Remove ImagesMaui County The Maui 10 Who’s the county’s most powerful player? February 15, 2007 RANK PREVIOUS COMPANY 1 1 Weinberg Foundation 2 2 Maui Land & Pineapple Co. 3 3 Dowling Co. 4 4 Maui Electric Co. 5 5 Makena Resort 6 6 Tesoro Hawai`i 7 8 Alexander Baldwin 8 9 Wailuku Water Co. 9 10 Hawaiian Telcom 10 7 Monsanto Hawai`i PLANT THIS! Bad news for genetically modified organism (GMO)/herbicide manufacturer Monsanto this week: on Feb. 6, 2007, U.S. District Judge Henry Kennedy ruled that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has been far too lenient in approving applications to grow GMOs that haven't yet been authorized for commercial use. The specific instance cited in the case was an Oregon application by Scotts Co. to plant 400 acres of grass—we're talking actual grass here, not "grass"—designed to resist Monsanto's Roundup herbicide. The USDA approved it with apparently little oversight. "The USDA received about 1,000 applications last year, most of which were approved quickly with no formal environmental impact reviews," reported the San Jose Mercury News the day of the ruling. "Kennedy ruled that the agency must give more scrutiny to applications to determine if detailed environmental assessments should be required." A coalition of individuals and anti-GMO organizations filed the suit back in 2003, and they're ecstatic. In a Feb. 7 press release, Joseph Mendelson, the legal director for the Center for Food Safety, which was one of the parties that filed suit against the USDA to stop Scotts' plan, called the ruling a "significant victory" that will have far-reaching effect. "The Court was clearly concerned that the agency has put our nation's environment at risk by exempting many of these field trials from environmental review," he added. "That's why the judge made the decision broadly to apply future field trials of genetically engineered crops." CALLING ALL CONSULTANTS For the first time in, well, a really long time, Carlyle Group-owned Hawaiian Telcom is out of the cellar on news that they've replaced consulting firm BearingPoint, Inc. with consulting firm Accenture, Ltd. The reason is, of course, BearingPoint's inability to deal with the torrent of customer complaints over bad bills following Carlyle Group's takeover of the Hawai`i phone company last year. In exchange for not holding BearingPoint liable for the complaint bonanza, that company agreed to pay Hawaiian Telcom $52 million and forget earlier invoices for work totaling $30 million. MTW |