Keep the North Shore Sane

This blog will be about the North Shore of Oahu. The focus will be on the politics, economics and lifestyle of the North Shore. The North Shore is such a small place, people are often intimidated and do not speak their mind. Here you can speak your mind. I accept guest posts either by name or anonymously as long as they are not obscene. Let's argue, let's be opinionated and let's really dig down into the issues that affect our lives here on the North Shore of Oahu.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Open Letter to Blake and Jack.

I've read the stories about back in the day when you were Groms and your parents dragged you out to wave signs and protest something on the North Shore. As early teens these events shaped you into the sensitive, environmentalists that you are today. Now as adults you are ready to save the Country from all sorts of greedy, seedy, self serving, bulldozer obsessed capitalist developers.

Well, Blake and Jack, the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Your good intentions realized with Pupukea Paumalu will lead to a place that is much less desirable to live in for a majority of our Keiki and Kapuna for generations.

I have the luxury of having time and the ability to afford to find things for my young relatives to do. With the new school schedules - almost 4 weeks off at Christmas, I've been busy looking for programs on the North Shore to let them have fun, blow off some steam, get educated a bit. There is not a lot out there unless you want to commute 30 minutes or more each way.

Blake and Jack, I came to realize this again, you and your group are destroying any chance for the North Shore between Haleiwa and Kahuku to have any meaningful alternative recreation area. Your closed door, closed minded no communication meetings with Obayashi and the Govt. will most likely result in the destruction of the commitment that runs with the land. That commitment would have seen built a brand new YMCA on the North Shore. Swimming pool, gymnasium, indoor basketball and volleyball, recreation floor space for varied children, adult and senior activities. That is just what this area needs and you guys are throwing it away for us.

Yeah right, your efforts will lead to more open space and rural park. You'll have nature programs. Well WHOOPPPEEE. I'll tell you what, we do not need any more parks and trails here. You can walk to Laie from the top of Pupukea on a great trail. You can go up past Comsat, or the motor cross track. Great Mauka trails behind Waimea, Sunset, V-land, Turtle Bay, Kahuku, Laie, Haula, etc. Knock yourself out every weekend of the year and you'll have plenty of varied terrain, views and conditions.

The youth and nature programs we have here on the North Shore are woefully unattended by local kids. Take a look at the programs they have at Waimea for kids. If it weren't for the haole kids of the environmentalists of the North Shore and townies, there would be a handful or less of kids there.

Jack, the irony of what your doing is going to fall on you when your kids get old enough and you have nothing for them in terms of the kinds of programs the YMCA has. No pool, no gym, no crafts, no senior fitness, no "Mommy and Me" programs, no youth and adult basketball, volleyball leagues. No pool, no swim teams for all ages, no place for youth leadership development.

Jack and Blake, they do not have lanes and starting blocks or swim teams in the ocean.

Jack and Blake are to blame, when our children suffer for a lack of recreational diversity.

Your closed loop trail and park, after your opening ceremonies, will have what, maybe, on a beautiful perfect day, a hundred people there? The same people who are going to the other Mauka parks and trails on other weekends. In the mean time hundreds of kids, adults and seniors an hour could have been at the YMCA.

If you choose to respond, don't lie to us and tell us you saved us from hundreds of homes being built. I know there was a proposal made to you guys that would have enabled about 30 homes to be built there, not all on the bluff. All the benefits to the community would have stayed intact. But you all said "No. Not one thing shall be built there".

Did you ask us? NO. Are you guilty of closed door negotiations without public discussion - YES. I know you are seeking to destroy the Unilateral Agreement to take away the conditions that would have benefited the community. You have not told anyone that. It is not on your website. You are hiding that very important fact, and that is shameful.

You are going to damn generations of residents here. Just wait Jack and Blake, as you start families, you'll see soon enough how much we could have used the facilities you are dooming to oblivion.

6 Comments:

  • At 12/05/2006 6:17 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Blake and Jack are heroes. Your ridiculous comments will never change the truth.

    Kindest Regards,
    The rest of the North Shore

     
  • At 12/05/2006 8:50 PM, Blogger Toegee-Jon Midpoint said…

    OK, to you they are heroes. Instead of the emotion, give me some facts as to why I am wrong.

    Is that too much to ask for you people who are shapping the North Shore in your image?

    GIVE ME SOME FACTS. TELL ME WHY 30 HOMES ARE TOO MUCH IN EXCHANGE FOR A YMCA. PLEASE USE YOUR BRAIN.

     
  • At 12/07/2006 4:49 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    Read with interest your open letter to Jack and Blake. Wondering if you are aware that the City purchased land about 5 years ago to build the promised Community Center. This is a project that has been worked on for many years. In 2003 Chair DelaCruz reported that monies had been set aside to build the Community Center. It's been a long wait and we are still waiting.

     
  • At 12/07/2006 5:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    A YWCA for 30 homes. Sounds like a pretty good deal. However lets delve a little further into this proposal. Would these homes have been low cost housing that lower income people could afford? I think not! No! They would have been high priced homes that would have locked long time residents out once again. So Jack and Blake thanks for not "selling our souls" to more big developers.

     
  • At 12/09/2006 2:18 PM, Blogger Toegee-Jon Midpoint said…

    "Community Center anonymous", I believe these are separate issues. The community building that the city is trying to do will replace the one over by Sharks Cove. Multi-purpose rooms at best. I am refering to the very large facility that is required for the land owners of Pupukea Paumalu to build.

    "Selling our Souls Anonymous" , you obviously did not read the directions of "USE YOUR BRAIN". On this planet for profit companies do not build houses on 5-10 acre lots with ocean views in desirable locations and then sell it for dirt cheap to low income people. Maybe on your planet they do this??? On this planet communities get concessions from developers that are desirable for the community. This happens when companies are able to make a profit. Your planet might have a socialist economic system but here in the USA on planet earth, we have a capitalistic system.

     
  • At 3/13/2007 12:07 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said…

    I'm over 50.

    My grandparents lived on the north shore.

    I started surfing there when I was ten at Haleiwa. I started going to Kawela Bay when I was six to visit my cousins who lived in the bay. My best friend lived beyond that. As did the guy who taught me how to glass surfboards, Bosco Burns.

    I'm Hawaiian. And I know the history of the North Shore pretty well.

    I think there's nothing wrong with proceeding with the development of the area, so long as there's a benefit to the community. Like a hospital, a YMCA, affordable housing, parks, extra lanes, rights-of-way.

    But none of that gets discussed. It just gets shot down. Maybe it's a generational thing, insofar as I'm so old. Maybe it's that kids, or young adults, just see what's in front of them, and have no sense of time, or change, or progress (aka development, a good word in software, or surfboard design).

    I'd love to raise a family there, but, like TOEGEE points out, there's not a lot there.

    When I grew up out there, in the country, there was nothing to do, but nothing to get into trouble with. Now days, there's a little bit more to do, but a lot more to get in trouble with. No jobs, not much activity. Not a good thing.

    Why not let the place grow, evolve, go somewhere. It doesn't have to bebad. Get more jobs. It'd open things up for people to live and work there.

    These are good things, and good things are worth discussing.

    Kaunahoakalani

     

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