Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Wild Animal Park
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Saturday, December 19, 2009
New Happy State Study
A new study on happy states comes up with distinctly different results than the one I cited previously. Hawaii's still #2, however, right up there with Louisiana, Florida, Mississippi and Alabama. Turns out this time that happiness is a function of sunshine. Who'd a thunk? Also, factors such as how crowded, air quality, house prices, etc. Top Ten:
1. Louisiana
2. Hawaii
3. Florida
4. Tennessee
5. Arizona
6. Mississippi
7. Montana
8. South Carolina
9. Alabama
10. Maine
Wyoming comes in at #13, Utah and Virginia are in the middle at #23 and 26, respectively. (Rob and Anna should hardly notice the difference!) The bottom five are:
46. California
47. Indiana
48. Michigan
49. New Jersey
50. Connecticut
51. New York
Sorry, Whit and Jim -- at least you're not in New York! I find the inconsistencies most curious. For example, Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska are grouped together -- #31-33; makes sense to me. But why a 19-state difference between Arizona and New Mexico (#24)? You can find all 50 states and D.C. listed here.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Why the Christmas Colors Are Red, Green and White
Saturday, December 05, 2009
Happy States
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Sunday Picnic at Puako
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Weekend Adventure
I don't remember being able to see top to bottom so easily before.
Here's our little family
For the flora lovers, the flowers and colors were great! How 'bout a pink banana?
The end of a perfect day!
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Teacher Furloughs and Budget Crisis
Dear Editor:
Your opinion piece on Teacher Furloughs in Sunday’s paper makes a number of excellent points. As you discussed solutions, however, I became troubled.
The solution to our budget shortfall is not a lottery or new taxes. Your call, and others in recent weeks, for new sources of government revenue to restore cuts in the DOE budget reminds me of a lesson I learned forty years ago when I was on active duty in the Navy. A new officer transferred aboard the ship who had served most of his career in joint commands. When we were informed that budget cuts were in the works, he said: “Let me tell you how this works. When the Navy is told its budget will be cut, its response is: ‘It will be hard, but we will accomplish our mission.’ When the Air Force receives the same notice, its response is: ‘Gee, we won’t be able to fly bombers and fighters.’ Of course, the Air Force budget is restored, while the Navy’s is cut.”
A few years ago, I heard this concept referred to as the “Washington Monument" principle, when, after the National Park Service was threatened with a budget cut, it announced it would be closing the Washington Monument. When the Agriculture Department is threatened with a budget cut, it announces cutbacks in the school lunch program. A headline in the WHT last week reported that county budget cuts may require a cutback in the police force.
There’s a pattern here. Governments and government agencies often cut where the cuts are most noticeable and the services will be most missed, in order to provoke the public to support, or even demand, more taxation to maintain these important functions. The problem in Hawaii is not that we don’t pay enough taxes; by any standard, we do. It is that these tax dollars are not focused on the public’s top priorities.
The solution lies in reviewing government priorities and cutting back on functions that are not critical. When you and I are faced with declining income in our business or at home, we do not cut our expenses “across the board.” We maintain the more important and eliminate or cut back on the less important expenditures. We still pay the rent or mortgage and buy groceries, but we cut back on new clothes, travel or the movies.
To be effective, schools need teachers, books, classrooms, a few good administrators and a small support staff. Yet I suspect less than half of those on the DOE payroll are teachers. A number of years ago, a report compared the New York City public school system with the New York Catholic school system (large by our standards). In the public system, only half of the employees were teachers; in the Catholic system, about three-quarters were. The leadership of the state and the DOE need to be reminded that government and schools are not jobs programs. When cuts need to be made, they need to come from the fat, the luxuries, the bureaucracy, the offices and programs that are not vital. (And I don’t mean eliminating music and art from the curriculum!)
As you stated, education should be one of the top priorities for state funding. Cuts could be made, and would not missed, in many other areas. A review of state regulations could result in eliminating those that are not critical. For example, we would probably be none the worse off if the requirement for manicurists to be licensed were dropped, and business licenses could be good for two or three years instead of one. With a reduction in regulations, regulators’ positions could be eliminated. I am sure many "management" positions could be eliminated or consolidated without an adverse impact on government services. In fact, I would wager that if government had grown only as the population grew over the past ten years, we would not now be in the present crisis.
Let us not be seduced into accepting more taxes or a lottery as a solution to our current fiscal problems.
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Scout Hike
It was rainy and blustery when we dropped into the pond. By the time we came out, it had cleared and was windy, but beautiful. So onward and upward!
It was very green. The kids had a good time -- the Samoan on the left walked/ran the whole way barefoot!
Sunday, November 08, 2009
Another Hawaiian Wedding
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Williamsburg & Jamestown
More Zion and Cedar Breaks
Looking back into Zion from the top
Thanks, kids, for a perfect weekend!