Category Archives: Government

Canary in the Coal Mine

When it comes to the islands’ food supply, Richard told me, Hawai‘i is the nation’s “canary in the coal mines.”

It is widely agreed that in Hawai‘i, where we are so dependent on imported foodstuffs, we have just seven days’ worth of food in the state at any given time. Seven days!

Should there be a shipping interruption, Richard predicted, supermarket shelves would be bare within two days—because we know from experience that in emergencies here, many people panic and hoard.

This all came up when Richard testified Friday before the state’s Water, Land, Agriculture and Hawaiian Affairs committee. That’s a committee chaired by Sen. Russell Kokobun that is working on issues related to the state’s sustainability to the year 2050.

It was Andy Hashimoto, dean of the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, who brought up that we live in this precarious situation with only about seven days of food available and the rest in transit.

“He couldn’t have said it most starkly,” said Richard. “If something happened to us down here sitting in the middle of the ocean, the rest of the nation would have a wake-up call,” he said. “They wouldn’t starve to death; they’d have a wake-up call.”

Friday’s testimony was informational, Richard said, to bring Senator Kokobun and his committee up to speed.

“I wanted to talk about something that is not usually voiced,” Richard said. “My objective was to say that we need to grow food wherever we can grow it. Dry side, wet side, high elevation, low elevation, geographically on every different island.” It’s the way Hawaiians used to work the land, and something that has changed drastically in modern-day Hawai‘i. “We shouldn’t put all our eggs in one basket.”

“Normally,” he said, “you go to business school and you’re pushing volume. If you’re going to sell Vienna sausages, you need to sell millions of cans at a profit of two cents a can. If something goes wrong in the process, you’re sunk. That’s why you need to diversify every way you can.”

Others testified about different pieces of the “pie.”

Eric Enos, who runs Ka‘ala Farm in Wai‘anae, also talked about traditional Hawaiian agricultural ways. He talked about relating the taro lo‘i, and the traditional ahupua‘a (land division) system, to our modern-day life. This is a goal at Ka‘ala Farm, where they work the land educate students about people’s relationships to the ‘aina (land).

Dean Okimoto, president of the Hawai‘i Farm Bureau Federation, testified about designating certain highly productive lands as “important agricultural lands,” referring to legislation that the Farm Bureau introduced last year.

Sen. Clayton Hee brought up that this is a tough issue, though—pointing, for instance, to Campbell Estate’s plan to build 1100 houses at $500,000 each. Hee asked what types of incentives the legislature could offer landowners to keep land in agricultural production instead of development.

And Derek Kurisu, vice president of KTA Superstores, talked about his grocery store’s commitment to local farmers. He said once they commit to a farmer, they support him or her “through thick and thin.”

This is encouraging, Richard said, as it is hard for small farmers to weather ups and downs without such support.

He said there was a time where buying local produce was only price-driven, but that consumers are responding to KTA’s long-time support of local farmers. “People are starting to see that KTA has been successful with what they’ve been doing.”

“I saw it in action when we went with Chef Alan Wong to Hualalai Resort for a cooking presentation,” he said. “The audience was mostly people with two or more homes who were staying at the Hualalai Resort for the season. They let us know that they wanted to be contributing members of the Big Island community. They made it known that they shopped at KTA because they support the local economy.

“I took that to mean that KTA has been successful in spreading their message that shopping at KTA means supporting the local economy,” he said. “I was impressed.

“They’ve been supporting local for a long time and it’s evidently working. They have lots of customers and they’re full all the time.”

Looking at the big picture, Richard said that our dependence on large-scale, industrial agriculture is happening all over the nation.

“Industrial agriculture is dangerous,” he said, “because it can’t always support you. It’s only as strong as its weakest link. For instance, say you’ve got this one multinational brand and they have hundreds of farmers. If one farm is not doing something the way it’s supposed to be done, it jeopardizes the whole brand. People throughout the whole nation start wondering about the whole brand.”

Overall, though, Richard said he is optimistic.

“All this stuff—the slow food movement, chefs wanting local fresh food products—it’s all related and it’s all encouraging,” he said. “In the last few years, I feel it’s changed quite a bit. I don’t know how far it can go.

“On our side, we know the consumers want to support local. We want to give them value so there’s reinforcement for supporting local; so it’s worthwhile for them. We spend a lot of time trying to make sure we give value with our product.”

It’s all food for thought. — posted by Leslie Lang

A Whole Lot of Salads and Pasta Sauces Were Made

When Hamakua Springs had an unexpected tomato surplus recently, Richard called over to the county building and said he had some extra tomatoes he wanted to give to county workers.

P1010053_3Dayday Hopkins, Economic Development Specialist at the Hawai‘i County Department of Research and Development, says she asked Richard how many tomatoes he was talking about. “I thought it was a case or two,” she said, “but he asked how many departments we have.”

“He went hog wild in sharing,” she said. “He gave us like 25 cases. Who gives away 25 cases of tomatoes? For him to do that, it really makes you feel good that there’s a business person who is not only for himself and his business but also wants to share with the rest of the people that touch him.”

Richard says sometimes they give extra tomatoes to the local schools their grandchildren attend: Kalaniana‘ole Elementary, Keaukaha Elementary and Kea‘au Middle School. P1010061_2

“Or schools that are having a hard time with the ‘No Child Left Behind’ thing,” says Richard. “We give to the teachers and staff and try to do a morale booster kind of thing.”

Last month, though, when they had a lot of extra cocktail tomatoes, Richard sent some to the Hawai‘i Island Food Bank and then took the rest to the Hawai‘i County Building.

He explains that sometimes there’s an unexpected short spike in production due to timing–one crop comes into production as another is going out. “Because we harvest the tomatoes when they’re vine ripe,” he says, “we cannot hold them very long when that happens and we have to move them quickly.”

P1010055_3

“The reason we chose the county workers,” says Richard, “is because they are pretty much not recognized for the work they do and we wanted to acknowledge their hard work.”

Dayday couldn’t say enough nice things about Richard. “We ask him for donations of bananas when we have fundraisers for the schools, and other community activities, and he’s always open and accommodating,” she said. “Mr. Ha is just one of those unique breed of farmers and people. June was here, too, and as goodhearted as the husband. I couldn’t believe she got up in the pickup truck and was getting out cases of tomatoes. She said, ‘Yeah, I have to help.’”

Richard took some cases to the Department of Water Supply, which isn’t located in the county building. Dayday got some help and took the rest around to offices in the County building: Planning, Parks and Recreation, Civil Service, Finance, Office of the Aging, Corporation Council and others.

Pat_koga_exec_scty_tp_chris_yuen_plannin_2

She says some of the workers were surprised and even suspicious when handed containers of tomatoes. “They asked me, ‘Are you selling them?’ I told them, ‘Mr. Ha wants to share his bounty of tomatoes for you to taste and enjoy. He has a big heart; he just really wants to share with the people in the county because he said the county has been very nice to him.’” Others, she said, were surprised they were such beautiful, perfect tomatoes and not “seconds,” or tomatoes that weren’t good enough to sell.

Dayday even sent some to the mayor’s office, where they were a hit. The mayor Harry Kim called her and asked if there was any way he could get two more. (He got them.) Andylevin_2

In these last two photos, that’s Dayday with Pat Koga, executive secretary to Planning Director Chris Yuen, and then with Andy Levin, executive director to Mayor Kim.

Dayday took her tomatoes home. “My husband eats tomatoes like grapes. And I cut some up and made a green salad.”

She also shares her recipe for a salsa she makes. She chops up Hamakua Springs cocktail tomatoes with a pinch of cilantro, some green onions and sea salt, and puts that salsa over her special fried rice: “I buy poke, cut it a little smaller and sauté it with garlic. Then cook it with rice, soy sauce, and put the salsa over it.”

“Ha ha ha!” she said as she recounted the recipe. Our kind of person! — posted by Leslie Lang

Short Pants

Welcome to our new blog. You can click on the “About” button at right to read a bit about us, and enter your email address at right if you’d like to get an email whenever we update the blog.

And if you’re just getting to know us here at Hamakua Springs Country Farms, let me start you off by explaining that we’re pretty down-to-earth around here.

Especially Richard.

When our fearless leaders Richard and June Ha were honored recently at Washington Place—that’s the governor’s mansion in Honolulu—the Hawai’i-style farmer wore what he always wears: short pants.

They were his good shorts, of course. And he wore a nice Aloha shirt with them.

Washplace_2

(From left to right: Governor Linda Lingle, Lieutenant Governor Duke Aiona, Speaker of the House Calvin Say, June Ha and Richard Ha)

The Washington Place luncheon was to recognize founding members of the new Hawai‘i Seal of Quality program, a statewide branding program to protect and promote Hawai‘i-grown and Hawai‘i-made products.

Richard says he looked around and saw that Hamakua Springs Country Farms is in good company. “It’s a wide range of products, but the common thread is everybody is acknowledged as a good company,” he says. “High quality. It’s good to be in with this group. Everybody’s quality helps each other.”

Soqposter

(That’s Richard and June at the top of the second column.)

Check out the mouthwatering Washington Place luncheon menu comprised of the 12 companies’ products (but not if you’re hungry).

Did Governor Lingle blanch when Richard came forward to accept his award in short pants? Nope. Richard says he got two reactions to his choice of formalwear, neither of them negative. One was anticipatory (someone told him he’d wondered if Richard would show up in shorts) and the other, envious.

Richard has worn shorts as far north as Edmonton, Canada, where he says it was “pretty cold” but he’d do it again. And he once wore shorts throughout England, where he said he really stuck out (but when people found out they were from Hawai’i, he was instantly forgiven).

He’s speaking at a high school graduation soon, and says that’s the only time he’ll bend his rule and wear long pants. “That to me is serious stuff,” he says. “Everything else is pretty light.”

Re: the shorts. Would he do it again? Definitely, he says.

“If I met the president of the United States, I would have to really think hard,” he says. “But that’s about it.”