opportunities. It is not acceptable to me that many of our kids are essentially becoming immigrants in other places because we don’t have the opportunities here.

While there is more to do, I am proud of what we have accomplished. We have more Early College programs so high school students can earn college credits, saving families money and making it easier to graduate with degrees.

We expanded campuses and offer more courses at UH West Oʻahu and Palamanui. The creation of Hawai‘i’s Promise scholarships helps to pay for the costs of attending UH community colleges.

The Entrepreneur’s Sandbox in Kaka‘ako brings start-ups together in one shared space and helps with loans and grants. We also founded the annual “hackathon” competition, which enlists hundreds of professional and amateur code writers to develop solutions for the state’s biggest information technology challenges.

We must prepare our young people for jobs in this sector and that means supporting STEM education, focusing on science, technology, engineering and math. The good news is that it is expanding at all levels.

The University of Hawaiʻi is one of the leaders in this work, with the Mānoa campus increasing its STEM graduates by more than a third in recent years and the community colleges tripling theirs.

Also helping to train students in our schools are partners like DevLeague, a computer programming and coding academy, founded by two local software engineers. They are working with the DOE and private foundations.

Together, they are teaching high school students advanced coding and cyber security. We’d like to recognize DevLeague’s founders, Jason Sewell and Russel Cheng.

To be sure that workers in Hawai‘i’s existing industries aren’t left behind, we’ve made available a wide variety of vocational training opportunities through the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations.

These programs match training with current job openings in fields ranging from computer science and shipyard welding to banking and food safety.

And within state government, as we ride the wave of modernization, we remain fully committed to retraining every worker to use the new computer systems and technology tools. Technology helps us be more responsive to the public we serve.

Homelessness

For those who want to live in Hawai‘i, probably no issue is more challenging than finding a decent, affordable place to live. And probably no issue challenges us as a society more than the daily sight of those who are now living on our streets and in our parks.

We have dedicated more money to mental health treatment and services, including to our homeless population.

We have initiated the largest annual increase in production of affordable housing with thousands of new units.

We’re on track to meet our goal of 10,000 new housing units by 2020, with at least 40% affordable.

I’m requesting $100 million to maintain the momentum and produce more affordable homes across the state.

Our “Housing First” policy focuses on transitional housing as a way to get people into permanent housing. The New Kaka‘ako Family Assessment Center moves families off the streets and into permanent housing in less than 90 days.

A “special team” in public housing reduced the vacant unit turnaround time from 267 days to just seven days.

And our landlord summits increased the number of landlords willing to rent to families transitioning out of homelessness.

Even in the tragedy that is homelessness, there are significant signs that these policies are starting to work. Homelessness is down 9% statewide – the first decline in eight years.

There’s more to be done for sure. We continue our efforts to offer services to those who have so far refused to leave the streets.

We have set aside monies in this year’s budget to support more progress on the homelessness front. Our budget request also includes $15 million in additional funding for Housing First initiatives, outreach services and maintaining safety in public places.

We also know how important community partners have been in tackling this challenge. Take Kahauiki Village, a permanent housing project for homeless families launched by local businessman and philanthropist Duane Kurisu. Duane brought together city, state, nonprofits and businesses to make the village a reality in record time. The first 30 families recently moved in.

Hawaiian Homes

It has been my firm belief that the state must remain committed to developing and delivering Hawaiian homelands to beneficiaries. In 2016, we provided $24 million in funding to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. This was the highest level of funding in the department’s 95-year history and more than double what had been set aside previously.

For its part, Hawaiian Home Lands has been ramping up development of vacant and turn-key lots. More than 220 lots were awarded in 2017 and that number will more than double in 2018.

We’ve also worked hard with the department to spend down federal funds and identify alternative sources of revenue that can be used to sustain the agency over time.

Traffic

I have three goals: get projects done quickly, get them done inexpensively, and get them done with minimal impact to the environment.

From zipper, shoulder lanes and other contraflow lanes, to safety around our public schools and truck-only routes, we are going to where the problems are. We’re reducing back-ups and bottlenecks – in West and Windward Oʻahu, Kahului, Lahaina, Līhuʻe, Hilo, Kona and other communities across the state.

Healthiest State in the Nation

“We are one of the healthiest states in the nation. People here live longer than anywhere else in the country.

We have led the nation in health insurance for decades, and in the current chaos, we stand firm in caring for each other.

Pacific Biodiesel’s Director of Operations Jenna Long and Agricultural Program Manager James Twigg-Smith explain to Governor Ige how the crushing mill, located on the lot adjacent to the refinery, fits into the Company’s sustainability model. Pacific Biodiesel photo.

Climate Change – “We depend too heavily on imported food and fuel”

We’re also making great strides in protecting our ʻāina and ocean resources.

To date, we have protected over 40,000 acres of watershed forests on Kauaʻi, Oʻahu, Molokaʻi and Hawaiʻi islands.

We helped preserve and protect Turtle Bay lands from development.

A joint agreement with the US Navy is helping us reach our renewable energy goals. And together, we’ve established guidelines to use recycled water on food crops.

Working with all of you here in the Legislature, we were able to provide tax credits for organic farmers, which means a healthier people and healthier lands.

You passed and I signed a law to abide by the Paris Climate Accord – the first state in the nation to do so. We understand deeply and fully what the future requires of us.

I also fought to give Native Hawaiians a seat at the table when it comes to the management of Papahānaumokuakea National Marine Monument. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs is now a co- trustee of the monument.

Our goal of increasing local food production is another golden opportunity for Hawaiʻi. We are blessed with four growing seasons and a land-grant university with a College of Tropical Agriculture that has a long history of cutting-edge work.

With all these factors, Hawaiʻi can and must become the premier center for new agricultural technologies.

We already have ag tech startups going strong in Hawai‘i. One company that comes to mind is Smart Yields.

They help small and medium farmers to increase their production with data analytics and other tools. The company received international attention when it was chosen to be a part of the Vatican’s first tech accelerator focused on global food production.

At this time, I’d like to recognize Smart Yields CEO Vincent Kimura and his mentor, Hawai‘i Island farmer Richard Ha.

What we now need is the driver to make greater local food production possible. There is no better way than through our schools. I applaud the new leadership in the DOE’s Farm to School program, the leadership provided by Lt. Governor Shan Tsutsui, and the great cooperation of the Department of Agriculture and the State’s Procurement Office.

Clean energy is not only critical to air and water quality, it is important to our economy and our wallets as we work to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels imported from the mainland.

Working with the Legislature, I was the first governor to sign into law a bill requiring 100% of Hawai‘i’s electricity to come from renewable sources by 2045. Again, this demonstrates what we can accomplish when we work together.

We want hydropower, sea water air conditioning, solar and wind energy, biomass and the fullest possible use of our waste streams. We celebrate the Hu Honua Power Plant on the Big Island as well as the new solar farms on other islands.

And this week we will join NRG Energy, Hawaiian Electric and Kamehameha Schools in celebrating three utility-scale solar projects on Oʻahu.

As a next step, we will grow a carbon market in Hawaiʻi. This way carbon polluters around the world can invest in restoring Hawaiʻi’s koa and ʻōhiʻa trees to offset their carbon emissions.

We want the brainpower and the imagination of the world to continue to come here. They can help us find our way to 100% renewable energy sources for electricity, and in doing so, help the world find its way to 100%. Let us take the billions we export for fossil fuels, spend it here, and then export the energy systems we develop.

We are dreaming big and creating the promise of limitless opportunities. Anything less means we are letting down the next generation.

The Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM) is this year’s recipient of the Kona-Kohala Chamber of Commerce Pualu Award for Environmental Awareness.

Business Innovators

Hawai‘i has so much potential in this new globally connected world. We are already viewed as the ideal research base and testing ground for innovative, globally significant technologies such as telemedicine, smart cities, driverless vehicles and aquaculture.

Hawai‘i is a leader in solving the issues of our time. Much of what we do here in Hawai‘i is ground-breaking.

Hawai‘i is home to many talented individuals breaking new ground every day.

Hawai‘i is full of stories of business innovators blazing the trail to create new products and services.

The Big Island’s Tina Fitch turned her start-up Switchfly into a global software platform used by almost every major travel and hospitality company. Now, she’s returned home and started a second company, HobNob. I’d like to recognize Tina, who flew in to be with us this morning.

In our own state government, employees are helping us improve our services to the public every day.

One example is a team of young millennials known as “The Three Amigos” – Jodie Nakamura, Ryan Mercado and Liam Tobin – the wait time for workers’ comp hearings has been cut in half. This 2017 Team of the Year from the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations launched a project to digitize mountains of paperwork from some 20,000 claims a year.

They’re just a sampling of our homegrown talent. We just need to do more to create the supportive environment around them that will launch and sustain their careers here in the islands.

I hope you’ll leave today knowing that we have laid important groundwork and that Hawai‘i is on the edge of something exciting.

Elderly

We have always been a state that cares about the elderly. We are making good on that.

I am proud that together we were able to pass Kupuna Caregiver legislation that provides assistance for full-time family caregivers who also have full-time jobs. This is a win for Hawaiʻi’s families.

We also worked to make sure those who have served our state get to retire with the dignity they were promised and deserve. With the Legislature’s support, we took aggressive steps that will save us $1.6 billion over the next 20 years.

As our kūpuna have taught us, paying our bills, honoring our obligations and saving for the future is how we build a brighter future. And we have done that.

One value that has guided this administration is to not simply pass on our debts to our kids and grandkids.

Together we have made tremendous strides in this task – building our Rainy Day fund to $310 million.

We have gone after the tax cheats and collected millions from those who were not paying their fair share.

And we are working to modernize our tax collection system to make it easier and fairer for the people of Hawaiʻi.

We have made needed changes to improve the system so we can collect the tax revenues we rely on for state services. I believe we’re on the right track to accomplish this major task.

Governor David Ige and wife, Dawn Ige, march in the 52nd Merrie Monarch Festival Royal Parade Saturday morning. Photo credit: Tiffany Epping.

End of Speech

At the beginning of my speech, I said Hawaiʻi is a beautiful and complex place. I believe that is our gift to our children and to our future.

Imagine a future economy for Hawai‘i that isn’t reliant solely on tourism and the military. Imagine a future where local entrepreneurs are inventing useful products and services that are sold across the globe.

Imagine that we use our temperate weather and four growing seasons to develop new high- tech agricultural tools that increase yields for farmers from Hawai‘i to India.

Imagine that we farm our nearshore ocean waters, too, feeding our own communities and the growing global demand for seafood. And with these new businesses, there’s new demand for scientists, technicians and marketing professionals.

And what does this mean for the people of Hawai‘i? It means a healthier economy with quality jobs that enable us to improve our schools, take care of our kūpuna and provide more affordable housing.

This future Hawai‘i isn’t as far off as it seems. We’ve already set things in motion. We’ve put stakes in the ground and we’re making progress.

To face the challenges of the future, Hawai‘i must seize opportunities, embrace change and identify the game-changing steps we need to take.

Together, the possibilities are limitless. I believe the qualities we treasure most about Hawai‘i are what will draw our children back to us.

When I ran for Governor four years ago I wanted to take my lifetime of public service and fundamentally change the path we were taking.

I have committed my life to the people of this state.

No matter what challenges we face, no matter what frustrations or issues we have with one another, I find my strength and courage in our shared sense of unity.

Mahalo and Aloha.”

Congresswoman Habanusa Response to State Address:

Congresswoman Colleen Hanabusa commented on Gov. Ige’s State address today by saying, “Even now in his fourth year, the governor’s State of the State address touched on many of the same issues Hawai‘i has been grappling with for decades. He did so in the same generalities, while avoiding other topics altogether.

“Imagining and setting goals are only the first steps in accomplishing progress. We cannot wait another four years for action. This election is about decisive leadership. The people of Hawai‘i deserve no less.”

Sponsored Content

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Stay in-the-know with daily or weekly
headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Cancel
×

Comments

This comments section is a public community forum for the purpose of free expression. Although Big Island Now encourages respectful communication only, some content may be considered offensive. Please view at your own discretion. View Comments