“Hawai’i House Finance Chair has plans for big changes in the Tax Code.”
Views expressed in this Hawaii News update are those of the reporters and correspondents. Accessed on 11 December 2024, 0046 UTC.
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Hawai‘i House Finance Chair Has Plans for Big Changes in the Tax Code
Big changes could be coming to the way Hawaiʻi taxes locals and visitors alike. That’s because one of Hawaiʻi’s most powerful lawmakers — Kyle Yamashita, who chairs the House Finance Committee — has already set in motion the pieces to get where he wants to go. His vision: higher property taxes to minimize out-of-state investors from buying up local homes.
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U.S. Supreme Court Avoids Hawai‘i Legal Fight Over Gun Rights
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected a Hawai‘i man’s bid to throw out criminal charges for carrying a pistol while hiking, as the justices declined to review a ruling by the liberal-leaning state’s top court that denounced an expansion of gun rights by the nation’s highest judicial body.
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Luigi Mangione’s Hawaiʻi Friends Shocked by Arrest in United Healthcare CEO Shooting
Luigi Mangione lived at the Surfbreak co-living community near Ala Moana Park on Oʻahu and later at 801 South Street. Friends recall him as a natural leader who led a book club. They say he once suggested they read the manifesto of Unabomber Ted Kaczynski as a joke.
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Senators Urged to Examine Gabbard’s ‘Deep and Intense’ Ties to Hawaiʻi Sect
For years, questions have swirled about Tulsi Gabbard’s ties to the Science of Identity Foundation, a Hawaiʻi religious sect that defectors have described as a cult. And now that Gabbard has been tapped by Donald Trump to serve as director of national intelligence, a former member of the group is warning members of Congress about why she worries that Gabbard’s involvement in the group could compromise national security.
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Hawaiian to Take over Seattle-Based Routes, Add Airplanes and Crews
Alaska Air Group today plans to tell investors in New York that Hawaiian Airlines will take over West Coast routes from Alaska Airlines to Hawai‘i and fly new nonstop routes from Seattle to Japan and South Korea, as well as announce more Hawaiian Air planes, and flight and ground crews.
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HAWAII BUSINESS MAGAZINE
Can Waikīkī’s Business Improvement District Be a Model for Downtown?
Businesses agreed to increase property taxes for hospitality, cleaning and landscaping, and more security. Many say the extra cost is worth it.
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O‘ahu Headlines
Honolulu City Council to Vote on Standards for Office-To-Residence Conversions
The Honolulu City Council will have its final vote Wednesday on a bill that would lay out the standards to convert commercial buildings to residential. It’s in reaction to a state law that gives counties until 2025 to adopt ordinances allowing commercial-to-residential building conversions, also known as adaptive reuse. The new state law says conversion projects just need to follow the international building code, which does not require windows to open. But the city currently goes beyond the international building code, requiring openable windows in residential properties.
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City Council to Vote Wednesday on Empty Homes Tax Bill
More than 9% of Oʻahu homes are vacant. That’s 34,000 unoccupied units based on 2020 U.S. Census data. Bill 46 could add a 3-percent yearly tax on vacant homes rolled out over three years, so a million-dollar home could face a $30,000 tax bill.
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Property Values Are Going Up Again, Here’s Why
Heads up to homeowners, real property assessments will be mailed out soon and valuations are up again. That means many will be paying higher property taxes. City officials say residential property values are up 2.6% on Oʻahu. This year, the Leeward side has the highest increase at 7.7%, according to Honolulu Budget and Fiscal Services Director Andy Kawano.
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SPONSORED BY KHON2
It’s A New Day On KHON2
As you get ready for the day ahead, be prepared and in-the-know. KHON2’s morning news show, Wake Up 2Day, provides information you need each workday, plus fun and interesting features from around the islands.
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Hawaiʻi Has Money to Police Agriculture Crime, but No Timeline to Start
Hawaiʻi has more than $90,000 to hire investigators focused on agricultural crimes. The issue of ag crime is top of mind after the high-profile killing of an Oʻahu rancher earlier this year. Yet officials still don’t know when they’ll fill these positions, and local law enforcement don’t receive any specialized training in agricultural crime.
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City and State Collaborate to Improve Kailua Beach Park
The city Department of Parks and Recreation, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources’ Office of Conservation and Coastal Lands and the University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program say they plan to work with community groups to smooth and flatten the dunes toward the makai side of the park.
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The Case Against Mike Miske Could Be About to Disappear as if It Never Happened
What happens if someone is convicted of a crime, but dies before they’re sentenced? That’s exactly what happened in the case of Mike Miske, found guilty of racketeering. He died a month before he would have been formally sentenced to life in prison. A judge would have determined what to do about the government’s push to seize more than $25 million of assets acquired as a result of his crime empire. A federal legal doctrine requires all actions be vacated if a defendant dies before being sentenced or if any appeals remain.
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Hawai‘i Island Headlines
Military Exemption to Hawaiʻi Nuclear-Free Law Repealed
The military is no longer exempt from Hawaiʻi County’s Nuclear-Free Law, according to Big Island lawmakers. In 1981, Hawaiʻi County became the first municipality in the United States to pass a law prohibiting the transportation or storage of radioactive material on the island. However, the County enacted another ordinance in 1984, allowing United States military operations to be exempt from the law. This year, the Hawaiʻi County Council passed Bill 206 Draft 2 to repeal the military exemption.
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Agency Sees Uptick in Marine Debris
The Hawaiʻi Wildlife Fund has removed about 350 tons of marine debris from Big Island shores between 2003 and 2023, the majority of which came in the form of net bundles, masses of tangled rope and nets that can weigh hundreds of pounds.
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SPONSORED BY BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU
Better Business Bureau: Trust Drives Growth
When customers trust your business, they choose you – and they keep coming back. For over a century, BBB has helped businesses build credibility and stand out with confidence. Hawai‘i’s most successful companies prove that earning customers’ trust is the key to lasting success.
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Maui Headlines
Maui County Council Considers Ban on Flavored Tobacco Sales
The council passed the measure through its first reading on Friday after a series of mostly supportive testimony. If passed, retailers would not be allowed to sell or market flavored tobacco, including menthol products.
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This Unsheltered Maui Community Is Stepping Up to Improve the Road They Call Home
It’s shower and laundry day at Holomua Road in Pāʻia, where nearly 30 Maui residents live unsheltered. Every two weeks, Maui Rescue Mission brings its mobile shower and laundry trailer to Holomua. Scott Hansen, the executive director of the organization, makes regular rounds of the island’s unsheltered communities. And through a partnership with Malama Maui Nui, a dumpster will now be available every other week for those living at Holomua to throw away their rubbish and keep the area clean.
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Maui Coalition Departs to Washington D.C. To Demand Congress Release Disaster Recovery Funds for Lahaina
A Maui coalition of the Hawaiʻi Workers Center has departed to Washington D.C. where they will demand that Congress release disaster recovery funds for Lahaina and all other communities impacted by the 2023 and 2024 disaster seasons. HWC leads the Lahaina delegation, joining alongside Organizing Resilience’s coalition of community members of disaster affected areas from all over the country including North Carolina, Florida, Texas, Louisiana and more.
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Kaua‘i Headlines
University of Hawai‘i and the U.S. Navy Partner to Support Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands
The University of Hawaiʻi and the Department of the Navy signed a historic 10-year agreement to support the protection and management of natural and cultural resources on Navy and Marine Corps installations in Hawaiʻi.
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