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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, December 4, 2006

It's 'back to the drawing board' as transfer of Hai'ku Stairs is rejected

By Eloise Aguiar
Advertiser Windward O'ahu Writer

The state has declined a city offer to transfer Ha'iku Stairs. Access to the stairs has been an issue since the facility was closed in 1987.

BRUCE ASATO | The Honolulu Advertiser

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HA'IKU STAIRS' HISTORY

1942

Stairs built of wood for the U.S. Navy Ha'iku radio station

1952

Replaced with metal stairs

1958

Navy radio station inactivated, and used as OMEGA radio-navigation station

1972

Coast Guard moves in

1987

Stairs, in disrepair, closed to public

1988

State considers taking over the stairs

1996

Coast Guard prepares plan to dismantle the OMEGA Station (including repairing the stairs and transferring ownership to the city)

1999

Department of Hawaiian Home Lands receives 147 acres in Ha'iku Valley from the Coast Guard

2000

City sets money aside to repair stairs, plan a nature preserve and build an access road.

2001

Repairs to stairs begin

2002

Planned October opening is delayed

Gate across access road from the valley is locked to stop hikers

2003

June: Police to guard stairs; community called neighborhood a "war zone" as hikers trespass through neighbors' yards

August: Rep. Ken Ito asks DHHL to deny access; parking plan at Hope Chapel Kaneohe falls through; neighbors of the stairs call for permanent closure

October: City opens negotiations for land swap with DHHL

December: Kane'ohe Neighborhood Board comes up with a plan; city managing director promises no opening until parking and facilities are provided

2004

January: Ito introduces a bill for state to acquire and dismantle stairs

March: Haiku Stairs Task Force calls for access through Windward Community College, repairs to a fence between neighbors and trail access, and having a nonprofit operate the stairs and charge a fee

August: City and DHHL reach a swap agreement that would allow city to move forward on preserve plan

2005

January: Swap agreement found to be illegal

May: Mayor Mufi Hannemann offers the stairs to the state

2006

June: State declines

September: Mayor makes a second offer

October: Gov. Linda Lingle declines mayor's offer

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KANE'OHE — A second request by the city to transfer the Ha'iku Stairs to the state recently was turned down, leaving the disposition of the 3,922-step climb up in the air.

Mayor Mufi Hannemann made the request to Gov. Linda Lingle in a Sept. 11 letter, and Lingle declined the following month.

"This basically sends us back to the drawing board to consider what options to pursue," said city spokesman Bill Brennan, adding that funding for a security guard at the stairs is about to run out.

The historic stairs were built as a World War II access to radio equipment, and the public was allowed to climb there until 1987 when the facility was closed for refurbishing at a cost of $875,000 in 2002. It was never reopened, which led to trespassing and other problems.

Since completion of the repairs, the city has come close to opening the stairs several times but kept running into problems, the biggest of which has been access. Having several landowners in the valley complicated the access problem.

While working through this issue, trespassing became so extensive that neighbors were pleading with officials to intervene, close the trail permanently and tear down the stairs.

Supporters continue to say that opening the stairs and providing access and parking would end the neighbors' problem.

Meanwhile, the city has been spending about $1,500 a month to keep a guard at the site to stop hikers. The number of people turned away or cited was not immediately available on Friday.

"I think we have enough money to keep a guard there through March," Brennan said.

In his letter, Hannemann said the city doesn't have the experience or expertise to operate and manage the nature hiking trail.

"Prior to finalizing a decision on the disposition of Ha'iku Stairs, I wanted to provide a last offer to transfer ownership of Ha'iku Stairs to the state for inclusion in the Na Ala Hele Statewide Trails and Access Program," Hannemann wrote.

Peter Young, director of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources, which manages the Na Ala Hele trails, said the Ha'iku Stairs doesn't fit into that program.

"Our Na Ala Hele trails are essentially nature trails out in the wilderness," Young said. "They're not manufactured stairs going up the side of a mountain."

Brennan said he thought the city would have to make a decision about what to do with the stairs before formulating the city budget, which must be submitted at the beginning of March.

One option the city has considered in the past was to have a community group operate the facility, but that would have to include a partnership for operations, maintenance and liability, he said.

The Friends of Ha'iku Stairs was interested in the concept several years ago but it never materialized as the city struggled to resolve access issues, said John Flanigan, a member of the Friends. The Friends maintain the stairs three or four times a year but aren't pushing to open it, Flanigan said.

"We really don't have anything that we can push because access is the problem," he said. "Unless there's access, then nothing else works."

Although hikers don't have access to the valley, other people may soon be able to go there. A charter school is leasing Ha'iku Valley land and buildings owned by the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, and Ko'olau Foundation, a community group, is proposing to set up a cultural preserve in the valley, Flanigan said.

"If those things happen, clearly there has to be access to the valley," he said.

In declining the mayor's offer, Lingle wrote in an Oct. 4 letter, "It is our understanding that the nonprofit community organization Friends of Ha'iku Stairs is prepared to take over the responsibility for the operations of this city facility. As you move forward on management of this facility, we encourage you to contact and work with the Friends of Ha'iku Stairs."

Reach Eloise Aguiar at eaguiar@honoluluadvertiser.com.