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Hawaii
In reply to the discussion: Gloves Come Off As Hawaii Senate Race Gets Going [View all]ellisonz
(27,774 posts)2. Aloha!
I think I'll take this as an opportunity from my why I loathe Linda Lingle thread I put up when she announced this most recent charade:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x2102087
Some Background on why she is awful for Hawaii:
In Hawaii, an imbroglio over an investment gone bad
By Jake Grovum, Special to Stateline
Just as the economy was beginning its nosedive, the state of Hawaii doubled down on its investment in an exotic financial instrument known as auction-rate securities. Between July 2007 and February 2008, the states holdings in these investments more than doubled, from $427 million to nearly $1.1 billion. At the time, it seemed like a safe bet. Many other institutional investors, including other state and local governments, had placed their money in these long-term, high-yield securities.
Then, things went wrong. In the spring of 2008, the market for auction-rate securities froze up, and the regular dividends that had made the investments an attractive place to park cash stopped being paid. Hawaii, which was among the most heavily invested in the securities, is now left with the one-third of its more than $3 billion treasury locked up in 30-year investments that are essentially illiquid.
Nobody in Hawaii disputes that the investment didnt go as planned. The state already has written down the value of the securities by $250 million. Whats less clear and is one of the hottest political debates in Honolulu at the moment is how big of a problem this represents.
Marion Higa, the states longtime auditor, thinks its a crisis. In March, she issued a report faulting Hawaiis Department of Budget and Finance for prioritizing investment yield above safety. She says buying the securities, which were backed by long-term student loans, violated a law requiring investments to mature within five years. According to the report, the department suffered from a lack of proper leadership and accountability.
http://www.stateline.org/live/details/story?contentId=4...
By Jake Grovum, Special to Stateline
Just as the economy was beginning its nosedive, the state of Hawaii doubled down on its investment in an exotic financial instrument known as auction-rate securities. Between July 2007 and February 2008, the states holdings in these investments more than doubled, from $427 million to nearly $1.1 billion. At the time, it seemed like a safe bet. Many other institutional investors, including other state and local governments, had placed their money in these long-term, high-yield securities.
Then, things went wrong. In the spring of 2008, the market for auction-rate securities froze up, and the regular dividends that had made the investments an attractive place to park cash stopped being paid. Hawaii, which was among the most heavily invested in the securities, is now left with the one-third of its more than $3 billion treasury locked up in 30-year investments that are essentially illiquid.
Nobody in Hawaii disputes that the investment didnt go as planned. The state already has written down the value of the securities by $250 million. Whats less clear and is one of the hottest political debates in Honolulu at the moment is how big of a problem this represents.
Marion Higa, the states longtime auditor, thinks its a crisis. In March, she issued a report faulting Hawaiis Department of Budget and Finance for prioritizing investment yield above safety. She says buying the securities, which were backed by long-term student loans, violated a law requiring investments to mature within five years. According to the report, the department suffered from a lack of proper leadership and accountability.
http://www.stateline.org/live/details/story?contentId=4...
The short change resulted in this result:
How Hawaii's Budget Led to Furloughed Kids
By Suzanne Roig / Honolulu Saturday, Oct. 24, 2009
At Noelani Elementary, the small school near Honolulu where President Obama learned to read and write, the next generation of Hawaii's leaders learned a new word this week: "furlough."
The Noelani students joined nearly 170,000 other children across Hawaii whose teachers on Friday began an unprecedented state furlough program that will close classrooms 34 days over the next two years. The "furlough Fridays" are part of a controversial effort by Gov. Linda Lingle to deal with a projected budget deficit of nearly $1 billion. The cost-cutting measure has angered parents, lawmakers and children. Popular musician and Hawaii public school graduate Jack Johnson sang at a rally Friday morning at the state Capitol to protest the furloughs. During the rally, parents handed a petition bearing thousands of signatures protesting the furloughs to the governor, whose office is on the fifth floor of the state Capitol. (See the top 10 things you didn't know about Hawaii.)
Lingle's two-year contract with the teachers union and its 13,000 members amounts to a 7.9% pay cut. The bulk of the union's teachers will have 17 furlough days a year, giving Hawaii the shortest school year in the nation. "It's completely Draconian," says Vernadette Gonzalez, whose 5-year-old daughter, Inez Anderson, is a kindergartner at Noelani. "People are shocked when they hear that this was allowed, or even considered as a sane solution to the budget crisis." Gonzalez fears that students will not be able to make up for the lost school time, noting that teachers are struggling to adapt their lesson plans. "It's not only passing on the cost to the parents but to the kids," she said. "They're getting a second-rate education."
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1932079,...
By Suzanne Roig / Honolulu Saturday, Oct. 24, 2009
At Noelani Elementary, the small school near Honolulu where President Obama learned to read and write, the next generation of Hawaii's leaders learned a new word this week: "furlough."
The Noelani students joined nearly 170,000 other children across Hawaii whose teachers on Friday began an unprecedented state furlough program that will close classrooms 34 days over the next two years. The "furlough Fridays" are part of a controversial effort by Gov. Linda Lingle to deal with a projected budget deficit of nearly $1 billion. The cost-cutting measure has angered parents, lawmakers and children. Popular musician and Hawaii public school graduate Jack Johnson sang at a rally Friday morning at the state Capitol to protest the furloughs. During the rally, parents handed a petition bearing thousands of signatures protesting the furloughs to the governor, whose office is on the fifth floor of the state Capitol. (See the top 10 things you didn't know about Hawaii.)
Lingle's two-year contract with the teachers union and its 13,000 members amounts to a 7.9% pay cut. The bulk of the union's teachers will have 17 furlough days a year, giving Hawaii the shortest school year in the nation. "It's completely Draconian," says Vernadette Gonzalez, whose 5-year-old daughter, Inez Anderson, is a kindergartner at Noelani. "People are shocked when they hear that this was allowed, or even considered as a sane solution to the budget crisis." Gonzalez fears that students will not be able to make up for the lost school time, noting that teachers are struggling to adapt their lesson plans. "It's not only passing on the cost to the parents but to the kids," she said. "They're getting a second-rate education."
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1932079,...
She also blew the inter-island Superferry project and let Aloha Airlines go under after encouraging a price-war with Go! Airlines - ignored environmental protection - Hawaii State Parks receive the same amount of funding they did in 1992, and has failed to stop the bleeding of Hawaii's hard earned dollars to the hotel industry and gambling (only Hawaii and Utah do not have any form of gaming), and has presided over the biggest economic downturn in what should be a wealthy state while unlicensed vacation rentals boomed and average Hawaii residents saw wages and economic opportunity stagnate amid rising prices. The Rick Perry of the Pacific!
At a 2007 Hawaii Sustainability Conference at the Hilton Hawaiian Village in Waikiki, a panel of select high school students were asked if they thought they would be living in Hawaii in 2035 - not a single one raised their hand. Shame on you Linda Lingle! You will not take a Democratic Senate Seat and you will not be allowed back into our politics, period. Auwe!
For a write up on the conference, see:
Future plans must focus on Hawaii's youth
By Dean Uchida, Vice President of for D.R. Horton Schuler Homes
The Honolulu Advertiser
November 29, 2007
http://www.hawaii2050.org/index.php/site/news /
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Lingle is a GOPer who screwed Hawaii for 8 years as CEO GOV...came in on Bushies 2nd year
opihimoimoi
Dec 2011
#1
Love the pic of Dustin....Lingle also fucked with the DLNR with a pol hack...cut off funds to Anuenu
opihimoimoi
Dec 2011
#4
That idiot THeilen killed off Anuenue Fisheries and 44 years of priceless research....aquaculture is
opihimoimoi
Dec 2011
#14