HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.B. NO.

908

TWENTY-NINTH LEGISLATURE, 2017

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

 

RELATING TO THE RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL FOR THE DISPOSITION OF REMNANTS.

 

 

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

 


     SECTION 1.  The legislature finds that the vast majority of Hawaii's public lands have a complex history as unlawfully seized and ceded former national and crown lands of the Hawaiian Kingdom.  As the legislature recently reaffirmed in House Concurrent Resolution No. 6, S.D. 1 (2013), after the illegal overthrow of the sovereign Kingdom of Hawaii, "one million eight hundred thousand acres of crown and government lands were . . . ceded to the United States without consent or compensation to the Native Hawaiian people or their sovereign government[.]"  The legislature further recognized that "the Native Hawaiian people never relinquished their claims to . . . their national lands throughout the overthrow, occupation, annexation, and admission of Hawaii into the United States[.]"  Given this history, as well as the continuing cultural, social, and economic significance of the āina to Native Hawaiians and the people of Hawaii nei, important procedural safeguards now exist to ensure that any sales of public lands held by the State occur only in the most exigent and appropriate of circumstances.

     One such safeguard was created through the enactment of Act 176, Session Laws of Hawaii 2009.  Act 176, which settled a decade-long lawsuit brought by the office of Hawaiian affairs to stop the sale of public, ceded lands, established a comprehensive, accountable, and transparent process for the disposition of nearly all public lands.  The Act further required the prior approval of a super-majority of the legislature, "before most state-owned land [can] be sold[.]"

     However, a purportedly narrow exception to Act 176's procedural safeguards exists for lands that qualify as remnant lands under section 171-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes.  Unlike other public lands, lands found to qualify as remnants may be disposed of without legislative approval, and without the procedural steps that would otherwise ensure the level of transparency and accountability deemed appropriate by the legislature.

     Recently, uncharacteristically broad interpretations of the statutory definition of remnants have led to the disposal of significant parcels of public lands, including public land trust lands and ceded lands, without legislative approval or the procedural requirements of Act 176.  The dispositions have raised significant concerns for the legislature, the Native Hawaiian community, and the general public.

     The legislature finds that the complex history of Hawaii's public lands, the State's moral and legal responsibility to maintain these lands in trust for both the Native Hawaiian people and the general public, and the need to ensure some level of accountability and transparency in the permanent alienation of any public and potentially ceded lands, all counsel creating an additional safeguard against the inappropriate disposal of lands deemed to be remnants by the State.  Given the constitutional responsibility of the office of Hawaiian affairs to hold property in trust for Native Hawaiians, granting the office of Hawaiian affairs a right of first refusal to any contemplated disposition of remnant lands would constitute such a suitable safeguard.

     Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to give the office of Hawaiian affairs the right of first refusal for any disposition of public lands classified as remnants under section 171-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes.

     SECTION 2.  Section 171-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:

     "(c)  Disposition.  Remnants or portions thereof may be disposed of by the board of land and natural resources without recourse to public auction in the manner set forth herein.  Any remnant or portion thereof to be disposed of shall be first offered for sale to the office of Hawaiian affairs at a reasonable price based on appraised value.  The remnant or portion thereof shall be offered to the office of Hawaiian affairs for a reasonable amount of time prior to offering the remnant for sale to any other person or entity; provided that if the office of Hawaiian affairs elects to purchase the remnant, any abutting landowner whose access to a street requires an easement across the remnant shall be offered such an easement for a reasonable amount of time and for a reasonable price based on appraised value, with the price of the remnant to be sold to the office of Hawaiian affairs reduced accordingly.  If the office of Hawaiian affairs declines to purchase the remnant or portion thereof to be disposed, the remnant or portion thereof may then be offered for sale to the abutting owner for a reasonable period of time at a reasonable price based on appraised value.  [In the event that] If one abutting landowner lacks access to a street, and [such] access can be secured by disposition of the remnant, [such] the remnant shall be first offered for sale to [such] the abutting owner, or subdivided so as to protect the access of all abutting landowners.  If there is more than one abutting owner who is interested in purchasing the remnant, it shall be sold to the one submitting a sealed bid containing the highest offer above the appraised value.  If the remnant abuts more than one parcel, the board may subdivide the remnant so that a portion thereof may be sold to each abutting owner at the appraised value; provided that no remnant shall be sold to any abutting owner unless the remnant, when combined or consolidated with the abutting property, shall constitute a lot acceptable to the appropriate agency of the county in which the remnant lies; and provided further that appropriate language shall be included in any document of conveyance of [such] the remnant to assure use of the remnant in accordance with the applicable ordinances, rules, and regulations of the county concerned."

     SECTION 3.  Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken.  New statutory material is underscored.

     SECTION 4.  This Act shall take effect upon its approval.

 

INTRODUCED BY:

_____________________________

 

 


 


 

Report Title:

Disposition of Remnants; Right of First Refusal

 

Description:

Provides the office of Hawaiian affairs with the right of first refusal for any disposition of public lands classified as remnants.

 

 

 

The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.