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Maui County


Wish upon a Starr


Summer Starr's campaign livens Upcountry State House



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District 12 hopeful Summer Starr
August 07, 2008
Every so often in the tedium of election year politicking, a candidate comes along who is capable of re-instilling in the voters a sense of hope in the political process.

On the national scene, the youthful exuberance and vision of Barack Obama seems to have generated that sort of optimism. Locally, it appears that Upcountry Maui voters may have a bright new choice to represent them in the state legislature.

Summer Starr is the youngest of four children of Hugh and Erin Starr of Olinda. She earned a self-designed Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Hawaii in Protecting Hawaii’s Environment and is now enrolled in graduate school, focusing on sustainable development and indigenous politics. Her goal is to create a template of the traditional ahupua`a system in the context of the modern urban backdrop.  

Summer Starr Interview
Election '08 - audio series: Summer Starr
Rob Parsons interviews State House district 12 candidate Summer Starr.
Election '08 - audio series: Summer Starr
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Download Podcast | 19.50 Meg

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After moving home to Maui two years ago, Starr worked with the Hawaii PV (photovoltaic) Coalition to promote renewable energy awareness. She worked on a successful campaign that resulted this year in the Public Utilities Commission upping the percentage of PV energy accepted into the utility grid from o.5 percent to 1 percent.

Now, Starr is campaigning for the District 12 (Upcountry Maui) State House seat currently held by Kyle Yamashita. The incumbent is perhaps best known for his energetic roadside waving to morning commuters heading into town along the Hana Highway in the weeks leading up to the election. Only the politically astute may have followed his voting record.

Awarded chairmanship of the House Economic Development and Business Concerns Committee at the beginning of his second two-year term, Oahu-born Yamashita appears to have quickly aligned himself with the house leadership.

In this year’s legislative session, Yamashita refused to hear Senate Bill 1789, regarding community access channels such as Akaku, even though it had passed the Senate unanimously and he received dozens of messages from constituents urging that he pass the bill. He also failed to advance the revised bottle bill legislation that would have required large retailers to take back redemption items, as is the case in every other state with a bottle bill.

Yamashita also drew criticism from political pundits concerned about legislation aimed at allowing large landowners to designate 80 percent of their Important Ag Lands, which many believe could open the door to urbanization or non-ag uses on the remaining 20 percent.

In an open-air courtyard café in Makawao, I asked Starr a few questions about her campaign platform.

Maui Time Weekly: What prompted you to run for State House, District 12 this year?

Summer Starr: I moved back to Maui two years ago after five years on Oahu. I saw that the Maui I had known all my life here was changing very quickly. 

MTW:  How do we revamp the Hawaii education system?

SS: Did you know that studies show that just 30-40 hours of one-to-one attention between student and teacher can raise a child’s performance by a full grade? We need more teachers, more teacher’s training, smaller classrooms and a cost of living increase.

MTW:  What do you see as the vital issues in your district?

SS: Agriculture, water and affordable housing are very inter-related. We face an aging population, and we’ll need to address senior care. We also need to be certain we choose the right path to replace lost jobs in a sagging economy.

MTW: What is your vision for a Maui your children may someday inherit?

SS: I envision self-sufficiency in feeding ourselves with food grown here. I believe our vital need to shift to renewable energy will open the door for a myriad of good paying jobs. Renewable energy equals jobs, technology, better education and a healthy local economy. We really can be a model for the entire planet. Our task is to illustrate how to retrofit an increasingly urban model to bring it back to a sustainable model.

MTW:  How would your style differ from that of the incumbent?

SS: I will be a voice for the community I serve, not just follow house leadership.

MTW: What else would you like voters to know?

SS: That it’s very important to vote in the Primary Election! And that I am eager to represent the community where I grew up. MTW



WANTTOHEAR MORE? Go to www.mauitime.com for an election podcast.

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  1. print email
    Intergenerational Locals, More Relevant to Politics
    August 08, 2008 | 03:07 PM

    I'm sure trust fund baby Ms. Starr would make an excellent Representative in California, but in Hawaii, her revisionist anglo-interpretation of "Hawaiian" is not what intergenerational locals deserve. Yamashita is better suited to provide a vision for Hawaii. So what if he aligned with leadership, who is naive enough to think that one could raise hellfire and brimstone at the capitol and get anything done.

    Ms. Starr's rhetoric reeks of the bourgeois California escapist who comes to Hawaii to reshape it into some imagined, gated paradise. Open your eyes, people really live and work here, and the average citizen ain't buying your tripe. We want a vibrant economy, not tree houses. We want to live where you live, Ms. Starr, in that million dollar second home your parents own.

    You, represent the people, ironic.

    Publius808
  2. print email
    It's about time...
    August 08, 2008 | 04:09 PM

    It's about time someone here on Maui focuses on sustainable living and renewable energy. Better still if someone with some real working knowledge of the subject is in a position to make some changes. I just hope, if elected, she doesn't get blackballed by the corrupt old boys club in the name of "local values". EVERYONE who lives and works on Maui should be concerned about where the status quo is taking us. We all do indeed, want to live in a million dollar home - but none of us will get there being completely dependent on imported energy, and food. Are other locals happy that our stores sell bananas from Ecuador, avocados from mexico, and are 90% dependent on imported oil for energy? Talk about irony! Where can I learn more about Ms. Starr? I want to help.

    Long time public school worker
  3. print email
    To Publius808
    September 02, 2008 | 08:28 PM

    While everyone is certainly entitled to there own opinion, one should not slander with fictional vile. I happen to have been to that " million dollar second home your parents own." Were you referring to the quaint little cottage, built in the 70's, by hand out of recycled material from a torn down building, before there was electricity available on a little dirt road. Is that the definition of a Trust Funded Califonian Mansion?

    KeepNitreal
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