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Community presses Hawaii’s new Green Fee Advisory Council

Representatives of Hawaii’s new Green Fee Advisory Council who will make recommendations on how increased lodging fees should be spent to combat climate change said Wednesday that they understand the scrutiny they’re under and pledged transparency.

“There are a lot of eyeballs on this,” Jeff Mikulina, the council’s chair, said during the first public discussion of what’s expected to happen in the months ahead. “This is really first in the nation. We owe it to the visitor industry, the folks who are paying into this, and communities and future generations to be very clear and explicit about where the funding is going and hold folks accountable to execute those projects.”

Even before Wednesday’s 90-minute presentation, which included dozens of community questions, members of the all-volunteer council have been barraged by ideas and projects that people believe should be funded when Hawaii’s Transient Accommodations Tax increases by 0.75 percentage point on Jan. 1 for everyone — including local residents — who books hotel rooms, short-term vacation rentals or cruise ship accommodation.

Among the questions being debated by the 10-member advisory council are whether they should recommend “shovel-ready projects” that will produce results quickly or fund longer-term concepts — or both.

Whatever they decide in the remaining three months of 2025 will go to Gov. Josh Green for his consideration to turn into potential bills, which will then be debated by the Legislature when it convenes in January.

After the session ends in May, the first months of higher TAT will then go into the state’s general fund, where state departments and agencies will begin distributing it when the next fiscal year begins July 1.

The 0.75-percentage-point increase has been estimated to generate $100 million annually and Act 96 — which Green signed into law — clearly states that the funds have to be distributed equally between three separate “buckets”:

• Protect, manage and restore the state’s natural resources, including native forests, native plants and animals, aquatic resources, coastal lands, and freshwater resources.

• Increase the resilience of structures and infrastructure to natural and climate-­related disasters, such as hurricanes and sea level rise and perform hazard mitigation activities such as wildlife and flood mitigation.

• Improve the visitor experience, mitigate the impacts of tourism on the natural environment, ensure that the state’s natural resources are maintained for future residents and visitors, and support destination management, such as park improvements and beach improvement, nourishment, and maintenance projects.

Otherwise, there are plenty of ideas of what kind of specific projects should be funded.

The advisory council, Mikulina said, “is eager and dedicated to getting this right.”

Starting Jan. 1, Hawaii becomes the first state in the country to impose a statewide tax increase devoted to combating climate change.

Until then, Mikulina said, “time is really against us.”

Once the legislative session begins, Mikulina said, advisory council members will testify at the Legislature about how and why they came up with their recommendations to Green after considering all kinds of issues, including the visibility, risks and cost versus benefits of funding certain projects or programs.

The three members of the advisory council who appeared on Wednesday’s webinar were asked myriad questions, including how they will avoid conflicts of interests with some of the industries and interests they represent.

The answer was that an evaluation tool remains under development to produce objective results, which would note whether advisory council members have any conflicts.

They were also asked if the higher TAT would be distributed proportionately among the four major counties.

Advisory council member Keoni Kuoha said it remains one of the many issues that has yet to be determined.

“We have a tall order in front of us,” he said.

They were also asked how nonprofit organizations can apply for TAT money directly and responded that it will be up to state agencies and departments to roll out the funding to individual groups.

For now, the advisory council remains focused on the overarching issue of helping Hawaii protect itself from the threat of future wildfires, sea level rise, erosion and other climate-related threats, Mikulina said.

“This is truly a generational opportunity … and we need to get it right,” Mikulina said.
Source: The Garden Island

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