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The Honolulu Advertiser du lieu suivant : Honolulu, Hawaii • 7

Lieu:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Date de parution:
Page:
7
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

irk Toe Hoooluiu Advertiser Thursday, November 8, 19M A-7 i Hawaii election report 100 of precincts counted maui rr school 3 board State Senate 3 Department heads' terms of office 100 of precincts counted Those candidates who were automatically elected because they faced no opposition were not on the ballot. They are Charles S. Ota (D-E. Maui) and Linda Lingle (R-Molokai) Shall the Maui County Charter oei amended to provide that the term oH ottice tor all department heads (e- cept police, liquor and personnel) shall end with the term ol office for the mayor' Yes 13.312 No (6) At-Large 3N. Hito-Hamakua-Kohala-E.

Maul No election this year. Maiama Solomon is a holdover senator. Wailuku-Kahului-Upcountry Maui VAMASAKI, MAMORU (D) 9,490 West Maui-Molokai-Lanai No election this year Gerald Machi-da is a holdover senator. The state Board of Educa-tion and Office of Hawaiian Affairs trustees are nonpartisan offices, so candidates run without parry labels. The number in parentheses in each district heading indicates how many seats are available.

a Procedures for 1 1 county contracts Leeward Oahu (1) Nakano, Ronald 57,305 De Mattos, Joe 46.086 Fujii, Gary 40.035 Windward Oahu (1) Penebacker, John 96,797 Dickerson, Jan 45.894 Shrum, John 12,844 2 Neighbor Islands (3) At-Large (2) Nakasone, Bob (0) 16.874 Awns, Abe (D) 16.116 Soto. Bob (R) 7.590 Sydney, Susanne (R) 4.391 Central Maui (3) Santos. Vetma (O) 15.258 Nishiki. Wayne (D) 14.914 Liu, Elizabeth (D) 13,182 Ramil. Tony (R) 11 493 Hallord.

Ernest (R) 7.948 West Maui (1) Kihune, Howard (0) 14.528 Dele Cm. Ronald (R) 8 168 Lanai (1) Hokama. Goto (D) 12.882 Oliva. Henry (R) 10 641 Shall the Maui County Charter be amended to require that contracts be signed by the mayor, director of fi-' nance or chairman of the council, depending on the type of contract' Yes 15.020 NO 7.702 Big Island (i) Akaka, Moanikeala 15,488 Desha, Pitlani 14,588 Kinney, Everett 5,708 Coakley, Jeffrey 3,291 Kauai (Tj Keale, Mom 30,469 ZatXan, Liiwela 7,344 Molokai (iy Hao, Louis 15,288 Forbes, Yola 11,088 Kamakea, Radine 7,065 laea, Jack 2,672 Lasco, Raymond 1,440 State Board of Education (13) State House Office of Hawaiian Affairs Board of Trustees 5 Rescue functions for Fire Department Shall the Maui County Charter amended to place primary responsibility for rescue operations with the Department of fire control' Yes 15.456 No 7.402 Each of the three Neighbor Island seats on the Board of Education has a district residency requirement one each from the Big Island, Maui County and Kauai County. However, all voters on all Neighbor Islands cast ballots for all three seats, even those from other islands.

The Big Island and Kauai residents will get four-year terms; the Maui resident will get a two-year term. Aiona, Darrow 72,606 Apo, Margaret 68,340 Yoshida, Randal 58,257 Norwood, Chuck 51,477 Kawahara, Hatauko 49,335 Sakima, Akira 46,688 Ho. Peter 39.300 Arakaki. David 32,928 Woods. Bill 32,478 Malina-Wright, 29.512 Aona Blaisdell, 28.173 Anzai, Earl 1 27.949 Carter, George 27,036 Mina, Ted 26,415 Gilbert, Patrick 25,501 McMillen, Franci9 23.600 Migan, Mary Anne 22,282 Johnson, Walter 22.260 Quinn, Dennis 22.216 Cooper, Brooks 21,143 Ledward, Masako 20,693 Ichihashi, Richard 20.086 Alameida, Roy 19.746 Kam, Thomas 19.154 Kleppin, Carol 16,230 Cox.

Anton 13 088 Tharp, James 9.658 Vighelmo, Frances 9.587 Mon. Victor 8.259 Olayan, Gilbert 8.180 Jacosalem, Brice 7.876 Chiwa, Saburo 7,737 Shorba, Joe 5,498 Honolulu District (1) Matsuda, Mike 47,924 Wong, Tommy 32,366 Cooper, Terry 20.555 Greenwell, Blaine 16.519 Storch, Larry 14,859 Lott, Edson 10,097 Rominger, Bart 3,469 Central Oahu (1) Araki, Mako 71,594 Wagatsuma, Patricia 66.351 All OHA Board of Trustees candidates were voted on statewide, but three seats have district residency requirements for candidates, as indicated below. 6N. Kona-Kohala-East Maui Lindsey, Robert (D) 3,852 Kiefle. Mike (R) 3,038 7Wailea-Upcountry Maui-Paia Andrews, Mark (D) 4,7 IS Langa, Sanford (R) 1.418 8 Wailuku-Kahului HONDA, HERBERT (0) 5.198 9Waihee-Lahaina-Kihei Souki.

Joseph (D) 3.620 Sailer, Marsha (R) 2.174 West Maui-Molokai-Lanai Pletl. Bill (R) 3.228 Shilo. Georgina (D) 2.215 1 6 Lapsing of capital appropriations Oahu (10) (D At-Large (D Big Island Shall the Maui County Charter be ampnded to provide for the lapse of rapital improvement appropriations in onp and one half years or less, if not spent or encumbered by written con trart' Yes 12.616 No 8 646 Maui County Charter amendments 1 Four-year terms for County Council Shall the Maui County Charter he amended to change the terms of council members from two years to four years, concurrent with the term of the mayor'' Yes 8 3 No 17.119 2 Create county salary commission Shall the Maui County Charter he amended to establish a salary com mission tor elected county officials'' Yes 12.427 No 11 919 Of the 10 Oahu seats, six have no district residency requirement, while one member each must reside in the Honolulu School District, Central Oahu District, Leeward Oahu District and Windward Oahu District. However, all voters on Oahu voted for candidates for all 10 seats, even those from districts other than their own. The top three vote-getters from the at-large race and the winners of the Honolulu and Leeward districts will hold four-year terms.

The bottom three winning vote-getters at-large and the winners of the Central and Windward districts will be elected to two-year terms. 7 Council reapportionment Maui County Council Waters, William 31,220 Simpson, Martha 16.238 Miles. Ellen 13,691 Maui County (1) Ueoka, Meyer 35,850 Romanchak, Viv 15,483 Bertomen, Jose 12,108 Kauai County (1) Sherwood Hara, unopposed, was automatically elected. Kaulukukui, Tommy 10,516 Akana, Keith 4.784 Benham, Roy 3.853 Hcokano, Geo 3.277 Agard, Louis 3.119 Shim, Marion 2.862 Cazimero, Tanny 2.262 Kinney, Richard 2,237 Kekipi, Velma 1 ,823 Kekaula, William 1 ,478 Lii, Samuel 882 Tiki, Varoa 783 Seto, Ainsley 703 Mia, George 197 Should the County Charter provision regarding composition of the council and qualifications of its mem ters be amended as recommended hy the Charter Reaportionment Commission on February 23. 1984' Yes 10.B6S No 11,971 All nine council members are voted on county-wide, but seven seats have district residency requirements for candidates.

City Hall prepares for 'Welcome back, Mr. Mayor' By George Gar ties Advertiner Government Bureau Mayor Eileen Anderson and the City Council got ready to welcome Mayor-elect Frank Fasi back to City Hall yesterday as Anderson's appointees began thinking about job-hunting. Business in many offices appeared to be slower than usual and the main topic of conversation with visitors was Fasi's upset victory and impending return to office as a Republican. Anderson had been expected to stay home today, but instead arrived for a mid-morning meeting with her department heads and deputies and a long series of interviews with the council was drifting "I think the City Council has developed its own priorities and I think going to continue to move forward I think that one of the best things that, this council has done is look at. things in a bipartisan way and I expect this to continue." Mink, who some feel has made life difficult for Anderson, bid hor a cordial public farewell.

"We'll always cherish the friendships we have made with that administration." Probably the most effusive welcome for Fasi came from Councilman Leigh-Wai Doo: "We look forward to: working cooperatively with him to build our city of aloha." election meeting overshadowed by the election, tried to lay the groundwork for a cordial relationship with a mayor who often feuded with past councils. George Akahane and Marilyn Born-horst, both veterans of past Fasi administrations, called for regular meetings with the new mayor as a way to head off conflicts. Bornhorst suggested following the example set by Denver's mayor and council and holding monthly meetings in public. "I'd like to see us all look at our agendas for the next two years (the remainder of the council's term)," she said. Akahane, who has complained that Although the meeting was said to be upbeat, some Anderson appointees privately expressed disappointment at losing to the man they thought they had driven from office four years ago.

Anderson sent Fasi a letter congratulating him and offering help in the transition between administrations. Managing Director Andrew Chang, who will coordinate the switch, said he was looking for office space for a Fasi transition team headed by Don Clegg, a former Fasi appointee who was active in the campaign. Chang said his staff was already compiling for Clegg information on the positions Fasi will be filling by appointment. City Council members, in a post the council lacks direction, suggested such meetings could also help get council members all working for the same goals. "I don't know whether we can afford another two years of feeling each other out and getting acquainted," he said.

Chairwoman Patsy Mink said Fasi's victory suggests "there are out there in the constituency unmet aspirations" to which elected leaders are not responding. The council, she said, will cooperate: "As we have worked with the Anderson administration, I intend to work fully with the Fasi administration." She rejected Akahane's suggestion i 7 -V'f Council OKs home windmills Small windmills will he allowed in residential neighborhoods if Mayor Eileen Anderson approves a bill passed hy the City Council yesterday. Homeowners who want to put in windmill-dnven electrical generators or WECS for Wind Energy Conversion Systems, as the bill insists on calling them would have to meet several conditions Neighbors would have IS days to file an official complaint about any proposed windmill. The lowest reach of the windmill blades must be at. least 15 feet off the and the tips of 'he blades have to be 7 feet away from the roof.

The lowest rung of any ac- cess ladder has to be 15 feet above ground, or the whole thing has to be put behind a 6-foot-high fence. There must be a sign "warning of high voltage and dangerous moving blades above." The silence of defeat Political campaigns, drawn out in the fighting, become instant history after the election. Eileen Anderson's campaign headquarters was a study in solitude yesterday. Advertiser photo by David Vamada lution calling for a nuclear freeze. The decision to make nuclear defense plans.

Fawcett said, "carries very heavy value commitments." The resolution asks that the public have a say before those commitments are made, she said. Councilman David Kahanu suggested the council was "spinning our wheels," since the front pages of the telephone book already explain what to do when the air raid sirens go off. Two other members answered that the evacuation plans under discussion are different from the phone hook instructions, but Kahanu joined Rudy Pacarro in voting against the resolution. Councilman Tony Narvaes abstained twice, which under council rules is counted as a "yes." actually increase the danger of war by making people think such a war can be won. The resolution says more than 100 cities and counties have decided not to cooperate with federal defense planning efforts for that reason.

The state Civil Defense Agency produced a nuclear evacuation plan, but pulled it back earlier this year when the federal government decided nuclear defense plans should be combined with plans for natural disasters. The resolution, adopted by a 7-2 vote, calls on state Civil Defense to hold pub-he hearings on the issue. It also asks the governor to appoint a "high-level panel of experts" to make recommendations on the wisdom of such plans. And it "reaffirms" a 1983 council reso By George Garties Advertiter Government Bureau The City Council yesterday called on civil defense planners to let the public help draw up plans for evacuation of the island's target zones in case of nuclear attack. The council's resolution on the matter expresses some doubt about whether the idea of planning for nuclear war is worthwhile, but the language has been softened from an earlier version some members considered too strident to support.

Some council members, particularly Welcome Fawcett, had worried that making plans for nuclear defense could Public input sought on evacuation plans.

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