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OHA: Office of Hawaiian Affairs

Testify in support of SB 268 SD1!

Mahalo to everyone who submitted testimony for the first hearing of SB 268 on January 29. Thanks to your support, this bill has moved forward to the Senate Committee on Judiciary as SB 268 SD1 and will be heard on Wednesday, February 19, at 9:45 a.m.


Submit Testimony by Tuesday, February 18, at 9:45 a.m.
Testimony received after the deadline will be accepted, but considered late. Those who wish to testify via videoconference must also submit written testimony.

How to Create a Legislative Account  How to Testify


Summary of SB 268 SD1

  • The island burial councils were created in 1990 following the disinterment of over 1,100 Native Hawaiian burials in the location of the proposed Ritz-Carlton Kapalua.
  • The councils were created to give Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners and lineal descendants a role in protecting iwi kūpuna through the historic review process (HRS Chapter 6E) and to prevent future desecration.
  • Currently, up to 3 of 9 seats on Island Burial Councils (and 1 of 5 seats on the Moloka‘i council) are reserved for “development and large landowner interests.”
  • OHA’s bill would strengthen cultural perspectives and make it easier for councils to meet by eliminating the large landowner seats and reducing council size from 9 to 7 members (the Moloka‘i council would remain at 5).

Sample Testimony in Support of SB 268 SD1

Use this sample to submit your own testimony:

Aloha e Chair Rhoads, Vice Chair Gabbard, and members of the Senate Committee on Judiciary:

I support SB 268 SD1 for the following reasons:

Perpetuation of mālama iwi practices: SB 268 strengthens the ability of Island Burial Councils to fulfill their primary mission: to protect and mālama iwi kūpuna. By centering cultural knowledge and expertise, and removing the requirement that developer and large landowner interests have reserved seats on each council, this bill ensures the councils will represent Native Hawaiian cultural perspectives.

Increasing the effectiveness of burial councils: SB 268 would also decrease the number of individuals necessary for the councils to meet by removing the landowner seats. Historically, quorum requirements have made it difficult for councils to convene, leaving important community issues – including the recognition of lineal and cultural descendants – unresolved. Allowing councils to do business with fewer members will help relieve this backlog and ensure that descendants have a voice in the protection and preservation of burial sites.

Implementing the state’s trust duties: The State of Hawaiʻi has a constitutional mandate to protect Native Hawaiian traditional and cultural practices, including those related to mālama iwi. Island Burial Councils are an important means for the state to effectuate its trust duties by ensuring that Native Hawaiians cultural perspectives are properly reflected in council decisions, and by empowering Native Hawaiian decision-making authority over Native Hawaiian burial sites.

Mahalo for the opportunity to testify in support of this important measure. I respectfully urge the committee to pass SB 268 SD1.

Mahalo for the opportunity to testify.
[Your Name] [Your Contact Information]


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