Report Title:

Cave Protection

Description:

Protects caves as unique cultural and natural resources of the State of Hawaii by making theft of funerary objects theft in the fist degree and upon request of a cave owner, DLNR shall determine whether the cave location shall not be disclosed. (HB2659 HD1)

 

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

2659

TWENTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2002

H.D. 1

STATE OF HAWAII

 


 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

RELATING TO CAVE PROTECTION.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

SECTION 1. The legislature finds that caves are unique land forms that often contain irreplaceable resources of immense cultural, spiritual, aesthetic, and scientific value. The cultural and spiritual resources within caves include human burials and other artifacts of native Hawaiian use and their associated traditions. Scientific, biologic, and geologic resources include unique subterranean ecosystems inhabited by specialized organisms, associated native flora and fauna living within cave entrances, mineral and bedrock formations, and paleontological, or fossil deposits. Fossil deposits, which include remains of plants, animals, and surface debris preserved in caves, provide a unique record of the past climate and biota of the islands.

These valuable resources are vulnerable, are being destroyed, and are in need of greater protection. Preservation of these resources is of paramount importance if Hawaii's cultural traditions are to survive, and knowledge of Hawaii's heritage is to be preserved for future generations.

The purpose of this Act is to protect the unique cultural and natural resources that are Hawaii's caves, without limiting protections provided by other laws, such as chapters 6E, 340E, and 342D, Hawaii Revised Statutes, which address historic preservation and water quality.

SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:

"Chapter

protection of caves

§ -1 Definitions. As used in this chapter:

"Board" means the board of land and natural resources.

"Cave" means any naturally occurring void, cavity, recess, or system of interconnected passages large enough for human entry occurring beneath the surface of the earth or within a cliff or ledge, including the cave resources therein, whether or not an entrance exists or is natural or man-made. The term includes such forms as a lava tube, natural pit, sinkhole, underwater cave, or other feature that is an extension of the entrance.

"Cave life" means any living native plant, animal, fungus, or microorganism occurring naturally in caves or in cave entrances or entrance pits.

"Cave resource" means any material or substance occurring in caves, such as native animal life, native plant life, evidence of past human use over fifty years old, and tangible and intangible attributes associated with cultural traditions over fifty years old, paleontological deposits, sediments, minerals, speleogens, and speleothems. This includes historic properties as defined in chapter 6E.

"Commercial entry" means an activity undertaken to exhibit a cave for which compensation is received by any person for goods or services, or both, rendered to customers or participants in that use or activity. Commercial entry includes activities whose base of operations are outside the boundaries of the premises, or which provide transportation to or from the premises. A commercial entry is not conducted when a not-for-profit organization charges only a nominal fee to cover administrative cost and conducts a use or activity at a frequency or magnitude that does not significantly contribute to the degradation of the cave and its resources.

"Department" means the department of land and natural resources.

"Educational purposes" means entrance into a cave by faculty or staff and students of recognized educational institutions for the purpose of teaching about some aspect of the cave, including but not restricted to cave geology, mineralogy, hydrology, biology, archaeology, paleontology, management, and hazards.

"Gate" means any structure or device located to limit, control, or prohibit access to or entry to any portion of a cave.

"Owner" means the persons who hold title to or are in possession of the land on or under which a cave is located, or the persons' lessee or agent.

"Paleontological deposit" means any remains or fossils of life forms or surface debris that are over fifty years of age and provide a record of past climates and biota.

"Person" means not only individuals, but corporations, firms, associations, societies, communities, assemblies, inhabitants of a district, or neighborhood, or persons known or unknown, and the public generally, where it appears, from the subject matter or the sense and connection in which such words are used, that such construction is intended.

"Scientific purposes" means research, or exploration, or both, conducted by persons affiliated with recognized scientific organizations with the intent to advance knowledge and with the intent to publish the results of exploration or research in an appropriate medium.

"Speleogen" means relief features on the walls, ceiling, or floor of any cave.

"Speleothem" means any secondary natural mineral formation or deposit occurring in a cave, including any stalactite, stalagmite, helictite, cave flower, flowstone, concretion, drapery, rimstone, or formation of clay or other sediment.

§ -2 Prohibitions. (a) It shall be unlawful for any person to intentionally or negligently break, break off, crack, carve upon, write, burn or otherwise mark upon, remove, or in any manner destroy, disturb, deface, mar, or harm the surfaces of any cave or the cave resources, within the cave, whether attached or broken, including speleothems, speleogens, and sedimentary deposits, without the owner's written permission being first obtained.

(b) It shall be unlawful for any person to break, force, tamper with, or otherwise disturb a gate to any cave, even though entrance thereto may not be gained, without the owner's permission being first obtained.

(c) It shall be unlawful for any person to remove, deface, or tamper with a sign stating that a cave is posted or citing provisions of this chapter.

(d) It shall be unlawful for any person to take, appropriate, excavate, injure, destroy, or alter any paleontological deposit, which may be found in a cave without the owner's written permission being first obtained.

§ -3 Pollution. (a) It shall be unlawful for any person to store, dump, dispose of, or otherwise place any refuse, garbage, dead animals, sewage, litter, or toxic substances in any cave or cave entrance; provided that:

(1) Any cesspool or leach field that is otherwise legal and existing on the effective date of this section shall continue to be lawful as a nonconforming use or facility; and

(2) The nonconforming use or facility shall not be expanded or reconstructed.

(b) It shall be unlawful to burn within a cave or cave entrance any material that produces any smoke, engine exhaust, or gasses harmful to any naturally occurring organisms in any cave.

§ -4 Disturbance of native organisms. It shall be unlawful for any person to intentionally or negligently remove, kill, or harm any native organisms within any cave except as provided by a scientific permit obtained from the appropriate agency. This is not intended to restrict normal fishing and gathering in accordance with existing laws.

§ -5 Sale. It shall be unlawful for any person to sell or offer for sale speleothems and speleogens removed from caves.

§ -6 Commercial entry. (a) Any person allowing or establishing commercial entry to a cave shall obtain from the board a permit to open the cave for public entry. The department shall charge a reasonable permit processing fee and adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 necessary to carry out the purposes of this section.

(b) Any person receiving compensation in conjunction with a use or activity who seeks to qualify as non-commercial shall have the burden of establishing to the satisfaction of the department that the fee or charge is strictly a sharing of actual expenses of the use or activity.

§ -7 Liability. (a) An owner of a cave who either directly or indirectly invites or permits without charge any person to use the cave for educational, native Hawaiian cultural, or scientific purposes does not:

(1) Extend any assurance that the premises are safe for any purpose;

(2) Confer upon the person the legal status of an invitee or licensee to whom a duty of care is owed;

(3) Assume responsibility for, or incur liability for, any injury to person or property caused by an act of omission or commission of those persons; or

(4) Assume responsibility for, or incur liability for, any injury to person or persons who enter the premises in response to an injured educational or scientific user.

(b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to:

(1) Create a duty of care or ground of liability for injury to persons or property;

(2) Relieve any person using the cave of another for educational or scientific purposes from any obligation which the person may have in the absence of this section to exercise care in the person's use of that cave and in the person's activities therein, or from the legal consequences of failure to employ such care; or

(3) Limit the effect of chapter 520.

§ -8 Confidentiality. (a) Upon request by a cave owner, the department shall determine whether disclosure of information regarding cave location or resources could reasonably be detrimental to protection of the cave under this chapter. If the department determines that disclosure of information regarding the cave location or resources could resaonably be detrimental to protection of the cave, then the department shall not disclose the information except as permitted by section 92F-19.

(b) The department may by rule under chapter 91 set standards and procedures for the purpose of implementing subsection (a).

§ -9 General administrative penalties. (a) Except as otherwise provided by law, the board or its authorized representative by proper delegation may for violation of this chapter or any rule adopted or permit issued in accordance with this chapter:

(1) Set, pursuant to subsection (b), charge, and collect administrative fines or bring legal action to recover administrative fees and costs as documented by receipts or affidavit, including attorneys' fees and costs; or

(2) Bring legal action to recover administrative fines, fees, and costs including attorneys' fees and costs, payment for damages, or for the cost to correct damages resulting from violation of this chapter or any rule adopted or permit issued in accordance with this chapter.

(b) Administrative fines shall be as follows:

(1) For a first violation, a fine of not more than $10,000 for each separate offense;

(2) For a second violation within five years of a previous violation, a fine of not more than $15,000; and

(3) For a third or subsequent violation within five years of the last violation, a fine of not more than $30,000.

§ -10 Criminal penalties. Intentional or reckless violation of this chapter, any rule adopted, or permit issued in accordance with this chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor; provided that the maximum fine that may be imposed shall be:

(1) For a first conviction, by a fine of not less than $250 nor more than $1,000;

(2) For a second or subsequent conviction within five years of a previous conviction, by a fine of not less than $500 nor more than $1,000.

(b) Intentional or reckless damage, destruction, removal, taking, sale, or illegal possession of each specimen of cave resource shall be subject to a fine of up to $1,000. Each day of continued violation under this chapter shall constitute a distinct and separate offense for which the violator may be punished. Equipment used by the violator in the course or furtherance of the violation shall be subject to seizure and disposition by the State pursuant to chapter 712A.

§ -11 Penalties cumulative. Criminal and civil actions under this chapter shall be cumulative and in addition to any other remedy provided by law, and shall not limit penalties provided under chapter 6E."

SECTION 3. Section 708-830.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (1) to read as follows:

"(1) A person commits the offense of theft in the first degree if the person commits theft:

(a) Of property or services, the value of which exceeds $20,000;

(b) Of a firearm; [or}

(c) Of dynamite or other explosive[.]; or

(d) Of funerary objects, including human bones, from a cave."

SECTION 4. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun, before its effective date.

SECTION 5. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.

SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.