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x-johnnybaileystan-x · 29 days ago
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Five Children and It (2004 movie) Cyril Stories
I would love to see some Cyril x reader stories for the 2004 movie Five Children and It. I just loved Jonathan Bailey in that movie, he was so young and I would just love to see some stories based on that character and that movie. Would anyone wanna make some?
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myrna-nora · 2 years ago
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2022: Books
January 1. Silent Parade (沈黙のパレード) (2018) Keigo Higashino 2. A Nun in the Closet (1975) Dorothy Gilman 3. The Maid (2022) Nita Prose 4. Rock Paper Scissors (2021) Alice Feeney 5. It's in His Kiss (2005) Julia Quinn February 6. The Chuckling Fingers (1941) Mabel Seeley 7. Untimely Death (He Should Have Died Hereafter) (1958) Cyril Hare+  8. No Exit (2019) Taylor Adams 9. Apprehend Me No Flowers (2020) Diane Vallere 10. Rules of Murder (2013) Julianna Deering + 11. The Lady's Mine (2022) Francine Rivers 12. Bats in the Belfry (1937) E.C.R. Lorac March 13. The Four Graces (1946) D.E. Stevenson 14. The Kill of it All (2022) Diane Vallere  15. The Spy Who Loved Me (1962) Ian Fleming 16. The Paris Apartment (2022) Lucy Foley 17. Nine Lives (2022) Peter Swanson April 18. The Nutmeg Tree (1937) Margery Sharp 19. A Time of Love and Tartan (2017) Alexander McCall Smith 20. Four Aunties and a Wedding (2022) Jesse Q. Sutanto ^ 21. Mrs. Pollifax Unveiled (2000) Dorothy Gilman ^ May 22. Finlay Donovan Is Killing It (2021) Elle Cosimano 23. All Creatures Great and Small (1970/1972) James Herriot 24. On the Way to the Wedding (2006) Julia Quinn ^ June 25. The Resting Place (Arvtagaren) (2020) Camilla Sten 26. Confessions (告白) (2008) Kanae Minato 27. Finlay Donovan Knocks 'Em Dead (2022) Elle Cosimano ^ 28. The Woman in the Library (2022) Sulari Gentill  29. Under Lock & Skeleton Key (2022) Gigi Pandian  30. Under Currents (2019) Nora Roberts 31. The House Across the Lake (2022) Riley Sager July 32. Miss Butterworth & the Mad Baron (2022) Julia Quinn, Violet Charles 33. Rose Cottage (1997) Mary Stewart * 34. Death in the Stocks (1935) Georgette Heyer + 35. The Swimming Pool (1952) Mary Roberts Rinehart + 36. Octopussy & the Living Daylights (1966) Ian Fleming ^ 37. The Science of Murder (Murder Isn't Easy: The Forensics of Agatha Christie) (2021) Carla Valentine August 38. The Peppermint Tea Chronicles (2019) Alexander McCall Smith 39. Spiders From Mars (2020) Diane Vallere ^ 40. Nightwork (2022) Nora Roberts 41. Parker Pyne Investigates (1934) Agatha Christie * 42. Murder Underground (1934) Mavis Doriel Hay 43. A Promise of Ankles (2020) Alexander McCall Smith 44. Till Death Do Us Part (1944) John Dickson Carr September 45. The It Girl (2022) Ruth Ware  46. A Flicker in the Dark (2022) Stacy Willingham 47. Solace Island (2017) Meg Tilly 48. Love in the Time of Bertie (2021) Alexander McCall Smith ^ 49. The Ink Black Heart (2022) Robert Galbraith ^ October 50. The Midwich Cuckoos (1957) John Wyndham 51. The Bullet That Missed (2022) Richard Osman ^ 52. A Song of Comfortable Chairs (2022) Alexander McCall Smith ^ November 53. Love Me or Grieve Me (2022) Diane Vallere ^ 54. The Couple at the Table (2022) Sophie Hannah  55. The Twist of a Knife (2022) Anthony Horowitz ^ 56. Kurashi at Home (2022) Marie Kondō December 57. Mystery in White (1937) J. Jefferson Farjeon 58. Murder for Christmas (1949) Francis Duncan 59. The Christmas Card Crime & Other Stories (2018) Martin Edwards (Editor) + read what I already own challenge ^ finished or caught-up in series * re-reads
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sistamagza · 3 years ago
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SA Helpline Numbers For Victims Of Gender-Based Violence
New Post has been published on https://sistamag.co.za/sa-helpline-numbers-for-victims-of-gender-based-violence/
SA Helpline Numbers For Victims Of Gender-Based Violence
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Being a woman in South Africa today is a lot. South Africa has one of the highest rates of violence against women and girls in the world. Given the figures, in 2018 alone, President Cyril Ramaphosa said, 2 700 women in the country and more than 1 000 children died at the hands of men.
Below are SA Helpline Numbers For Victims Of Gender-Based Violence.
National helpline numbers
National GBV Helpline 0800 150 150 LifeLine South Africa 0861 322 322 AIDS Helpline 0800 012 322 National Counselling Line 0861 322 322 Childline South Africa 0800 055 555 South African Police Service 10111 Legal Aid 0800 110 110
Other useful contacts
AIDS Consortium 011 403 0265 Crime Stop 086 001 0111 Human Rights Commission 011 877 3600 Lifeline Sexual Health Line 086 132 2322 Love Life 080 012 1900 Marie Stopes South Africa 080 011 7785 People Opposing Women Abuse 011 642 4345 Rape Crisis 021 447 9762 Tears Foundation (free SMS helpline) *134*7355# Suicide Help 080 056 7567 The South African Depression and Anxiety Group 080 021 2223 Toll Free Crisis Line 086 157 4747
Thuthuzela Care Centres
Thuthuzela Care Centres are one-stop facilities where a rape survivor receives medical, psychosocial and legal support. They have been introduced as a critical part of South Africa’s anti-rape strategy, aiming to reduce secondary victimisation, improve conviction rates and reduce the cycle time for finalisation of cases.
Province Thuthuzela Care Centre Contact Number Eastern Cape Bizana TCC St Patrick’s Hospital, Bizana 039 251 0236 Butterworth TCC Butterworth Hospital, Butterworth 047 491 2506 Dora Nginza TCC Dora Nginza Hospital, Port Elizabeth 041 406 4111 Libode TCC St Barnabas Hospital, Nyandeni Region 047 568 6274 Grey Hospital TCC Grey Hospital, King William’s Town 043 643 3300 Lusikisiki TCC St Elizabeth Hospital, Lusikisiki 039 253 5000 Mdantsane TCC Cecilia Makiwane Hospital, East London 043 761 2023 Mthatha TCC Mthatha General Hospital, Mthatha 047 502 4000 Taylor Bequest TCC Taylor Bequest Hospital, Matatiele 039 737 3107 Free State Bongani TCC Health Complex (Old Provincial Hospital) Long Road Street, Welkom 057 355 4106 Metsimaholo TCC Metsimaholo District Hospital, 8 Langenhoven Street, Sasolburg 016 973 3997 Phekolong TCC Phekolong Hospital 2117 Riemland Road Bohlokong, Bethlehem 058 304 3023 Tshepong TCC National District Hospital, Roth Avenue, Willows, Bloemfontein 051 448 6023 Gauteng Baragwanath/Nthabiseng TCC Chris Hani Bara Hospital, Chris Hani Road, Diepkloof 011 933 1206 Kopanong TCC Kopanong Hospital, Duncanville, Vereeniging 016 428 5959 Laudium TCC Laudium Hospital & Community Health Centre 012 374 3710 Lenasia TCC Lenasia Hospital, Lenasia South, Johannesburg 011 211 0632 Mamelodi TCC Mamelodi Day Hospital 012 841 8413 Masakhane TCC Tembisa Hospital, Tembisa 011 923 2180 Sinakekelwe TCC Natalspruit Hospital 011 909 5832 KwaZulu-Natal Edendale TCC Edendale Hospital, Pietermaritzburg 033 395 4325 Madadeni TCC Madadeni Hospital, Newcastle 034 328 8000 Empangeni TCC Ngwelezana Hospital, Empangeni 035 901 7000 Phoenix TCC Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Hospital 031 502 1719 Port Shepstone TCC Port Shepstone Regional Hospital, Port Shepstone 039 688 6021 RK Khan TCC RK Khan Hospital, Westcliffe 031 459 6000 Stanger TCC Stanger Provincial Hospital, Stanger 032 437 6000 Umlazi TCC Prince Mshiyeni Memorial Hospital, Umlazi 031 907 8496 Limpopo Groblersdal TCC Groblersdal Hospital, Groblersdal 013 262 3024 Mangkweng TCC Mangkweng Hospital, Polokwane 015 286 1000 Mokopane TCC Mokopane Hospital, Mokopane 015 483 4000 Musina TCC Musina Hospital, Musina 072 287 5263 Nkhensani TCC Nkhensani Hospital, Giyani 015 812 0227 Seshego TCC Seshego Hospital, Seshego 015 223 0483 Tshilidzini TCC Tshilidzini Hospital, Thohoyandou 015 964 3257 Mpumalanga Ermelo TCC Ermelo Hospital, Ermelo 017 811 2031 Themba TCC Themba Hospital, Kabokweni 013 796 9623 Tonga TCC Tonga Hospital, Nkomazi 013 780 9231 Witbank TCC Witbank Hospital, Witbank 013 653 2208 Northern Cape De Aar TCC Central Karoo Hospital, De Aar 053 631 2123 Galeshewe TCC Galeshewe Day Hospital, Kimberley 053 830 8900 Kuruman TCC Kuruman Hospital, Kuruman 073 334 3208 Springbok TCC Van Niekerk Hospital, Springbok 027 712 1551 North West Job Shimankane Tabane TCC Job Shimankana Tabane Hospital Cnr Heystek & Bosch Street, Rustenburg 014 590 5474 Klerksdorp TCC Klerksdorp Hospital, Benji Oliphant Road Jouberton, Klerksdorp 018 465 2828 Mafikeng TCC Mafikeng Provincial Hospital, Lichtenburg Road, Mafikeng 018 383 7001 Potchefstroom TCC Potchefstroom Hospital Cnr Botha & Chris Hani Street, Potchefstroom 018 293 4659 Western Cape George TCC George Provincial Hospital, Davidson Road, Glen Barrie, George 044 873 4858 Heideveld  TCC Heideveld Community Health Clinic, Heideveld, Cape Town 021 699 0474 Karl Bremer TCC Karl Bremer Hospital Cnr Mike Pienaar Boulevard & Frans Conradie Avenue, Belville 021 948 0861 Khayelitsha TCC Khayelitsha Hospital, Lwandle Road, Site B, Khayelitsha 021 360 4570 Worcester TCC Worcester Hospital, Murray Street, Worcester 023 348 1294 Wesfleur TCC Wesfleur Hospital, Wesfleur Circle, Atlantis 021 571 8043
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global-news-station · 5 years ago
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JOHANNESBURG: Twenty-five people died Monday when a bus rolled down a steep embankment in South Africa’s coastal Eastern Cape province, the country’s transport minister said.
“Reports indicate that the driver lost control of the bus, which subsequently rolled down a steep embankment, leaving 25 dead and approximately 62 injured,” Fikile Mbalula said in a statement.
“To lose so many lives in a single accident is devastating and shocking.”
The bus was carrying more than 80 mainly elderly people travelling between Butterworth town and a settlement named Chebe.
The minister said most of the victims were going to cash-in their government-issued social grants.
President Cyril Ramaphosa said the dead were mainly pensioners and young students.
“This tragedy leaves our country deeply saddened and forces us to focus yet again on the need for transport providers and other road users to exercise care and consideration on our roads,” said the president.
“From this incident we see the need for us to be especially considerate towards elderly persons and children who depend on others to be conveyed around communities and the country,” he added.
The crash was the deadliest accident in the province since 2015 when 35 people lost their lives.
The bus was travelling on a gravel road near the village of Qolweni when it overturned.
“The driver lost control of the vehicle and it rolled down a very steep embankment,” provincial transport department spokesman Unathi Binqose said.
Binqose said checks would be carried out if the bus had been roadworthy as “it may be a contributing factor”.
Despite having one of the most developed road networks on the continent, South Africa has among the highest rates of road accidents in the region owing to speeding and poor maintenance of some vehicles and roads.
The Road Traffic Management Corporation data shows that more than 14,000 people died in road crashes on South African roads in 2017.
The post 25 killed in South African bus accident appeared first on ARY NEWS.
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punalavaflow · 6 years ago
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Aloha, 2018! The Tribune-Herald’s top stories of the year
Earth has made another revolution around the sun and, as we get set to ring in 2019, it’s time to look back at the year that was 2018.
In addition to White House firings and resignations too numerous to detail, 2018 is marked with a mind-boggling number of disasters locally, nationally and globally.
Hurricane Florence blew ashore from the Atlantic in September, causing 53 confirmed deaths, mostly in the Carolinas. In October, Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida panhandle, leveling cities and leaving at least 36 dead. Typhoon Manghut brought widespread damage to Guam, the Philippines and South China, and was responsible for at least 134 fatalities, 127 of them in the Philippines. Typhoon Yutu wreaked havoc in both the Philippines and the Northern Marianas Islands of Saipan and Tinian, killing 27.
Wildfires in California killed at least 88 people — and that total may still rise, as hundreds are still missing and unaccounted for.
And a tsunami in Indonesia just before Christmas killed more than 430 people.
Notable deaths this year include 41st President George H.W. Bush and his first lady, Barbara Bush, U.S. senator and former presidential candidate John McCain, former Hawaii U.S. Sen. Daniel Akaka, former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, pioneering astronaut John Young, the “Queen of Soul” Aretha Franklin, physicist and author Stephen Hawking, chef-turned-author and TV host Anthony Bourdain, handbag designer Kate Spade, playwright Neil Simon, author Philip Roth, Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, actress and director Penny Marshall, evangelist Billy Graham, comic book creator Stan Lee, jazz trumpeter Roy Hargrove and movie star Burt Reynolds.
Some prominent Big Islanders passed in 2018, as well. They include: pacemaker developer and Medtronic founder Earl Bakken; self-made car dealer and entrepreneur David De Luz; former University of Hawaii at Hilo chancellor Edward Kormondy; murdered police officer Bronson Kaliloa; second-generation Hawaiian music legend and UH-Hilo slack-key guitar teacher Cyril Pahinui; rapper, activist and radio personality Donald “Ke‘ala” Kawa‘auhau, also known as “King Don 1” of Sudden Rush; Kahua Ranch patriarch and community benefactor Herbert “Monty” Richards; rancher and community activist Harold “Freddy” Rice, whose Rice vs. Cayetano lawsuit opened up Office of Hawaiian Affairs elections to the entire Hawaii electorate; Kona businesswoman and community volunteer Maralyn “Marni” Herkes; activist Lanric Hyland; Brian Hughes, a Hilo-born federal firefighter who died battling the Ferguson fire in California; and former child actress and singer Donna Butterworth, who co-starred with Elvis Presley in “Paradise, Hawaiian Style.”
And now, we bring you the Top 10 local stories of 2018 as selected by the editorial staff of the Hawaii Tribune-Herald:
1. Kilauea erupts
On April 30, Pu‘u O‘o’s crater floor collapsed after steady inflation of its cone since March, causing hundreds of small tremors along Kilauea volcano’s East Rift Zone and sending underground magma downrift.
Then on May 3, a 5.0-magnitude temblor prompted Pu‘u O‘o’s cone to emit a plume of red ash that was seen for miles. That afternoon, a volcanic eruption forced the evacuation of Leilani Estates and Lanipuna Gardens in lower Puna after lava burst through cracks in the middle of a residential street in Leilani.
On May 4, a 6.9-magnitude earthquake struck on the south flank of Kilauea, the largest quake in Hawaii in 43 years. The massive temblor drove home the enormity of what was happening beneath the earth’s surface.
The lower East Rift Zone eruption, the largest in more than two centuries, would change not only the landscape, but also the lives of thousands of Big Island residents. The earth’s crust was breached by two dozen fissures, with at least one, fissure 8, sending rivers of molten rock downhill for months.
Simultaneously, collapse-explosion events occurred regularly inside Halema‘uma‘u crater at the summit of Kilauea volcano inside Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, dramatically increasing the size of the crater. The park was closed for 134 days and the Jaggar Museum, perched on the crater’s overlook, was deemed unsafe and its exhibits were removed.
The eruption also necessitated moving of Hawaiian Volcano Observatory to the University of Hawaii at Hilo campus.
Evacuation shelters were opened, housing more than 400 displaced individuals at their peak, including residents of Kapoho Vacationland subdivision, which had no homes remaining, Kapoho Beach Lots, where all but a few homes were destroyed by lava, and surrounding areas. In all, more than 700 homes were consumed by lava between May and August.
Numerous Pahoa businesses closed, and many continue to suffer economically from the lava crisis.
Lava crossed Highways 132 and 137 plus Pohoiki Road in lower Puna. Underground magma movement caused cracks in Highway 130 that were later covered by steel plates, and cracks and sinkholes developed on Highway 11 in the Volcano area.
While much of lower Puna was inundated by lava, the nerves of Volcano village residents and cash registers of its businesses were adversely affected for months by Halema‘uma‘u’s seismic activity and the national park’s closure.
Other casualties of the lava include Wai‘opae Tide Pools, Champagne Pond, Ahalanui Beach Park and Kua O Ka La Public Charter School, all in lower Puna. Lava entered the parking lot at Isaac Hale Beach Park in Pohoiki, but the county park itself and the state-owned Pohoiki boat ramp, which is accessed through the park, were spared.
Isaac Hale Beach Park was reopened in early December after the county bulldozed through lava on Highway 137 and reopened the road.
Dozens of sightseers, informally dubbed “lava loiterers,” were cited by authorities for trespassing to get a closer look at lava in areas deemed restricted to the public. There also were reports of burglars and squatters taking advantage of evacuated homes.
The lava’s destruction ended in early August, and in early September, no molten lava was visible within the cone of fissure 8.
2. The rain from Lane
Although no hurricanes made landfall in Hawaii, there were a number of close calls, including from Hurricanes Hector, Norman and Olivia. But one storm in particular, Hurricane Lane, was especially problematic for East Hawaii.
The former tropical cyclone had already passed the Big Island and was being torn to remnants by wind shear when the storm’s outer rain bands dropped a deluge of historic proportions on East Hawaii in late August.
The National Weather Service described the downpour — which damaged numerous homes and businesses, destroyed two homes in Hawaiian Acres subdivision, and caused evacuations in Reed’s Island in Hilo and Keaau Ag Lots — as the “third highest storm total rainfall from a tropical cyclone in the United States since 1950.”
Mountain View received 51.53 inches of rain between noon Aug. 22 and 4 a.m. Aug. 26.
Damage to county facilities totaled about $20 million, and an estimated 152 homes were damaged, with 59 sustaining major damage from Lane, Managing Director Wil Okabe said.
3. This is not a drill
With those words, all capitalized, flashing across cellphones statewide at 8:07 a.m. on Jan. 13, a Saturday, islanders were warned of an impending nuclear catastrophe: North Korea had fired intercontinental ballistic missiles at Hawaii.
Although state officials knew almost immediately the chilling text message from Hawaii Emergency Management Agency — which was re-transmitted via TV and radio — was a false alert, it took 38 minutes for the state to issue another cellphone alert cancelling the false alarm. It took 13 minutes for the state to announce it was a false alarm on social media platforms, with Gov. David Ige blaming the lapse on having forgotten his Twitter password.
The employee who sent out the false alert, a man in his 50s, thought it was a real missile emergency, although others on the same watch heard the word “exercise” several times and knew the alert shouldn’t have been sent to the public, authorities said. The employee was, at first, reassigned to another position, but was later fired, ostensibly because of public pressure. He’s filed a wrongful-termination lawsuit against the state.
Then-HI-EMA director Vern Miyagi resigned after the fiasco and was replaced by retired Navy Capt. Tom Travis, a former Big Island resident.
4. Pocketbook pinch
Big Islanders should be prepared to pay more for just about everything in 2019.
Five county taxes and fees have been recently hiked or are in the process of being raised. That includes property taxes, which were raised in 2017 on all classes of properties with the exception of homeowner and affordable rental.
The county has increased its share of gasoline taxes each of the past four years, with the pain at the pump going up from 19 to 23 cents per gallon in 2019, and annual vehicle safety check stickers up $5.81 each. Water bills are up an average of 8 percent for residential users, and the county plans to increase sewer fees 44 percent in 2019.
In addition, the county will assess a quarter-cent surcharge on state general excise tax starting Jan. 1, meaning you’ll pay an extra 4.25 cents per dollar for retail goods and services.
Those retail goods are likely going up, as well. Matson, the largest shipper of goods to the islands, increased its fuel surcharge from 27.3 percent in 2017 to 38.5 percent in 2018, an increase of 41 percent.
Tipping fees for commercial rubbish haulers went up a whopping 27 percent in 2018 and will increase a modest 2 percent in 2019.
And electricity went up about 7.4 percent in 2018, with Hawaii Electric Light Co. requesting an additional 3.4 percent rate hike.
5. High court paves way for TMT
On Oct. 30, the Hawaii Supreme Court voted 4-1 in favor of granting a Conservation District Use Permit to allow the next-generation Thirty Meter Telescope to be built on Maunakea.
A month later, the high court voted down two motions to reconsider that decision.
Scott Ishikawa, a spokesman for TMT International Observatory, said the organization is working to fulfill pre-construction requirements set by the permit issued by the Board of Land and Natural Resources.
He said a resumption in construction would take “at least several months.”
Some opponents of the project have said they plan to try to block construction. Protesters, who call themselves “protectors,” repeatedly blocked construction vehicles in 2015 before the high court overturned the original permit because of due process issues.
BLNR issued another permit in 2017 after a lengthy contested case hearing, which led to another appeal to the Supreme Court.
6. Cop killing spurs manhunt
On the evening of July 17, Officer Bronson Kaliloa, a 10-year veteran of the Hawaii Police Department, was shot and killed by the side of Highway 11 near Kukui Camp Road in Mountain View.
The 46-year-old Kaliloa, a married father of three and Puna Officer of the Year for 2014, became the fifth Big Island police officer killed in the line of duty and the first to die of gunfire.
Kaliloa’s death spurred an islandwide manhunt for Justin Joshua Waiki, a felon wanted on a warrant revoking his bail. Waiki was shot and killed July 20 by officers during a shootout on South Point Road in Ka‘u. Sgt. Bryan Tina of the Special Response Team, the department’s SWAT unit, suffered nonfatal gunshot wounds in the shootout.
Police Chief Paul Ferreira called Kaliloa’s shooting “the worst day of my 36-year-career,” and Kaliloa’s funeral on Aug. 4 drew more than 1,000 people, including police and other first-responders from across Hawaii and beyond.
7. Hilo redevelopment bill becomes law
Gov. David Ige came to Hilo in early July to sign Senate Bill 3058, a measure that establishes a “Hilo community economic district” around the Kanoelehua Industrial Area.
The law creates a sprawling redevelopment district for Hilo under a 10-year pilot program, which encompasses all state lands in the industrial area as far south as Makaala Street, Banyan Drive and the Waiakea Peninsula, Wailoa River State Recreation Area, the Bayfront ball fields and along Kalanianaole Avenue.
The law allows tenants within the district to extend their leases for up to 40 years if they make substantial improvements, subject to Land Board approval. Many of the leases were established after the 1960 tsunami and are facing expiration. Members of the business community say those whose leases are expiring have little incentive to invest in the property, leading to dilapidation in areas such as the KIA, where the state leases almost 80 parcels.
Hawaii Island Chamber of Commerce President Gordon Takaki said the bill is “probably the biggest thing to happen to the KIA” since it was established in 1960.
Jason Fujimoto, president and chief operating officer for HPM Building Supply, said HPM is preparing to submit its lease extension application to the state Department of Land and Natural Resources in early 2019.
8. Fines for farmers market
On March 16, the county sent a letter to Hilo Farmers Market owner Keith De La Cruz, informing him he’d reached the deadline to complete a permanent structure for the iconic market at the corner of Kamehameha Avenue and Mamo Street. The letter also stated the market was in violation of the county’s zoning, building and fire codes, and he would be fined $1,000 a day for each of four parcels the market occupied for each day violations continued to occur.
The market closed down for a day a week later, and the tarps and tents covering the market were replaced with individual pop-up tents De La Cruz instructed owners to buy and which the county also deemed as unacceptable. County inspectors continued citing violations at the market and, as of October, accrued fines totaled more than $200,000.
Mayor Harry Kim said last week De La Cruz met a Dec. 14 deadline for submitting new plans for a permanent market structure to the county.
9. Council passes vacation rental bill
The County Council in late November passed on a 6-1 vote a bill regulating short-term vacation rentals on Hawaii Island.
The final measure, passed in November, was the culmination of seven drafts and extensive community input over a two-year period.
It’s now up to the Planning Department to formulate the rules which, when drafted, will face a public hearing. Those rules are expected to be finalized by April 1.
Hawaii County becomes the last in the state to regulate short-term rentals in residential neighborhood.
“This must be controlled because of the disturbance of a lifestyle,” Mayor Harry Kim said in favor of the measure. “Vacation rental is a business. It’s not a good or bad business, it’s just a business. … This is good where it is controlled.”
10. A brown Christmas
Big Island Dairy, which announced its intention to cease operations in 2019, discharged manure-laden wastewater into Ookala gulches over the holidays.
According to the Department of Health, owners of the beleaguered dairy reported Christmas morning that about 800,000 gallons of wastewater was expected to be discharged during pumping activities throughout the day.
“(There’s) nothing like having the dairy say ‘Merry Christmas’ to the community by releasing close to a million gallons of effluent into the community,” Ookala resident Charlene Nishida said.
A discharge in May released nearly 2.3 million gallons of rain and wastewater during a period of three days, and in August, heavy rain from Hurricane Lane caused a wastewater pond at the dairy to overflow, sending untreated effluent into a nearby gulch.
The DOH issued the dairy fines of $91,000 on Dec. 4 for three separate spills between April and May.
That comes more than a year after DOH fined the dairy $25,000 in May 2017 for unlawful discharge of wastewater.
A lawsuit alleging the dairy violated the federal Clean Water Act was filed in 2017 in U.S. District Court in Honolulu.
Honorable mentions
As usual, there are a number of important stories worthy of mention which did not make the Top 10 list. They include: the acquisition of the Great Crack Property in Ka‘u in September by the National Park Service; four individuals killed and another injured in police-involved shootings; former Puna Councilwoman Jen Ruggles refusing to vote her final two months in office, based on her belief the county and council are illegal entities and her votes might constitute war crimes; work continues on the Hu Honua power plant in progress, despite legal challenges and a $25,000 fine for discharging industrial wastewater into the ocean on Nov. 9; and the Keauhou Ranch fire in August blackened more than 3,700 acres on the slopes of Mauna Loa, mostly within Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
Hawaii Tribune-Herald reporters Tom Callis, Michael Brestovansky and Stephanie Salmons and West Hawaii Today reporter Nancy Cook Lauer contributed to this story.
Email John Burnett at [email protected]. from Hawaii News – Hawaii Tribune-Herald http://bit.ly/2Ajd7Fl
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