maui - hc&s diversified agriculture – beef

15
Clif Hasegawa <[email protected]> MAUI - DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE - KULA AGRICULTURAL PARK - WATER - ACQUISITION OF EAST MAUI IRRIGATION SYSTEM - WAIAHOLE DITCH - HAWAII SUPREME COURT Clif Hasegawa <[email protected]> Mon, Dec 26, 2016 at 12:21 PM To: “Governor David Ige” <[email protected]>, "Lieutenant Governor Shan S. Tsutsui" <[email protected]>, "Senate President Ronald D. Kouchi" <[email protected]>, “House Speaker Joseph M Souki” <[email protected]>, Senator Rosalyn Baker <[email protected]>, “Senator J Kalani English” <[email protected]>, "Senator Gilbert S.C. Keith-Agaran" <[email protected]>, “Representative Justin H Woodson” <[email protected]>, “Representative Kaniela Ing” <[email protected]>, “Representative Lynn DeCoite” <[email protected]>, “Representative Kyle T Yamashita” <[email protected]>, “Representative Angus McKelvey” <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, Mayor Alan Arakawa <[email protected]>, “Council Member Elle Cochran” <[email protected]>, “Council Member Riki Hokama” <[email protected]>, “Council Member Mike White” <[email protected]>, "Council Member Michael P. Victorino" <[email protected]>, “Council Member Don Couch” <[email protected]>, “Council Member Gladys Baisa” <[email protected]>, “Council Member Robert Carroll” <[email protected]>, “Maui Council Member Stacy Crivello” <[email protected]>, “Maui Council Member Don Guzman” <[email protected]>, "Deborah L. Ward" <[email protected]>, "Burgon, Jonas D" <[email protected]>, "Ice, Charley F" <[email protected]>, [email protected] Cc: “Cindy McMillan Communications Director Office of Governor David Ige” <[email protected]>, Ross Tsukenjo Executive to the Lieutenant Govenor <[email protected]>, Flo Hamasaki Office Manager House Speaker Joseph Souki <[email protected]>, “Grace Ishii Executive to Mayor Alan Arakawa” <[email protected]>, “Managing Director Keith Regan” <[email protected]>, Maui Tomorrow <Webmaster@maui-tomorrow.org>, Maui Causes <[email protected]>, “Sierra Club of Hawaii” <[email protected]>, Wendy Osher <[email protected]>, Debra Lordan <[email protected]>, Tommy Russo <[email protected]>, “Anthony Pignataro” <[email protected]>, “Jen Russo” <[email protected]>, “Joe Bradley” <[email protected]>, “Lee Imada” <[email protected]>, Andrew Walden <[email protected]>, “Todd Simmons Civil Beat” <[email protected]>, “Nick Grube Civil Beat” <ngrube@civilbeat.com>, [email protected] Shared by The Southern Poverty Law Center, today, December 26, 2016, … UNTIL JUSTICE ROLLS DOWN LIKE WATERS AND RIGHTEOUSNESS LIKE A MIGHTY STREAM DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. Clifton M. Hasegawa President and CEO Clifton M. Hasegawa & Associates, LLC 1322 Lower Main Street A5 Wailuku, Hawaii 96793 Telephone: (808) 244-5425 Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cliftonhasegawa

Upload: clifton-m-hasegawa-associates-llc

Post on 14-Apr-2017

70 views

Category:

Food


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

Clif Hasegawa <[email protected]>

MAUI - DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE - KULA AGRICULTURAL PARK - WATER -

ACQUISITION OF EAST MAUI IRRIGATION SYSTEM - WAIAHOLE DITCH -

HAWAII SUPREME COURT

Clif Hasegawa <[email protected]> Mon, Dec 26, 2016 at 12:21 PM To: “Governor David Ige” <[email protected]>, "Lieutenant Governor Shan S. Tsutsui"

<[email protected]>, "Senate President Ronald D. Kouchi" <[email protected]>, “House

Speaker Joseph M Souki” <[email protected]>, Senator Rosalyn Baker

<[email protected]>, “Senator J Kalani English” <[email protected]>, "Senator Gilbert

S.C. Keith-Agaran" <[email protected]>, “Representative Justin H Woodson”

<[email protected]>, “Representative Kaniela Ing” <[email protected]>, “Representative

Lynn DeCoite” <[email protected]>, “Representative Kyle T Yamashita”

<[email protected]>, “Representative Angus McKelvey” <[email protected]>,

"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>,

Mayor Alan Arakawa <[email protected]>, “Council Member Elle Cochran”

<[email protected]>, “Council Member Riki Hokama” <[email protected]>, “Council

Member Mike White” <[email protected]>, "Council Member Michael P. Victorino"

<[email protected]>, “Council Member Don Couch” <[email protected]>, “Council

Member Gladys Baisa” <[email protected]>, “Council Member Robert Carroll”

<[email protected]>, “Maui Council Member Stacy Crivello” <[email protected]>,

“Maui Council Member Don Guzman” <[email protected]>, "Deborah L. Ward" <[email protected]>,

"Burgon, Jonas D" <[email protected]>, "Ice, Charley F" <[email protected]>,

[email protected]

Cc: “Cindy McMillan Communications Director Office of Governor David Ige” <[email protected]>,

Ross Tsukenjo Executive to the Lieutenant Govenor <[email protected]>, Flo Hamasaki Office

Manager House Speaker Joseph Souki <[email protected]>, “Grace Ishii Executive to Mayor Alan

Arakawa” <[email protected]>, “Managing Director Keith Regan” <[email protected]>, Maui

Tomorrow <[email protected]>, Maui Causes <[email protected]>, “Sierra Club of Hawaii”

<[email protected]>, Wendy Osher <[email protected]>, Debra Lordan

<[email protected]>, Tommy Russo <[email protected]>, “Anthony Pignataro”

<[email protected]>, “Jen Russo” <[email protected]>, “Joe Bradley” <[email protected]>, “Lee

Imada” <[email protected]>, Andrew Walden <[email protected]>, “Todd Simmons Civil Beat”

<[email protected]>, “Nick Grube Civil Beat” <[email protected]>, [email protected]

Shared by The Southern Poverty Law Center, today, December 26, 2016,

… UNTIL JUSTICE ROLLS DOWN LIKE WATERS

AND RIGHTEOUSNESS LIKE A MIGHTY STREAM

– DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

Clifton M. Hasegawa President and CEO Clifton M. Hasegawa & Associates, LLC 1322 Lower Main Street A5 Wailuku, Hawaii 96793 Telephone: (808) 244-5425 Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cliftonhasegawa

Page 2: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

On Mon, Dec 26, 2016 at 11:21 AM, Clif Hasegawa <[email protected]> wrote:

Dear Governor Ige, Lieutenant Governor Tsutsui, Senate President Kouchi, House Speaker Souki, Members of the Maui Delegation to the Hawaii Senate and House of Representatives, Members of the Hawaii Senate and House of Representatives, Mayor Alan Arakawa and the Maui County Council,

The following is provided in further support for acquisition of the East Maui Irrigation (EMI) system.

Legal precedent for the establishment of a public-owned irrigation system was first established in 1953 in Waimanalo. On July 9, 1999 the State acquired the Waiahole Ditch to guarantee “guaranteeing a steady source of irrigation water at an affordable price allowing for growth of diversified agriculture in Central and Leeward Oahu.”

Acquisition of the East Maui Irrigation system will ensure a steady and continuous source for residents of Maui, the taro farmers in East Maui and particularly and significantly the Kula Agricultural Park.

The Kula Agricultural Park, established by Maui County Ordinance, “is to promote the development of diversified agriculture by providing appropriately-sized agricultural lots at reasonable rent and long-term tenure.” Originally 346 acres, Mayor Arakawa and the Maui County Council voted in November 2015 to acquire an additional 373 acres. This is Phase I. Phase II is the design and engineering for water infrastructure for the lots.

The Hawaii Department of Agriculture, through its Agricultural Resource Management Division, operates ten agricultural parks, 4 on Hawaii Island, 4 on Oahu, 1 on Kauai and 1 on Molokai. The cooperative effort of the State and the County of Maui will ensure that Phase II is accomplished to ensure a sustainable water source for the Kula Agricultural Park, Up County framers and residents of Maui County.

Land acreage for the Kula Agricultural Park has been secured. Provisioning for water is in progress. County of Maui begins negotiations for acquisition of Wailuku Water Company property. Acquisition for the acquisition of the East Maui Irrigation system has been proposed.

Additional Reference. 2015 Statewide Agricultural Use Baseline – Maui. pp. 62 – 65. https://hdoa.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/StateAgLandUseBaseline2015.pdf Web Accessed: December 26, 2016.

On PBS INSIGHTS, Senate President Ronald Kouchi referred to “thriving tourism and construction” as key elements for Hawaii’s economy. Historically Hawaii’s economy was agriculture. The mono-crop industry has evolved; the mono-crop industry has come to pass with the closure of HC&S. Governor Ige and the Legislature’s vision of a Sustainable Hawaii is a firm commitment to less reliance on imports and a greater reliance on local resources, renewable energy, made and grown in Hawaii food and products.

We humbly and sincerely request your support and endorsement.

Thank you very much

Aloha Respectfully, Clifton M. Hasegawa President and CEO Clifton M. Hasegawa & Associates, LLC

Page 3: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

HISTORY OF AGRICULTURE IN HAWAII [Abbreviated]

1949 Territorial legislature creates Industrial Research Advisory Council to sponsor and finance studies, many have been in the area of diversified agriculture.

1953 The territory establishes its first public-owned irrigation system in Waimanalo.

1959 With statehood, federal funds became available for the development and growth of Hawaii's agricultural industries with funding for programs such as farm credit, natural resources, and statistical services.

1975 The establishment of the state's first agricultural park at Pahoa.

1987 Enactment of the State Water Code sets precedence on the allocation of water with the shutdown of a plantation irrigation system.

1994 Hamakua Sugar Co. harvests last crop (September 30)

1994 The Waiahole Ditch Contested Case sets the process for allocation of water by the state's Water Commission.

1995 Hilo Sugar closes.

1995 Oahu Sugar closes (April 9).

1996 Ka'u Sugar closes (March 27).

1996 Waialua Sugar closes (October 4).

1999 Last sugar harvest in Lahaina, Maui (September 12).

1999 The state acquires ownership of the Waiahole Ditch guaranteeing a steady source of irrigation water at an affordable price allowing for growth of diversified agriculture in Central and Leeward Oahu (July 9).

Source: Department of Agriculture. http://hdoa.hawaii.gov/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HISTORY-OF-AGRICULTURE-IN-HAWAII.pdf Web Accessed: December 26, 2016.

______________________________________

HAWAII DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, AGRICULTURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT DIVISION

Currently, the Hawaii Department of Agriculture, through its Agricultural Resource Management Division, operates ten agricultural parks – four on Hawaii Island, four on Oahu, and one each on Kauai and Molokai. In addition, there is one agricultural park on Maui in Kula, but it is managed by the County of Maui. All of the State’s lots are presently under lease. The lessees are engaged in diversified agricultural crops or aquaculture and are small farming enterprises (under 20 acres). [Emphasis Supplied] Source: Department of Agriculture. http://hdoa.hawaii.gov/arm/agricultural-parks/ Web Accessed: December 26, 2016

Page 4: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

Maui County, Hawaii, Code of Ordinances. Title 22 - AGRICULTURAL PARKS. Chapter 22.04A KULA AGRICULTURAL PARK (§§ 22.04A.010 - 22.04A.130)

Source: County of Maui. https://www.animallaw.info/local/hi-maui-county-title-22-agricultural-parks-chapter-2204a-kula-agricultural-park#s30 Web Accessed: December 26, 2016/

§§ 22.04A.030 Purpose of program.

The purpose of the Kula agricultural park is to promote the development of diversified agriculture by providing appropriately-sized agricultural lots at reasonable rent and long-term tenure.

KULA AGRICULTURAL PARK

OED [Office of Economic Development] also serves as the County's land management entity for the Kula Agricultural Park on Pulehu Road. The purpose of the Ag Park program is to promote the development of diversified agriculture by providing appropriately sized agricultural lots at reasonable rent with long-term tenure thereby contributing to the economic growth of our agriculture industry.

The Park consists of 31 farm lots ranging from 10 to 30 acres for a total of 445 acres and supports 26 farmers. There is a multitude of crops being grown such as Kula onions and a multitude of vegetables, turf grass, landscape nursery products, flowers, bananas, and dryland taro.

Source: County of Maui. http://www.co.maui.hi.us/621/Kula-Agricultural-Park Web Accessed: December 26, 2016. [Clarification Supplied]

___________________________________

COMMITTEE: KULA AG PARK TO DOUBLE ITS SIZE

November 5, 2015

The Maui News

Eileen Chao [email protected]

WAILUKU – The Maui County Council Budget and Finance Committee on Tuesday recommended approval of a land purchase that would add 373 acres and double the size of the Kula Agricultural Park.

The county intends to buy two parcels of land from Haleakala Ranch – a 148-acre mauka parcel adjacent to the current park for $2.9 million and 225 acres makai and farther south that was formerly used to farm organic pineapple for $3.1 million.

The $6 million acquisition would be funded with $5 million in state funds and $1 million from the county. The state approved the money for the project two years ago. Those funds expire on June 30.

Teena Rasmussen, director of the county Office of Economic Development, told the committee Tuesday that preserving agricultural lands is important for the island.

“There’s been a huge decrease in the amount of actively farmed land in the Kula region,” she said, adding in her presentation that “gentrification is a big threat to farming throughout much of Hawaii and especially so in Kula.”

Page 5: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

The Kula Agricultural Park currently spans 346 acres with 31 lots, all of which are being actively leased.

Lot sizes range from 5.5 to 26.6 acres. Rasmussen said there is a waiting list of farmers seeking a lot in the park. Park leases are granted to farmers for $100 per acre per year.

The expansion would preserve a substantial amount of farmland, with some of the “best soil on the planet,” advocates said.

“Upcountry Maui was once the center of vegetable production in the state,” said Warren Watanabe, executive director of the Maui County Farm Bureau. “Through the transition of lands, we find that many of the farms have changed ownership and the only large contiguous farmland in existence today is the Kula Ag Park. . . . Agriculture is risky by itself. Removal of some of the risk factors such as preserving large contiguous farmland will increase the viability of these operations.”

Councilors agreed that more agriculture would be a boon for Maui County, but they had reservations about adding more demand for water Upcountry, which already struggles to meet current resident and business needs in times of drought.

“I think that it’s really important, because I represent the entire Upcountry area and they’re so subject to water issues, I want to make sure people understand. . . . This poses no danger to their ability to get water,” Council Member Gladys Baisa said.

The county is able to draw up to 1.5 million gallons of water per day from the Kamole Weir, the largest surface water treatment facility on Maui that relies on flow from East Maui from the Wailoa Ditch. The Office of Economic Development calculated that current use for the agricultural park is about 548,191 gallons per day. East Maui Irrigation, the Alexander & Baldwin subsidiary that delivers the water via the ditch, had promised another 351,102 gallons per day to the planned Kula 1800 agricultural subdivision. Though that project has since been foreclosed upon and sold, water entitlements to the property remain, Rasmussen said.

That leaves 600,706 gallons available for the agricultural park expansion, Rasmussen said.

Whether that will be enough to irrigate all the new lots is hard to say, Department of Water Supply Director Dave Taylor told the committee. On average, the ditch flows 100 million gallons per day. The county department takes the first 6 million gallons, followed by Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. for its sugar cane plantation. The Kula park is last in line to receive water.

“We are not the water provider,” Taylor said of the county department. “All I know is we take the first 6 million gallons, and they (ag park) are at the end. If there’s still water, then there’s still water.”

EMI officials were not present at the committee meeting to answer questions.

Acquiring the land will be the first phase of the project. Additional funding will be needed for the second phase – engineering and water infrastructure for the lots. Officials won’t know exactly how much those costs would be until engineering studies are done, Rasmussen said. Engineering costs would be added to her office’s budget next fiscal year, while funding for water delivery infrastructure would be sought from state and federal sources.

Page 6: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

“Maui is the only (county) without a state ag park. I think it’s appropriate for the state to do as they’ve been doing – put forth money for the acquisition and put forth money for water system operations,” council Chairman Mike White said.

On Tuesday, the committee also recommended approval of a resolution to acquire a property at 2154 Kaohu St. in Wailuku for $1.22 million. Department of Finance Deputy Director Mark Walker said the county has wanted to buy the property for nearly a decade, entering negotiations “on and off” with the seller. The property sits in the middle of two county-owned properties, and acquiring the parcel would give the county “a contiguous lot” for its Kalana O Maui campus expansion project. County officials have not decided on what the parcel would be used for, though Budget Director Sandy Baz said it’s been suggested to use it as a parking structure.

[Emphasis Supplied]

Source: The Maui News. http://www.mauinews.com/news/local-news/2015/11/committee-kula-ag-park-to-double-its-size/ Web Accessed: December 26, 2016.

___________________________________

MOVING FROM CANE TO CATTLE A&B MAPS OUT A PATH TO LIFE BEYOND SUGAR

December 14, 2015

The Maui News

Eileen Chao [email protected]

Jacob Tavares, Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co.’s livestock diversification

manager, explains the ranching model being studied and implemented in Hamakuapoko. The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photo

HAMAKUAPOKO1 — Growing Maui’s farm-to-table cattle industry is among the chief projects of Alexander &

Baldwin as its 36,000-acre sugar plantation folds at the end of this year.

1 Footnote, Supplied. Hamakuapoko is in the Hamakuapoko Region of the East Maui Watershed.

Page 7: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

The parent company of Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Co. plans to expand its cattle grazing operations to 4,000

acres and create an agricultural park Upcountry, projects that the company hopes will help ranchers and farmers

sell their products locally.

“These cows, after they’re slaughtered and processed, would stay here on the island for local consumption,” said

Jacob Tavares, project manager for livestock diversification. “So you can find it in the stores, in Longs and

Foodland, in the local restaurants That’s a huge point of effort that we’re making here is to increase food security.”

Local ranchers “export calves to the Mainland because there’s not that high-quality feed source here on a

consistent basis,” Tavares said. “We’re providing that bridge to allow producers to keep their product here rather

than us importing steaks and exporting live animals.”

For months leading up to the closure of HC&S, everyone from politicians to community groups has weighed in on

how former sugar cane lands could contribute to food production and sustainability on Maui.

Cattle chow down after their daily move to a new section of irrigated pasture Monday in Hamakuapoko. The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photo

With A&B still testing different crops, right now the future of former cane fields is in a herd of 1,200-pound black-

and-brown animals grazing the green pastures of Hamakuapoko.

For about a year, A&B has been testing different grasses with a herd of just over 100 cattle from Ulupalakua

Ranch. As A&B seeds and fences more grass areas, Maui Cattle Co. plans to put about 1,000 head on this

grazing land by next summer, Maui Cattle President Alex Franco said.

The cattle company is made up of six different ranching entities: Ulupalakua, Kaupo, Hana, Haleakala and Nobriga

ranches on Maui, and Olumau Angus Plus on Kauai. Ranches will maintain ownership of the cattle and pay

A&B for the weight the company puts on the cattle, Franco said. The company does its own beef processing

and selling.

“It’s pretty much a game changer for us,” Franco said. “In our business, the biggest bottleneck that we face is

drought conditions. . . . One of the things we’re missing in our industry is the ability to put cattle on irrigated

pasture under drought conditions to where we can still provide product to the marketplace on a consistent basis.

That’s what A&B brings to the table.”

A&B currently has 3,000 planted, unirrigated acres for the project and plans to eventually add 1,100 irrigated

acres, Tavares said. Test trials allotted 1.2 acres per head of cattle, but the company is still trying to figure out the

ideal density for the animals, Tavares said.

Page 8: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

Diversified agriculture workers Michael Ross and Freddy Acopan

assemble a temporary pen in a Hamakuapoko pasture Monday afternoon.

The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photo

The company uses a method that prevents overgrazing and keeps the cows calm and content. The pasture is

divided into sections, and each day the animals are moved to a different section to give them fresh grass and allow

the grazed area 48 days to regrow to optimum size and nutrient level.

“It’s also good for the cows because you’re putting high-volume, high-quality grass in front of them every single

day,” Tavares said.

“Part of the grazing strategy is to keep everything very low stress,” he explained. “Keeping an animal low stress is

good for the quality of meat . . . which is more of a tender meat cut with better marbling.”

Tavares said it’s a 10-month process to seed the ground and let the grass grow a root system strong enough for

grazing. The company gets calves when they’re 6 to 8 months old and weigh 450 to 500 pounds. It takes them

about 24 to 26 months to reach their “ideal finishing weight” of 1,200 pounds.

Ranchers aren’t the only ones hoping to get in on A&B’s agricultural plans. The company has gotten lots of

interest from local producers eager to work the former sugar cane lands, said Jerrod Schreck, director of renewable

energy and land stewardship.

“Many of them are smaller crop producers, so we think an agricultural park with shared infrastructure would make

a lot of sense to help some of these folks,” Schreck said.

A&B is currently working with the county on a site near the Kula Agricultural Park, according to Rick Volner,

HC&S plantation general manager.

“The current thought is that the ag park will be built out in phases based on demand and could total up to 1,000 or

more acres ultimately,” Volner said. “The park will be open to all, but we continue to expect that former HC&S

employees will be given a preference for leasing plots.”

Schreck said the company wants to hear from local farmers about the crops they grow, their experience and at what

scale they plan to grow their crops.

Alika Atay, who won the Wailuku-Waihee-Waikapu residency council seat in the general election, said he was

“happy to hear” that A&B is making steps toward local cattle production and involving farmers.

Page 9: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

“I think these are all hopeful opportunities for the people of Maui County to participate in this transition,” Atay

said. “We already know we already consume a lot of beef. . . . Why not produce it so that it’s also slaughtered and

butchered here on the island and giving local residents more opportunities for jobs?”

Atay, an organic farmer and a leader of the SHAKA Movement (Sustainable Hawaiian Agriculture for the Keiki

and the Aina), said he planned to meet with A&B officials and representatives of the farming and cattle industries

to learn how he can “assist or be part of the transition.”

“I’m excited for the future of Maui’s opportunities, seeing Maui be more productive in the area of food production

and feeding people,” Atay said.

Dr. Lorrin Pang is also part of the SHAKA Movement and helped push for a voter initiative this year that would

have allowed the county to take over A&B lands for organic farm production. (The initiative did not get enough

signatures to be put on the ballot.) Pang said “we can walk the common path” with A&B but was concerned about

what would happen “when somebody comes in with a lot of dollars and they want to grow things that are not for

local consumption but have a lot of export value.”

“When push comes to shove, they might sell it off to the highest bidder,” said Pang, a state Department of Health

Maui County District health officer who spoke as a private citizen. He said there was no guarantee that A&B won’t

burn crops, use pesticides or sell to foreign markets in the future.

For now, A&B is still testing crops that could take over after sugar — primarily sorghum, corn and oilseed crops

such as sunflowers and soybeans that could be used for biofuels. Schreck said the company is looking at

production costs, yields and pest impacts. He said it was “hard to say” how long research would take.

The offer of a bioenergy deal could send A&B “off to the races with bioenergy,” or a high demand for beef could

increase pasture trials.

“It’s really going to depend on how the market responds,” Schreck said. “We know diversified ag is going to be

really hard. We know it’s going to take a long time to get all these acres back into production. But we think we

have some advantages that other plantations maybe didn’t.” For one, A&B owns thousands of contiguous acres,

most of which are designated as “important agricultural lands” by the state. The plantation is also close to the

harbor, and much of the land already comes with up-to-date electrical and irrigation systems and roads.

“We have good conditions for potential success,” Schreck said.

Source: The Maui News. http://www.mauinews.com/news/local-news/2016/12/moving-from-cane-to-cattle/

[Emphasis Supplied] Web Accessed: December 27, 2016.

________________________

THE BIG ISLAND PASTURE-RAISED BEEF

The Big Island produces the lion's share of Hawai’i's beef. The statewide cattle industry is basically

divided into two operations: the cow-calf setup where the calf is produced to be exported out-of-state for

finishing and second, the local slaughter operation, where cattle is raised entirely in Hawai'i for

commercial slaughter. While some ranches do one or the other, numerous do both simultaneously.

Page 10: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

Big Isle ranches producing pasture-raised beef sell their product to restaurants and retailers. A handful of

ranchers sell direct to consumers or at farmers markets.

The following ranches are producing pasture-raised beef for local consumption on the island.

4 Boys Ranch, Volcano

Agee Inc, Pa‘auilo

Alfonso Ranch, Kalopa

Botheilo Dairy, Hawi

Clarence Rapoza Ranch, Kona

Daleico Ranch, Kailua-Kona

Double D Ranch, Lapahoehoe

Egami Ranch, Kealakekua

Ernest DeLuz Ranch, Hamakua

Ernest Pung Ranch, Hamakua

F Ranch

Five O Cattle Company, Kamuela

FR Cattle Company, Kamuela

Jack Ramos Ranch, Honoka’a

John Rapoza Ranch, Kailua

Hale Kea Farms

Hualalai Ranch, North Kona

Kahua Ranch, Kohala

Kapapala Ranch, Pahala

Kealia Ranch-South Kona

KK Ranch, Pa‘auilo

Kukaiau Ranch, Hamakua

Kuahiwi Ranch, Na’alehu

Kukuipahu Ranch, North Kohala

Lowline Cattle Company, Ahualoa

McCandless Ranch, Captain Cook

Mealani Research Station, Waimea

Onaka Ranch, Honaunau

Paniolo Cattle Company, Waimea

Palani Ranch, North Kona

Parker Ranch, Waimea

Ponoholo Ranch, North Kohala

Pu‘uwai Ranch, Hamakua

RJ Ranch, Hamakua

SC Ranch, Pa‘auilo

Sheldon Mattos, Hilo

Triple D Ranch, Honoka‘a

Waikoekoe Cattle

Wall Ranch, Kealakekua

Source: Melani’s. Taste of the Hawaiian Range. http://www.tasteofthehawaiianrange.com/grass-fed-101/hawaii-grass-fed-

beef.html Web Accessed: December 27, 2016

__________________________________

WHERE’S THE BEEF?

12/14/2016 Source: Office of Communication Services, CTAHR

Some of it’s in the Islands, but not enough is produced here to meet resident and visitor demand,

explains a new video produced by Glen Fukumoto (HNFAS) that was recently presented to the

local beef industry. But while local producers will never be able to supply total demand in

Hawai‘i, grass-fed beef production can definitely be increased here, with improved financial,

land, water, and management resources.

THE BOTTOM LINE: “Ranchers need to make a profit to be sustainable.”

“72% of locally grown beef is exported.”

“6.2% of locally grown beef is consumed in Hawaii.”

Video Presentation: http://mm.ctahr.hawaii.edu:8080/Livestock/SupplyDemandBeefHawaii.mp4

Source: CTAHR. http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/site/News.aspx Web Accessed: December 27, 2016

Page 11: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

NATIONAL CATTLEMEN’S BEEF ASSOCIATION

CATTLE AND CALVES ON FARMS (000 HEAD)

Region VI 2014 TREND 2015

Arizona 900 UP 920

California 5,300 DOWN 5,250

Hawaii 132 DOWN 130

New Mexico 1,340 DOWN 1,290

Nevada 460 DOWN 455

Utah 770 UP 800

Total 8,902 DOWN 8,845

TOP 25 COW - CALF OPERATORS

Tie 13th

Parker Ranch, HI Alico, Inc., FL

23rd

Ponoholo Ranch Ltd., HI

Source: http://www.beefusa.org/CMDocs/BeefUSA/Producer%20Ed/2015%20CattleFax%20section.pdf

______________________

SHIPPING CATTLE FROM HAWAII – AIR & SEA

PARKER RANCH, one of three cattle ranches on the Big Island of Hawaii to rank in the top 25

nationally for cow herd size. The Parker Ranch is home to 9,000 cows, but approximately 5,300 head of

calves have to be shipped to the mainland for finishing each year.

To reduce stress, Parker Ranch prefers shipping to the continental U.S. via 747 cargo planes. Calves are

loaded into specially designed 8' x 10' boxes. Up to 20 boxes can be carried by plane, for a load of

100,000 lb., which fills two truckloads on the other end.

Door to door, whether by air or sea, it costs at least 47¢/lb. to ship an animal. That’s approximately $200

for each 425-lb. calf.

While shrink isn’t detrimental to the calves, it is part of the consideration when shipping cattle. “We

actually see more shrink on air freight than we do on the ocean. Air freight, they recover a lot quicker, but

you’re going to have 10% shrink,” Wood says.

PONOHOLO RANCH on the northern side of the Big Island also prefers the ocean route. Ranch owner

and operator Pon von Holt estimates 70% of his calves born from 3,000 cows are sent to the mainland

with specialized shipping containers called “cowtainers” each year.

Page 12: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

The shrink on calves is only 6% to 7% because of the access to feed and water, but much of that shrink is

tissue loss. It takes a little longer to gain back that weight, von Holt says.

“From a cattle standpoint, the airplane is a better trip,” von Holt says, adding he does use air transport for

some smaller shipments. “For us, shipping larger and larger amounts of cattle, the ship is more efficient.”

Source: SHIPPING CATTLE TO THE MAINLAND. By Wyatt Bechtel, Drovers, Associate Editor.

AGWEB/ The Farm Journal, December 6, 2014. http://www.agweb.com/article/shipping-cattle-to-the-

mainland-wyatt-bechtel/

____________________

GUIDELINES FOR INTERSTATE SHIPMENT OF CATTLE. Prepared by the Hawaii Cattlemen’s

Council Animal Welfare Committee and Transportation Committee. Updated March 2012. [By Sea]

http://www.hicattle.org/CMDocs/HawaiiCattle/White%20Paper%20&%20Info/GUIDELINES%20FOR

%20INTERSTATE%20SHIPMENT%20OF%20CATTLE%20updated%203-12%20final.pdf

____________________

IGE POSTPONES LOCAL FOOD GOAL

THE GOVERNOR SETS A NEW TARGET DATE OF 2030 FOR DOUBLING PRODUCTION

Honolulu Star-Advertiser

11 Sep 2016

By Sophie Cocke [email protected]

Gov. David Ige has pushed back by a decade his campaign pledge of doubling local food

production in Hawaii by 2020.

As the 2020 date approaches, Scott Enright, director of the state Department of Agriculture,

acknowledged that there has yet to be any significant increase in local food production, though

noting that plans to increase local egg, dairy and beef production are in the works.

Complicating matters, the state doesn’t accurately know how much food is being produced

locally versus what’s imported — making the goal elusive given the lack of a firm baseline.

Ige mentioned the new 2030 target date for doubling local food production in remarks last week

during the IUCN World Conservation Congress, an environmental convention here that attracted

an estimated 9,100 people, including government officials, scientists, nonprofits, business

leaders and policymakers.

Ige’s office didn’t respond to questions about why the governor had pushed back the target date,

but Enright called 2030 “far more realistic.”

Page 13: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

Ige isn’t the first governor to try to increase local food production, which “buy local” proponents

have argued is important for safeguarding the state against the loss of food imports if there is a

disaster that disrupts shipping, in addition to supporting local farmers and stimulating the local

economy.

Former Gov. Neil Abercrombie in 2014 signed on to a commitment known as the Aloha-plus

Challenge, which includes the goal of doubling local food production by 2030, with a target of

20 percent to 30 percent of the food consumed in Hawaii being grown locally.

Asked whether the state has made any progress in recent years in moving the needle on local

food production, Enright said that the “short answer is no, but it is starting to move.”

In the 1970s, Hawaii was self-sufficient when it came to eggs and milk, with 240 egg farms and

120 milk operations, according to a 2012 report from the state Department of Business,

Economic Development and Tourism. The number of egg farms since plummeted to about 100,

at the time of the report, and Hawaii currently has only two dairies. There have also been

significant declines in livestock.

Replacing 10 percent of the food Hawaii imports could generate $313 million within the local

economy, including millions in added revenue for farmers and vendors, while creating more than

2,300 jobs, according to the report.

Enright noted that several projects in the works in Hawaii could make a significant impact on

local food production. California’s Hidden Villa Ranch and Indiana’s Rose Acre Farms are

planning an egg farm in Wahiawa with as many as 1 million hens.

Honolulu’s Ulupono Initiative is also working to develop a dairy on Kauai and the state has been

approached by mainland investors interested in developing another dairy in the state, Enright

said.

There are also efforts underway to stimulate the grass-fed beef industry on both Hawaii

island and Maui. [Emphasis Supplied]

Enright said that one of the biggest challenges for the state in producing food locally is

cultivating a new generation of agriculturalists. He noted that the average age of a farmer in

Hawaii is 60.

To this end, he said the state needs to invest more in supporting ag startups for people who want

to farm but don’t have a track record, making it difficult to secure private loans.

This past session, Enright said he asked the Legislature for $4 million for the department’s ag

loan portfolio, hoping to increase available funding by a third. However, the Legislature didn’t

provide the funding. He said this coming session he will ask for $5 million annually for the next

two years.

Page 14: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

A more rudimentary problem to Ige’s goal of doubling local food production is that the state

doesn’t have exact figures on how much food is being produced locally versus what is being

imported.

It’s often estimated that Hawaii imports between 85 percent and 90 percent of its food, but the

figure isn’t based on firm statistics, said PingSun Leung, an agricultural economist at the

University of Hawaii at Manoa’s College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources.

“People just throw out numbers at this point, but the truth is nobody knows,” he said.

Perhaps the best analysis in the state has been done by Leung and his colleague Matthew Loke.

In a 2010 report, they estimated that about 88 percent of Hawaii’s food comes from imports.

The figure “is truly based on the best information that we could get, but there is a lot of missing

information,” Leung said.

He said that one of the biggest data gaps involves imports from foreign countries.

Leung said that an easier target would be to double local produce, which is the bulk of what

Hawaii grows for the local market. The Agriculture Department used to keep precise figures on

produce imports until much of its staff that tracked these numbers was laid off following the

2008 financial meltdown. Enright has struggled to reconstitute the division.

The Agriculture Department has also been working with a group called Sustain Hawaii to come

up with a statewide food metrics platform that it hopes will give policymakers a much clearer

picture of food imports and exports, helping them better define sustainability goals.

Honolulu’s Ulupono Initiative has provided $160,000 in funding for the project, according to

Amy Hennessey, a spokeswoman for the investment firm specializing in environmental

sustainability.

However, the complexity of the project appears to have delayed its rollout, which Enright had

hoped would be early this year. He now says that he hopes it will be available in the next 60

days.

Enright said he wasn’t sure when Ige decided to forgo the goal of doubling local food production

by 2020, but said it was likely around the time of the World Conservation Congress.

As of January of this year, the governor was apparently still holding on to the campaign pledge,

which became the subject of skepticism among some lawmakers during a January budget

briefing for the Agriculture Department.

Rep. Richard Onishi, vice chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, questioned Enright at

the time as to how the governor intended to meet the expedited target date given that the state

still lacked data on food production.

Page 15: MAUI - HC&S DIVERSIFIED AGRICULTURE – BEEF

“So the governor was told we don’t really know how much is being produced, but we are going

to support you in doubling what we don’t know?” Onishi asked.

“I wouldn’t really state it that way,” Enright replied. “But I will give you a yes on that,

representative.”

People just throw out numbers at this point, but the truth is nobody knows.” PingSun Leung UH

agricultural economist, speaking about the state not having exact figures on local food

production and imports

______________________

__________________________

“Upcountry Maui was once the center of vegetable production in the state.

Through the transition of lands, we find

That many of the farms have changed ownership and

The only large contiguous farmland in existence today is

The Kula Ag Park”

– Warren Watanabe, Executive Director, Maui County Farm Bureau