It’s time to pass Kaua’i County’s General Plan update and get on with managing the growth of the island. The seemingly endless process of moving the plan toward eventual approval is tentatively scheduled to end next Wednesday, the day the
It’s time to pass Kaua’i County’s General Plan update and get on with managing
the growth of the island.
The seemingly endless process of moving the plan
toward eventual approval is tentatively scheduled to end next Wednesday, the
day the County Council should vote to accept proposed amendments to the
document. Those amendments, approved this week by the council’s Planning
Committee, project 28,000 visitors on the island per day and call for
approximately 2,000 more residences, among other things. Sounds
reasonable.
Updated provisions of the plan have emerged from a succession
of meetings and public hearings, both in the council’s chambers in Lihu’e and,
for the convenience of residents in outlying areas, in communities around the
island. The arguments against proposed amendments have been heard over and
over. There is no way that opponents, as some have nevertheless insisted,
haven’t been heard, or that the revised plan doesn’t reflect citizen input.
Also, it’s hard to find much sense in claims that the council now is rushing to
adopt the changes before the one newly elected council member takes office.
Bill Asing, the new guy, has only one vote, and indications are that he
wouldn’t be able to rustle enough other votes of council members to alter the
course of the General Plan.
The debate over the plan can continue ad
nauseum, or it can shift to how best to manage Kauai’s inevitable growth within
the document’s amended framework. The second option is the best one.