Driving Dissent Among Hawaiians

posted in: September 2024 | 0

In the summer of 2020, members of Kiaʻi Kauaula met with an archaeologist with Scientific Consulting Services. SCS had been retained by West Maui Land Construction to oversee excavation it was undertaking to install irrigation lines for Launiupoko Irrigation Company near Mill Street in Lahaina. The group consists of Native Hawaiians who conduct traditional practices, including “revering and protecting” iwi kupuna burials from desecration, according to a petition filed with the Public Utilities Commission.

According to an affidavit from Kaipo Kekona, one of the group’s members, the archaeologist was informed that the waterline “would hit iwi kupuna burials based on the route they had determined to trench, which route would pass through Pioneer Mill Cemetery amongst other sensitive areas.”

The trenching began according to plan, and Hawaiians began to protest near the work site.

On September 30, at a meeting of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, the concerns over trenching arose, albeit obliquely, in a discussion over protection of burials more generally. Ceridwen Kahi McClellan, talking about an issue in Kahoma Valley, went on to say, “I just hope that OHA would investigate further into the people who are there occupying the land because they are not descendants of that particular parcel. … The whole occupation of different lands in Lahaina is really sensitive right now… I just wanted to acknowledge that there is another side to the story.”

Charlene Rowland said she was concerned with the development “and the pipes that are being laid and the iwi kupuna. … It just hurts me to see these things that are going on.”

As to McClellan, Rowland said, “I really hope that she would, you know, try to help the Hawaiians as well. Try to help us and not be against us and not demean… It seems to me that she’s not helping anyone but herself.”

Linda Magalianes weighed in, saying that maps of the trenching plans showed that “they’re going to go through cemeteries that I knew as a little girl.” She went on to accuse McClellan of having been hired by the developer, although she could not identify who had told her this.

OHA took no action on the matter.

On October 8, the Maui/Lanaʻi Islands Burial Council heard testimony about the trenching and passed a motion calling for “the immediate cessation of all utility installation and work in the area of Pioneer Mill cemetery, Jacobson Cemetery and Puehuehuiki Cemetery in order to avoid burial sites and cemeteries associated from this area…”

On October 13, five Hawaiian women were arrested at the site. They were charged with trespass, although the county later dropped all charges, saying the matter was a civil matter.

Ten days later, at 9:45 a.m., an excavator removed a boulder from the trench floor, exposing what were determined to be bones from a human skull. Further trenching was stopped and a new route for the waterlines was selected.

For Launiupoko Irrigation Company, that was hardly the end of the matter.

Invoices and records of expenses provided to the Public Utilities Commission show it spent tens of thousands of dollars on legal services and archaeological consultants addressing the issue of “trespass” on the “AB waterline,” the line that was being installed when human remains were exposed.

But those same records disclose payments made to Ceridwen McClellan as well, retained, evidently, to gather information on Hawaiian protesters and to attempt to spin public opinion in a direction favorable to LIC.

In a ledger showing “extra job costs” related to the A/B waterline, a payment shows up of $2,552.07 to McClellan, for “collect, record, identify people for trespass.” McClellan was also paid $187.66 for unspecified services relating to “waterline complaint,” $103.46 “for Facebook page 10/5/20,” and $1,170 for a “presentation waterline stop 2019 Namauu/kapu Affida[vit].”

Patricia Tummons

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