Critics Sue Over Hawaii's Housing Deregulation, Calling It Attempted 'Genocide'
A coalition including the state ACLU, Sierra Club, and Native Hawaiian cultural groups argue Gov. Josh Green vastly exceeded his emergency powers when he waived most regulations on homebuilding.

Back in July, Hawaii Gov. Josh Green used a novel interpretation of his emergency powers to suspend most restrictions on homebuilding, reasoning that the island's severe housing insufficiency was a crisis that justified snap, executive-led deregulation.
The governor's declaration of "yes in my backyard" (YIMBY) martial law proved controversial even with people who otherwise agreed that Hawaii's thicket of red tape was needlessly driving up housing costs. It is now being challenged by a wide coalition of advocacy groups who do not share the governor's view that Hawaii housing is overregulated.
Late last week, the public interest law firm Earthjustice filed the suit in Hawaiian state court on behalf of six plaintiffs, including the state chapters of the Sierra Club and the American Civil Liberties Union, as well as two Native Hawaiian cultural advocates and two housing advocacy groups with a history of opposing new market-rate development.
"The governor cannot suspend laws he doesn't like whenever he feels like it," said David Henkin, an attorney for Earthjustice. "That's dictatorship, not democracy."
Their lawsuit and associated press materials argue that the governor is vastly exceeding his powers under the state constitution and the state's emergency management law in order to ram through politically favored "luxury" housing projects.
"This proclamation rips apart our constitution to impose the tired demands of developers and real estate speculators, whose decades of profiteering off of our lands and waters is the true culprit behind our housing crisis," said Wayne Tanaka, Executive Director of the Sierra Club of Hawaii. "Our democracy should not be thrown out the window to build more non-affordable housing."
The governor's efforts to "sidestep" laws protecting traditional Hawaiian burials "should be seen as another attempt at genocide," said Noelani Ahia, a plaintiff.
The genocide claim is seemingly in reference to parts of Green's order waiving the state's historic preservation and environmental review laws, both of which play a role in preserving Native Hawaiian cultural resources.
Nevertheless, the governor's order isn't a free-for-all.
Developers looking for relief from those laws would be required to get their project certified by a new Beyond Barriers Working Group that includes representatives of local island barrier councils who are tasked with preserving Native Hawaiian remains.
The state's lead housing officer, another office created by the order, could still require project sponsors to go through environmental review if their development is being planned for a sensitive area.
While it doesn't require people to build affordable housing projects, the governor's proclamation instructs the Beyond Barriers working group to prioritize projects with subsidized units. The lead housing officer can also grant regulatory relief to government-sponsored projects without the need for them to be approved by the Beyond Barriers Working Group.
The actual legal challenges raised in the lawsuit brought by Earthjustice therefore focus less on affordability requirements and the potential for genocide and more on the legitimacy of the working group and the lead housing officer.
Hawaii's emergency management law, which Green's emergency proclamation relies on, does give the governor sweeping powers to suspend laws in the face of an emergency. It also variously defines emergencies as "an occurrence, or imminent threat thereof" of "naturally or human-caused hazards" that can damage life, property, and the environment.
The lawsuit argues that because Hawaii's century-old housing shortage isn't "an occurrence" but rather a long-running problem, the governor can't invoke his emergency powers to address it.
The lead housing officer and Beyond Barriers Working Group, as children of this illegal emergency, are also illegitimate bodies, it argues.
A number of provisions included in Green's proclamation, including streamlining the expansion of urban growth boundaries, are laws that the Legislature has considered and rejected. The suit argues that Green is usurping the Legislature's powers by adopting those policies unilaterally.
It also argues that the governor's suspension of state open meeting requirements and public records requests for the Beyond Barriers Working group and potentially other agencies approving housing is an unconstitutional modification of the state's Sunshine Law.
Allies of the governor have argued that the consequences of Hawaii's housing shortage are indistinguishable from a natural disaster and, therefore, should qualify as a proper emergency.
"We've entered seven straight years of population decline. About half of all native-born Hawaiians live outside of Hawaii," Sen. Stanley Chang (D–Honolulu) told Reason last month. "If you had 15,000 people leaving because of flooding or a hurricane or earthquakes or volcanic eruptions, I think that would certainly qualify for an emergency. The severe [housing] shortage constitutes an emergency as well."
In a pretty sweeping grant of authority, the state's emergency management statute also says that the governor will be the "sole judge of the existence of the danger, threat, or circumstances giving rise to a declaration of a state of emergency."
State officials are standing firm in their defense of the governor's order.
"The Emergency Proclamation Relating to Housing is a lawful exercise of the Governor's emergency powers as defined by law, and the emergency rules concerning the Build Beyond Barriers Working Group are valid. The Department of the Attorney General will vigorously defend against the lawsuit in court," said Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez in an emailed statement to Reason.
There are a lot of reasons to be trepidatious about the use of Green's emergency powers.
The Beyond Barriers Working Group and the state's lead housing officer's authority to waive regulations for individual projects could easily devolve into political favoritism for connected developers.
The power to say yes or no to new development is a valuable thing. Baked into that discretion is the temptation to use those powers for cronyism. The fact that the governor's proclamation suspends various transparency requirements makes the potential for corruption even greater.
At the same time, the worst outcome from that corruption will still just be that new projects get approved without having to go through an arguably equally corrupted system of environmental review, public input, and permission begging.
Unlike other sweeping emergency orders invoked during COVID, Green's order doesn't create any obligations or restrictions on private citizens. All it does is create a voluntary process for developers and local governments to speed up housing production in a state with the nation's worst housing crisis.
Substantively, that's not a bad thing. We'll have to wait and see if it's legal.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Hawaii, great place to visit, nobody can live there but the ultra rich.
"Nobody can live there but the ultra-rich" is a bit of a problem for the natives who aren't ultra-rich.
But starting a fire, turning off the water, telling locals they can't leave, then seizing the land and not letting people back in their houses, that's not genocide.
Seems like that might fall more under "land snatching."
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The genocide claim is seemingly in reference to parts of Green's order waiving the state's historic preservation and environmental review laws, both of which play a role in preserving Native Hawaiian cultural resources.
No Christian, it's not. The genocide claim is about anti-colonialism. There are a great number of Hawaiians who want the rich whites off their islands.
Hawaii is a US state. US states are not owned by any particular ethnic group. Hawaiians are free to move anywhere in the US, and any American is free to move to Hawaii.
If "native Hawaiians" are such racists and want to create an ethno-national state for themselves, they need to secede and give up US citiizenship. That’s fine by me: good riddance.
If I could go back in time and make sure that white people never discovered Hawaii, and they were left completely untouched by European influence, I would absolutely do that.
Because if I learned anything in my several years there, it's that the native Hawaiians deserve nothing less than to fully experience the tender mercies of the Imperial Japanese during WWII.
I wonder what percentage of those natives are full blooded. I grew up on a reservation, out of 2500 registered members a total of 6 were full blooded, and only one was full blooded member of that tribe. So, you know those evil white colonists, most natives also belong to that category.
According to Wikipedia only about 10% are "Native Hawaiian and
other Pacific Islander". That percentage has been increasing, but I don't know if it's due to more native births, or more immigration from other Pacific islands. It's not the highest percentage of natives among the US states; Oklahoma is definitely higher. If you count the Hispanics as mostly-native American, there are several more states with a higher native population.
It doesn't give how many of those who counted themselves as natives are mixed-ancestry. The percentage of "Two or More Races" is larger and increasing more rapidly; this was a separate census category, not overlapping with the other racial/ethnic categories, and it could include more mostly-natives than the "native" category.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii#Ancestry
>>"The governor cannot suspend laws he doesn't like whenever he feels like it,"
pourque? Brandon does it.
Good for the governor. I wish Hochul would do this in NY. NIMBY zoning and other similar regs atre why the NYC area is so expensive.
It may not be a constitutional means of implementing it, but deregulation of housing construction is not, by any stretch of the imagination, genocide, especially when you consider that humans can die from hypothermia in temperatures as high as 60° Fahrenheit in 3 hours, can die of smoke in 3 minutes, and can die of falling hail and volcanic rock or lava immediately.
Hawaii’s Governor is in the unenviable position of almost imposing freedom on the State before the Legislature, bureaucrats, and cronies can act to stifle it, much like Konrad Adenauer in West Germany in the 1950s.
Unilaterally overruling the peoples' representatives in the State House in a non-emergency is hardly "imposing freedom." More like "enacting tyranny," or "typical executive overreach," or "cashing in under the table with manila envelopes from developers."
The Legislators and regulators--who equally act from quid pro quo and "Sweetheart Deals" from public-private patnership--never should have passed anti-construction laws and regs in he first place.
Private property owners should be free to build anything on their property that doesn't violate the equal property rights of other property owners. And this repeal of the laws and regs should be made permanent.
Isn’t it interesting that the fire happened so soon after his decree.
Nah, no democrat would stoop so low.
"The governor cannot suspend laws he doesn't like whenever he feels like it," said David Henkin, an attorney for Earthjustice. "That's dictatorship, not democracy."
Where the hell has HE been the last three years?
Yeah, now he complains. *rolls eyes*
The reason credo: “different because reasons.”
Did anyone tell Whitmer et al?
Progtards keep using that word. I do not think it means what they think it means.
They are making trivia of the term and in fact are advocating the very thing of which they speak by depriving Hawaiians the right to construct life-saving shelter on their own property.
Does the Hawaii constitution authorize housing regulation?
“The governor cannot suspend laws he doesn’t like whenever he feels like it,” said David Henkin, an attorney for Earthjustice. “That’s dictatorship, not democracy.”
If the State Constitution doesn’t give that authority to “democracy” then “democracy” of it is an act of treason against the People of the State.
This premise is the very root problem with this nation. It is NOT a "democracy". It has 'The Peoples' LAW over their government.
And the Federal Constitution guarantees Hawaiians and all Srate Citizens “a republican form of government”, so there is that.
It probably doesn't need to. State constitutions, unlike the federal constitution, don't involve specific grants of power with everything else reserved. They get to do everything unless there's a reason they can't.
And 'probably' needs to be verified before just handing it over to "democracy". It's a pretty sh*tty Constitution if it doesn't even have a measure of private property allocated in it.
This was doomed from the start. The governor's rule allowed developments to bypass some bureaucracy if the statewide working group allowed it. That group includes the Sierra Club and native Hawaiian groups. The Sierra Club and native Hawaiian groups are now suing.
Of course that same Hawaiian coalition challenged Governor Ige's COVID restrictions in 2020 and 2021, right? Right?
To deregulate housing, the Governor created more government. Sounds like the perverted logic behind all the marijuana “legalization" measures – you can have a little of it but the government will regulate it, tax it, and create more bureaucracy to govern it all.
The lawsuit argues that because Hawaii’s century-old housing shortage isn’t “an occurrence” but rather a long-running problem, the governor can’t invoke his emergency powers to address it.
That’s a very good point. Invoking an ’emergency’ should, by definition, require a universal mobilization of the population. Neither the legislature nor the executive have the authority to bypass whatever processes they want to bypass – to suspend the constitution – in the name of ’emergency’ because whatever authority they have was given to them BEFORE said emergency in an election that by definition did not include the ’emergency’ in the range of electoral decisions.
Here's a list of national emergencies in the US. Maybe it shouldn't be so easy to declare them
A long-standing failure of the legislature to act rationally is not an emergency. To paraphrase H.L. Mencken, it's the voters getting what they wanted - good and hard.
What does any of this have to do with the ACLU?
Indigenous rights. Oh, and the suspension of the rule of law in emergency powers that didn't involve masking lockdowns and covid, which the ACLU supported. Or gun rights, which the ACLU doesn't support. See another governor and an emergency that just got declared.
I don't know why Reason keeps picking examples of governors using "emergency powers" or simply unilaterally overriding state laws-- state laws which we might all agree constrain property rights and are unlibertarian... but these are nothing to cheer on. When governors use emergency powers to override the rule of law, or democratic process, or even the constitution, if they occasionally, accidentally intersect with a libertarian outcome, the reverse can happen to devastating effect. And on this subject, I'm giving you 48 hours to make a comment on another governor who just used emergency powers to cancel a couple of amendments in the constitution, and said, explicitly , during a press conference that your constitutional rights are null and void when she declares them so in an "emergency"-- and an emergency that the governor declared. 48 hours, Reason.
Yo, Britches,
My argument that this was a graft program for the wealthy and well-connected dressed up as 'deregulation' starting to make any sense yet?
It was always a fucking wolf dressed in 'YIMBY' robes. You should have looked into it the first time.
If it wasn't crooked, they would have done in the full light of public scrutiny in regular sessions; instead of sneaking it in under the guise of Emergency Powers.
It's a bit funny to me that anyone at a resort site would claim real estate developers are "profiting off our land and water". Um, where are tourists and high income earners supposed to stay? Who built things like Casinos and hotels at Las Vegas?
You know what's really sad - 119 people are confirmed dead in Maui, and some predict that number will reach the thousands. But no one really cares. Imagine if 119 mostly black people died in a fire in a major American city in the mainland. And we find out that local government blocked the only road out of town. Even if it occurred at a blue city, the left would be foaming at the mouth and bellowing about white privilege and racial inequity.
This should be a national tragedy. But it's not being treated like one. Because a lot of the victims are Asians (not from Korea, Japan, China, etc). The state is insignificant in the electoral college and would safely vote blue no matter what, so no one cares. As far I as know, very few major Asian representative has visited Maui, if at all. And these people talk SO MUCH about "representation".
"And we find out that local government blocked the only road out of town." AND shut off the water.