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This Weeks Letters


VERY SOUR, INDEED


August 17, 2006
I hope you know what an idiot you have working for you in Editor

Anthony Pignataro. Based on his recent story ("The Mayor's Race,"

Aug. 3, 2006), he clearly supports Alan

Arakawa despite: the Maui Lani Height

Violations; his handling of the homeless; the Water Use and

Development Plan being years late; the General Plan circus; his

insisting on using HPoko Wells; him telling us Upcountry residents to

stop "bitching and moaning." The list goes on and on. 

How the Pig can back The A-Team rather than Charmaine Tavares shows

either: (1) He's an idiot; (2) He's friends with [Mayoral Executive

Assistant David] DeLeon; (3) What all us women say: "He's got the small

man syndrome (very small I might say)."

 -"Sour Grape," via email.







TAX OR CUT



COMET's proposed property tax charter amendment will be disastrous

for Maui, if passed by the voters (Coconut Wireless, July 27, 2006).

Here's why! It is simple math. If you cut taxes, then you have to cut

county services. So here is the question: which county services would

you like to see cut?

Which county parks and swimming pools should we close and how many

police officers and firemen should we layoff? Should we stop building

new county roads and infrastructure? How much should we cut back on

grants to such organizations as the Maui Humane Society, Maui Economic

Opportunity, Community Work Day and other worthy organizations? Should

we stop salary increases for county employees or maybe even reduce

their salaries?

We have a perfectly good property tax system right now which has a

$300,000 exemption for homeowners plus a low rate which make our

property taxes some of the lowest in the nation. Just to install the

new system would cost a lot of money to write up all new software and

to hire the new personnel in the finance department to implement and

maintain it.

The housing bubble has popped now and home values are declining.

Would you like to have your assessment frozen at the top? If someone

asks you to sign the petition, ask them which county services they want

to cut!

 -Bob Babson, Kihei







TIME MANAGEMENT



I know of no one who has not been impacted by and complains about

traffic on Maui ("Moratorium Time?" June 22, 2006). Especially during

rush hour. It's such a waste of gas and although time in traffic can be

well spent, you know we'd rather not be in traffic. It can take over an

hour to get from Kahului to Lahaina, a distance of about 25 miles; or

south Maui to Kahului, which is only about 12 miles. We're probably

using up more gas idling in bumper to bumper traffic than moving.

Personally, I don't think more roads is the answer. We do need more

roads, but those will quickly fill up with traffic too. I have another

idea to suggest.

In the corporate world it's called flex time. Basically, it's an

adjusted schedule. A lot of Maui's traffic problem is caused by

everyone trying to get someplace at the same time. What if only half

the people trying to get someplace no longer needed to get there at

that same time?

What would happen if teachers and students didn't need to get to

school until 9 a.m.? What if school was 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., instead of 8

a.m. to 2 p.m.? How might that alter morning traffic jams? What if we

tended our shops, conducted our business and, basically, had "day time"

work routines at night? If half the people who work from 8 a.m. to 5

p.m. could change to working 12 p.m. to 9 p.m., it may not drastically

reduce rush hour traffic, but it sure would help.

Maybe some day soon, private business and government agencies will

allow employees to have this kind of flex time. Freedom is flexibility,

not adherence to a social convention or system of habit. If a large

enough number of parents simply refuse to bring their children to

school until 9 a.m. due to the extra cost of idle gas time (and a

higher safety risk) of transportation at "rush" hour, then so be it.

After all, parents are taxpayers and, thereby, part owners of "the

system"—complete with all the responsibilities of ownership.

 -Ken Fields, Wailuku 







Maui Time welcomes letters commenting on

our coverage, but only if they're complimentary. If you still wish to

complain about something, please have the decency to use plenty of bad

punctuation and grammar—that makes it easier for us to make fun of you

when we respond. We also reserve the right to edit your letters. Send

your letters to the editor via e-mail (letters@mauitime.com), regular

mail (Letters to the Editor, Maui Time Weekly, 33 N. Market St., Ste.

201, Wailuku, HI 96793-1742) or fax (808-244-0446). All correspondence

must include your full name, hometown and phone number.

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