skip to main content
Hawaii State Seal

Hawai'i State Legislature

Ka 'Aha'ōlelo Moku'āina 'O Hawai'i

Photo of Stanley Chang

9
Hawai‘i Kai, Kuli‘ou‘ou, Niu, ‘Āina Haina, Wai‘alae-Kāhala, Diamond Head, Kaimukī, Kapahulu
Stanley Chang represents East Honolulu, Diamond Head to Hawaii Kai, in the Hawaii State Senate. A lifelong resident of Waialae-Kahala, Stanley attended Wai-Kahala Preschool, Kahala Elementary School, and Iolani School before attending college and law school at Harvard University. He practiced real estate law at Cades Schutte in Honolulu. Stanley served four years on the Honolulu City Council from 2011 to 2015. In 2016, he was elected to the State Senate as its youngest member, defeating the only Republican member and making the Hawaii Senate the first legislative chamber in the United States without a minority party since 1983. As chair of the Committee on Housing since 2018, Stanley has pursued an innovative public sector housing program modeled on the successful Singapore and Vienna, Austria models to solve Hawaii’s decades-long affordable housing shortage.

Stanley is married to Annie and has a two year old daughter, Elizabeth.
Education
   •  Wai-Kahala Preschool
   •  Kahala Elementary School
   •  Iolani School
   •  Harvard College
   •  Harvard Law School

Public Service
   •  Honolulu City Council Member (2011 - 2015)
   •  Hawaii State Senate (2016 - Present), Chair of Housing Committee

Private Sector
   •  Cades Schutte LLP, practiced real estate law

Show Archived News
Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Sunshine Blog: If The Iceman Commeth, He Better Drop That Mask

Short takes, outtakes, our takes and other stuff you should know about public information, government accountability and ethical leadership in Hawai‘i.

Originally published by Honolulu Civil Beat; click here to read the column on civilbeat.org.

By The Sunshine Blog | February 18, 2026

I’ve just seen a face: One of the first bills to pass the state Senate and move to the House this session comes in response to the brutal federal immigration crackdowns that have drawn national ire in Minneapolis, Los Angeles and other “blue” locales. Senate Bill 2203 would prohibit anonymous policing for all levels of government but with important exceptions.

One of the bill’s co-sponsors, Sen. Karl Rhoads, took to the Senate floor Tuesday to explain that those exceptions include when undercover work is involved, when protective gear for various hazards is used, and for cops riding motorcycles. It also allows masks in law enforcement situations as long as at least one officer shows his or her face.

“Events on the continent have focused attention on law enforcement practices, and we’d like to avoid the abuses that have been seen on the contiguous 48, and this bill will help,” said Rhoads.

All 22 of Rhoads’ Democratic colleagues voted in favor of SB 2203, including its primary author, Stanley Chang. But the three Republicans — Brenton Awa, Samantha DeCorte and Kurt Fevella — opposed the measure. And some of the only testimony in opposition came from the Honolulu Police Department.

If the House moves as smoothly and expeditiously on SB 2303 as did the Senate, the anti-mask measure (one of nine that were introduced this session) could be one of the first bills to make it to Gov. Josh Green’s desk for his expected signature. Cue photo op in the Capitol’s fifth floor Ceremonial Room.

Police inquiry: The Honolulu Police Commission continues its search for a new police chief to replace Joe Logan, who retired somewhat abruptly last summer. The executive search firm, Public Sector Search & Consulting, wants people to fill out an online survey, which The Blog was sorry to see is not the most user-friendly form.

Still, the survey is just one of the first steps the consultant and commission are taking toward community involvement. It asks three basic questions seeking your views on what professional and leadership qualities the chief should have as well as what you think the priorities for the department should be.

After The Blog found a stronger pair of reading glasses it took about 5 minutes to answer. It’s well worth the time to help get this long-overdue show on the road.

The commission is still predicting at least June before a new Honolulu police chief is selected.

Bench warmers: Gov. Josh Green has a new list of potential judges to choose from, these for a spot on the Intermediate Court of Appeals. The last The Blog heard, the governor is also still mulling over who to pick for the chief justice post on the Hawaiʻi Supreme Court.

Green has less than 30 days left to fill the ICA opening from the names sent to him by the Judicial Selection Commission. The lucky winner will also need to be confirmed by the Senate.

News junkies will recognize at least a couple of the finalists. One is Dan Gluck, now a deputy corporation counsel for Honolulu. He is a Harvard Law School graduate and perhaps best known as the former director of the Hawaiʻi State Ethics Commission and former ACLU legal director.

He was also up for the Court of Appeals in 2021 but ran into a turbulent confirmation process when objections were raised over race and gender on the ICA. Gov. David Ige chose Gluck as his nominee over several women, including a Native Hawaiian woman who was also a judge (Gluck had no judge experience.) Gluck ended up gracefully backing out saying he recognized and appreciated the concerns, just as the Senate voted against his confirmation.

Another perennial judge wannabe on the ICA list this time is Lance Collins, a Maui attorney. He is also on the list for the current Supreme Court chief justice gig. And he was on the list for ICA in 2021 when the Gluck controversy erupted as well as in other years.

Others on the ICA nomination list are Nickolas Kacprowski, a partner in the Dentons law firm. He’s been on the finalist list before too, as recently as 2025.

The fourth finalist is Robert Nakatsuji, a deputy prosecuting attorney for Honolulu.

Help wanted, and ASAP: Three watchdog agencies critical to keeping politicians and lobbyists in line are desperately in need of new blood, all at a time when the nefarious role of money in politics is in the headlines practically every day:

 •  The Judicial Council is seeking applicants to fill a current vacancy on the five-member Campaign Spending Commission. It’s a voluntary gig, but reasonable expenses such as travel are covered. Applications are available here, and the deadline is March 13.
 •  The Judicial Council has also extended the deadline (also to March 13) to submit applications to fill two upcoming vacancies on the five-member Hawaiʻi State Ethics Commission. It’s also voluntary and with some expenses covered. The Ethics Commission takes on ethical issues involving legislators, registered lobbyists and state employees. Applications are available here.
 •  And the Honolulu Ethics Commission is seeking an executive director to serve as legal counsel and chief executive officer of the commission. The paid position (the annual salary range is $177,429 – $197,376) has been empty since Jan. 1, when Jan Yamane resigned. The deadline for applications is March 31, and the job begins June 1.

I, Robot: The Blog was amazed to find a new feature making the rounds of the State Capitol this session. It cleans floors, it costs $127,000 and it’s called the T380AMR Robotic Floor Scrubber.

“It operates autonomously, which lets us allocate our staff to higher priority, more complex tasks and assignments,” James Kurata, administrator of the Central Services Division at the Department of Accounting and General Services, told The Blog.

The robot T380AMR can clean narrow aisles and spaces, “all while working safely alongside employees and customer,” Kurata said. It’s powered by BrainOS, an advanced artificial intelligence and robotic technology platform from Tennant partner Brain Corporation.

“This technology increases efficiency and productivity, giving us a more consistent, thorough, faster cleaning as compared to manual methods,” said Kurata. “It also lets us save your taxpayer dollars by reducing labor costs, minimizing water and chemical usage, and lowering workplace accidents.”




Thursday, March 5, 2026

Amendment to bill could resume HCDA's 99-year leasehold project in Kakaako

Originally published by Pacific Business News; click here to read the article on bizjournals.com/pacific.

By Nichole Villegas | February 11, 2026

At the beginning of last year, the Hawaii Community Development Authority acquired two plots of land in Kakaako at the corner of Ward Avenue and Kapiolani Boulevard for the development of a mixed use and mixed-income residential building with units for sale under a 99-year ground lease. But the project was put on pause a few months ago due to economic concerns within the housing market including the amount of buyer interest.

However, Senate Bill 2061, introduced this legislative session by Sen. Stanley Chang, would remove or modify the restrictions attached to the leasehold in hopes of making the units more feasible and marketable to buyers, HCDA Executive Director Craig Nakamoto told PBN.

The two properties owned by HCDA are currently home to a Jack in the Box, located at 875 Kapiolani Blvd., and the Galiher Office Building at 610 Ward Ave., which has a mural of former President Barack Obama painted on side of the building.

The land, totaling 26,626 square feet, was acquired in January 2025 as a pilot for the HCDA’s first 99-year leasehold program under which affordable and market condominium units on state-owned and county-owned land in urban redevelopment sites would be sold to qualified residents under the leasehold.

“It's kind of another tool in the toolbox to try to address the shortage of housing, especially workforce housing,” Nakamoto said. “If this works in Kakaako, it could be a tool that we could use in other parts of the island.”

The leasehold program was introduced and passed through SB865, introduced by Chang in 2023, which also appropriated $1.5 million to HCDA for the pre-development work.

HCDA acquired the land from Howard Hughes Holdings (NYSE: HHH) through a non-cash consideration or purchase price of 163,000 square feet of floor area, which translated in dollars to $12.22 million, based on an agreed-upon value of $75 per square foot.

“The property was appraised at $15 million so we purchased the property for less than appraised value,” Nakamoto said.

Developer Ko Laila LLC was selected to develop the pilot project, which would provide 370 units, with 60% set aside as reserved housing for residents earning at or below 140% area Median Income, which for a family of four in Honolulu is $212,800. The other 40% of the units would be sold as market rate, and there would also be commercial space in the development.

As the developer completed its due diligence three to four months ago, which included looking at the current market, the developer and HCDA agreed to put the project on pause before moving to presales, which would have been the next step.

The reason for the pause was due to concern for buyer interest in the units, mainly because of increased buyer uncertainty in the economy, high interest rates and competition from two other projects in Kakaako – Stanford Carr Development's Kahuina and Castle and Cooke's Waiakoa, which both offer fee-simple, instead of leasehold, affordable units for sale.

Due to the rising cost of construction, the cost of the leasehold units compared to the fee simple units in the other projects, would have been too close to justify the restrictions that come with a leasehold.

The 2023 bill introduced by Chang imposed stricter restrictions than HCDA’s usual two to 10 year living requirement and shared equity. It states that all units under the 99-year leasehold must be owner-occupied as residential use in perpetuity for the entire lease.

The new bill introduced by Chang would adjust the owner-occupant restrictions to only be applicable to the reserved units and would reduce the owner-occupant timeline requirement to 10 years instead of in perpetuity.

“That made a lot of sense,” Nakamoto said, “because to have the market units subject to that “in perpetuity,” was going to make the market units unsellable, too.”

However, the bill stipulates that at the time of the initial sales, 100% of the units in the project, market and reserved, must be offered for sale for owner-occupied residential use only. But, after 60 days, if there are any unsold units, up to 40% of the market units may be sold to Hawaii state residents without the owner-occupant requirement.

With a total development cost of $279 million, the average cost to build one unit is $740,000, Nakamoto told PBN. The reserved units would be priced at $368,100 to $644,700 for a one-bedroom and $650,000 to $725,300 for a two-bedroom. The market-rate units would be priced at $879,200 to $974,200 for a two-bedroom, $957,300 to $1.21 million for a three-bedroom and $1.33 million to $1.4 million for a four-bedroom.

In comparison, the affordable units in Kahuina, which are open for presales, range in price from one-bedrooms starting at $598,888, two-bedrooms starting at $692,800 and three-bedrooms starting at $839,900.

The bill has passed first reading and was referred to a committee on Jan. 22, and if the amendment passes into law, Nakamoto said HCDA will begin presales if the market conditions are right. If the pilot program is a success, then the plan is to replicate it for other HCDA-owned sites.




Thursday, March 5, 2026

State lawmakers weigh public funding for Michelin restaurant guide in Hawaii

Originally published by Pacific Business News; click here to read the article on bizjournals.com/pacific.

By Virginia Noone | February 9, 2026

The state is considering a proposal to spend state money to pay for the creation of a Michelin Guide covering Hawaii restaurants in an effort to boost tourism.

Senate Bill 2072 proposes funding from the state's general fund go toward Michelin — the organization that awards Michelin stars — to evaluate Hawaii restaurants and publish an official guide. A Michelin Guide would give restaurateurs in Hawaii a chance to earn a coveted Michelin star rating.

The Michelin Guide, owned by the French tire manufacturer, is the world’s most widely recognized authority on fine dining. Michelin Guides are usually created only when a government or tourism authority pays for the guide to exist in that region. The creation of a guide is often done as a strategy to increase tourism.

It’s unclear exactly how much bringing a Michelin Guide to Hawaii would cost — other states have paid varying sums, as there does not seem to be a standard price.

In Florida, which received its first round of Michelin stars in 2022, the state’s guide was funded with more than $1.5 million from state and city tourism budgets, according to an investigation by The Miami Herald.

In Atlanta, the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau paid as much as $1 million to bring the Michelin Guide to town, as reported by the Atlanta Business Chronicle.

According to Hawaii’s SB 2072, the money would come from state general revenues. The bill leaves the dollar amount blank, which is common in early versions of bills. The actual amount would be decided later during the budget process.

The funds would be handled by the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism.

Supporters often argue that creating a Michelin Guide can boost prestige and visitor spending, while critics sometimes question whether public money should support a private rating system.

The Hawaii Tourism Association is one of the groups supporting the bill, according to the HTA’s public affairs officer, Jill Radke.

The bill, which passed first reading on Jan. 26, is slated for a public hearing at the Senate's committee on Economic Development and Tourism on Tuesday.




Thursday, March 5, 2026

Hawaii Senators Take Aim At Developers With Vienna-Style Housing Crackdown

Originally published by Hoodline; click here to read the article on hoodline.com.

By Erin Collins | February 4, 2026

Developers using public funds to build affordable rentals may soon be required to reinvest extra profits into new housing rather than keeping the earnings, under SB2194, a proposal described as inspired by the "Vienna model." Advanced on Tuesday by the Senate Committee on Housing, the bill aims to tighten eligibility for the state’s Rental Housing Revolving Fund, ensuring that the funds continually support the creation of additional affordable units instead of being diverted as developer profits.

Committee moves bill toward second reading

The Senate Committee on Housing voted unanimously to recommend SB2194 for second reading, with Chair Sen. Stanley Chang joined by Sens. Troy Hashimoto, Brandon Elefante and Karl Rhoads. Chang cast the measure as a way to stop developers from walking away with a "windfall profit" instead of using public support to build more units, according to Maui Now.

What the bill would change

SB2194 would restrict eligibility for Rental Housing Revolving Fund awards to government agencies or organizations that are legally obligated to reinvest any financial surplus, aside from development fees, back into housing construction. The bill's findings cite the state's 2006 purchase of Kukui Gardens for $132.5 million as a touchstone example and note that roughly 15,000 affordability restrictions across the islands are set to expire by 2100, according to the bill text on LegiScan.

Why supporters invoke the Vienna model

The "Vienna model" centers on limited-profit housing associations that can generate a surplus but must funnel those funds into building or preserving more affordable homes instead of distributing profits to owners. Sen. Chang has promoted ALOHA Homes and limited-profit housing ideas as part of that broader strategy. Supporters say this kind of setup turns public investment into a self-sustaining development cycle, while analysts warn it will have to be carefully tailored to Hawaii's existing financing tools and housing market realities. Background on the approach and Chang's plan is available from Sen. Chang's office.

State housing agency raises concerns

Hawaiʻi Housing Finance & Development Corp. Executive Director Dean Minakami told lawmakers he is concerned that requiring "all" surplus to be reinvested could narrow the pool of eligible applicants and threaten the financial stability of smaller nonprofits. He suggested that legislators consider a specific reinvestment percentage or clearer parameters that would hold projects accountable without making it impossible for organizations to keep their doors open, according to Maui Now.

Next steps and stakes

The measure now heads to the powerful Senate Ways and Means Committee, where senators will have to decide how strict they want to be about reinvestment rules and how the policy would work in practice. The Rental Housing Revolving Fund is administered by the Hawaiʻi Housing Finance & Development Corporation and currently provides low-interest equity-gap loans to qualified projects, according to HHFDC. Lawmakers, housing providers and nonprofits will be watching Ways and Means to see whether it keeps tight reinvestment requirements or moves toward a compromise that preserves enough financial room for developers and nonprofits to keep building.




Thursday, March 5, 2026

Hawaii lawmakers to confront housing affordability, tourism volatility in 2026

Originally published by the Honolulu Star-Advertiser; click here to read the article on staradvertiser.com.

By Allison Schaefers | December 28, 2025

Hawaii’s housing crisis is often described in numbers, but for state Sen. Stanley Chang, it’s personal.

His father, an immigrant from China, bought a home on one state salary. Today, Chang says, it would take him 40 years of his full salary to buy that same house — a stark example of the generational pressures reshaping Hawaii.

Those pressures are mounting as the state faces a predicted mild recession next year, and as Hawaii lawmakers head into the 2026 legislative session to confront housing affordability, tourism volatility and shifting job markets.

More than a decade after the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization urged investment in economic security, health care, pensions and children, its latest report shows that Hawaii’s elder population is growing faster than expected. By 2035, 1 in 4 residents will be 65 or older, and by 2050 the gap between what seniors consume and what they earn is projected to nearly double.

A key finding is that the number residents 75 and older — “super seniors” who require far more medical and long‑term care — is growing significantly, said UHERO professor emeritus Andrew Mason, who authored the report “Aging and Hawaii’s Generational Economy,” along with Michael Abrigo, a research fellow at the Philippine Institute for Development Studies.

Hawaii, Mason warned, is not prepared. Aging creates “pressure across generations,” with fewer workers supporting more seniors and fewer children.

Mason described the interdependence between generations as a “whole system of shifting resources” that is “very complicated,” and he noted that “we don’t know as much about it as we should,” even as population aging is poised to strain it further.

He argued that policymakers often ignore these linkages: “What we do with regard to seniors is going to rebound back onto children,” and changes affecting workers “are going to affect seniors.”

Gov. Josh Green’s supplemental budget reflects the mounting strain.

His $10.58 billion proposal for fiscal year 2027, which begins July 1, is up from $10.48 billion from fiscal 2026. It boosts spending on infrastructure, construction, housing and health care, and leans on $903 million in new bonds to stabilize the economy amid rising costs and federal uncertainty.

Rep. Adrian Tam (D-­Waikiki), a 33-year-old millennial, sees the consequences in his district, where 48% of residents are seniors.

“When you lose younger people, you lose support for seniors,” he said. “Who is going to staff our hospitals? Who is going to drive the Handi-Van?”

Economic security

Mason said that economic security for seniors depends heavily on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, all of which face sustainability challenges. He added that the shift from pensions to 401(k)s has increased individual risk in retirement planning. Pensions have a defined benefit, but 401(k)s carry more risk to individuals because they depend on contributions and investment performance.

Mason pointed to the Hawaii Retirement Savings Program, projected to launch in mid-2026 to provide a retirement savings option for private sector workers who do not have access to an employer-sponsored plan. It’s a step toward greater security, Mason said.

Mason said better jobs and flexible work arrangements for seniors would empower some to keep contributing to the economy and improve their own economic security.

Younger workers face their own barriers.

Tam said Hawaii must create better jobs and pathways to homeownership; even as a legislator, he couldn’t afford a home until his early 30s.

He supports expanding the film industry, strengthening tech tax credits, reducing the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands waiting list and cracking down on illegal vacation rentals — a recurring issue before the House Committee on Tourism, which he chairs.

At 43, Chang is at the upper end of the millennial generation, so he relates not only to the pressures facing younger millennials like Tam but also to those experienced by Gen X—such as juggling the needs of aging parents while raising children.

Chang (D-Hawaii Kai, Kuliouou, Niu, Aina Haina, Waialae-Kahala, Diamond Head, Kaimuki, Kapahulu), said he and his wife, Annie, own a condo but buying a single-family home to accommodate their growing family is still out of reach despite two incomes and parental help.

“Every government elected official says housing is the top priority, but somehow we don’t see the action,” he said. “Hawaii is failing —it’s an F minus.”

He noted that Hawaii has made progress on low income housing — more than $1 billion appropriated over the past decade, with the state now financing about half of all the low-income units built — but that the middle class pipeline “has collapsed.”

He supports a 99-year-leasehold model inspired by Singapore, with state-built or state-partnered condo towers sold at 10%-20% below market. “Like Costco gas,” he said. “Cheaper, not free.”

Chang said he also supports expanding lower-interest rate programs so that more buyers can qualify.

Lawmakers are considering changes to the Dwelling Unit Revolving Fund, which is managed by the Hawaii Housing and Finance Development Corporation , to help more Hawaii residents become homeowners. HHFDC partners with developers of for-sale projects by purchasing a portion of equity in designated units for qualified buyers.

Buyers pay a reduced upfront price and, when they sell, pay HHFDC a prorated share of the unit’s appreciation.

‘Cradle-to-grave’

Spending on children and education declined between UHERO’s 2012 and 2022 studies, a trend Mason warned “will bite us back,” since today’s children are tomorrow’s taxpayers and caregivers.

“Protecting low-income individuals across all generations should be a priority,” he said. “Public programs remain the primary source of support, and community-based solutions alone are insufficient.”

Mason said property tax reform could help better fund education as property taxes go to the counties, while the state funds public education.

State Sen. Sharon Moriwaki, (D, Waikiki, Ala Moana, McCully, Kakaako), who is vice chair of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means, said the state must adopt a “cradle-to-grave” approach to shoring up its generational economy. Housing solutions, she said, must be paired with workforce development and stronger education. She cited Ready Keiki, minimum wage increases, paid internships, career advancement programs and partnerships between the University of Hawaii, the state Department of Education and employers.

“Kids need careers, not just jobs,” she said.

She added that schools must teach practical life skills and that the state should shift toward prevention, citing wellness models that emphasize staying healthy to reduce long term costs.

Health care faces both funding and workforce challenges, particularly in caring for the elderly.

Moriwaki said her own baby boomer generation faced hardship, but today’s landscape is marked by a deeper disconnect — employers struggling to hire, young people unable to find work in their fields and schools that continue to prioritize academics over practical life skills.

She said lawmakers added financial literacy to public education requirements, and now need to consider adding health planning.

“Our kids need to learn how to live well,” she said, a discussion that she said has come up in her yoga classes.

UHERO associate professor Colin Moore said investment across generations — especially working families — is essential. “If working families can’t see a future here, they’ll leave,” he said. “And once they go, they rarely come back.”

But he warned that the people Hawaii most needs have the least ability to influence the system. Working-­age people rarely have time to testify, and Hawaii lacks a strong advocacy organization for them. As a result, policies like paid family leave stall year after year.

Chang said Hawaii’s younger residents, who are not yet voting age, also need more consideration. “If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu,” he said.

Moore emphasized that the core issue is not generational conflict but interdependence — how the stability of seniors and children relies on retaining a strong base of working-age residents. As federal programs face long-term strain, he expects the Legislature will confront even harder trade-offs.

“If it’s not addressed, it’s only going to get worse,” Moore said.




Thursday, March 5, 2026

Is Senator’s Affordable Housing Plan Happening? Depends Who You Ask

State authority says market conditions and project requirements put Aloha Homes on the shelf. Sen. Stanley Chang says the Kakaʻako development remains underway.

Originally published by Honolulu Civil Beat; click here to read the article on civilbeat.org.

By Jeremy Hay | December 23, 2025

The Jack in the Box at a busy street corner in Kakaʻako displays no hint of state Sen. Stanley Chang’s aspirations to tackle Hawaiʻi’s housing crunch.

Until the end of September, the state-owned property the fast food restaurant occupies at Ward Avenue and Kapiʻolani Boulevard on Oʻahu was clearly a testing ground for a concept Chang has long argued could transform the state’s beleaguered housing landscape.

A constricted housing supply and sky-high real estate prices are blamed for contributing to Hawaiʻi’s steep cost of living, for driving locals to find cheaper housing elsewhere, and as a factor in high rates of homelessness.

Chang has pushed his Aloha Homes idea as a solution since at least 2018 — attracting some national attention for it along the way — saying it was a way to develop housing faster, less expensively and more efficiently.

The Jack in the Box property seemed to indicate his idea had gained traction. Now that’s uncertain.

Aloha Homes — for Affordable, Locally Owned Homes for All — is modeled on Singapore’s system of government-run public housing, home to about 80% of that island nation’s population. In Chang’s version, Hawaiʻi residents, regardless of income, could buy condominiums at below market prices with leasehold terms, under which the properties would revert to government ownership after 99 years.

Development costs would be recouped through unit sales, making projects “revenue neutral” so funds could be plowed into new projects, Chang said.

The idea inched ahead. In 2023, the Legislature allocated $1.5 million for preliminary Aloha Homes planning. Then, a breakthrough: Gov. Josh Green included $15 million for it in his 2026-2027 budget.

“I anticipate this will be the first 99-year leasehold, revenue-neutral project in the state of Hawaiʻi and it will hopefully be a big success and spawn the construction of many more,” Chang said during a briefing on housing legislation he held for the public after the 2025 legislative session.

Now, nearly a year after it won Green’s support, Chang’s vision may have faltered again, although the senator says it hasn’t.

The head of the state agency charged with shepherding the project forward said it’s on hold, and that he let Chang know.

“We had really high hopes for this. When I say that, I’m not giving it the kiss of death,” said Craig Nakamoto, executive director of the Hawaiʻi Community Development Authority. “All it is saying is, we’re going to take a pause. Maybe in two or three years we can resurrect this project again. Or there’s another type of workforce housing project.”

Chang, though, put it this way: “There’s still a lot more work that needs to be done in the pre-development stage before shovels go into the ground and before the actual building gets built. But it’s underway.”

He told Civil Beat conversations are continuing about how to move it ahead, if perhaps at a slower pace.

“There’s just a bunch of different paths forward at this point,” Chang said.

Stipulations And The Market

Nakamoto said rising construction costs, high interest rates and climbing condo insurance rates are among factors that pushed up the cost of developing the project, to the point where units might not be saleable.

“Our goal, of course, is to develop a product that’s ultimately going to sell in the market,” he said. “If we can’t sell it, then ultimately the project is not successful.”

The project may also have been hampered, Nakamoto said, by some of the signature features of the Aloha Homes concept.

Those included stipulations that condo owners would have to live in their units and couldn’t own other personal or commercial real estate, which they would have to sell within six months of purchasing a unit.

Those conditions were intended to steer the units toward Hawaiʻi residents seeking the opportunity to own their own homes, rather than real estate investors hoping to take advantage of lower-priced condo properties.

According to the minutes of a June 4 development authority meeting at which the project was discussed, it was to have 351 units, 60% of them designated as affordable. That would reserve them for buyers with household incomes between 80% and 140% of the median area income, currently from $85,000 to $149,000 on Oʻahu.

The remainder were to be sold at a “market” rate, with the largest units, which have four bedrooms and three bathrooms, costing $1 million. Comparable neighboring properties were priced at $1.5 to $1.7 million.

Another stipulation of the pilot project was that owners of affordable units would have to share profits from the sale of their properties with the authority. That stipulation wouldn’t have applied to owners of market-rate units.

Together with the 99-year leasehold terms, those conditions might have made the Aloha Homes condos a tougher sell, Nakamoto said.

“As we found out,” he said, “those things could have an impact on marketing and sales.”

‘It Wasn’t Prudent’

Although the authority had spent more than a year laying the groundwork for the project with a prospective developer, the decision was made that “it wasn’t prudent” to move to the presale stage, where the building would be marketed to potential buyers, Nakamoto said.

Chang, though, said those conditions were not set in concrete.

“It needs to be a project for local people, that’s the whole point,” Chang said. “But I think we can talk about different restrictions that we could remove without fundamentally undermining that purpose.”

He conceded the 99-year leasehold terms might be too onerous for some buyers and said he isn’t wedded to that condition.

But he maintained there are many reasons that feature would be appealing. Those include that the leasehold is long enough that original buyers would not have to move during their lifetime. And the leasehold feature drives down costs, so Aloha Homes units would be priced considerably lower than comparable properties.

Also, Chang said, leasehold status offers far more security than is enjoyed by one group of potential Aloha Homes buyers — renters who have zero equity in their home and leases that are often month-to-month.

Adjustments Being Made

That the project had been deemed unrealistic even with the community development authority helming it wasn’t a good sign, said Justin Tyndall, an associate professor of economics at University of Hawaiʻi who researches housing.

Beyond construction costs, navigating the bureaucracy, regulatory and permitting hurdles that development projects face would have been key challenges faced by the Aloha Homes project, he said.

“If a government housing program is forced to navigate the same hurdles and uncertainty,” he said, “it is hard to see what advantage it would have over private development.”

At Housing Hawaiʻi’s Future, director of policy Perry Arrasmith said he hopes Chang’s idea can survive, even if it needs adjustments.

“The question we’re going to be asking ourselves in this next (legislative) session is if we want this model, if we want this experiment to continue, then what barriers need to be removed to help push it forward,” Arrasmith said. “We’re going to be looking to leaders like Sen. Chang for direction.”

The development authority is asking the right questions, Arrasmith said, when it comes to whether the special conditions attached to the Aloha Homes project would deter buyers.

“If it wants to succeed, it needs to be as flexible as it can be to market pressures,” he said. “And perhaps that’s where we need fewer restrictions.”

As of December, Nakamoto said nothing in the project’s status had changed and it remained on pause.

Chang, again, said things are moving forward.

Based on hard-won experience nudging Aloha Homes along, he said legislation is being drafted to address some of the issues Nakamoto raised, such as removing the condition that prospective buyers not own other real estate.

“That’s the main initiative right now,” Chang said.

There is also interest in how sales in nearby condominiums go, as an indicator of how strong the market is, Chang said, and he called the slight easing in interest rates in recent months a promising trend.

 2025 Allowance Report
 Measures Introduced in 2025
Measure and Title
SB3 SD1
RELATING TO WATER.
SB5 SD1
RELATING TO LEGISLATIVE VACANCIES.
SB6
RELATING TO NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT.
SB7
RELATING TO HEALTHY WORKPLACES.
SB8 SD1
RELATING TO JURY DUTY.
SB10
RELATING TO AIR FILTERS.
SB12
RELATING TO NEONICOTINOIDS.
SB18 SD1
RELATING TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION.
SB22
RELATING TO FISHERIES.
SB23
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB24 SD1
RELATING TO LIMITED-PROFIT HOUSING ASSOCIATIONS.
SB25 SD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB26 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING.
SB27 SD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB28
RELATING TO THE LAND USE COMMISSION.
SB29
RELATING TO THE MOTOR VEHICLE RENTAL INDUSTRY.
SB30 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO MOPEDS.
SB31 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO PROPERTY.
SB32
RELATING TO THE PSYCHOLOGY INTERJURISDICTIONAL COMPACT.
SB33
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM.
SB34
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB35 SD1
RELATING TO THE RENTAL HOUSING REVOLVING FUND.
SB36
RELATING TO THE LAND USE COMMISSION.
SB37
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB38 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB39
RELATING TO VOTER REGISTRATION.
SB40 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO STATE FINANCES.
SB41
RELATING TO THE CONVEYANCE TAX.
SB42
RELATING TO THE RENTAL HOUSING REVOLVING FUND.
SB44
RELATING TO HOUSING DISCRIMINATION.
SB45
RELATING TO RESTITUTION.
SB46
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB47 SD1
RELATING TO STATE HOLIDAYS.
SB48
RELATING TO THE STATE BUILDING CODE COUNCIL.
SB49 SD1
RELATING TO TERMINAL ILLNESSES.
SB50 SD1
RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION.
SB51 SD1
RELATING TO PUBLIC FINANCING FOR CANDIDATES TO ELECTED OFFICE.
SB52 SD1
RELATING TO CARBON OFFSETS.
SB53
RELATING TO THE SUPPLEMENTAL NUTRITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.
SB54
RELATING TO AN INTERSTATE COMPACT TO PHASE OUT CORPORATE WELFARE.
SB55 SD1
RELATING TO ADMINISTRATIVE RULES.
SB56
RELATING TO CHILD CARE.
SB57
RELATING TO CORPORATIONS.
SB58 SD1
RELATING TO PUBLIC ASSISTANCE.
SB59
RELATING TO ALGORITHMIC DISCRIMINATION.
SB63
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB64
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB65 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB66 SD2 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB67 SD1
RELATING TO INCLUSIONARY ZONING.
SB68 SD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING.
SB69 SD1
RELATING TO DEPOSITS OF PUBLIC FUNDS.
SB70 SD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB71 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO THE RENTAL HOUSING REVOLVING FUND.
SB72
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB73 SD1
RELATING TO COUNTY PERMITS.
SB74
RELATING TO STATE CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.
SB75
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB76 SD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB77
RELATING TO RESIDENTIAL LEASEHOLDS.
SB78
RELATING TO VOTER REGISTRATION.
SB79 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION REVIEWS.
SB80
RELATING TO THE DWELLING UNIT REVOLVING FUND.
SB81
RELATING TO VOTING.
SB82
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB84
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB85
RELATING TO PERMITS.
SB86
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB87
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB88 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII NATIONAL GUARD.
SB89
RELATING TO TOBACCO PRODUCTS.
SB90
RELATING TO A COMPENSATORY TIME CASH-OUT PILOT PROGRAM.
SB91
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB92
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MEDICAL RESPONSE.
SB93
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB94
RELATING TO TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDERS.
SB95
RELATING TO VEHICLE SAFETY.
SB96
RELATING TO TRAFFIC CITATIONS.
SB97 SD2 HD2 CD2
RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLES.
SB98
RELATING TO LOW-SPEED ELECTRIC BICYCLES.
SB99
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT.
SB103 SD1
RELATING TO ELECTRIC VEHICLE BATTERIES.
SB104 SD2 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO CORRECTIONS.
SB105
RELATING TO LEGISLATIVE EMPLOYEES.
SB112 SD2
RELATING TO POLICE REPORTS.
SB114 SD1
RELATING TO ELECTIONS.
SB115 SD1
RELATING TO ATTACHMENT AND EXECUTION OF REAL PROPERTY.
SB116 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO DISCRIMINATION.
SB117 SD1
RELATING TO DEFAMATION.
SB118 SD1
RELATING TO THE CAMPAIGN SPENDING COMMISSION.
SB120
RELATING TO BUILDING CODES.
SB123 SD1
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB125 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO STATE ENTERPRISE ZONES.
SB126
RELATING TO NEONICOTINOIDS.
SB127 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL GRANTS.
SB128
RELATING TO TRESPASS.
SB130
RELATING TO SEARCH AND RESCUE.
SB131
RELATING TO PROCUREMENT.
SB132
RELATING TO SMALL BUSINESS LOANS.
SB133 SD2
RELATING TO ENERGY.
SB134
RELATING TO ELECTIONS.
SB135
RELATING TO THE LABELING OF MACADAMIA NUTS.
SB136
RELATING TO IRONWORKERS.
SB137 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO ELECTRIC UTILITIES.
SB139
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB140 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB141 SD1
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.
SB142 SD2
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB143
RELATING TO SPECIAL NUMBER PLATES.
SB144 SD2
RELATING TO CHIROPRACTIC.
SB145
RELATING TO DECLARATION OF WATER SHORTAGE AND EMERGENCY.
SB146 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB147 SD2
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB148 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO COMBAT SPORTS.
SB149
RELATING TO ACCESSIBILITY.
SB150 SD1
RELATING TO RED HILL.
SB151 SD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS.
SB152 SD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS.
SB153
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB154
RELATING TO EVICTION RECORDS.
SB155
RELATING TO EVICTIONS.
SB156
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB157 SD2
RELATING TO ANTITRUST.
SB158
RELATING TO PUBLIC BANKING.
SB159
RELATING TO SCHOOL IMPACT FEES.
SB160
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB161 SD1
RELATING TO COUNTY PERMITTING AND INSPECTION.
SB162
RELATING TO WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT.
SB163
RELATING TO THE RENTAL HOUSING REVOLVING FUND.
SB164
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB165
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB166
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB167
RELATING TO PERMITS.
SB168
RELATING TO SCHOOL IMPACT FEES.
SB169 SD1
RELATING TO REDRESS FOR WRONGFUL CONVICTION AND IMPRISONMENT.
SB170
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION ESTABLISHING THE RIGHT TO OWN ONE'S OWN DATA.
SB173 SD1
RELATING TO CHILD CARE.
SB174
RELATING TO FIREARMS AMMUNITION.
SB175 SD1
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE VI, SECTION 3, OF THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION TO INCREASE THE MANDATORY RETIREMENT AGE FOR STATE JUSTICES AND JUDGES.
SB177 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO AQUACULTURE.
SB178
RELATING TO SURFING.
SB188
RELATING TO A STATE PERMITTING OFFICE.
SB189 SD1
RELATING TO BREAST CANCER SCREENING.
SB201
RELATING TO STUDENT OUT-OF-SERVICE-AREA ATTENDANCE.
SB202 SD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB203
RELATING TO CRIME.
SB204
RELATING TO STATE WATER CODE PENALTIES.
SB205
RELATING TO THE COMMISSION ON WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT.
SB207
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION.
SB208
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES.
SB211
RELATING TO THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY.
SB214
RELATING TO INCOME.
SB215 SD1
RELATING TO TOWING COMPANIES.
SB220
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION FINANCING.
SB221
RELATING TO SCHOOL MEALS.
SB222 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB223 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO FIRE PREVENTION.
SB224 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO IDENTIFICATION.
SB225
RELATED TO DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE.
SB226
RELATING TO PRESCRIPTION DRUGS.
SB227 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB228 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO EXCITED DELIRIUM.
SB229
RELATING TO DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION FARM TO SCHOOL PROCUREMENT.
SB231
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL TOURISM.
SB232
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB233
RELATING TO CLIMATE RESILIENCE.
SB234
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB235
RELATING TO SCHOOL MEALS.
SB236
RELATING TO CESSPOOLS.
SB237
RELATING TO ADAPTATION PATHWAYS PLANNING.
SB238
RELATING TO WASTEWATER SYSTEMS.
SB240
RELATING TO THE RIGHT TO FARM.
SB246
RELATING TO CORAL REEFS.
SB247
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL LAND CONVEYANCE TAX.
SB248
RELATING TO DECENTRALIZATION OF DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION FARM TO SCHOOL.
SB249 SD1
RELATING TO LOCAL AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS.
SB251
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB292 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO SEXUAL EXPLOITATION.
SB293
RELATING TO REAL PROPERTY TRANSACTIONS.
SB294
RELATING TO HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT.
SB295 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO DOMESTIC ABUSE PROTECTIVE ORDERS.
SB296
RELATING TO MINORS.
SB297
PROPOSING A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF HAWAII TO PROTECT THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM.
SB298 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES.
SB299 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO LOAN REPAYMENT FOR HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS.
SB300
RELATING TO STATE LEGISLATIVE VACANCIES.
SB301 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO DOGS.
SB306
RELATING TO THE LANDLORD-TENANT CODE.
SB307 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO RECORDINGS OF LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITIES.
SB308 SD2
RELATING TO FIREARMS.
SB310
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB311 SD1 HD1
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION REGARDING THE FREEDOM OF SPEECH.
SB312 HD1
RELATING TO AUDIBLE VEHICLE REVERSE WARNING SYSTEMS.
SB315
RELATING TO FERAL PIGS.
SB316
RELATING TO INFRASTRUCTURE MAINTENANCE IN HOUSING SUBDIVISIONS.
SB317
RELATING TO LACTATION CONSULTANTS.
SB318
RELATING TO GENETIC INFORMATION.
SB320
RELATING TO PROPERTY FORFEITURE.
SB321 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB322 SD1
RELATING TO MEDICAID.
SB323
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB324
RELATING TO PHARMACISTS.
SB326 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO REVOLVING FUNDS.
SB327 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO INTERNSHIPS.
SB328 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB329 HD1
RELATING TO WATER POLLUTION.
SB330 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES PREVENTION.
SB331
RELATING TO THE CONTRACTOR REPAIR ACT.
SB332 SD1 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO FORECLOSURES.
SB333
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB334
RELATING TO TOURISM.
SB335
RELATING TO CANDIDATES.
SB336 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE DEFENSE OF STATE EMPLOYEES.
SB337 SD1
RELATING TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.
SB338 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB339
RELATING TO NEEDS ALLOWANCE.
SB340 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING IN PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT.
SB341
RELATING TO REIMBURSEMENT OF PUBLIC OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES.
SB345 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO PUBLIC FINANCING.
SB350 SD1
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO THE HAWAII CONSTITUTION TO PROTECT THE RIGHT TO CONTRACEPTION.
SB360
RELATING TO HOMELESSNESS.
SB361 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO THE COMMUNITY OUTREACH COURT.
SB363 SD1
RELATING TO FIREARMS.
SB364
RELATING TO STATE BOATING FACILITIES.
SB365
RELATING TO LEAF BLOWERS.
SB368
RELATING TO MEDICAL RECORDS.
SB369
RELATING TO RESILIENCY.
SB371 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO PROPERTY DAMAGE OF CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE FACILITIES.
SB372
RELATING TO STATE NAMING COMMISSION.
SB375 SD1
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT.
SB376 SD1
RELATING TO TAX CREDITS.
SB378 HD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.
SB379
RELATING TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING.
SB380
RELATING TO NON-GENERAL FUNDS.
SB381 SD1
RELATING TO PUBLIC AGENCY MEETINGS.
SB382 HD1
RELATING TO PROCUREMENT.
SB383 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO SMALL PURCHASES.
SB384 SD1
RELATING TO VICTIM RESTITUTION.
SB385 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB386
RELATING TO WATER SYSTEMS.
SB387 SD1
RELATING TO SERVICE ANIMALS.
SB388
RELATED TO TEACHER LOANS.
SB389
RELATING TO THE GENERAL EXCISE TAX.
SB391 SD1
RELATING TO RECYCLING.
SB392
RELATING TO ELECTRIC BICYCLES.
SB393
RELATING TO HOSPITALS.
SB394
RELATING TO THE SPAYING AND NEUTERING OF ANIMALS.
SB400
RELATING TO FIREARMS.
SB401 SD2 HD1 CD2
RELATING TO FIREARMS.
SB408
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB409
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.
SB410
RELATING TO STATE AND COUNTY EMPLOYMENT.
SB411 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS AT STATE SMALL BOAT HARBORS AND STATE PARKS.
SB412 SD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB413
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB414 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO RESTORING ACCESS TO DISASTER-AFFECTED AREAS.
SB415
RELATING TO TRAIL ACCESSIBILITY.
SB416 SD1
RELATING TO THE RESIDENTIAL LANDLORD-TENANT CODE.
SB418 SD1
RELATING TO REGULATORY SUNSET REVIEW IN HAWAII.
SB419 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB420 SD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB421 SD1
RELATING TO LITERACY.
SB422 HD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB423 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO THE EARLY LEARNING BOARD.
SB425 SD1
RELATING TO QUALIFIED COMMUNITY REHABILITATION PROGRAMS.
SB426 SD1
RELATING TO AN EARLY LEARNING APPRENTICESHIP GRANT PROGRAM.
SB431
RELATING TO PARKING FOR DISABLED PERSONS.
SB433
RELATING TO WEAPONS.
SB434
RELATING TO TREATMENT FOR MENTAL ILLNESS.
SB435 SD1
RELATING TO VOTING.
SB439 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO FEES.
SB440 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB441 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA.
SB442 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT.
SB444
RELATING TO STATE GOVERNMENT.
SB450 SD1
RELATING TO AUTISM.
SB451 SD1
RELATING TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.
SB455
RELATING TO MINIMUM WAGE.
SB462 SD1
RELATING TO PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS.
SB474 SD1
RELATING TO PSYCHOLOGISTS.
SB475
RELATING TO COLORECTAL CANCER.
SB476
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB477
RELATING TO DOMESTIC ABUSE PROTECTIVE ORDERS.
SB484
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB485 SD1
RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLES.
SB486
RELATING TO THE POMAIKAI HAWAII FUND.
SB487
RELATING TO A STATEWIDE DATA AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE GOVERNANCE AND DECISION INTELLIGENCE CENTER.
SB488
RELATING TO WATER FLUORIDATION.
SB489
RELATING TO TRANSIT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT.
SB490
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB491 SD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB492 SD1
RELATING TO GENERAL EXCISE TAX.
SB493 SD1
RELATING TO VETERINARIANS.
SB495
RELATING TO MEAT PROCESSING.
SB496 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB497
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB498 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL WORKFORCE HOUSING.
SB499
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB500 SD1
RELATING TO COFFEE LABELING.
SB501 SD1
RELATING TO CESSPOOLS.
SB502
RELATING TO VEHICLES.
SB503
RELATING TO DAM AND RESERVOIR SAFETY.
SB504 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB505
RELATING TO THE MINIMUM WAGE.
SB506 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB507
RELATING TO MEAT PROCESSING.
SB508
RELATING TO SEARCH AND RESCUE.
SB510
RELATING TO THE LAPAKAHI MARINE LIFE CONSERVATION DISTRICT.
SB512
RELATING TO FIREFIGHTING.
SB513 SD1
RELATING TO WATER.
SB514
RELATING TO WILDFIRES.
SB515
RELATING TO THE SUGAR-SWEETENED BEVERAGES FEE PROGRAM.
SB517
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB518
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY PERMITS.
SB519
RELATING TO AQUATIC LIFE.
SB520 SD1
RELATING TO WASTEWATER SYSTEMS.
SB521
RELATING TO ACCESS TO WATER ON HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS.
SB522 SD1
RELATING TO THE HALAULA AGRICULTURAL PARCEL.
SB523 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL BIOSECURITY.
SB525
RELATING TO MANDATORY PRIOR WRITTEN NOTICE AND CONSENT IN CONTRACTS TO PROVIDE CREMATION SERVICES.
SB526 SD1
RELATING TO THE WOMEN'S COURT.
SB527 SD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB529 SD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB530 SD1
RELATING TO BRAILLE LITERACY.
SB531
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB532 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.
SB533 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB534 SD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY.
SB535
RELATING TO FEDERAL LAND.
SB537
RELATING TO ORGANIC WASTE.
SB541
RELATING TO WATER QUALITY.
SB542
RELATING TO CESSPOOLS.
SB543
RELATING TO WATER.
SB544 HD1
RELATING TO SENTENCING OF MINOR DEFENDANTS.
SB546
RELATING TO ARBORISTS.
SB547 SD1
RELATING TO WATER CONSERVATION.
SB548 SD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII INVASIVE SPECIES COUNCIL.
SB549
RELATING TO SCHOOL MEALS.
SB552 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB554
RELATING TO WORKERS' COMPENSATION.
SB555
RELATING TO WORKERS' COMPENSATION.
SB556
RELATING TO RURAL EMERGENCY HOSPITALS.
SB557 SD1
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB558 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS.
SB561 SD1
RELATING TO CONSERVATION ENFORCEMENT.
SB562 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB563 SD1
RELATING TO WATER INFRASTRUCTURE.
SB564
RELATING TO INFRASTRUCTURE.
SB565 SD1
RELATING TO POLOLU VALLEY MANAGEMENT EFFORTS ON HAWAII ISLAND.
SB566
RELATING TO THE SPAYING AND NEUTERING OF ANIMALS.
SB567
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB568
RELATING TO FERAL ANIMALS.
SB569
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB570
RELATING TO GOATS.
SB572 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB573
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB575
RELATING TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION REVIEWS.
SB576 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATION.
SB577
RELATING TO RENTAL HOUSING PROJECT DISASTER RECOVERY PERMITS.
SB578
RELATING TO HISTORIC PROPERTY.
SB580
RELATING TO THE SCHOOL FACILITIES AUTHORITY.
SB581 SD1
RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT.
SB582 SD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM.
SB583 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO NAMING RIGHTS.
SB584
RELATING TO THE NATURAL ENERGY LABORATORY OF HAWAII AUTHORITY.
SB586 SD1
RELATING TO CLIMATE CHANGE.
SB587 SD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB588 SD2
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB589 SD1 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB590
RELATING TO THE STATE PARKS SPECIAL FUND.
SB593 SD1
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL DOG BREEDERS.
SB594
RELATING TO CRIMES AGAINST SENIORS.
SB595
RELATING TO POWERS OF ATTORNEY.
SB596
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB597 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO ADMINISTRATIVE DRIVERS LICENSE REVOCATION.
SB598 SD1
RELATING TO PROTECTIVE ORDERS.
SB599
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB600
RELATING TO FIREARMS.
SB601 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATED TO LAW ENFORCEMENT.
SB602
RELATING TO THE HAWAII PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITY.
SB603 SD1
RELATING TO VETERANS.
SB605
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB606
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND CONSUMER AFFAIRS.
SB607
RELATING TO DISABLED VETERANS.
SB608 SD1
RELATING TO VETERANS RIGHTS AND BENEFITS.
SB609 SD1
RELATING TO THE OFFICE OF VETERANS' SERVICES.
SB610
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB614 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO HAWAIIAN INDEPENDENCE DAY.
SB619
RELATING TO STREAM WATER QUALITY.
SB622
RELATING TO DUST MONITORING.
SB630
RELATING TO ABANDONED VEHICLES.
SB631
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT.
SB632
RELATING TO THE STATE BUILDING CODE.
SB638
RELATING TO EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES.
SB639 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANKS.
SB640
RELATING TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.
SB641 SD1
RELATING TO ALCOHOL.
SB642 SD2
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB643
RELATING TO ENERGY-EFFICIENCY PORTFOLIO STANDARDS.
SB644
RELATING TO REAL PROPERTY.
SB647
RELATING TO ELECTRIC BICYCLES.
SB648
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.
SB649
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB650
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB651
RELATING TO TAX EXPENDITURE ACCOUNTABILITY.
SB652
RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLE TIRES.
SB653
RELATING TO NUISANCE ABATEMENT.
SB655
RELATING TO RICHARD "BUFFALO" KEAULANA DAY.
SB656
RELATING TO WATER.
SB657 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO THE CENTER FOR CLIMATE RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT.
SB658 SD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII ANT LAB.
SB659 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.
SB660
RELATING TO ENERGY.
SB661 SD1
RELATING TO PLANT-BASED BUILDING MATERIALS.
SB662 SD1 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB663
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII COLLEGE OF TROPICAL AGRICULTURE AND HUMAN RESOURCES.
SB664
RELATING TO WATER QUALITY.
SB665
RELATING TO ENERGY.
SB666 SD1
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB667
RELATED TO TOXIC CHEMICALS.
SB672
RELATING TO CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB673
RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP FEES.
SB674 SD1
RELATING TO THE ENVIRONMENT.
SB675 SD1
RELATING TO CESSPOOLS.
SB676
RELATING TO ORGANIC WASTE.
SB677 SD1
RELATING TO A CLIMATE ADAPTATION AND RESILIENCE IMPLEMENTATION PLAN.
SB678 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB679
RELATING TO HURRICANE SHELTERS.
SB685
RELATING TO TAXATION OF POLLUTION.
SB686 SD1
RELATING TO THE COCONUT RHINOCEROS BEETLE PROGRAM.
SB688 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB689
RELATING TO FOOD SECURITY.
SB690
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB691 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO FAMILY COURTS.
SB692
RELATING TO SPRAY PAINT.
SB693 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE FOOD HUB PILOT PROGRAM.
SB694 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE DETENTION OF MINORS.
SB695
RELATING TO AMBULANCES.
SB696
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.
SB697 SD1
RELATING TO AN INCOME TAX CREDIT.
SB698
RELATING TO THE STATE BUILDING CODES.
SB699
RELATING TO DISASTER PREPAREDNESS.
SB700 SD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB701
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB702
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE I OF THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION TO RECOGNIZE AND PROTECT THE INHERENT AND INALIENABLE RIGHT OF ALL PEOPLE TO CLEAN WATER AND AIR, A HEALTHFUL ENVIRONMENT AND CLIMATE, HEALTHY NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS, AND BEACHES.
SB703
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB704
RELATING TO THE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT.
SB706 SD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB707
RELATING TO LAVA ZONE INSURANCE.
SB709 SD1
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB710 SD1
RELATING TO CHILD WELFARE.
SB711 SD1
RELATING TO GUBERNATORIAL APPOINTMENTS.
SB712
RELATING TO THE PRESCHOOL OPEN DOORS PROGRAM.
SB713
RELATING TO MEDICAID.
SB714
RELATING TO MEDICAID.
SB715
RELATING TO MEDICAID.
SB716 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO HAWAII EMPLOYMENT SECURITY LAW.
SB717 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.
SB718
RELATING TO EQUITY.
SB719
RELATING TO SUGAR-SWEETENED BEVERAGES.
SB722
RELATING TO PROPERTY FORFEITURE.
SB725
RELATING TO BAIL.
SB727
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB733
PROPOSING AMENDMENTS TO THE HAWAII STATE CONSTITUTION TO ESTABLISH A CONTINUOUS LEGISLATIVE SESSION.
SB734
RELATING TO SOCIAL WORK.
SB740
RELATING TO SPECIAL PERMITS.
SB741
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB743
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB744 SD1
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB745
RELATING TO ELECTRIC BICYCLES.
SB746 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB748
RELATING TO ENERGY.
SB750
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT PROPERTY.
SB751
RELATING TO MARINA RESTORATION.
SB752 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB753
RELATING TO THE SCHOOL FACILITIES AUTHORITY.
SB754
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB756
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES.
SB757 SD1
RELATING TO LIBRARIES.
SB758
RELATING TO THE STATE ARCHIVES.
SB759
RELATING TO THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.
SB760
RELATING TO LAND USE.
SB761
RELATING TO THE NORTH KOHALA KYNNERSLY EAST SITE LAND PARCEL.
SB762 SD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL CRIMES.
SB763 SD2 HD3
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT.
SB764
RELATING TO PHYSICIAN SHORTAGE.
SB765 SD1
RELATING TO BEEKEEPING.
SB766
RELATING TO PUBLIC LANDS.
SB767
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII'S SPACE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INITIATIVE.
SB768
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB769
RELATING TO MAUNA KEA.
SB770
RELATING TO MAUNA KEA.
SB771 HD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.
SB772
RELATING TO MEDIA LITERACY.
SB773
RELATING TO STATE LICENSED CARE FACILITIES.
SB774
RELATING TO GUN VIOLENCE PREVENTION.
SB775
RELATING TO LAW ENFORCEMENT.
SB780
RELATING TO ELECTIONS.
SB785
RELATING TO DYNAMIC PRICING.
SB786
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT RECORDS.
SB790
RELATING TO SCHOOLS.
SB792
RELATING TO CRIMINAL STREET GANGS.
SB794
RELATING TO IMMIGRATION DETENTION FACILITIES.
SB797
RELATING TO SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME.
SB799
RELATING TO THE FREEDOM TO READ.
SB802 SD2
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB803 SD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB804 SD2
RELATING TO INSURANCE FOR HAWAII CONDOMINIUM PROPERTIES.
SB805 SD1
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUM INSURANCE.
SB811
RELATING TO STATE WATER CODE PENALTIES.
SB812
RELATING TO VITAL STATISTICS.
SB813
RELATING TO LAW ENFORCEMENT REFORM.
SB814
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB815
RELATING TO ENTERPRISE ZONES.
SB816 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO DUE PROCESS PROTECTIONS.
SB817 SD1
RELATING TO OUT-OF-STATE OFFICES.
SB818
RELATING TO IMMIGRATION.
SB819 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB822 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO THE LANDLORD TENANT CODE.
SB825 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO EVICTION MEDIATION.
SB830 SD2
RELATING TO COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT.
SB831
RELATING TO THE RESIDENTIAL LANDLORD-TENANT CODE.
SB833
RELATING TO STATE CHILDCARE.
SB834
RELATING TO RESTRICTIONS ON THE TRANSFER OF REAL PROPERTY UNDER CHAPTER 201H, HAWAII REVISED STATUTES.
SB835
RELATING TO PUPIL TRANSPORTATION.
SB836 SD1
RELATING TO WATER CATCHMENT SYSTEMS.
SB837
RELATING TO PUPIL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY.
SB838 SD2
RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE.
SB839
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES.
SB840
RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION.
SB841 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO MARINE LIFE CONSERVATION DISTRICTS.
SB842
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB843
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB844
RELATING TO MEDIA LITERACY.
SB845
RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLE REGISTRATION.
SB846
RELATING TO EMERGENCY POWERS.
SB848 SD1
RELATING TO DESALINATION.
SB849 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO WILDLIFE CONSERVATION.
SB850 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO DISABILITY HEALTH DISPARITY.
SB853
RELATING TO IMMIGRATION.
SB854
RELATING TO IMMIGRATION.
SB855 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO HAWAII RETIREMENT SAVINGS ACT.
SB856
RELATING TO IMMIGRATION.
SB857
RELATING TO CARE HOMES.
SB858
RELATING TO PROCUREMENT.
SB859
RELATING TO PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT.
SB860
RELATING TO SHOPLIFTING.
SB864
RELATING TO STUDENT TRANSPORTATION.
SB865 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB866
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES.
SB867 SD2
RELATING TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING.
SB868
RELATING TO THE SCHOOL BUS DRIVER CERTIFICATION SUBSIDY PILOT PROGRAM.
SB869 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO COMMUNITY OUTREACH BOARDS.
SB870 SD1
RELATING TO TELECOMMUNICATION.
SB871 SD1
RELATING TO ARSON.
SB872
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB874
RELATING TO VETERINARY MEDICINE.
SB877
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES.
SB878
RELATING TO KUPUNA HOUSING.
SB879
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB880
RELATING TO THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE ON AGING.
SB881
RELATING TO FOOD SECURITY.
SB941
RELATING TO GREEN BONDS.
SB942 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO RENTAL APPLICATIONS.
SB943
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB945
RELATING TO DOULAS.
SB946 SD2 HD3
RELATING TO WASTEWATER MANAGEMENT.
SB947
RELATING TO BIRTH CERTIFICATES.
SB948
RELATING TO THE ELECTIONS COMMISSION.
SB949
RELATING TO LAND COURT.
SB950
RELATING TO TRAUMA-INFORMED CARE.
SB951 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO CHILD PROTECTION.
SB952 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO CHILD WELFARE SERVICES.
SB953
RELATING TO HOSPITALS.
SB955 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO FITNESS TO PROCEED.
SB956
RELATING TO PRESCRIPTION DRUGS.
SB957 SD1
RELATING TO OVERDOSE PREVENTION.
SB958 SD1
RELATING TO CESSPOOLS.
SB959
RELATING TO HEALTH.
SB969
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB974
RELATING TO FOSTER CARE.
SB976 SD1
RELATING TO INTOXICATING LIQUOR.
SB981 SD1
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM.
SB982
RELATING TO A STATE HOTEL.
SB984 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO WATER POLLUTION.
SB986 SD1
RELATED TO TOURISM.
SB989 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT.
SB993
RELATING TO GEOTHERMAL ENERGY EXPLORATION.
SB994
RELATING TO ENERGY ASSISTANCE.
SB995
RELATING TO RENEWABLE FUEL.
SB996 SD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY.
SB998
RELATING TO THE HAWAII FIRST RESPONDERS MEMORIAL.
SB1002 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO AFFORDABLE HOUSING.
SB1004
RELATING TO COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKERS.
SB1008 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO PARKING.
SB1010
RELATING TO SEX-BASED DISCRIMINATION.
SB1013
RELATING TO THE EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT.
SB1014
RELATING TO THE HAWAII STATE ENERGY OFFICE.
SB1016
RELATING TO DECARBONIZATION.
SB1019
RELATING TO THE OCEAN RECREATION SPECIAL FUND.
SB1022 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO ANIMAL ENDANGERMENT.
SB1024
RELATING TO PUBLIC HOUSING.
SB1025
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1026
RELATING TO PET INSURANCE.
SB1027
RELATING TO DOGS.
SB1028 SD1 HD2
RELATING TO YOUTH FEES AND FINES.
SB1029
RELATING TO PROPERTY FORFEITURE.
SB1030 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO ELECTIONS.
SB1031 SD1
RELATING TO ADVISORY REFERENDUMS.
SB1035 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION.
SB1036
RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION.
SB1037
RELATING TO CONSUMER DATA PROTECTION.
SB1038 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO PRIVACY.
SB1039
RELATING TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.
SB1042 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO MENTAL HEALTH.
SB1044 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO THE STABILIZATION OF PROPERTY INSURANCE.
SB1045
RELATING TO BROADBAND SERVICE INFRASTRUCTURE.
SB1046 SD1
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB1047
RELATING TO CORRECTIONS.
SB1048 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO SOLICITATION OF FUNDS FROM THE PUBLIC.
SB1053
RELATING TO A CHILD TAX CREDIT.
SB1054
RELATING TO PAID FAMILY LEAVE.
SB1069
RELATING TO CANNABIS.
SB1070 SD1
RELATING TO HEALTHCARE PRECEPTORS.
SB1074 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENTS.
SB1090
RELATING TO ENERGY.
SB1091 SD1
RELATING TO REMOTE WORK ASSESSMENTS.
SB1093
RELATING TO PARKING DEMAND MANAGEMENT.
SB1096 SD1
RELATING TO LICENSE PLATES.
SB1097
RELATING TO MOTOR VEHICLES.
SB1098
RELATING TO HOMELESS YOUTH.
SB1100 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO BIOSECURITY.
SB1102 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO THE AIRCRAFT RESCUE FIRE FIGHTING UNIT.
SB1110
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.
SB1112
RELATING TO THE HAWAII COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY.
SB1113
RELATING TO THE KOHALA DITCH.
SB1114
RELATING TO HOUSING.
SB1115
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION SAFETY.
SB1118
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1120 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1123
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1124 SD1
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1131
RELATING TO TAXATION.
SB1136
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB1137 SD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB1138
RELATING TO INSURER PRIOR AUTHORIZATION.
SB1139
RELATING TO MEDICAID.
SB1140 SD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE OF LAST RESORT.
SB1141 SD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE PROTECTIONS.
SB1142 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO INSURANCE PROCEEDS.
SB1146 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE ALA WAI CANAL.
SB1163
RELATING TO PRIVACY.
SB1168
RELATING TO STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY ASSESSMENTS.
SB1170 SD2 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO THE EXPEDITIOUS REDEVELOPMENT AND DEVELOPMENT OF AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING.
SB1171 SD1
RELATING TO INVASIVE SPECIES.
SB1172
RELATING TO EMPLOYER HEALTH CARE REQUIREMENTS.
SB1174
RELATING TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION.
SB1175 SD1
RELATING TO PROCUREMENT.
SB1177
RELATING TO SEARCH AND RESCUE.
SB1194
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1196
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1198
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1202
RELATING TO CAMPAIGN FINANCE.
SB1203
RELATING TO COGNITIVE ASSESSMENTS.
SB1204
RELATING TO THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII.
SB1211
RELATING TO A STATE BREAST MILK BANK.
SB1212 SD1
RELATING TO THE REAL ESTATE COMMISSION.
SB1213
RELATING TO ELECTRONIC SERVICE OF PROCESS.
SB1219
RELATING TO TRANSPORTATION.
SB1220 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO RENEWABLE GAS TARIFF.
SB1221 SD2 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS.
SB1222
RELATING TO STORMWATER MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS.
SB1223
RELATING TO WATER SAFETY.
SB1224
RELATING TO INSURANCE.
SB1225 HD1
PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE XVII, SECTION 3 OF THE HAWAII CONSTITUTION TO SPECIFY THAT THE STANDARD FOR VOTER APPROVAL OF A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROPOSED BY THE LEGISLATURE IS A MAJORITY OF ALL THE VOTES TALLIED UPON THE QUESTION.
SB1226 SD1
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB1229 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO THE DWELLING UNIT REVOLVING FUND.
SB1240
RELATING TO ELECTIONS.
SB1247
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL LAND.
SB1249 SD1 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB1250 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO FARM TO FAMILIES.
SB1251
RELATING TO AGRICULTURAL TOURISM.
SB1252 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO DEMENTIA.
SB1253
RELATING TO BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS.
SB1254
RELATING TO THE BOARD OF REGENTS.
SB1255 SD1
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT RECORDS.
SB1262
RELATING TO OAHU CORAL REEF RESILIENCE ENHANCEMENT.
SB1263 SD2 HD3 CD1
RELATING TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION.
SB1264
RELATING TO EDUCATION.
SB1265
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATIONS.
SB1266 SD1
RELATING TO BURIAL SITES.
SB1274
RELATING TO TEACHER WORKFORCE HOUSING.
SB1275
RELATING TO STATE-OWNED HISTORIC PROPERTIES AND INHERITED LANDS.
SB1276 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO AGRICULTURE.
SB1279 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO PHARMACISTS.
SB1280
RELATING TO CONSUMER PROTECTION.
SB1281 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO TELEHEALTH.
SB1288
RELATING TO TRANSITIONAL HOMES.
SB1523 SD1
RELATING TO PRIVATE SECTOR COLLECTIVE BARGAINING RIGHTS.
SB1531
RELATING TO NUISANCE ABATEMENT.
SB1536 SD2 HD2 CD1
RELATING TO THE HAWAII TOURISM AUTHORITY.
SB1537
RELATING TO WILDLIFE CONSERVATION.
SB1539 SD1
RELATING TO THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.
SB1541 SD1 HD1
RELATING TO THE WAIAHOLE WATER SYSTEM.
SB1542
RELATING TO AGE VERIFICATION FOR APP DEVELOPERS AND APP STORES ACT.
SB1543 SD2
RELATING TO GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY.
SB1544
RELATING TO WIRELESS COMMUNICATION DEVICES IN SCHOOLS.
SB1545 HD1
RELATING TO NEPOTISM.
SB1546
RELATING TO RETIRED TEACHERS.
SB1559 SD1
RELATING TO DUNE RESTORATION.
SB1560
RELATING TO HOUSING RESILIENCY.
SB1567 SD1 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO THE CLASSIFICATION AND COMPENSATION SYSTEMS.
SB1570 SD1
RELATING TO EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.
SB1577
RELATING TO THE STATE FOUNDATION ON CULTURE AND THE ARTS.
SB1578 SD2 HD1 CD1
RELATING TO INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS.
SB1579
RELATING TO PHARMACISTS.
SB1582 HD1
RELATING TO THE COCONUT TREE.
SB1612 SD2 HD1
RELATING TO FITNESS TO PROCEED.
SB1614 SD1
RELATING TO TRANSIT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT.
SB1615
RELATING TO FIREWORKS.
SB1616 SD1
RELATING TO CARE CENTERS.
SB1617
RELATING TO PUBLIC MEETINGS.
SB1619 SD2
RELATING TO THE COSMETOLOGY LICENSURE COMPACT.
SB1620
RELATING TO NATURAL HAIR BRAIDING.
SB1621 SD1
RELATING TO NAIL TECHNICIANS.
SB1622 SD1
RELATING TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.
SB1623
RELATING TO CONDOMINIUMS.
SB1643
RELATING TO THE USE OF INTOXICANTS WHILE OPERATING A VEHICLE.
SB1648 SD1
RELATING TO POWER OUTAGES.
SB1653
RELATING TO THE HAWAIIAN HOMES COMMISSION ACT, 1920, AS AMENDED.
SB1654
RELATING TO LAND TRANSFERS.
SB1655
RELATING TO MANUFACTURED HEMP PRODUCTS.
SB1656 SD1
RELATING TO PUMPED STORAGE HYDROPOWER.
SB1657 SD2 HD2
RELATING TO THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.
SB1660 SD1
RELATING TO EMPLOYMENT.
SB1669 SD2 HD3
RELATING TO TRANSIT ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT.
SCR2
REQUESTING THE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER TO CONDUCT A STATEWIDE STUDY ON TITLE INSURANCE.
SCR16 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A TASK FORCE TO IDENTIFY AND DEVELOP MINIMUM PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER TRAINING PROGRAMS.
SCR17
REQUESTING THE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER TO STUDY THE IMPACT OF UNINSURED MOTORISTS IN HAWAII.
SCR19
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO MAKE AVAILABLE RECREATIONAL FACILITIES TO THE PUBLIC DURING NON-PEAK HOURS AND NON-SCHOOL DAYS.
SCR20
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO COMPREHENSIVELY REEVALUATE ITS POLICIES REGARDING IN-PERSON CONTACT VISITATION AT CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES THROUGHOUT THE STATE TO BEST SUPPORT INCARCERATED PERSONS IN STAYING CONNECTED WITH LOVED ONES WHO CAN HELP THEM ON THEIR JOURNEY OF REHABILITATION.
SCR21
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO MAKE AVAILABLE TO CORRECTIONAL FACILITY STAFF MEMBERS THROUGHOUT THE STATE CLINICAL COUNSELING SERVICES THAT ARE SEPARATE AND DISTINCT FROM THE EXISTING MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO INMATES.
SCR22
REQUESTING THE HAWAII EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY TO COLLABORATE WITH RELEVANT AGENCIES TO DEVELOP INITIATIVES AND OUTREACH PROGRAMS TO INFORM KUPUNA ABOUT EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS.
SCR23
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION AND DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT TO STUDY THE POSSIBILITY OF A HIGHWAY PATROL AND SPEED CAMERAS ALONG MAJOR FREEWAYS AND HIGHWAYS IN PRIMARY AREAS OF SPEEDING.
SCR24 SD1
STRONGLY URGING THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE TO MAINTAIN ALL REFERENCES TO THE 100TH INFANTRY BATTALION AND 442ND REGIMENTAL COMBAT TEAM ON ITS WEBSITES FOR THE PUBLIC.
SCR25
REQUESTING THE STATE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO HOLD A PUBLIC MEETING FOR ALL CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATIONS FOR ANY PROPOSED SPECIAL TREATMENT FACILITY IN NEIGHBORHOODS WITH COMMUNITY ASSOCIATIONS.
SCR26
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION, IN PLANNING AND DESIGNING THE NEW OAHU COMMUNITY CORRECTIONAL CENTER IN HALAWA, TO INCLUDE CIRCUIT AND DISTRICT COURT FACILITIES AND ESTABLISH A RELEASE PROCEDURE UNDER WHICH DETAINEES OR INMATES, UPON RELEASE, ARE TRANSPORTED TO A SITE OTHER THAN RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITIES OR PUBLIC SPACES.
SCR27
REQUESTING THE AUDITOR TO CONDUCT AN AUDIT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION'S CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECT FINANCES.
SCR31 SD1
ENDORSING TAIWAN'S INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION, SUPPORTING THE SIGNING OF A UNITED STATES-TAIWAN BILATERAL TRADE AGREEMENT, AND COMMEMORATING THE RELATIONSHIPS AND EXCHANGES BETWEEN THE STATE OF HAWAII AND TAIWAN.
SCR32
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO COLLABORATE WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO USE INMATE WORK FURLOUGH PROGRAMS FOR STATE ROADWAY AND HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE.
SCR41 SD1
ENCOURAGING EACH COUNTY TO ESTABLISH ITS OWN BIOSECURITY PLAN THAT PRIORITIZES THE NEEDS OF THE COUNTY.
SCR45
STRONGLY SUPPORTING AND RECOMMENDING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE REVISED 2025 HAWAII PATIENT BILL OF RIGHTS.
SCR52
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND HAWAIʻI EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY TO ADOPT A CURRICULUM FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE YOUTH CIVIL DEFENSE CORPS.
SCR53 SD1 HD1
REQUESTING THE COMPTROLLER TO COOPERATE WITH THE HAWAII STATE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM, OFFICE OF PLANNING AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, AND HAWAII BROADBAND AND DIGITAL EQUITY OFFICE TO IDENTIFY RURAL AND UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES IN THE STATE WITH A NEED FOR BETTER TELECOMMUNICATION ACCESS FOR RESIDENTS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS.
SCR54 SD1 HD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES TO CONVENE AND PROVIDE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANCE TO A DESALINATION PLANNING TASK FORCE TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE USE OF DESALINATION FOR LARGE-SCALE WATER CONSUMPTION IN THE STATE IS FEASIBLE.
SCR56
URGING THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT TO DEVELOP A NATIONAL BIODIVERSITY STRATEGY.
SCR57 SD1
URGING THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES TO ENACT A NATIONAL REINSURANCE PROGRAM TO ADDRESS THE MULTI-STATE INSURANCE CRISIS RESULTING FROM CATASTROPHIC NATURAL DISASTERS.
SCR58 SD1
URGING THE COUNTIES OF THE STATE TO INSTALL A MINIMUM SET OF ACCESSIBLE RECREATIONAL PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT IN EACH PLAYGROUND LOCATED IN A COUNTY PARK AND TO ESTABLISH COMPREHENSIVE MAINTENANCE PLANS THAT ENSURE THE LONG-TERM SAFETY, CLEANLINESS, AND FUNCTIONALITY OF EACH PLAYGROUND.
SCR59 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES TO PARTNER WITH THE KAHOOLAWE ISLAND RESERVE COMMISSION TO COLLABORATIVELY IMPROVE AND FACILITATE THE CONTINUED REPAIR, REHABILITATION, AND REDEVELOPMENT OF THE KIHEI RAMP.
SCR60 SD1 HD1
URGING THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TO DEVELOP A PLAN TO PRODUCE SUFFICIENT HOUSING TO MEET THE STATE'S DEMAND.
SCR61 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO REVIEW AND EVALUATE THE COST-BENEFIT AND RETURN ON INVESTMENT OF A POSSIBLE SPONSORSHIP OF A MICHELIN GUIDE FOR RESTAURANTS ACROSS THE STATE.
SCR62
REQUESTING THE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A WATER FLUORIDATION WORKING GROUP.
SCR63
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS TO STUDY THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A HAWAII WORKFORCE EXCELLENCE AWARD PROGRAM.
SCR64
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT TO ESTABLISH THE HAWAII STATE FELLOWS PROGRAM.
SCR68
REQUESTING THE COUNTIES TO AUTHORIZE A PERCENTAGE OF TAXES GENERATED BY THE GENERAL EXCISE AND FUEL TAXES COLLECTED BY THE COUNTIES TO BE USED FOR THE MAINTENANCE OF PRIVATELY‑OWNED ROADWAYS THAT ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.
SCR69 SD1 HD1
REQUESTING THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE STATE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY TO CONVENE A PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGER WORKING GROUP TO DETERMINE THE BEST POLICIES TO LOWER DRUG COSTS FOR PATIENT CONSUMERS AND INCREASE ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE.
SCR72
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO UPDATE VACCINATION FORMS AND RECORDKEEPING FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL AND CHARTER SCHOOL STUDENTS.
SCR73 SD1
REQUESTING THE OFFICE OF WELLNESS AND RESILIENCE TO DEVELOP A REPORT TO ADDRESS THE DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS OF CHILDREN BORN DURING THE CORONAVIRUS DISEASE 2019 PANDEMIC.
SCR75 SD1
REQUESTING THE COUNTY OF MAUI TO EMPLOY AN ARCHAEOLOGIST FOR THE PURPOSE OF HISTORIC PRESERVATION IN REBUILDING LAHAINA.
SCR77 SD1
DECLARING THE INTENT THAT PROJECTS WITH HOUSING UNITS THAT QUALIFY FOR HOUSING CREDITS UNDER ACT 31, SESSION LAWS OF HAWAII 2024, ARE STILL ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE HOUSING CREDITS AFTER THE REPEAL OF ACT 31 IF THE HOUSING PROJECTS WERE APPROVED BY THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION BEFORE JULY 1, 2031, AND REQUESTING THE CORPORATION AND EACH COUNTY TO INCLUDE CERTAIN INFORMATION WHEN APPROVING HOUSING PROJECTS FOR HOUSING CREDITS.
SCR81
AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF A PERPETUAL, NON-EXCLUSIVE EASEMENT COVERING A PORTION OF STATE SUBMERGED LANDS AT WAIALAE, HONOLULU, OAHU, FOR THE EXISTING DRAINAGE OUTLETS, AND FOR THE USE, REPAIR, AND MAINTENANCE OF THE EXISTING IMPROVEMENTS CONSTRUCTED THEREON.
SCR84
URGING THE COUNTY OF MAUI, IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE MAUI EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, HAWAII EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, TO CONDUCT REAL-TIME WILDFIRE AND OTHER DISASTER DRILLS INVOLVING THE MAUI COMMUNITY.
SCR88
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO ESTABLISH AND ADMINISTER A MICROBIAL ALGAE SOIL PRODUCTS PILOT PROGRAM.
SCR89
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO CONVENE A WORKING GROUP TO DEVELOP A PLAN TO CREATE AN EDUCATIONAL PATHWAY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM TO EQUIP INTERESTED STUDENTS WITH THE NECESSARY ENTRY LEVEL KNOWLEDGE, SKILL SET, EXPERTISE, AND ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL IN THE FIELD OF MEAT PROCESSING.
SCR90
REQUESTING THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TO ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ROUTINE MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR OF THE KOHALA DITCH.
SCR93 SD1
URGING THE GOVERNOR, MAYORS OF EACH COUNTY, AND THE STATE TO WORK TOWARDS A JUST CLIMATE FUTURE BY INTEGRATING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE INTO POLICY AND DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES RELATED TO CLIMATE ADAPTATION, CLIMATE MITIGATION, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCY.
SCR94 SD1
URGING THE HAWAII DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE OF THE COUNTY OF MAUI TO TAKE FURTHER MEANINGFUL ACTION TO ADDRESS THE AXIS DEER OVERPOPULATION.
SCR98
STANDING WITH TAIWAN TO SUPPORT DEMOCRACY AND SECURITY.
SCR99
RATIFYING A PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES GIVING THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES POWER TO LIMIT, REGULATE, AND PROHIBIT THE LABOR OF PERSONS UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE.
SCR101
URGING THE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH AND THE DIRECTOR OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO ENCOURAGE HOSPITALS AND PRISONS TO OFFER MORE HEALTHY FOOD OPTIONS THAT CONSIST OF MINIMALLY‑PROCESSED FRUITS, VEGETABLES, WHOLE GRAINS, LEGUMES, NUTS AND SEEDS, HERBS AND SPICES, AND NON-DAIRY BEVERAGES, RATHER THAN ULTRA-PROCESSED FOODS.
SCR110 SD1
REQUESTING THE HAWAII STATE ENERGY OFFICE TO CONDUCT A STUDY EVALUATING THE FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING A GREEN BONDS PROGRAM IN THE STATE.
SCR111
DECLARING A PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY RELATING TO CLIMATE CHANGE AND REQUESTING STATEWIDE COORDINATION TO IDENTIFY, PLAN FOR, AND CREATE CROSS-SECTOR SOLUTIONS TO STRENGTHEN HAWAII'S PUBLIC HEALTH RESPONSE TO THE CLIMATE CRISIS.
SCR112 SD1 HD1
REQUESTING THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU TO LIGHT UP CITY HALL WITH PURPLE LIGHTS ON AUGUST 7, 2025, IN HONOR OF NATIONAL PURPLE HEART DAY.
SCR113
REQUESTING THE GOVERNOR TO ISSUE A PROCLAMATION DESIGNATING HAWAII AS A PURPLE HEART STATE ON AUGUST 7, 2025.
SCR114
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, IN COLLABORATION WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND STATE PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOL COMMISSION, TO CONDUCT A STUDY ON THE PRACTICES OF MANAGING HEAT EXPOSURE IN DEPARTMENT AND CHARTER SCHOOLS TO PROTECT STUDENTS' HEALTH DURING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES.
SCR115 HD1
AFFIRMING THE IMPORTANCE OF MARINE ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION TO ACHIEVE THE STATE'S DECARBONIZATION GOALS.
SCR116
URGING THE COUNTIES TO ADOPT LOCAL ZONING ORDINANCES TO REQUIRE OWNERS OF AGRICULTURAL-ZONED LANDS TO EXECUTE AND RECORD DECLARATIONS THAT ACKNOWLEDGE STATE AND COUNTY AGRICULTURAL LAND USE REGULATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS AND PENALTIES FOR NONCOMPLIANCE.
SCR117 SD1 HD1
URGING THE SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL ADVISORY COMMITTEE TO COLLABORATE WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, AND THE COUNTY OF HAWAII TO CONDUCT AN INVENTORY OF BUS STOPS ON HAWAII ISLAND UTILIZED BY CHILDREN TO TRAVEL TO SCHOOL AND DEVELOP STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE SAFETY AT EACH LOCATION.
SCR118 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A WORKING GROUP TO ASSESS THE FEASIBILITY OF ALLOWING BUSINESS OWNERS IN THE STATE TO UTILIZE FILTERED WATER COLLECTED BY WATER CATCHMENT SYSTEMS FOR BUSINESS ACTIVITIES.
SCR129
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO UNDERTAKE PRELIMINARY EDUCATION, OUTREACH, AND VACCINATION DRIVE EFFORTS AT SCHOOLS IN HAWAII WITH VACCINATION RATES UNDER FIFTY PERCENT, PRIORITIZING SCHOOLS WITH VACCINATION RATES UNDER THIRTY PERCENT, BEGINNING AT THE START OF THE 2025-2026 SCHOOL YEAR.
SCR130
SUPPORTING THE REACTIVATION OF, AND URGING THE GOVERNOR TO APPOINT MEMBERS TO, THE HAWAII HEALTH AUTHORITY TO PLAN FOR A TRANSITION TO A MAXIMALLY COST-EFFECTIVE SINGLE-PAYER HEALTH CARE SYSTEM FOR THE STATE, TO BE IMPLEMENTED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE AFTER WAIVERS HAVE BEEN OBTAINED TO CAPTURE ALL MAJOR SOURCES OF FEDERAL FUNDING FLOWING TO THE STATE THROUGH MEDICARE, MEDICAID, AND TRICARE.
SCR134
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO PROVIDE A DETAILED REPORT TO THE LEGISLATURE ON THE TRUE COST OF PRODUCING SCHOOL MEALS TO ENSURE TRANSPARENCY AND AVOID UNNECESSARY PRICE INCREASES.
SCR135 SD1
URGING ALL STATE DEPARTMENTS TO PARTNER WITH THE OFFICE OF WELLNESS AND RESILIENCE FOR SECURE AND APPROPRIATE DATA SHARING AGREEMENTS.
SCR136 SD1 HD2
REQUESTING THE HAWAII STATE ENERGY OFFICE TO CONVENE A NUCLEAR ENERGY WORKING GROUP TO STUDY THE FEASIBILITY OF USING ADVANCED NUCLEAR POWER TECHNOLOGIES IN THE STATE.
SCR139 HD1
REQUESTING THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TO DESIGNATE KUNIA, LEILEHUA PLATEAU, AND POAMOHO AS THE CENTRAL OAHU AGRICULTURAL CORRIDOR AND TO ESTABLISH A LIST PRIORITIZING POTENTIAL AGRICULTURAL INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS THAT WOULD PROVIDE THE MOST VALUE TO THE STATE.
SCR141 SD1
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO COLLABORATE WITH THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION REGARDING GRANT FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
SCR143 SD1
URGING ALL BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS TO CONDUCT ANNUAL PERFORMANCE REVIEWS OF THEIR EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS OR PERSONS HOLDING EQUIVALENT POSITIONS EXEMPT FROM CIVIL SERVICE LAW.
SCR203
REQUESTING THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII TO EXPLORE THE FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING AN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER AND IDENTIFY THE REQUIREMENTS FOR RECEIVING FEDERAL FUNDING FROM THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING FOR ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH.
SCR207
REQUESTING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN INTERGOVERNMENTAL TASK FORCE TO ERADICATE ILLEGAL GAMBLING AND DRUG ACTIVITIES AND TO ESTABLISH COMMUNITY SAFE ZONES.
SCR209
REQUESTING THE HAWAII EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY TO IDENTIFY EXISTING LARGE TREES ALONG EVACUATION ROUTES AND TRIM, SPRAY, OR REMOVE TREES HAVING THE POTENTIAL TO OBSTRUCT THE EVACUATION ROUTE; CONDUCT COMPREHENSIVE RISK ASSESSMENTS FOR SPECIFIC HIGH-RISK TREES; IMPLEMENT BEST PRACTICES IN URBAN FORESTRY; AND STRENGTHEN COMMUNITY-BASED DISASTER PREPAREDNESS INITIATIVES.
SCR211
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO IDENTIFY SCHOOLS HAVING AGING EQUIPMENT AND REPLACE THE EQUIPMENT WITH NEW AND MODERNIZED EQUIPMENT.
SCR212
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES TO ASSESS THE FEASIBILITY OF IMPLEMENTING A SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE A TWENTY PERCENT DISCOUNT ON CERTAIN GOODS AND SERVICES FOR LOW- TO MODERATE-INCOME ELDERS IN THE STATE.
SCR214
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT TO COLLABORATE ON ENSURING SAFETY AT PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AND STATE PREKINDERGARTEN PROGRAM CAMPUSES.
SCR216
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES TO INCREASE REIMBURSEMENT RATES TO PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS FOR SERVICES TO MED-QUEST RECIPIENTS.
SCR218
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO ESTABLISH AND OPERATE A PERSONAL AIRCRAFT FIREWORKS INSPECTION PILOT PROGRAM.
SCR219
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO STUDY THE FEASIBILITY AND ADVISABILITY OF ELIMINATING THE STATE'S SAFETY INSPECTION REQUIREMENTS FOR MOTOR CARRIER VEHICLES.
SCR220
URGING THE MAYOR OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, HONOLULU POLICE DEPARTMENT, AND HONOLULU PROSECUTING ATTORNEY'S OFFICE TO COLLABORATE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS TO IMPLEMENT SAFE AND SOUND PROGRAMS IN EWA BEACH, KAPOLEI, AND WAIANAE.
SCR222 SD1
REQUESTING THE OFFICE OF CONSUMER PROTECTION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND CONSUMER AFFAIRS TO CONVENE A TASK FORCE TO ASSESS ISSUES RELATED TO THE AVAILABILITY OF PAYMENT OPTIONS FROM TOW COMPANIES.
SCR228
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO ESTABLISH A PILOT PROGRAM IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND CHARTER SCHOOLS TO HAVE AVAILABLE STAFF TRAINED IN EPINEPHRINE ADMINISTRATION.
SCR233
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO DEVELOP INDOOR ATHLETIC COURTS AND GYMNASIUMS AT ELEMENTARY PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
SCR235
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT TO ESTABLISH, IN COLLABORATION WITH THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, FAIR POLICIES AND PROCESSES FOR TOWING AND DISPOSING OF VEHICLES THAT BELONG TO ACTIVE DUTY SERVICEMEMBERS AND THAT ARE ABANDONED ON STATE OR CITY PROPERTY.
SCR236
REQUESTING THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU TO ESTABLISH A TOWING AUTHORITY TO MANAGE TOWING SERVICES AND TOWING CONTRACTS ON BEHALF OF THE CITY AND COUNTY.
SR12 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A TASK FORCE TO IDENTIFY AND DEVELOP MINIMUM PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS FOR COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER TRAINING PROGRAMS.
SR13
REQUESTING THE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER TO STUDY THE IMPACT OF UNINSURED MOTORISTS IN HAWAII.
SR15
REQUESTING THE STATE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO HOLD A PUBLIC MEETING FOR ALL CERTIFICATE OF NEED APPLICATIONS FOR ANY PROPOSED SPECIAL TREATMENT FACILITY IN NEIGHBORHOODS WITH COMMUNITY ASSOCIATIONS.
SR17 SD1
ENDORSING TAIWAN'S INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION, SUPPORTING THE SIGNING OF A UNITED STATES-TAIWAN BILATERAL TRADE AGREEMENT, AND COMMEMORATING THE RELATIONSHIPS AND EXCHANGES BETWEEN THE STATE OF HAWAII AND TAIWAN.
SR18
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO COLLABORATE WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO USE INMATE WORK FURLOUGH PROGRAMS FOR STATE ROADWAY AND HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE.
SR25 SD1
ENCOURAGING EACH COUNTY TO ESTABLISH ITS OWN BIOSECURITY PLAN THAT PRIORITIZES THE NEEDS OF THE COUNTY.
SR28
STRONGLY SUPPORTING AND RECOMMENDING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE REVISED 2025 HAWAII PATIENT BILL OF RIGHTS.
SR34
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND HAWAIʻI EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY TO ADOPT A CURRICULUM FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE YOUTH CIVIL DEFENSE CORPS.
SR35 SD1
REQUESTING THE LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE BUREAU TO COOPERATE WITH THE HAWAII STATE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM TO IDENTIFY RURAL AND UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES IN THE STATE WITH A NEED FOR BETTER TELECOMMUNICATION ACCESS FOR RESIDENTS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS.
SR36 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES TO CONVENE AND PROVIDE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANCE TO A DESALINATION PLANNING TASK FORCE TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE USE OF DESALINATION FOR LARGE-SCALE WATER CONSUMPTION IN THE STATE IS FEASIBLE.
SR38
SUPPORTING THE NATIVE HAWAIIAN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY WORKING GROUP'S REQUEST FOR RESOURCES AND TIMELINE EXTENSION FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025-2026.
SR40
URGING THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT TO DEVELOP A NATIONAL BIODIVERSITY STRATEGY.
SR41 SD1
URGING THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES TO ENACT A NATIONAL REINSURANCE PROGRAM TO ADDRESS THE MULTI-STATE INSURANCE CRISIS RESULTING FROM CATASTROPHIC NATURAL DISASTERS.
SR42 SD1
URGING THE COUNTIES OF THE STATE TO INSTALL A MINIMUM SET OF ACCESSIBLE RECREATIONAL PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT IN EACH PLAYGROUND LOCATED IN A COUNTY PARK AND TO ESTABLISH COMPREHENSIVE MAINTENANCE PLANS THAT ENSURE THE LONG-TERM SAFETY, CLEANLINESS, AND FUNCTIONALITY OF EACH PLAYGROUND.
SR43 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES TO PARTNER WITH THE KAHOOLAWE ISLAND RESERVE COMMISSION TO COLLABORATIVELY IMPROVE AND FACILITATE THE CONTINUED REPAIR, REHABILITATION, AND REDEVELOPMENT OF THE KIHEI RAMP.
SR45 SD1
URGING THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TO DEVELOP A PLAN TO PRODUCE SUFFICIENT HOUSING TO MEET THE STATE'S DEMAND.
SR46 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, AND TOURISM TO REVIEW AND EVALUATE THE COST-BENEFIT AND RETURN ON INVESTMENT OF A POSSIBLE SPONSORSHIP OF A MICHELIN GUIDE FOR RESTAURANTS ACROSS THE STATE.
SR47
REQUESTING THE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A WATER FLUORIDATION WORKING GROUP.
SR48
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS TO STUDY THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A HAWAII WORKFORCE EXCELLENCE AWARD PROGRAM.
SR49
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT TO ESTABLISH THE HAWAII STATE FELLOWS PROGRAM.
SR52
REQUESTING THE COUNTIES TO AUTHORIZE A PERCENTAGE OF TAXES GENERATED BY THE GENERAL EXCISE AND FUEL TAXES COLLECTED BY THE COUNTIES TO BE USED FOR THE MAINTENANCE OF PRIVATELY‑OWNED ROADWAYS THAT ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.
SR53 SD1
REQUESTING THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE STATE HEALTH PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY TO CONVENE A PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGER WORKING GROUP TO DETERMINE THE BEST POLICIES TO REFORM PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGER PRACTICES IN THE STATE TO ENSURE TRANSPARENCY AND FAIRNESS FOR CONSUMERS AND IN THE PHARMACEUTICAL SECTOR, LOWER DRUG COSTS FOR PATIENT CONSUMERS, AND INCREASE ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE.
SR55
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO UPDATE VACCINATION FORMS AND RECORDKEEPING FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL AND CHARTER SCHOOL STUDENTS.
SR56 SD1
REQUESTING THE OFFICE OF WELLNESS AND RESILIENCE TO DEVELOP A REPORT TO ADDRESS THE DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS OF CHILDREN BORN DURING THE CORONAVIRUS DISEASE 2019 PANDEMIC.
SR58 SD1
REQUESTING THE COUNTY OF MAUI TO EMPLOY AN ARCHAEOLOGIST FOR THE PURPOSE OF HISTORIC PRESERVATION IN REBUILDING LAHAINA.
SR60 SD1
DECLARING THE INTENT THAT PROJECTS WITH HOUSING UNITS THAT QUALIFY FOR HOUSING CREDITS UNDER ACT 31, SESSION LAWS OF HAWAII 2024, ARE STILL ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE HOUSING CREDITS AFTER THE REPEAL OF ACT 31 IF THE HOUSING PROJECTS WERE APPROVED BY THE HAWAII HOUSING FINANCE AND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION BEFORE JULY 1, 2031, AND REQUESTING THE CORPORATION AND EACH COUNTY TO INCLUDE CERTAIN INFORMATION WHEN APPROVING HOUSING PROJECTS FOR HOUSING CREDITS.
SR64
AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF A PERPETUAL, NON-EXCLUSIVE EASEMENT COVERING A PORTION OF STATE SUBMERGED LANDS AT WAIALAE, HONOLULU, OAHU, FOR THE EXISTING DRAINAGE OUTLETS, AND FOR THE USE, REPAIR, AND MAINTENANCE OF THE EXISTING IMPROVEMENTS CONSTRUCTED THEREON.
SR67
URGING THE COUNTY OF MAUI, IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE MAUI EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, HAWAII EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, TO CONDUCT REAL-TIME WILDFIRE AND OTHER DISASTER DRILLS INVOLVING THE MAUI COMMUNITY.
SR71
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO ESTABLISH AND ADMINISTER A MICROBIAL ALGAE SOIL PRODUCTS PILOT PROGRAM.
SR72
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO CONVENE A WORKING GROUP TO DEVELOP A PLAN TO CREATE AN EDUCATIONAL PATHWAY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM TO EQUIP INTERESTED STUDENTS WITH THE NECESSARY ENTRY LEVEL KNOWLEDGE, SKILL SET, EXPERTISE, AND ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL IN THE FIELD OF MEAT PROCESSING.
SR73
REQUESTING THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION TO ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ROUTINE MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR OF THE KOHALA DITCH.
SR76 SD1
URGING THE GOVERNOR, MAYORS OF EACH COUNTY, AND THE STATE TO WORK TOWARDS A JUST CLIMATE FUTURE BY INTEGRATING INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE INTO POLICY AND DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES RELATED TO CLIMATE ADAPTATION, CLIMATE MITIGATION, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCY.
SR77 SD1
URGING THE HAWAII DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE OF THE COUNTY OF MAUI TO TAKE FURTHER MEANINGFUL ACTION TO ADDRESS THE AXIS DEER OVERPOPULATION.
SR80
STANDING WITH TAIWAN TO SUPPORT DEMOCRACY AND SECURITY.
SR81
RATIFYING A PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES GIVING THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES POWER TO LIMIT, REGULATE, AND PROHIBIT THE LABOR OF PERSONS UNDER EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE.
SR82
URGING THE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH AND THE DIRECTOR OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION TO ENCOURAGE HOSPITALS AND PRISONS TO OFFER MORE HEALTHY FOOD OPTIONS THAT CONSIST OF MINIMALLY‑PROCESSED FRUITS, VEGETABLES, WHOLE GRAINS, LEGUMES, NUTS AND SEEDS, HERBS AND SPICES, AND NON-DAIRY BEVERAGES, RATHER THAN ULTRA-PROCESSED FOODS.
SR91 SD1
REQUESTING THE HAWAII STATE ENERGY OFFICE TO CONDUCT A STUDY EVALUATING THE FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING A GREEN BONDS PROGRAM IN THE STATE.
SR92
DECLARING A PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY RELATING TO CLIMATE CHANGE AND REQUESTING STATEWIDE COORDINATION TO IDENTIFY, PLAN FOR, AND CREATE CROSS-SECTOR SOLUTIONS TO STRENGTHEN HAWAII'S PUBLIC HEALTH RESPONSE TO THE CLIMATE CRISIS.
SR93 SD1
REQUESTING THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU TO LIGHT UP CITY HALL WITH PURPLE LIGHTS ON AUGUST 7 OF EACH YEAR IN HONOR OF NATIONAL PURPLE HEART DAY.
SR94
REQUESTING THE GOVERNOR TO ISSUE A PROCLAMATION DESIGNATING HAWAII AS A PURPLE HEART STATE ON AUGUST 7, 2025.
SR95
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, IN COLLABORATION WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND STATE PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOL COMMISSION, TO CONDUCT A STUDY ON THE PRACTICES OF MANAGING HEAT EXPOSURE IN DEPARTMENT AND CHARTER SCHOOLS TO PROTECT STUDENTS' HEALTH DURING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES.
SR96
AFFIRMING THE IMPORTANCE OF MARINE ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION TO ACHIEVE THE STATE'S DECARBONIZATION GOALS.
SR97
URGING THE COUNTIES TO ADOPT LOCAL ZONING ORDINANCES TO REQUIRE OWNERS OF AGRICULTURAL-ZONED LANDS TO EXECUTE AND RECORD DECLARATIONS THAT ACKNOWLEDGE STATE AND COUNTY AGRICULTURAL LAND USE REGULATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS AND PENALTIES FOR NONCOMPLIANCE.
SR98 SD1
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO COLLABORATE WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL ADVISORY COMMITTEE, AND THE COUNTY OF HAWAII TO CONDUCT AN INVENTORY OF BUS STOPS ON HAWAII ISLAND UTILIZED BY CHILDREN TO TRAVEL TO SCHOOL AND DEVELOP STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE SAFETY AT EACH LOCATION.
SR99 SD1
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO CONVENE A WORKING GROUP TO ASSESS THE FEASIBILITY OF ALLOWING BUSINESS OWNERS IN THE STATE TO UTILIZE FILTERED WATER COLLECTED BY WATER CATCHMENT SYSTEMS FOR BUSINESS ACTIVITIES.
SR108
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO UNDERTAKE PRELIMINARY EDUCATION, OUTREACH, AND VACCINATION DRIVE EFFORTS AT SCHOOLS IN HAWAII WITH VACCINATION RATES UNDER FIFTY PERCENT, PRIORITIZING SCHOOLS WITH VACCINATION RATES UNDER THIRTY PERCENT, BEGINNING AT THE START OF THE 2025-2026 SCHOOL YEAR.
SR109
SUPPORTING THE REACTIVATION OF, AND URGING THE GOVERNOR TO APPOINT MEMBERS TO, THE HAWAII HEALTH AUTHORITY TO PLAN FOR A TRANSITION TO A MAXIMALLY COST-EFFECTIVE SINGLE-PAYER HEALTH CARE SYSTEM FOR THE STATE, TO BE IMPLEMENTED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE AFTER WAIVERS HAVE BEEN OBTAINED TO CAPTURE ALL MAJOR SOURCES OF FEDERAL FUNDING FLOWING TO THE STATE THROUGH MEDICARE, MEDICAID, AND TRICARE.
SR113
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO PROVIDE A DETAILED REPORT TO THE LEGISLATURE ON THE TRUE COST OF PRODUCING SCHOOL MEALS TO ENSURE TRANSPARENCY AND AVOID UNNECESSARY PRICE INCREASES.
SR114 SD1
URGING ALL STATE DEPARTMENTS TO PARTNER WITH THE OFFICE OF WELLNESS AND RESILIENCE FOR SECURE AND APPROPRIATE DATA SHARING AGREEMENTS.
SR115 SD1
REQUESTING THE HAWAII STATE ENERGY OFFICE TO CONVENE A GEOTHERMAL ENERGY WORKING GROUP TO EVALUATE THE REGULATORY AND POLICY LANDSCAPE SURROUNDING GEOTHERMAL ENERGY IN HAWAII.
SR156 SD1
URGING ALL BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS TO CONDUCT ANNUAL PERFORMANCE REVIEWS OF THEIR EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS OR PERSONS HOLDING EQUIVALENT POSITIONS EXEMPT FROM CIVIL SERVICE LAW.
SR157
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO DESIGNATE KUNIA, LEILEHUA PLATEAU, AND POAMOHO AS THE CENTRAL OAHU AGRICULTURAL CORRIDOR AND TO ESTABLISH A LIST PRIORITIZING POTENTIAL AGRICULTURAL INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS THAT WOULD PROVIDE THE MOST VALUE TO THE STATE.
SR159 SD1
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE TO COLLABORATE WITH THE AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION REGARDING GRANT FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.
SR163
REQUESTING THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII TO EXPLORE THE FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING AN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER AND IDENTIFY THE REQUIREMENTS FOR RECEIVING FEDERAL FUNDING FROM THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING FOR ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH.
SR182
REQUESTING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN INTERGOVERNMENTAL TASK FORCE TO ERADICATE ILLEGAL GAMBLING AND DRUG ACTIVITIES AND TO ESTABLISH COMMUNITY SAFE ZONES.
SR184
REQUESTING THE HAWAII EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY TO IDENTIFY EXISTING LARGE TREES ALONG EVACUATION ROUTES AND TRIM, SPRAY, OR REMOVE TREES HAVING THE POTENTIAL TO OBSTRUCT THE EVACUATION ROUTE; CONDUCT COMPREHENSIVE RISK ASSESSMENTS FOR SPECIFIC HIGH-RISK TREES; IMPLEMENT BEST PRACTICES IN URBAN FORESTRY; AND STRENGTHEN COMMUNITY-BASED DISASTER PREPAREDNESS INITIATIVES.
SR185
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO IDENTIFY SCHOOLS HAVING AGING EQUIPMENT AND REPLACE THE EQUIPMENT WITH NEW AND MODERNIZED EQUIPMENT.
SR186
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES TO ASSESS THE FEASIBILITY OF IMPLEMENTING A SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE A TWENTY PERCENT DISCOUNT ON CERTAIN GOODS AND SERVICES FOR LOW- TO MODERATE-INCOME ELDERS IN THE STATE.
SR189
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT TO COLLABORATE ON ENSURING SAFETY AT PUBLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AND STATE PREKINDERGARTEN PROGRAM CAMPUSES.
SR191
URGING THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES TO INCREASE REIMBURSEMENT RATES TO PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS FOR SERVICES TO MED-QUEST RECIPIENTS.
SR193
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO ESTABLISH AND OPERATE A PERSONAL AIRCRAFT FIREWORKS INSPECTION PILOT PROGRAM.
SR194
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO STUDY THE FEASIBILITY AND ADVISABILITY OF ELIMINATING THE STATE'S SAFETY INSPECTION REQUIREMENTS FOR MOTOR CARRIER VEHICLES.
SR195
URGING THE MAYOR OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, HONOLULU POLICE DEPARTMENT, AND HONOLULU PROSECUTING ATTORNEY'S OFFICE TO COLLABORATE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS TO IMPLEMENT SAFE AND SOUND PROGRAMS IN EWA BEACH, KAPOLEI, AND WAIANAE.
SR197 SD1
REQUESTING THE OFFICE OF CONSUMER PROTECTION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND CONSUMER AFFAIRS TO CONVENE A TASK FORCE TO ASSESS ISSUES RELATED TO THE AVAILABILITY OF PAYMENT OPTIONS FROM TOW COMPANIES.
SR204
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO ESTABLISH A PILOT PROGRAM IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND CHARTER SCHOOLS TO HAVE AVAILABLE STAFF TRAINED IN EPINEPHRINE ADMINISTRATION.
SR209
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION TO DEVELOP INDOOR ATHLETIC COURTS AND GYMNASIUMS AT ELEMENTARY PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
SR211
REQUESTING THE DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT TO ESTABLISH, IN COLLABORATION WITH THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU, FAIR POLICIES AND PROCESSES FOR TOWING AND DISPOSING OF VEHICLES THAT BELONG TO ACTIVE DUTY SERVICEMEMBERS AND THAT ARE ABANDONED ON STATE OR CITY PROPERTY.
SR212
REQUESTING THE CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU TO ESTABLISH A TOWING AUTHORITY TO MANAGE TOWING SERVICES AND TOWING CONTRACTS ON BEHALF OF THE CITY AND COUNTY.