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Giving Back
Giving Back
How you can promote our oceans’ sustainability and health
By Rob Parsons
Maui Time Weekly

MAUI, HI
— Feb 8, 2007 —
“The ocean is giving us so much. It’s only right that we give
back.” So says marine biologist
Hannah Bernard, co-founder in 1996
of Hawaii Wildlife Fund. Whether you’re surfing, paddling, diving,
fishing or just gazing at the deep blue horizon, the ocean gives us
more than we give back. In fact, scientific studies locally and
worldwide indicate our oceans and nearshore waters are in grave
danger.
Bernard, who has guided numerous marine environmental programs and
efforts, is now promoting public awareness through this Saturday’s
“Malama Maui: Think Island, Think Sustainability” at Maui Community
College (MCC). The free event will feature speakers, movies, music,
booths, a Keiki Corner and more.
“Maui is at a turning point, a tipping point,” Bernard says. “If we
can take better care of Maui, maybe we can inspire all the other
islands. It’s up to all of us to sustain the health of our planet.”
In 2003, Bernard and fellow marine biologist Ann Fielding
co-authored, Maui at the Turning Point: Threats to Nearshore Waters
and Coastal Lands and Strategies for Recovery. The report,
underwritten by The Nature Conservancy, Hawai`i Community
Foundation and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), surveyed 40 key ocean users and kupuna. All agreed that our
nearshore waters, marine life, reef ecosystems and water quality
are in decline.
The “Think Island” strategy as a coordinated education campaign was
one of several recommendations in Maui at the Turning Point. It
extends the view shared by kupuna that the canoe is the island, and
vice versa. The voyaging canoe can only carry a finite amount of
resources, with the same being true of our islands and the planet
as well.
Through environmental education, research, advocacy and action,
Bernard has been building awareness for ocean issues for the past
25 years. She helped found the
Maui Reef Fund, which accepts
voluntary donations from the marine tourism industry to preserve
the resource they share and to urge appropriate conduct for the
industry.
She also helped establish
Makai Watch, which is supported by Hawaii
Tourism Authority, Castle Foundation and the Department of Land and
Natural Resources. Makai Watch works to restore and sustain
Hawai`i’s coastal resources through community involvement. By
placing marine educators at sensitive areas such as the `Ahihi-Kina`u
Natural Area Reserve in South Maui, Makai Watch raises awareness,
conducts biological and human-use monitoring and encourages
compliance with area regulations.
Bernard has long advocated halting noise pollution in our oceans.
“What in the world are we doing blasting our oceans with sonar?”
she asks. In 1993, with Earthtrust, she spoke out against U.S. Navy
plans to deploy Low Frequency Active Sonar (LFAS) testing.
She said her father “empowered” her to do so. A retired Pentagon
official, he spoke on 60 Minutes, saying the testing is
unnecessary. Bernard has traveled to Washington, D.C. to lobby
against further LFAS testing. She applauds the work of the National
Resource Defense Council, which has sued the Navy.
“Destroying the health of our oceans is a far greater threat to our
national security,” she says.
Then there’s the projected launching of Hawaii Superferry, which
Bernard predicts will kill whales. While calling for greatly
reduced speed limits at a minimum, she added that the potential
secondary impacts are, “so insidious and alarming.” She detailed
the systematic exploitation of sensitive marine areas for fishing,
`opihi gathering and limu collecting by people from over-fished
Oahu who have no allegiance to those areas.
“We have to examine whether or not all commercial scale uses of an
island are compatible,” she says. “We can’t say yes to every
business that wants to establish here.”
The collection of fish in Hawai`i’s waters for the home aquarium
industry has been very troubling to resource managers and
enforcement agencies. The Associated Press recently reported that
the activity is, “loosely regulated across most of the state, where
a government permit allows collectors to net as many of a species
as they want, wherever they want, and whenever they want.”
Bernard feels West Hawai`i has provided a good working model for a
local resource council to guide decisions. Beginning in 1999, they
have established Marine Protected Areas on 35 percent of the Kona
Coast and have watched reef fish populations rebound. In a culture
of finger pointing, it’s important to bring people and groups
together to manage the resource.
Another threat to Hawai`i’s nearshore ecosystems is the continued
use of lay-gill nets, which indiscriminately capture a wide range
of fish and sea life. After years of public hearings by DLNR to
assess the threat and to discuss the need to ban the monofilament
gill nets, signing of new rules by Governor Linda Lingle appears
imminent.
Yet House Bill 1578 and Senate Bill 1831 seek to have these
proposed new rules reviewed by a cultural panel, which would likely
delay this vital resource conservation measure even longer. Other
proposed legislation this session would create a more equitable
scientific and cultural review process for ocean issues, similar to
the concept of the local resource council model.
The “Think Island” event will feature four award-winning films and
several esteemed speakers. Donna Kahakui is the founder of
Kai Makana, a long-distance paddler of many epic voyages, and is one of
the event co-sponsors.
“The goal is for all of us to stand together in sending the message
that we need to care for our ocean and each other,” Kahakui says.
She says her previous long-distance paddles have taken her across
the other channels of the main Hawaiian Islands “on courses in
Tahiti and New Zealand and along 55 miles of the Hudson River in
New York.”
Vince Lucero’s documentary, Wahine O Ke Kai, follows Kahakui’s
one-woman paddle from Oahu to Ni`ihau and around Kauai. Through Kai
Makana, all of Kahakui’s long distance paddles are intended to
increase ocean awareness and stewardship.
Kenneth Burgmaier’s Wa`a Ho`olaule`a (Festival of Canoes) explores
the journey of the canoe and master carvers from the Polynesian
triangle. And Kat Tracy’s Passing the Gift: Malama Honokawai will
showcase the efforts of Ed Lindsey to restore Hawaiian culture in
Honokawai Valley.
Jeff Mikulina, Director of the Sierra Club Hawaii, recently
completed training to present the information highlighted in Al
Gore’s, An Inconvenient Truth, which also screens.
“Many of us feel overwhelmed by the thought that being
environmentally friendly is difficult or too expensive,” Kahakui
says. “‘Malama Maui: Think Island’s’ vision is to empower everyone
to make easy and economical changes in their lives to support the
health of our islands.”
Ultimately, Bernard would like to see these actions become a
movement that grows increasingly popular, until it becomes our way
of life.
“People also need to see the urgency,” she says. “If we don’t live
this way, we can survive, but we won’t live well.”
Malama Maui: Think Island, Think Sustainability
Saturday, Feb. 10, 4-10 p.m. at MCC’s Front Lawn. For more
information please contact Hawaii Wildlife Fund at 575-2046.
Copyright © 2007 Maui Time Weekly.
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