May 4, 2019 Update: Let's get something straight here at Yes2Rail. I just read a 5/2/14 story on CivilBeat.org in which reporter Sophie Cocke wrote the following: "Doug Carlson, who HART paid more than $536,000 for communicating on its behalf, repeatedly attacked former Hawaii Gov. Ben Cayetano on his rail blog. Cayetano was running for mayor on a platform focused on killing the rail project." Not once did I "attack" Cayetano. I called out his inadequate so-called plans to move people efficiently along Oahu's southern corridor between Ewa and downtown.
Even the Honolulu Star-Advertiser asked in its May 27, 2012 editorial, "What exactly is Cayetano's transit plan?" So I ask any readers to disregard the reporter's inarticulate description of my assessment of Cayetano's plan, which he spent months hiding from the public. As my column to the right of this main section notes under "This Isn't Political," finding fault with a candidate's transportation plans is not the same as "attacking" the candidate. Maybe reporters will understand that one day. About my fee: It was spread over five years and was appropriate for someone with my experience on rail issues, starting with Mayor Frank Fasi's failed effort to build elevated rail in the early 1990s, and continuing through the "dreary years" between the Fasi plan's death in 1992 and Mayor Mufi Hannemann's resurrection of rail in the next decade.
Mayor Hannemann called me to his office in 2007 and asked me to join his rail team. He had followed my efforts to counter Cliff Slater's anti-rail campaign over the years as I pushed back at Slater in public as often as possible when he took his shots at rail. Here are some examples:
* "Trolley wouldn't solve city's transit problem," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 10/6/98;
* "Rail will forever be a failure for car-loving Cliff Slater," Honolulu Advertiser, 11/17/03;
* "The only rational way to shorten commute times is to provide alternatives to driving on already over-crowded highways," Honolulu Advertiser, 10/23/05;
* "Cliff Slater's decades-long opposition to rail is based on a calculated misinformation campaign," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 10/8/06.
There's more of my commentary out there on the Internet -- not as much as you'll find from Cliff Slater and the troika of anti-rail columnists in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, but posts here at Yes2Rail were fact-based, unlike what you'll find in their continuing campaign.
So, yes -- I earned my fee as a member of the rail project's Public Outreach Team, and I'll defend it against all comers.....as usual.
November 6, 2012 Update: Pro-rail Kirk Caldwell defeated anti-railer Ben Cayetano in today's mayoral election, 53.9 to 46.1 percent. The result mirrors the August primary election's pro-rail outcome, as summarized in the headline above and in the post below. (We probably shouldn't say "told you so," but in fact, we did.) And if you're really curious about what we said about Mr. Cayetano's transportation ideas that were wholly dependent on anti-railer Cliff Slater's ideas, visit our aggregation site and scroll down to the 2012 Mayoral Race and Rail section.
AUGUST 2012: Barring unexpected developments that could reverse this decision, today’s post is Yes2Rail’s last – number 804 in the series that began on June 30, 2008. So we sign off with a few closing comments as we prepare to concentrate our energies on All Things California.
Some people in Honolulu
would have you believe the rail project is like a boxer who’s barely surviving
the 10th round of a 12-round championship fight. He’s behind on all
the scorecards, but still they work hard to convince the public that a knockout
punch is likely even this late in the fight – despite all the evidence.
The Honolulu Elevated Rail
Project is farther down the track than any other proposal to create a
traffic-free commuting alternative in Our Honolulu’s congestion-choked southern
corridor. The project's Full Funding Grant Agreement application is in Washington and is likely to be approved in the next few months, something the late Frank F. Fasi, who was elected Honolulu's mayor six times, never came close to achieving despite multiple attempts to build rail. His final plan died in the City Council 20 years ago this Fall.
So how did rail succeed this time around? Oh, I dunno…..maybe because it
benefited from an excellent public information campaign! That’s one conclusion
someone could make (we just did), since rail
has been consistently supported by Oahu residents several
years running, including only two days ago.
In 2008, the pro-rail
candidates won and anti-railers lost. A scientific poll released four years ago this month found 58 percent of those surveyed supporting rail, while only 38
percent said they were opposed. Remember the City Charter amendment that year
directing the City’s transportation division to pursue a steel-on-steel system?
It passed.
One year later, a poll reported 60 percent support for the project among those who were scientifically
surveyed – 34 percent strongly supportive and 26 percent somewhat supportive.
Of the 37 percent who said they were opposed, 21 percent were strongly against
the project, and 16 percent were somewhat opposed.
In 2010, pro-rail candidates
won, anti-rail candidates lost. Voters overwhelmingly approved a City Charter
amendment to create the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation, thereby
creating an entity to build and operate Honolulu rail.
A few months later in May
2011, another scientific survey found support for rail at 57 percent, with 40
percent opposed. That poll was publicized in the same month the Gang of Four –
Cliff Slater, Ben Cayetano, Randy Roth and Walter Heen – filed a federal
lawsuit to kill the rail project.
One year ago next Sunday,
the Gang launched its massive public relations campaign against rail with a
1500-word commentary in the newspaper. Online Civil Beat fact-checked the piece and found numerous false statements. Civil Beat judged only two to be TRUE , two FALSE and three
HALF-TRUE/HALF-FALSE .
The Gang’s PR campaign has
been barreling along virtually nonstop since last August and hit its peak with the launch of former Governor Cayetano’s campaign for mayor in
January, with near-constant media coverage of his anti-rail rhetoric. Yes2Rail concluded he really didn't understand rail very well. He's essentially a
one-issue candidate, as the media continually remind
us.
So How's Rail Doing Now?
In spite of all this
negativity about the rail, the project is doing just fine, thank you very much,
and the evidence of rail’s continuing support among the public is only two days
old.
Saturday’s Primary
Election supplied that evidence.
Pro-Rail Candidates: 54.6 percent
Anti-Rail Candidate: 44.7 percent
After all of the criticism,
all the negativity, all the accusations and misrepresentations in the anti-rail
camp’s massive multi-media PR campaign (see our “aggregation site” and the Mr.
Cliff Slater and Friends heading),
the opponents have failed to move the needle! The rail project’s support among
Oahu voters two days ago was a solid majority!
Candidates have come and
gone, some won and some lost, but consistent throughout the years has been the rail project's
public involvement campaign that week after week, month after month
supplied residents with truthful information that helped them understand and
appreciate the project.
But as they say, no good
deed goes unpunished, and the rail project’s public involvement team was "whacked" this summer, to use Civil Beat's word for the budget-trimming. Those of us whose involvement with rail ends this
month leave knowing the mission was
accomplished.
What About the Polls?
The public opinion surveys
published by the Star-Advertiser/Hawaii News Now and Civil Beat in recent weeks deserve a second look. The newspaper/TV poll published
on July 29 called it almost exactly right for Mr. Cayetano – 44
percent support in the Primary. The survey underestimated Mr.
Caldwell’s support by nearly 5 percentage points and overestimated Mr.
Carlisle’s backing by 2 points.
Civil Beat’s most recent survey (its story was updated only last Wednesday) had Mr. Cayetano at 51 percent, thereby badly missing the election’s
outcome. That poll was conducted among “very likely Oahu voters” only, a
methodology CB has used
repeatedly in 2012 that Yes2Rail believes is seriously flawed. UH professor
Neal Milner said we had a point.
Governments do not
differentiate between voters and non-voters in their planning processes. With
non-voters having lower incomes and less education than voters, they’re more
likely to rely on public transit than citizens who vote. Opinion surveys on
rail that ignore the non-voters’ views can’t possibly reflect the community’s
true support and appreciation of the rail project.
Whatever the reasons for Civil
Beat’s big miss in its most recent
survey, getting rid of voter-only polling can only help.
And Finally....
Yes2Rail has criticized the Honolulu news media over the past several months for their hands-off approach to covering
Governor Cayetano’s bus rapid transit alternative to elevated Honolulu rail.
After weeks of Yes2Rail posts calling on Mr. Cayetano to release details of
his “plan,” the Star-Advertiser finally pressed the point in a late-May editorial.
However, in the end, we’re
not so sure the media’s poor performance really mattered. The August 2012
Primary Election's results showed that rail continues to receive majority
support among Oahu residents.
Despite the media's laid-back
reporting and the opponents’ anti-rail rhetoric, residents managed to sort and
sift through the information available to them from multiple sources, including
the rail project itself, and gave the pro-rail candidates more votes than
the would-be rail killer.
That's a good note for rail's public involvement team to leave on.
AUGUST 16th UPDATE: Letter to Honolulu Star-Advertiser:
Headline missed real vote winner
Shouldn't this have been the banner headline in Sunday's Star-Advertiser: "Pro-rail candidates win primary, 55 to 44 percent"?
Jerome M. Comcowich
Kailua
AUGUST 16th UPDATE: Letter to Honolulu Star-Advertiser:
Headline missed real vote winner
Shouldn't this have been the banner headline in Sunday's Star-Advertiser: "Pro-rail candidates win primary, 55 to 44 percent"?
Jerome M. Comcowich
Kailua