Sergeant routinely abused Iraqis, say soldiers at hearings

Posted on: Monday, February 25, 2008

Sergeant routinely abused Iraqis, say soldiers at hearings

By William Cole
Advertiser Columnist

Back in October, Schofield Barracks soldiers described Spc. Christopher Shore as a peaceful guy, a very funny guy, a good guy, very friendly, an outstanding soldier who didn’t have a propensity for violence.

At his sentencing Wednesday for aggravated assault in the shooting death of an unarmed Iraqi detainee, he wiped away tears in a courtroom at Wheeler Army Airfield.

“I know it’s real easy if you’ve never been in this situation to Monday quarterback and say what the law says,” he said. “You don’t know until you’re there.”

In Iraq, things went terribly wrong for the scouts platoon of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry, the unit to which Shore belonged.

Testimony at both a preliminary hearing in October and Shore’s court-martial last week pointed to routine abuse of Iraqis by a bullying and out-of-control platoon leader, culminating with the shooting in the village of al Saheed outside Kirkuk last June.

Sgt. 1st Class Trey Corrales, 35, that platoon leader, is accused of shooting the unarmed Iraqi multiple times, and then ordering Shore to “finish” him.

Instead of carrying out the order, Shore said he fired two shots next to the detainee’s head in the dirt “to defuse the situation.”

Shore said Corrales had tried to get the Iraqi to take an AK-47 rifle after the raid, and then ordered the man to run.

Confused, the Iraqi, wearing a white tunic, said, “No mister, no mister, not me,” Shore said.

Another soldier testified that as the Iraqi backed up, he saw Corrales raise his rifle, and as the soldier turned away – not wanting to see what came next – he heard a succession of shots.

The Iraqi man was shot five times.

Shortly afterward, knowing what had happened was wrong and with the story spreading fast, several soldiers went to higher command.

Shore, 26, of Winder, Ga., was sentenced to 120 days’ confinement, received a reprimand and was reduced in rank, officials said.

He had gone to court-martial on a charge of third-degree murder – roughly equivalent to a civilian manslaughter charge – but was convicted of aggravated assault.

Corrales, of San Antonio, faces court-martial on April 22. He is charged with premeditated murder, wrongfully soliciting another soldier to shoot the Iraqi, and wrongfully impeding the investigation by having an AK-47 rifle planted near the victim. He faces life in prison without parole if convicted.

Soldiers described a litany of abuse by Corrales against Iraqis, and the fear they felt themselves.

Shore said Corrales once stuck the barrel of his M-4 rifle down an Iraqi’s throat until he gagged.

On another occasion, Corrales took out his knife, pulled out an Iraqi man’s tongue, and threatened to cut it off, Shore said.

Sgt. 1st Class Dennis Bulham said he saw Corrales abuse Iraqis, and punch and kick them.

Spc. Trinity Ison said he remembered a car out after curfew. Corrales pulled up, opened the car’s door and he “just started hitting the guy in the car,” Ison said.

Some soldiers testified they regularly lived in fear that the 5-foot-6 Corrales, who was explosive at times and calm at others, would fire them from the prestigious scouts platoon.

After the Iraqi was shot, the fear grew. One soldier slept with a knife at the ready.

Staff Sgt. Ronald Shipp said “I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t afraid – afraid of somebody going off the deep end.”

Soldiers said Corrales had a close relationship with the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Michael Browder. Michael Waddington, Shore’s attorney, said Corrales was known as Browder’s “wrecking ball.”

Shore said he initially didn’t think anything would come of the shooting, and it would be swept under the rug.

Browder, the battalion commander, was relieved of command. He’s now deputy commander of a basic training brigade at Fort Benning, Ga., officials said.

The Corrales family, on a MySpace page, said Trey Corrales has fought for his country in Macedonia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq.

As a result of the charges, the Corrales family said, it is faced with mortgaging “all that we have worked so hard for throughout our life, in order to pay for an attorney to defend him; to defend him from the very organization that he has proudly served for, for over 14 years.”

IN BRIEF

Army report says there’s no plans to put Strykers aboard Superferry

Suspicion continues, mostly in the blogosphere, over supposed connections between the Hawaii Superferry and the Army’s Stryker brigade, which is in Iraq.

In an environmental impact statement recommending that the Stryker brigade be permanently stationed in Hawai’i, the Army addressed the question of how the 19-ton armored vehicles would be moved to the Big Island for training.

The Army said its primary method of transporting the Strykers is by logistics support vessels operated by the Army.

If those aren’t available, the Army said, it would use private contract vessels. Typically, those are barges, and the service said it is required to get bids from multiple vendors.

“The Army does not know if the Superferry would ever bid on such a contract or if it could even be configured to carry military equipment with the chains and bracing needed to transport Stryker vehicles,” the service said. “No contract currently exists or is being formulated between the Army and the Superferry for transporting the (Stryker brigade).”

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Feb/25/ln/hawaii802250323.html

Army pre-decides to station Strykers in Hawai’i – again

February 23, 2008

Critics claim politics steers Stryker plans

By Gregg K. Kakesako
gkakesako@starbulletin.com

Opponents of the Army’s plan to base its fifth Stryker Brigade Combat Team at Schofield Barracks disagree with the Pentagon’s conclusion that the move would fill strategic and national security needs.

The Pentagon’s reasoning is outlined in the final version of a court-ordered environmental study that the Army conducted on whether to base the brigade in the islands, Alaska or Colorado. Opponents sued to require the study several years ago, claiming the Army did not adequately weight alternatives to Hawaii.

Bill Aila, one of the plaintiffs in a long-standing legal case against permanently locating the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team at Schofield, contends that politics and not national defense is the driving force.

Another opponent, Earthjustice attorney David Henkin, questioned the Army’s wisdom in stationing 328 eight-wheeled, 19-ton vehicles in the middle of the Pacific since there would be no place to land if cargo planes transporting the Strykers developed mechanical problems.

In reviewing the two alternates — Alaska and Colorado — that the Army rejected, Henkin said it would be easier for transport aircraft to find places to land if mainland Army bases were used.

Henkin again questioned why the Army keeps rejecting the inclusion of Fort Lewis in Washington state in its deliberations as a federal appeals court ordered it to do two years ago.

He said Hawaii is farther away from “hot spots in Asia” than Washington and Alaska.

The Army estimates that “it would take 300 sorties of C-17s to mobilize this brigade,” Henkin added, “and Hawaii only has six to eight of these jet cargo planes at Hickam Air Force Base.”

“Where are all those planes?” Henkin asked. “They are on the West Coast.”

The 743-page supplemental environmental impact statement was released yesterday by the Army Environmental Command in Maryland. A final decision will be made by Pentagon leaders before the end of March.

The report said Lt. Gen. James Thurman, Army deputy chief of staff, selected Hawaii because keeping the brigade here would give the Army two Pacific outposts from which to deploy the eight-wheeled, heavy-duty vehicles and the soldiers who operate them. The Army already has one Stryker brigade in Alaska.

In October 2006 the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the supplemental environmental study because it believed that a 2004 study did not adequately analyze alternatives to Hawaii.

Last December the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team deployed to Iraq for 15 months after completing its training under a limited court exemption. When fully manned and equipped, the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team will include 4,105 soldiers and 1,000 vehicles, including 328 eight-wheeled, 19-ton combat vehicles.

The entire study is available at www.aec.army.mil.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2008/02/23/news/story07.html

U.S.S. Superferry?

http://honoluluweekly.com/cover/2008/01/uss-superferry/

U.S.S. Superferry?

Unwitting Hawai’i residents may be getting a military ship in civilian camo

By Joan Conrow
Jan 16, 2008

Hawai’i Superferry-now running (weather permitting) between O’ahu and Maui, thanks to a gubernatorial and legislative override of a State Supreme Court ruling-has been officially touted as a way to bring ‘ohana together and provide a transportation alternative.

However, in light of the U. S. Navy’s current push to quickly expand its fleet with a new type of fast and versatile vessel, Hawai’i Superferry (HSF)-chaired by former Navy Secretary and 9/11 Commission member John F. Lehman-may also be using Hawaiian waters to demonstrate the performance of its Austal USA catamaran, the Alakai, and prove its efficacy for military purposes.

At stake are U.S. defense contracts potentially worth billions, and possible sales to foreign navies, according to a defense industry consultant in San Diego who asked not to be named. The Superferry is being tested in Hawai’i to qualify the design for military contracts and also for sale to the navies of India and Indonesia, the consultant said.

The Navy is seeking to develop two new types of crafts: the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) and Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV). Both crafts are intended to be smaller, faster and more versatile than existing naval ships. They are specifically designed to operate in both the open ocean and the shallow near-shore, or littoral, waters of nations the Pentagon views as emerging threats, such as China.

The Superferry is very similar in design and specifications to the Sea Fighter, the only LCS prototype that has been launched and gone through sea trials, and the Westpac Express, one of two demonstration JHSV currently in use. Among the Superferry’s virtues is its versatility, which makes it a contender for both the LCS and JHSV initiatives. U.S. Navy and Army representatives have toured the Alakai throughout its construction as part of the ongoing evaluation of potential JHSV platforms, according to a June 2007 announcement about HSF’s sea trials on Austal USA’s website.

Lehman already has spoken publicly about the company’s plans to run military equipment and personnel from O’ahu to the Big Island in much the same manner that the Westpac Express ferry serves the Marine Corps in the Western Pacific. The logistical plan was touted as a faster and cheaper way for soldiers stationed on O’ahu to train on the Big Island when the Stryker Brigade comes to Hawai’i. ‘The Superferry is strong enough to take Stryker vehicles,’ Lehman told Pacific Business News (PBN) in March 2005. ‘HSF provided the Army with a cost analysis and expects to negotiate a long-term contract,’ PBN reported. On Jan. 7 of this year, HSF carried Hawai’i National Guard heavy equipment to Maui for removal of storm debris.

While providing passenger and cargo service between O’ahu and Maui, the Superferry’s owners are able to conduct sea trials aimed at demonstrating the high-speed craft’s endurance and performance in rough open seas and littoral waters. Its need to quickly accrue time in the water could explain why HSF plans to offer a second daily run to Maui, even though it’s presently carrying only a third of the passenger load it projected, according to documents filed with the state Public Utilities Commission.

While using Hawaiian waters as a proving ground, HSF has been able to develop and test its prototype vessel with little financial risk to investors, thanks to a federally guaranteed loan of $143 million that covers much of the $190 million cost to build the two fast ferries, and $40 million in state support for related harbor projects.

Meanwhile, the state’s controversial decision to allow the ferry to run while a full Environmental Impact Statement is being conducted-a process that could take up to two years-effectively ensured the vessel would be operational in time to compete for a JHSV design contract that will be awarded later this year, as well as for LCS design contracts two years later. ‘In an accelerated procurement environment, it would give [Congressional appropriations] committees great comfort in granting money for something up and running,’ said an O’ahu-based legislative insider, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Big plans ahead

The procurement environment is indeed heating up. Over the next five years, the Navy plans to buy eight JHSV, which also will be used by the Army and Marine Corps. Not envisioned as combat ships, these crafts would be used to quickly transport several hundred troops and their equipment across the open sea. They’re also expected to be able to operate in shallow waters and access harbors without relying on tugboats, piers and cargo cranes.

‘Will it [the JHSV] have other abilities? Of course, but the high-speed transportation requirement is the heart of this program,’ Capt. Patricia M. Sudol, the Navy’s program manager for support ships, boats and craft and the officer in charge of the Navy-led joint acquisition program, told the Weekly in an interview. Sudol said the Navy envisions the JHSV as a modified version of existing commercial high-speed ship designs, which means it won’t have to meet the rigid construction and self-defense standards required for warships. For that reason, the vessels are projected to be relatively low cost, with the first one targeted at $150 and the remaining seven at $130 million each. One firm will be chosen to produce all eight JHSV, she said.

The Navy also wants to acquire 55 LCS by 2013, a goal that is already three years behind schedule, Navy spokeswoman Lt. Lara Bollinger said in a press release. These vessels are intended to operate close to shore, hunting submarines and destroying underwater mines. They also could serve as offshore platforms from which to launch helicopter attacks and other missions on land, and recover the inflatable combat boats used by special operations forces.

The LCS program is a key element of the Navy’s strategy to expand its fleet. A Sept. 13, 2007 article in The Washington Post quotes Navy spokesman Capt. John T. Schofield as saying the ships are ‘needed to fill critical, urgent war-fighting gaps.’

But cost overruns are mounting on the two LCS prototype vessels currently under construction, and performance problems plague the Sea Fighter, the only demonstration LCS that has hit the water.

The LCS prototypes, by General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin-initially slated to cost $220 million each, now are expected to come in at a combined total of more than $600 million. Early last year the Navy asked Congress to allow the tab for the second two ships to go as high as $460 million each. But the Senate appropriations committee balked and cut funding for the program, citing delays, design changes and cost overruns of more than 50 percent. ‘The Navy’s littoral combat ship has suffered from significant cost increases and has had to be restructured by the Secretary of the Navy,’ Hawai’i Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, chairman of the Appropriations defense subcommittee, told The Washington Post. As a result, the Navy cancelled contracts for the second two ships.

The Sea Fighter, the other LCS contender, has been developed by San Diego-based Titan Corp. under an exclusive $59.9 million contract from the Navy’s Office of Naval Research. U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter of San Diego, former Chairman and now Ranking Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, secured funding for the vessel’s design and construction because ‘deployment of the Sea Fighter can demonstrate and validate many of the Navy’s operational concepts for littoral warfare, and more specifically reduce risk in the Littoral Combat Ship program,’ according to an announcement on the Congressman’s website.

The Sea Fighter, a high-speed, shallow draft catamaran, is made of aluminum, like the Superferry, and the two crafts are eerily similar in size, design and performance characteristics. In addition, both the Sea Fighter and Superferry, like the craft leased to the JHSV program, were built to commercial standards, in response to the military’s move toward using ‘off the shelf’ technology. This approach allows the Navy to use commercial high-speed vessel training courses for the crew, thus allowing the ship to proceed directly from new construction to deployment, according to a US Navy website.

In effect, the Sea Fighter presented a less-expensive LCS surrogate with which to test various operational aspects of the program. It was launched in February 2005 and formally accepted by the Navy in July 2005 after successfully completing sea trials. But the vessel has since been repeatedly dry-docked due to problems with its propulsion system, and has a worrisome tendency to ‘fish-tail’ under certain conditions. Additionally, Nichols Brothers, the Washington State company that built the Sea Fighter, shut down last November, citing financial problems and a pending lawsuit.
Risky business bargains

Some Navy officials have expressed fears that Hunter and other lawmakers might consider the smaller Sea Fighter design an acceptable substitute for the larger and far more costly Littoral Combat Ships. And if LCS costs keep rising, officials say, that could be a valid concern. ‘So the issue will be, can the Navy continue to do more with less,’ Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., a senior member of the House Appropriations Defense Subcommittee, told the Weekly in a recent interview. ‘There is real skepticism in Congress at this time,’ Dicks said.

But Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., chairman of the House Armed Services Projection Forces Subcommittee, said during a committee hearing last year that, rather than replacing the LCS, the Sea Fighter would be a ‘bargain’ ship that could ‘easily operate alongside the LCS and provide our fleet force structure with an increased complexity making our future … Navy less vulnerable to the enemy,’ he said.

Hunter’s list of 30 funding initiatives for 2008 contains just one endorsement-for the Sea Fighter. Attributed to HSF Chairman John Lehman, it states: ‘This kind of innovative ship, built with commercial off-the-shelf technology, is the future of an affordable surface Navy.’

In addition to investing a $58 million equity capital in the Hawai’i Superferry project, J.F. Lehman & Company-a New York-based private equity firm led by its namesake-has been making acquisitions that could support LCS and JHSV contracts. These include Atlantic Marine Holding Company, a leading provider of repair, overhaul and maintenance services for commercial seagoing vessels and U.S. Navy ships. The company owns and operates two strategically located shipyards in Jacksonville, Fla., and Mobile, Ala., and leases a third facility at the Naval Station Mayport in Jacksonville.

Hawai’i Superferry’s military objectives-and the value of its heavyweight connections -may not be known for certain until the Navy awards the JHSV contract sometime this year and Congress decides how much it’s willing to pay for the LCS program. But if Lehman’s canny prediction, two years ago, that the ferry would affect a paradigm shift in the way business is conducted in Hawai’i is any indication, he and his company know exactly where things are headed.

Four of the six members of the Hawai’i Superferry (HSF) Board of Directors have strong ties to the Navy and defense industries.

They include its chairman, John Lehman, the former Secretary of the Navy under President Reagan. Lehman is a founding partner of J.F. Lehman and Company, which acquires maritime, defense and aerospace companies and invested $58 million equity capital in HSF. See [jflpartners.com].

Lead Director Tig Krekel, currently vice chairman of J.F. Lehman, is the former president and CEO of Hughes Space and Communications and past president of Boeing Satellite Systems. Krekel, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, served as an aide in the office of the Chief of Naval Operations at the Pentagon.

Director George A. Sawyer, a founding partner of J.F. Lehman, is former assistant secretary of the U.S. Navy, Shipbuilding & Logistics. He was also a submarine engineer officer in the U.S. Navy, and is a member of the American Society of Naval Engineers and the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers.

Director John W. ‘Bill’ Shirley is former program manager of the U.S. Department of Energy, Naval Reactors Division, Seawolf and Virginia Class Submarines. He has 34 years of experience in senior positions at the Navy Division of Naval Reactors. Shirley now works as a private consultant, giving preference to J.F. Lehman Partners.

Two of the remaining six directors-C. Alexander Harman and Louis N. Mintz-are employed by J.F. Lehman.

Source: [HawaiiSuperferry.com] and Pacific Business News ([pacific.bizjournals.com]). -J.C.

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

By Gene Park
gpark@starbulletin.com

An Army specialist about to be deployed to Iraq went into the University of Hawaii dormitories Sunday and allegedly pilfered panties and an iPod, police said.

Spc. Mark Heath, 20, was charged Monday night with first-degree burglary and unauthorized entry into a dwelling. He was arrested Sunday after he was caught in the Hale Aloha Lokelani dorms on Dole Street on the university’s Manoa campus.

According to court documents, at about 9 a.m. Sunday, Heath allegedly opened the door to a dorm room and stuck his head inside as he peered in. When he saw a male witness, Heath allegedly fled.

The witness ran after Heath and asked him why he was trying to get into his girlfriend’s room. Heath said he was looking for a male student in another room.

Heath was escorted to security. Police said officers who responded smelled alcohol on his breath. Heath was arrested on suspicion of unauthorized entry into the dorm.

When police patted Heath down, they found a 30- gigabyte iPod in his right pants pocket, the court documents say. Police also found women’s lingerie in his pockets.

A female student approached the officers later and said she was missing an iPod. The student confirmed the iPod and some of the lingerie belonged to her. Heath was arrested on suspicion of first-degree burglary.

Heath belongs to the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, which is based at Schofield Barracks and is preparing to deploy to Iraq next month.

Heath is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail and has no prior arrests.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/11/28/news/story05.html

Stryker soldier charged with UH dorm break-in

Army man charged with UH dorm break-in

By Rod Ohira

Advertiser Staff Writer

A 20-year-old man assigned to the Army’s Stryker brigade at Schofield charged in connection with Sunday’s alleged break-in at a University of Hawai’i at Manoa dorm room was in possession of stolen property, which included women’s underwear and an iPod, according to a court document. Mark Andrew Heath, accused of unauthorized entry into a dwelling and first-degree burglary, was being held in lieu of $100,000 bail awaiting a preliminary hearing Thursday at District Court on his warrantless arrest following his initial appearance at court today.

High bail was requested and granted because Heath presents a “danger to the community,” prosecutors said.

According to Schofield public affairs, Heath is a scout with Alpha Troop 2nd Squadron 14th Cavalry. The spokesperson was not sure if Heath is scheduled for deployment to Iraq with the Stryker brigade in coming weeks.

The soldier was arrested at 9:35 a.m. Sunday in the lobby of the Lokelani Dorm building at 2579 Dole St. by police investigating a reported break-in.

The unauthorized entry charge stems from Heath allegedly opening the door and entering a fourth-floor unit, according to an affidavit filed at District Court. A woman resident and her boyfriend were in the unit.

The boyfriend chased down Heath after he allegedly fled from the room.

When asked why he trying to enter the room, Heath allegedly said he was looking for a friend, “Travis Ford in dorm room 453,” the affidavit stated. Police and Campus Security said a check of the name and room number met with negative results, the document said.

According to witnesses, Heath appeared intoxicated, the affidavit said.

The woman resident of the dorm room Heath allegedly entered is the complainant in the unauthorized entry case.

Another 18-year-old female student and Lokelani Dorm resident identified a pink Nano iPod and
ingerie allegedly found in Heath’s possession as belonging to her, leading to the burglary charge.

The student told authorities the items were stolen sometime between Thanksgiving day and Sunday from her dorm room, the court document said. Her’s is a different room than the one in the unauthorized entry case.

UH spokesman Gregg Takayama said school officials are investigating how Heath gained entrance into Lokelani Dorm, which is part of the cluster of Hale Aloha campus dorms.

Takayama said the dorms have around-the-clock front desk check-in where guests are admitted only if escorted by a resident. Takayama declined comment when asked if Heath was a registered guest.

Dorm residents were also advised to lock their doors from the beginning of the current school year, Takayama said.

According to investigators, the dorms are not equipped with security surveillance cameras.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Nov/27/br/br8193742056.html

Drawing Battle Lines: Hawaiians on both sides testify at Stryker hearings

Drawing Battle Lines

Hawaiians on both sides testify at Stryker hearings

By lisa Asato

Publications Editor

The Army wrapped up five public hearings in Hawai‘i last month on its proposal to permanently base the Stryker Brigade Combat Team in Hawai‘i, Alaska or Colorado.

The hearings were the result of a ruling last year by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that halted Stryker-related work until the Army made an environmental analysis of other possible sites besides Hawai‘i, which was the only site previously considered. Training resumed on a limited basis last December.

During the course of the hearings, testimony was offered by Native Hawaiians on both sides of the issue. Activist and former gubernatorial candidate William Ailä was among those who testified that the draft Environmental Impact Statement still isn’t sufficient. “I think the process is being manipulated to arrive at the decision to stage the Stryker

here,” he said.

Ailä said the Army Chief of Staff and other decision-makers are not being presented with

all the information they need to make an informed decision.

Among the shortcomings, he said, is that a site-specific EIS was done for Hawai‘i but not for the two other sites under consideration at Fort Richardson, Alaska, and Fort Carlson,

Colorado, nor was one done for an alternate interim combat team, which may replace the

Stryker brigade.

Ailä also said a new quality-of-life criterion, added after the original EIS in 2004, “predisposes Hawai‘i as the selection site” because 99.5 percent of service members would choose Hawai‘i over Alaska or Colorado. “That automatically gives (Hawai‘i) a higher rating,” he said. Critics of the plan also oppose the brigade’s impact on endangered species and cultural sites, Ailä said.

Meanwhile, William Prescott, a Native Hawaiian retired Army sergeant and Vietnam veteran, said the EIS is “more than adequate to satisfy the requirements that’s been placed on (the Army).” He also challenged the use of words like “sacred” in the EIS, saying it

should be deleted or referred to as “formerly considered sacred” if it refers to Hawaiian gods and religion, because King Kamehameha II abolished the Hawaiian religion in 1819.

Prescott said soldiers need to train, and people should remember that they are here because our congressional delegation brings them here. “If (people) have any complaints, they should take it up with the people they elected, not on the men who are going to be committed to combat to defend our freedom,” he said.

The planned Stryker brigade would comprise about 4,000 soldiers and 1,000 vehicles, including about 320 Stryker combat vehicles, which would be based at Schofield Barracks and trained at Mäkua, Kahuku, Kawailoa and Dillingham Transportation Area on O‘ahu and at Pöhakuloa on Hawai‘i Island.

Last year, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs filed a complaint alleging the Army had failed to comply with federal law in performing construction work in the Schofield region, as

well as failure to comply with its own Programmatic Agreement of 2004, aimed at protecting cultural resources. OHA was a party to that agreement, and cultural monitors reported damage to Hale‘au‘au heiau by bulldozers, construction of a road over burial grounds and other violations. OHA is asking the courts to prohibit Stryker-related construction or training activity in that area until compliance is achieved.

The draft EIS may be viewed online at www.sbct-seis.org.

The public comment period ended Oct. 30. A video of the Stryker brigade EIS meeting

at Nänäkuli will air on ‘Ölelo channel 53 at 8 a.m. Nov. 9, 11:30 a.m. Nov. 10, 8 a.m. Nov. 16 and 12:30 p.m. Nov. 17.

Source: www.oha.org/pdf/kwo07/KWO0711.pdf

Stryker brigade expansion will force realignment of Saddle Road

Posted on: Monday, October 15, 2007

Hawaii Saddle Road faces realignment

By Eloise Aguiar
Advertiser Staff Writer

The state must realign a part of its Saddle Road highway improvement project after the Army acquired 24,000 acres of land near Pohakuloa Training Area that sits on part of the newly aligned highway.

The $220 million Big Island highway improvement project, under way since 2004, is an ambitious effort to straighten, repave and separate military training from motorists.

But with the Army’s acquisition from Parker Ranch last year of a section called Ke’amuku, the state Department of Transportation must find a new route for the road that will bypass military operations.

The planned alignment crosses the 24,000 acres, said DOT Highways Deputy Director Brennon Morioka in an Oct. 4 letter. The state wants to minimize contact between military training vehicles and civilian traffic in the Army’s Pohakuloa Training Area.

“Consequently, the state DOT will be attempting to establish an alternative alignment which will be infrequently disrupted by military activities and provide an efficient travel route for the general public,” Morioka wrote.

Planning studies have been initiated and a supplemental Environmental Impact Statement will be prepared, he said, adding that agency and public informational meetings will be held.

The Ke’amuku land is north of and now a part of the Army’s Pohakuloa Training Area that is used by several military branches, said Stefanie Gardin, Army spokeswoman.

“We purchased it as a nonlive-fire maneuver training area,” Gardin said.

Built by the Army in 1942, the two-lane Saddle Road extends 48 miles from the rainy Upper Kaumana area east of Hilo to a junction with Mamalahoa Highway six miles south of Waimea.

It connects the Mauna Kea Science Reserve International Astronomical Observatory Complex and the Army’s Pohakuloa Training Area to the rest of the island.

Before the beginning of repair work, much of the highway was a patchwork of repaired potholes, winding over and around blind hills and curves as it runs along miles of old lava flows, pasture land and thick rainforest.

Rental car companies had prohibited their customers from driving on the Saddle Road, but local commuters routinely barreled down the center line to avoid the bumps.

The state has completed a section of the road, mileposts 28 to 35, that is now open to the public, said Scott Ishikawa,DOT spokesman.

“There’s another section, (mileposts) 19 to 28, that’s being worked on,” Ishikawa said. “Goodfellow Brothers is looking to complete the work, probably in late summer 2008. There are other phases that they are trying to gradually connect as funding becomes available.”

Source: HonoluluAdvertiser.com

Superferry Unstoppable?

UNSTOPPABLE

Joan Conrow
Oct 10, 2007

As the Hawai’i Superferry navigates the Islands’ choppy judicial waters, some of the core issues surrounding its operations have been submerged in a rising debate over the vessel’s pros and cons.

Rep. Hermina Morita (D-14th) is trying to dredge them up again with a formal complaint asking the state Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to suspend the Superferry’s certificate to operate in Hawai’i’s waters. ‘People are so emotional over this issue they’re missing the most important thing that is happening in our communities, and this is a lack of confidence in government,’ she said.

Morita thinks that loss of faith is grounded in actions taken by Gov. Linda Lingle and her administration to first usher the Superferry through the permitting process without an environmental review-and then to keep the boat running after the Hawai’i Supreme Court ruled those actions were in error.

‘We have an administration that is so keen on pushing something through they’re missing what the courts are saying,’ Morita said. ‘All they can say is the courts are wrong.’

Russell Pang, the governor’s spokesman, did not return a call seeking comment.

Besides Morita’s complaint to the PUC, the administration’s actions have prompted several lawsuits and two large protests on Kaua’i that resulted in 14 arrests and international media coverage of surfers and kayakers blocking Nawiliwili Harbor to keep the Superferry out until the court-ordered Environmental Assessment (EA) is in.

Lingle responded to the protests by creating an unprecedented ‘unified command’ of state, county and federal law enforcement agencies to control demonstrators through a federal ‘security zone’ at the harbor.

‘It’s so political,’ said Morita, whose district includes Kaua’i’s North Shore and Kapa’a. ‘You’re using military force, police force, to enforce strictly a political decision, and that’s when government is really scary.’

Morita’s complaint, filed Sept. 26 by Kaua’i attorney Harold Bronstein, asks the PUC to suspend the Superferry’s operating certificate until it completes the environmental reviews mandated by state law, its harbors operating agreement and its PUC permit.

The PUC issued an order Oct. 4 stating it would serve the Superferry with the complaint and gave the company 20 days to respond. Superferry attorney Lisa Munger did not return a call seeking comment.

In the 21-page complaint, Bronstein cites public documents in laying out the chronology of the ferry’s approval process as it relates to environmental concerns.

The documents cited show that government agencies initially determined that a $143 million federally guaranteed loan to the Superferry, and its operations in the Islands, triggered the need for environmental studies.

Yet those same state and federal agencies later allowed the Superferry to proceed without conducting any review of how ferry services might affect both the environment and local communities after the Lingle administration determined no review was needed.
A rocky course

‘One of the reasons why we did this complaint was to try and get everyone educated about the timetable and what was being said and done about the environmental review,’ said Morita, ‘We want to get the timeline straight.’

That timeline is key to Morita’s contention that the Superferry enjoyed special treatment from the Lingle administration. And that political favoritism, she said, is leading the state along a rocky course that threatens to taint Hawai’i’s business climate, weaken its ‘progressive’ environmental laws, jeopardize its citizens and undermine the neutrality of a regulatory agency.

‘We’re making such important policy decisions that I don’t want to see our communities being bullied,’ Morita said in explaining why she filed the complaint. ‘I don’t think I would be so bold without Harold [Bronstein]. It’s like, can you protect my back?’

Morita and Bronstein previously teamed up to challenge Na Pali Coast tour boats operating in Hanalei Bay, and Bronstein recently won a state Supreme Court decision in a public interest case related to shoreline setbacks.

It took Bronstein nearly two weeks to sift through documents filed with various agencies, including the PUC, the federal Maritime Administration (MARAD) and the state Department of Transportation (DOT), and write the complaint.

The complaint shows that the DOT’s decision to exempt $40 million in Superferry-related harbor projects from environmental review influenced both MARAD and the PUC to take a similarly lenient approach.

‘It was kind of like a house of cards,’ Morita said, because DOT’s decision was later invalidated by the state’s highest court in an August ruling.

The DOT has since agreed to conduct a statewide EA, which could lead to the need for a broader Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). Lingle is pushing to keep the ferry operating while that process is under way-an issue that is the subject of a Maui Circuit Court hearing now in its fifth week.

Morita’s complaint contends the ferry cannot operate while the EA is conducted because state law requires that environmental studies be completed and accepted prior to implementing an action.

PUC records cited in Morita’s complaint indicate the agency recognized that ‘issues were raised by some at the public hearings about the impact of the proposed ferry system on the environment,’ and that some had suggested that an ‘environmental assessment be done on the proposed ferry services’ effect on the surrounding environment.’

The PUC also found that the environmental concerns raised by the public were ‘important issues that should be addressed.’ However, the agency stated the issues ‘need not be addressed in this particular decision and order, since the determination of whether the proposed ferry service and its effect on the harbors and surrounding areas require an environmental assessment is currently being reviewed and addressed by the DOT,’ the complaint states.

‘The PUC punted to the DOT, but the PUC really had the responsibility of conducting the environmental review,’ Morita said. ‘Because if they (Superferry) didn’t have a license, they wouldn’t need (DOT-funded) harbor improvements. If anything, I hope this opens up that the PUC had the responsibility of conducting this environmental review.’

Morita said the PUC’s deference to the DOT also raises the question of ‘who is providing oversight of state agencies if regulatory agencies don’t require applicants to follow the law? Where are your checks and balances? This is what really upsets me, the political influence over a regulatory body that is supposed to be neutral. That stinks.’

Although the PUC did not require Superferry to conduct an EA, it did impose conditions when granting the company a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) on Dec. 30, 2004.

‘We find it necessary, however, to condition our authorization in this docket upon Applicant’s showing, to the satisfaction of the commission, that Applicant has complied with all applicable federal and state laws, rules and regulations×to the extent applicable to ensure that all such requirements are appropriately addressed,’ according to PUC records cited in the complaint.

While the Superferry was moving through the PUC process, it also had applied to MARAD for loan guarantees to construct two high-speed ferries. In its December 2004 environmental review of the Superferry’s application, MARAD determined that because 78.5 percent of the project would be funded through $143 million in Title XI loan guarantees ‘the proposed action is considered ‘Major’,’ according to the complaint.

Under the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA), ‘major actions’ that are undertaken by federal agencies or use federal funds typically require an EA and often an EIS as well.

On Feb. 23, 2005, the DOT issued its exemption determination. A month later, MARAD followed the state’s lead and excluded the Superferry from NEPA requirements. In its March 28, 2005 record of that exclusion, MARAD states that during its December 2004 review of the application ‘there appeared to have been very little, if any, NEPA or state environmental work performed related to the proposed ferry service that would be adequate for MARAD’s responsibilities under NEPA.

‘However, since that time,’ the record continues, ‘the State of Hawai’i Department of Transportation completed a review of the proposed action×and determined that the proposed action is exempt from further review.’ Based on the state’s decision, ‘the NEPA program manager has determined that the proposed action is categorically excluded from further NEPA review.’

The NEPA exemption was granted even though the National Marine Fisheries Services and Marine Mammal Commission raised concerns in 2005 about the high-speed ferry’s potential impacts on marine mammals, including the likelihood of collisions with humpback whales, according to an Oct. 4 article in the Honolulu Advertiser.

In a Jan. 25, 2005 letter to MARAD, commission director David Cottingham noted that any federal agency taking action on behalf of the Superferry ‘has an obligation to conduct appropriate environmental analyses…because a ‘may affect’ situation is obvious,’ the Advertiser reported. The commission’s current head, Tim Ragen, also reportedly told the Advertiser that he disagrees with the exemption and the agency was surprised MARAD did not seek a consultation on the project.

A MARAD official testified during the current Maui court hearing that the exemption was warranted because the agency was not providing a direct loan or financing to the Superferry.

Despite the NEPA exemption, MARAD did recommend that the loan guarantee contract include the requirement that the Superferry ‘comply with all applicable environmental rules and regulations,’ according to Morita’s complaint.

Superferry officials have repeatedly asserted that the loan guarantees were contingent upon the state exempting the project from environmental review. But MARAD records cited in the complaint indicate the NEPA exemption was tied to the state’s decision, not the actual loan guarantees.

It’s all lip service

The complaint goes on to report that on or about Sept. 7, 2005, the DOT and Hawai’i Superferry entered into a harbors operating agreement. One provision of the agreement states: ‘In the event a governmental authority or a court of law determines that an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement is required regarding HSF’s operations, HSF will comply with all applicable environmental laws, statutes, rules, regulations, ordinances, orders, directives and guidelines,’ including NEPA and the Hawai’i Environmental Protection Act, (HEPA) also known as HRS chapter 343.

On Aug. 27 of this year, following the Supreme Court ruling that invalidated the DOT’s exemption, the PUC asked Superferry to address the court order. Hawai’i Superferry replied: ‘HSF is in compliance with all applicable laws, rules and regulations, and the August 23, 2007 order does not change that status,’ according to the complaint.

On Aug. 31, the Supreme Court released its full opinion on the case and concluded: ‘Contrary to the expressly stated purpose and intent of HEPA, the public was prevented from participating in an environmental review process for the Superferry project by DOT’s grant of an exemption from HRS chapter 343.

‘The exemption was erroneously granted as DOT considered only the physical improvements to Kahului harbor in isolation and did not consider the secondary impacts of the environment that may result from the use of the Hawai’i Superferry in conjunction with the harbor improvements.

‘All parties involved and society as a whole would have benefited had the public been allowed to participate in the review process of the Superferry project, as was envisioned by the Legislature when it enacted the Hawai’i Environmental Protection Act.’

Following the Supreme Court’s decision, a Maui judge approved a temporary restraining order to keep the boat from servicing that island. But Superferry did travel to Nawiliwili Harbor on Aug. 26 and 27, an action that Morita’s complaint contends was ‘in willful violation’ of HEPA, the harbors operating agreement and the conditions imposed under its PUC certificate.

Following public demonstrations at Nawiliwili Harbor, which prevented the boat from docking on Aug. 27, Superferry voluntarily suspended its service to the island.

Lingle chastised the demonstrators, saying their actions were giving the state ‘a very bad reputation.’ Rep. Fred Hemmings (R-25th) said the protests gave Hawai’i ‘a black eye’ and reinforced the perception that the Islands are a bad place to do business.

Morita disagrees. ‘We do far more damage to our business climate when we send out the message you have to rely on political favors to get things approved, and that’s what this reeks of.’

Two weeks after the protests, Lingle announced she had decided the ferry could return to Kaua’i on Sept. 26. She went on to say she had formed a ‘unified command’ of state, local and federal law enforcement agencies to ensure that demonstrators would not again prevent the Superferry from entering Nawiliwili Harbor.

Andy Bushnell, a retired Kaua’i Community College history professor, said he could recall nothing similar to such a command in Hawai’i’s past-except when martial law was imposed after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. But in that case, he said, the unified command was led by the military and opposed by civilian authorities, who eventually reclaimed their power to govern the Islands.

As part of a plan devised by the ‘unified command,’ the Coast Guard used an emergency rule to create a ‘security zone’ that makes most of Nawiliwili Harbor off-limits to everyone, including fishing boats and canoe clubs, for one hour prior to the ferry’s arrival until 10 minutes after it leaves port. The rule also restricts public demonstrations to Kalapaki Beach, which fronts the Kaua’i Marriott. Big Island attorney Lanny Sinkin is seeking a restraining order against the security zone in federal court.

On Sept. 20, Lingle visited Kaua’i to advise residents of the penalties associated with violating the security zone, including state and federal charges and fines, property seizures and investigations by Child Protective Services. More than 1,200 persons came to the meeting, expecting to discuss the ferry’s return. The crowd responded with boos and catcalls when it learned Lingle was firm in her decision to let the ferry run.

The following day, however, the Hawai’i Superferry announced it had decided on its own, without consulting the governor, to indefinitely suspend service to Kaua’i. Lingle later agreed it would be prudent to wait for the Maui court decision. But she also began meeting with key lawmakers to discuss calling a special session specifically to help out the Superferry if the court rules it cannot operate until the environmental review is done.

Many lawmakers have supported such a session, but Morita sees it as further politicizing the issue. ‘The only thing the Legislature could do without gutting the law (HEPA) is to exempt the Superferry from the process,’ she said.

And that, Morita said, threatens to undermine Hawai’i’s environmental laws, which were considered ‘groundbreaking’ when adopted.

‘We were such a progressive state and now we’re regressing,’ she said. ‘We all agree the environment is our economy, but we do nothing to protect it. It’s all lip service.’

Source: http://honoluluweekly.com/cover/2007/10/unstoppable/

Wahiawa speaks out on Strykers

Posted on: Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Hawaii Stryker plan gets wary welcome

By Will Hoover
Advertiser Staff Writer

WAHIAWA – An Army proposal to permanently base a $1.5 billion Stryker brigade combat team in Hawai’i received a somewhat warmer reception last night in Wahiawa than
it had in several previous meetings.

Last night’s hearing was the fourth of nine to take place in Hawai’i, Alaska and Colorado regarding a revised environmental impact statement on the Stryker brigade team. The Stryker unit would consist of about 4,000 soldiers, 328 Stryker vehicles and about 600 other vehicles.

Hugh Lowery, a member of the Wahiawa-Whitmore Neighborhood Board’s ad hoc committee that reviewed the EIS proposal, said the committee and community are keeping an open mind.

On the other hand, he said, they would like some reassurances from the military.

“Basically, we said we’ll concur – if,” Lowery said.

“We’d like to see more specifics. When they say ‘significant’ (environmental impacts), what exactly do they mean by that? We live here. And I at least am pro-military and pro-training. The Army is our children, our nieces, our nephews and our grandchildren. But we need to have some controls.”

While most of the 75 people in attendance at Wahiawa District Park spoke against the EIS and the Stryker brigade, numerous residents also spoke in favor of both.

Native Hawaiian Thomas Shirai, a decorated former Coast Guard member, said his grandson is doing his second tour of duty in the Special Forces in Iraq. Shirai said his grandson and other soldiers must have the proper military training, and that projects such as the Stryker brigade are vital to America’s security.

But Kamoa Quitevis, a Native Hawaiian, Navy veteran and Hawaiian cultural monitor, said he strongly opposes the Stryker unit and harshly criticized the revised EIS. He said he has seen the damage done to cultural sites because of the military presence in the Islands.

“We all need to look deeper into this, and really see what is the impact,” Quitevis said. “I don’t seen any information in this draft EIS that is answering any of the questions of how they (the Army) will mitigate the damages to our environment, our health and our culture.”

Native Hawaiian William Prescott, who was raised in Wahiawa and is pro-military, dismissed the cultural arguments as irrelevant. The Hawaiian religion was outlawed by the Hawaiian monarchy in 1819, he said. Consequently, he said all mention of religious cultural sites should either be deleted from the EIS or listed as “formerly considered sacred cultural sites.”

Opponents of the proposal who appeared at earlier meetings in Nanakuli on Monday and in Hilo on Sept. 25 and 26 had been vocal in the condemnation of the Stryker unit and the EIS, citing pollution and limited Island space.

Numerous speakers at those meetings, as well as those last night, criticized the Army’s revised EIS, saying it was incomplete and not objective.

Last October, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled that the Army’s 2004 EIS failed to comply with federal environmental law because it did not analyze alternative locations outside Hawai’i.

In July, the Army issued its revised EIS that did not mention a preferred location. However, it considered the possibility of bringing the Stryker project to Hawai’i after a future Iraq deployment, or basing it at Fort Richardson in Alaska or Fort Carson in Colorado.

The Army has said that if it should have to move the Stryker unit out of Hawai’i in late 2008 or early 2009, it would be replaced with a smaller airborne or infantry brigade.

Complaints about the EIS focused on the Army’s decision to not conduct site-specific EIS studies at the Alaska or Colorado locations until a decision has been made to exclude Hawai’i from consideration.

Wai’anae activist William Aila, who spoke at the Nanakuli meeting Monday night, said the Army’s approach appears to be aimed at making Hawai’i the predetermined site.

Paul Thies, chief of the Environmental Planning Branch at the U.S. Army Environmental Center in Washington, D.C., last night said the military was conducting the meetings to hear from the community, and to
listen to all its concerns and thoughts. He said all comments will be taken into consideration.

Reach Will Hoover at whoover@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Oct/03/ln/hawaii710030391.html/?print=on

Moku o Keawe blasts Stryker expansion

September 26, 2007

ROD THOMPSON / RTHOMPSON@STARBULLETIN.COM
Former Office of Hawaiian Affairs Trustee Moanikeala Akaka forcefully expressed an opinion to Army public affairs officer Howard Sugai, back to camera, before last night’s hearing on stationing a Stryker brigade in Hawaii.

Opponents dominate forum

By Rod Thompson
rthompson@starbulletin.com

HILO » About 60 Big Island residents attended a public hearing last night on whether to base a brigade of Stryker combat vehicles in Hawaii.

Most didn’t want the brigade in the state, and some added that the Army’s nearly 109,000-acre Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island should be closed.

“We told the military four years ago, no Stryker,” peace activist Jim Albertini said.

He was referring to the fact that the Army already did an environmental impact statement on the effects of basing Strykers in Hawaii, but a court decision required a supplemental impact statement to consider basing the brigade elsewhere.

The two alternative sites for the unit, which would have 320 of the multipurpose armored personnel carriers, are Fort Carson, Colo., or Fort Richardson, Alaska. Another option is not deploying the brigade anywhere.

Army public affairs officer Bob DiMichele said almost all of the public comment before the meeting has come from Hawaii. Alaska and Colorado residents have mostly been silent.

If based in Hawaii, the brigade would be stationed at Schofield Barracks.

Hank Fergerstrom, identifying himself as representing the Temple of Lono, told about 15 uniformed and civilian Army representatives that the Hawaiian culture discouraged people from going into the uplands — where Pohakuloa is located — because that was a spiritual realm.

“When I was a child, you didn’t want to go up into the kuahiwi (mountains). It has to do with respect,” he said.

The hearing was structured so that the public was required to comment on the draft environmental document chapter by chapter, coming back several times to make several comments.

That brought criticism from Albertini.

“Today we are being treated like children: Open your books to Chapter One,” he said.

John Ota was among several complaining that “depleted uranium,” a nonexplosive form of the metal, had been used at Pohakuloa. He correctly noted that “a number of years” have passed since the usage, more precisely about 30, but concluded, “The government proved to be untrustworthy.”

The meeting was generally peaceful but a tense moment took place when moderator Annelle Amaral tried to tell speaker Lindafaye Kroll that she had only one minute left to speak. Kroll momentarily refused to shorten her testimony and the audience united behind her, some calling out, “Censorship!”

Despite the anti-Stryker audience, Lt. Col. John Williams said public comments are useful, showing the Army, for instance, that it has to build “wash racks” to clean Strykers of invasive species before shipping the vehicles interisland.

Stryker hearings
Four more Stryker meetings are planned. All are 5:30 to 9:45 p.m.

» Tonight: Waimea (Big Island) Community Center

» Monday: Nanakuli High cafeteria

» Tuesday: Wahiawa District Park

» Oct. 3: Kawananakoa Intermediate cafeteria

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/09/26/news/story05.html