LIHU’E — The Planning Commission Thursday closed public comment on renovation of the Coco Palms Resort leaving a number of issues to be resolved. Among them are the historic significance of fishponds on the site, which developers plan to alter,
LIHU’E — The Planning Commission Thursday closed public comment on renovation
of the Coco Palms Resort leaving a number of issues to be resolved.
Among
them are the historic significance of fishponds on the site, which developers
plan to alter, and Hawaiian burials that are known to be entombed on the
property.
During public testimony, Cheryl Lovell-Obatake, chair of the
Kaua’i and Ni’ihau Island Burial Council, re-entered into public record
portions of a letter from Don Hibbard, state Historic Preservation Division
administrator.
Hibbard expressed concerns about fishponds on the site that
were awarded to Queen Deborah Kapule in the late 1800s.
Hibbard said
preservation of the existing ponds might require mitigating action if the ponds
are found to be in their original state.
Avery Youn, consultant for
developer James R. Reed of Lincoln Consulting Group, said the ponds’ boundaries
have been altered and modified over the years.
Renovation plans call for
raising the ground-floor levels of the resort buildings to a point above sea
level. Fishponds may be raised as well.
Kane Pa, who said he’s not against
the project, which will convert the old hotel into timeshare units, expressed
concerns about Na Kanaka Maoli remains buried under the existing hotel. He said
it’s not right to tear down the existing hotel and build new buildings on top
of those remains.
Youn acknowledged that human remains are known to be
entombed beneath one tennis court and a building which includes the
kitchen.
He said he thinks more bones will be uncovered when demolition of
an underground parking garage is done.
George Costa, a former Coco Palms
employee, said he’s in favor of rebuilding the resort if it’s done
right.
“I just want to see the right thing done there,” he said, offering a
short list in explanation: Hire local, learn the culture, share the
culture.
Costa is currently director of Neighbor Island operations for Marc
Resorts (Pono Kai, Embassy, various Princeville projects).
Puanani Rogers
asked for the commission to defer action on all three resort proposals before
it (Coco Palms, Waiohai and a new Kapalawai resort on Robinson family land near
the Russian Fort), so that more discussion can take place.
“We feel that it
is not wise, nor fair to our island and our island’s community to rush into
such grave and important matters that will affect us physically, morally and
spiritually,” she said. “Is it a life-or-death situation that forces you to
have to make a decision now? Will we be causing more dissension among ourselves
if we decide today, or will we be promoting harmony and aloha if we decide to
defer these permits?” Rogers asked the commissioners.
She advocated “smart
and slow growth,” and asked for a forum outside the Lihu’e Civic Center meeting
room where all could sit at the same table and speak on the issues as
equals.
Rogers also asked that the General Plan Update process be allowed
to finish first before moving forward on any of the hotel proposals before the
commission.
“We’re in no rush to do this deal,” and not in a position to
make an informed decision on Coco Palms, argued Ken Stokes.
There was a
time not long ago when people felt the urgency to re-open the Coco Palms.
“We’re no longer in a rush to get Coco Palms open,” Stokes said.
Lots of
other properties have come on-line since the Coco Palms and other properties
were ravaged by Hurricane ‘Iniki, and there are still some “major, major”
cultural issues involving both the Coco Palms and alignment of the proposed
Kapa’a bypass plan, he continued.
If “robust planning” had been or was
taking place, then the “major pedestrian access issue” between the hotel and
Wailua Beach would have been addressed already instead of still being an issue,
Stokes said.
Stokes further hopes the developer won’t alone be made to bear
all the costs of either a tunnel under or a bridge over Kuhio Highway. He also
hopes the new Coco Palms will be the community place the former resort
was.
He finally called for a meeting of the minds on how the community does
deals with developers. The Coco Palms approvals should come with a developer’s
“substantial contribution to the highway solution.”
Youn, commenting on the
sewage issue, said sewage overflows on the property go into the lagoons, and
into the basement of the hotel.
During the demolition phase of the work at
Coco Palms, some 50 percent of materials (dirt, rocks, concrete, grass,
greenwaste, plants, etc.) will remain on the property to be used as fill or, in
the case of live plants, moved to another part of the resort.
Debris will
be separated, and as much diverted from the landfill as possible. The same is
true with packaging materials (cardboard, etc.) of new equipment and supplies
brought to the site.
An oral history and pictorial history of the hotel and
property will be done, and the developer is looking at roughly $500,000 to go
to the county for park dedication and environmental impact fees, Youn
said.
The project will bring jobs, revenues and tax income to the island,
he added.