Small Business Hawaii
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SBH Sunrise! :-)
SBH Sunrise
Nov. 30, 2006
Charles Memminger
Star-Bulletin

SBH member calendar
Wed., November 8
SBH Board Meeting
SBH Office | 12 noon

Thurs., November 9
SBH Pau Hana
Furniture Plus Design
5:30 - 7:30 pm

Tue & Wed, Nov. 13 - 14
Business Opportunities Forum
Waikiki Mariott Hotel

Thurs., November 30
SBH Sunrise Networking
Macy¹s Pineapple Room
7 - 8:30 am

Wed., January 10, 2007
SBH 31st Annual Conference
Ala Moana Hotel

SBH TV
Sundays 4:30 pm
Channel 54

News
INSIDE THIS ISSUE

  • SBH Sunrise Nov. 26
  • Small Business Views
  • General Election Endorsements
  • Small Biz: Cynthia Thielen
  • Small Biz: Sen. Daniel Akaka
  • Charter Amendments
  • The Cost of Rail
  • SBH Home Page

    ONLINE EXTRAS

  • SBH 30th Anniversary
  • 30th Anniversary Photos
  • 2006 Legislative Ratings
  • Statehood Day
  • Broken Trust Forum
  • Broken Trust DVD
  • SBH Online Directory
  • SBH Books & Publications
  • SBH Member Benefits
  • Join SBH Today!

    SBH @ 30

    SBH 30th Anniversary Dinner
    30th Anniversary
    Dinner Photos


  • Small Business News
    November 2006 | Top of the News


    ELECTION 2006

    SBH Issues Recommendations on Five Hawaii
    State Constitutional Amendment Questions

    justice Small Business Hawaii reminds you to vote on the five (5) proposed amendments to the Hawaii State Constitution. These amendment questions will be on the 2006 Hawaii General Election Ballot November 7. Read carefully and vote - do not leave blank!

    1. Shall the governor be required to select board of regents candidates from a pool of qualified candidates screened and proposed by a candidate advisory council for the board of regents of the University of Hawaii as provided by law?

    SBH Position: NO. This measure would further dilute the powers of the Governor and not insure the best candidates would be nominated. The current process works well. The advisory panel is political and not independent.

    2. Shall the Constitution be amended to provide for a salary commission to review and recommend salaries for justices, judges, state legislators, the governor, the lieutenant governor, the administrative director of the State, state department heads or executive officers of the executive departments, and the deputies or assistants to department heads of the executive departments, excluding the superintendent of education and the president of the University of Hawaii?

    SBH Position: NO. Salary Commissions are a back door way of always raising the salaries of public officials without public input, debate or vote. Even the legislature doesn’t get to vote (except “no”) on the proposed increases. Many on salary commissions are former legislators or political appointees.

    3. Shall the mandatory retirement age of seventy for all state court justices and judges be repealed?

    SBH Position: NO. This is a blatant attempt to (1) limit the power of Governor Lingle to reform the Judiciary; (2) protect two current judges (among the worst) Chief Justice Ronald Moon (involved up to his eyebrows in the “broken trust” scandal) and James Burns, who are set to retire. Both knew going in that 70 was the retirement age. Most states have such a provision. it is constitutional. However, if we were to remove any age requirement, it should be done prospectively for the next appointees. (3) This would be another barrier to entry to younger, qualified, independent judge candidates, while protecting the old boys.

    4. Shall the Constitution of the State of Hawaii be amended to provide that in continuous sexual assault crimes against minors younger than fourteen years of age, the legislature may define:
    (1) What behavior constitutes a continuing course of conduct; and (2) What constitutes the jury unanimity that is required for a conviction?

    SBH Position: YES. The public and even the legislature overwhelmingly supports this change (and did so previously). Only sexual predators and some defense attorneys (and ACLU) oppose this protection for young children.

    5. Shall the State be authorized to issue special purpose revenue bonds and use the proceeds from the bonds to assist agricultural enterprises serving important agricultural lands?

    SBH Position: YES. The state already authorizes Special Purpose Revenue Bonds (SPRBs) for a narrow set of public purposes (education, energy, health, etc.) the state has no liability for the bonds but the agency gets a tax break and lower interest rate. Agriculture is a legitimate purpose for SPRBs.

    ELECTION 2006 PAGE LINKS

  • SBH Position on Constitutional Amendments
  • PAYCHECKS HAWAII General Election Endorsements
  • SBH Recommendations on City Charter Amendments (PDF)

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    Star-Bulletin's Charles Memminger is
    November's SBH Sunrise BreakfastSpeaker

    Memingernator
    Charles Memminger, Honolulu Star-Bulletin writer, “Honolulu Lite,” columnist, and author, speaks at the next Small Business Hawaii Sunrise Networking Breakfast at 7 am on Thursday, November 30 in the Pineapple Room, at Macy’s Ala Moana Center.

    Memminger, an SBH award winner for editorial commentaries, will offer the lighter side to some of Hawaii’s pressing issues hilighted in his newest book,“Hey, Waiter, There’s an Umbrella In My Drink.” Memminger, a former court reporter, finds humor in some of the most controversialissues and you’ll laugh along with him. Bring a guest! (Reserve on page 8)

    October’s Sunrise speaker was Victor Lim, franchise owner of half a dozen McDonald’s Restaurants.

    Cost is $20 for members and their guests who pay in advance; $30 for non-members and at the door if space available. Free members exhibit area — Parking is free for all!

  • SELECT THIS LINK TO DOWNLOAD THE RESERVATION FORM


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