Learn how certificate-of-need laws have hurt our medical preparedness Three special guests will explain how Hawaii's '"certificate of need" laws led to Hawaii coming up short when it needed healthcare capacity most HONOLULU, Nov. 1, 2021 >> Find out during a free webinar how Hawaii’s “certificate of need” laws are contributing to Hawaii's healthcare shortage, on Monday, Nov. 15, starting at 10 a.m. Sponsored by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, the one-hour event will feature three special guests: >> Joe Pluta, president of the West Maui Taxpayers Association, who was a vocal supporter of a proposed second hospital on Maui that was denied under the state’s CON laws. >> Naomi Lopez-Bauman, healthcare policy directory for the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute. >> Sal Nuzzo, director of the Florida-based James Madison Institute’s Center for Economic Prosperity. Hawaii’s certificate-of-need laws require healthcare investors to prove to the state that their proposed new medical facilities or services are “needed” before the state will let them be built or offered. Hawaii has the strictest medical CON laws in the nation, covering 28 different medical services. It also has the fewest hospital beds per capita in the nation. Yet since 2006, state officials have rejected over $200 million of private healthcare investments, which would have added more than 200 hospital beds to meet Hawaii’s immediate medical needs. Such regulation led to Hawaii’s healthcare market coming up short when the coronavirus emerged in March 2020. Alleging inadequate healthcare capacity, the governor shut down the entire state to “flatten the curve” and reduce stress on Hawaii’s hospitals. That “emergency” has now lasted 19 months. Perhaps it’s time to reform Hawaii’s CON laws. If you would like to learn more about how CON laws have diminished Hawaii’s healthcare capacity, please join us for this fascinating discussion. Moderator for the event will be Institute President Keli‘i Akina. Questions from the audience will be fielded by Joe Kent, institute executive vice president. Click the button below to register. For more information call 808-864-1776 or email [email protected]. REGISTER FOR WEBINAR HERE
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Hearing #1, Friday, Nov 12, 2:00 PM Aloha everyone! This letter was sent today to SHPDA in support of the West Maui Cancer Center. We are urging everyone a support letter similar to this. We have a copy of this letter posted at www.WestMaui.org, as well as a template in word to help get you started! Letters can be sent: ***** BY MAIL***** Mr. Serafin Colmenares, Jr. Administrator Hawaii State Health Planning and Development Agency 1177 Alakea Street, Suite #402 Honolulu, HI 96813 ****** BY FAX***** (808) 587-0783 ****** BY EMAIL***** [email protected] * Mahalo, Joseph Pluta, WMTA President
The Perils of Being a Watch Doggie
The story you are about to read is true. The names have not been changed to protect the innocent. This is the city: Honolulu, Hawaii. I live here. I’m a doggie. This is the Case of the Persecuted Watchdog. A few months ago, the Boss wrote an article called, “State Auditor Facing a Whack Job?” The article spoke of an apparent feud between the Speaker of the House and the State Auditor, and of a report that a committee organized by the Speaker put out that tried to cast doubt on the Auditor’s competence. We also spoke of a House special investigative committee that was formed to look into some unflattering things the Auditor found at the Department of Land and Natural Resources, and at the Agribusiness Development Corporation. According to House Resolution 164 that established the committee, the purpose and duties of the investigating committee were to follow up on the audits, to examine the recommendations made, and for “purposes of improving the operations and management of these state agencies, their funds, and any other matters.” But, as Honolulu Civil Beat reported on Thursday, the Auditor seems to be in the crosshairs of the investigation as well. The committee voted to subpoena Edwin Young, the former auditor of the City & County of Honolulu, ostensibly to talk to the committee about federal Yellow Book standards on auditing. This riled Rep. Dale Kobayashi, who observed that Mr. Young chaired the Speaker’s committee “to go after the auditor.” The committee also voted to subpoena one Randal Lee, who wasn’t involved with DLNR and ADC at all but who was a consultant to the State Auditor for an audit of the Honolulu rail project. Kobayashi wondered aloud what Mr. Lee had to do with the audit findings regarding DLNR and ADC, and suggested that the committee obtain an opinion from the Hawaii attorney general as to whether the committee was acting within its proper scope. Rep. Della Au Bellatti, the committee chair, pointed to language in the authorizing resolution (quoted above) arguably allowing it to look into “any other matters.” We share Rep. Kobayashi’s concern that the House investigation is going off track. The law requires that the resolution establishing an investigating committee state the committee’s purposes, powers, duties and duration, as well as the subject matter and scope of its authority. It’s tough to conclude that those three words, “any other matters,” give the committee unlimited scope and authority to do whatever the heck it wants. Let’s face it. Watchdogs are there to find things that certain people don’t want to be found. When those things are found, those people are unhappy and might want revenge on the watchdog. Watchdogs are very useful to society. That’s why I am one. But no watchdog expects to be everyone’s friend. Each one has enemies, some more powerful than others. When the Tax Foundation sued the State over the excessive “rail skim,” for example, certain politicians vowed that the Foundation would never get one cent from the Legislature in state aid. (We wouldn’t take it anyway.) To survive, watchdogs have to watch out for each other. If one gets beaten up, none of us are safe. That is why we are very concerned about the sudden turn in the House investigation, and we think any citizen who values honesty and transparency in our government should be concerned too. This is a true story. The end of the story has not yet been written. We too will be following the investigation, or trying to, and will continue to bark like crazy if it keeps going off track. Ours is a tough job but someone has to do it. The name’s Watch Doggie. |
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