*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Electronically Filed
Supreme Court
SCAP-13-0002266
22-DEC-2015
08:33 AM
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
---oOo---
THE SIERRA CLUB and SENATOR CLAYTON HEE,
Petitioners/Appellants-Appellants,
vs.
D.R. HORTON-SCHULER HOMES, LLC, a Delaware limited liability
company, d.b.a. D.R. HORTON-SCHULER DIVISION; THE LAND USE
COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF HAWAII; OFFICE OF PLANNING, STATE OF
HAWAII; DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING AND PERMITTING,
Respondents/Appellees-Appellees.
SCAP-13-0002266
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
(CAAP-13-0002266; CIV. NO. 12-1-2000-07)
DECEMBER 22, 2015
RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA AND McKENNA, JJ.,
AND CIRCUIT JUDGE CHANG, IN PLACE OF ACOBA, J., RECUSED;
WITH POLLACK, J., DISSENTING
OPINION OF THE COURT BY McKENNA, J.
I. Introduction
This appeal involves a long-standing issue in this state:
balancing agricultural and urban land uses. Appellants Sierra
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Club and Clayton Hee challenge the Land Use Commission’s (“LUC”)
reclassification of approximately 1525.516 acres of Appellee
D.R. Horton-Schuler Homes’ (“D.R. Horton-Schuler”) land from the
agricultural state land use district to the urban state land use
district. The land is slated for development of the Hoopili
project. On transfer from the Intermediate Court of Appeals,
Appellants seek review of the Decision and Order of the Circuit
Court of the First Circuit1 (“circuit court”) affirming the LUC’s
Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decision and Order
(“D&O”) and dismissing their appeal.
Appellants argue that the reclassification violated Article
XI, Section 3 of the Hawaii State Constitution, which provides
the following:
The State shall conserve and protect agricultural lands,
promote diversified agriculture, increase agricultural
self-sufficiency and assure the availability of
agriculturally suitable lands. The legislature shall
provide standards and criteria to accomplish the foregoing.
Lands identified by the State as important agricultural
lands needed to fulfill the purposes above shall not be
reclassified by the State or rezoned by its political
subdivisions without meeting the standards and criteria
established by the legislature and approved by a two-thirds
vote of the body responsible for the reclassification or
rezoning action.
Appellants also argue that the reclassification violated
Act 183, codified at Hawaii Revised Statutes (“HRS”) §§ 205-41
through -52 (Supp. 2005), and also known as Part III of HRS
1
The Honorable Rhonda A. Nishimura presided.
2
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
chapter 205 (“Part III”). Part III implements Article XI,
Section 3’s mandate and governs land use on important
agricultural lands (“IALs”). Appellants contend that the LUC
should not reclassify lands that the City and County of Honolulu
could potentially designate as IALs in the future, pursuant to
HRS § 205-47 (Supp. 2005).
Lastly, Appellants argue that the reclassification violated
Hawaii Administrative Rules (“HAR”) § 15-15-77(a) (effective
2000-2013), which requires reclassifications to conform to the
Hawaii State Plan. They also contend that the reclassification
violated HAR § 15-15-77(b)(6) (effective 2000-2013), which
requires the LUC to consider whether taking land in “intensive
agricultural use for two years prior to the date of a filing of
a petition [for a district boundary amendment] or lands with a
high capacity for intensive agricultural use” out of the
agricultural district “[w]ill not substantially impair actual or
potential agricultural production in the vicinity of the subject
property or in the county or State; or . . . [i]s reasonably
necessary for urban growth. . . .”
Pursuant to Save Sunset Beach Coalition v. City & County of
Honolulu, 102 Hawaii 465, 476, 78 P.3d 1, 12 (2003), Article XI,
Section 3, standing alone, is not self-executing; rather, its
mandate is carried out through the provisions of Part III.
3
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Therefore, the plain language of Article XI, Section 3 does not
require the LUC to stay reclassification of agricultural land
while the formal county-initiated IAL designation process runs
its course. Pursuant to the policies underlying Part III, state
and county government should consider the “compelling state
interest in conserving the State’s agricultural land resource
base assuring the long term availability of agricultural lands
for agricultural use,” see HRS § 205-41 (Supp. 2005); however,
the plain language of Part III contains no provision requiring a
stay. Further, the constitutional history of Article XI,
Section 3, as well as the legislative history of Part III, does
not reveal an intent to require the LUC to delay reclassifying
agricultural land pending formal designation of IALs. Second,
reliable, probative, and substantial evidence supported the
LUC’s finding that the reclassification of the land at issue in
this case was consistent with the Hawaii State Plan, would not
substantially impair agricultural production, and was necessary
for urban growth. We therefore affirm the circuit court’s
decision and order, which affirmed the LUC’s D&O.
4
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
II. Background
A. Land Use Commission Proceedings
1. D.R. Horton-Schuler’s Petition for Land Use
District Boundary Amendment
On January 24, 2007, D.R. Horton-Schuler filed a Petition
for Land Use District Boundary Amendment (“Petition”) before the
LUC. D.R. Horton-Schuler described the Hoopili project as
follows:
Petitioner is currently proposing the development of a
mixed-use, transit-ready community, including residential,
business, and commercial areas, transit stops, schools,
parks and open space. Petitioner is proposing to develop
approximately ll,750 residential units (including
affordable units) ranging from an estimated $200,000 to
$700,000 based upon 2006 market prices, a minimum of five
(5) school sites (subject to continued negotiations with
the Department of Education), approximately two hundred ten
(210) acres for parks and open space, and approximately one
hundred forty-five (145) acres for business and commercial
spaces that would sell for approximately $35 to $45 per sq.
ft. in today’s market. Both the residential and commercial
space selling prices are estimates and are subject to
change according to fluctuating market conditions, as well
as unanticipated costs incurred during construction. The
Proposed Project is being designed as a mixed-use community
ready to provide high-capacity transit stops to further
encourage walking/bicycling and the use of public
transportation to supplement that which already underpins
Hoopili’s traditional neighborhood design. Infrastructure
facilities to be expanded or improved include access and
circulation roadways, drainage systems, water distribution
and wastewater collection lines, and
electrical/communication systems.
The Hoopili project is scheduled to be developed in two ten-year
phases, the first phase from 2013-2020, and the second phase
from 2020-2030.2
2
Under HAR § 15-15-78 (effective 2000-2013), the LUC can reclassify
lands incrementally if “full development of the subject property cannot
(continued. . .)
5
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
The Petition stated that the land was “currently leased for
agricultural purposes,” including “diversified agriculture;
pasturage; grazing for livestock; cultivation of seed corn and
other agricultural crops; and agricultural research.” The Final
Environmental Impact Statement (“FEIS”) prepared in conjunction
with the Petition represented that D.R. Horton-Schuler would be
relocating the agricultural tenants onto replacement lands.
The FEIS also noted that the proposed project conformed to
the Hawaii State Plan. The FEIS pointed out that the Petition
lands were “located within (and makai of) the Urban Growth
Boundary of the Ewa Development Plan Urban Land Use Map.” The
FEIS represented that the project “is consistent with the
State’s goal to insure [sic] economic stability, diversity, and
growth for present and future generations,” because the project
“will provide various housing and employment opportunities for
the rapidly growing Ewa region, which will in turn, relieve
development pressures from other areas of Oahu, particularly the
Primary Urban Center, and rural areas such as Waianae, North
Shore, Koolau Loa and Koolau Poko.” The FEIS noted, “The
agricultural policies [of the Hawaii State Plan] are
predominantly not applicable to the Hoopili project.”
(. . .continued)
substantially be completed within ten years after the date of” the LUC’s
approval.
6
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
2. Intervenors and Other Parties to the Petition
Proceedings and Their Positions
When an “[a]mendment[] to district boundaries involving
land areas greater than fifteen acres” is filed with the LUC,
the State Office of Planning (“OP”) and the county planning
department, here the City and County of Honolulu’s Department of
Planning and Permitting (“DPP”), must appear as parties and
“make recommendations relative to the proposed boundary change.”
HRS § 205-4(e)(1) (2001). The DPP supported the Petition because
it found the project to be consistent with the City’s General
Plan, which “encourages development and growth and directs
economic activity within the secondary urban center and urban
fringe area in Ewa.” The DPP noted that the project is located
within the Urban Growth Boundary of the Ewa Development Plan,
where urban development is “allowed and consistent with the
long-range vision, policies, principles and guidelines in the
Ewa Development Plan regarding land use and the plan’s vision of
building master planned residential communities that allow
residents to live and work in the Ewa region.” The OP generally
supported the orderly development of Kapolei as Oahu’s second
city but did not initially take a position on the Petition,
citing insufficient information. Four years into the Petition
proceedings, the Sierra Club and Clayton Hee, in his individual
capacity only, were permitted to intervene. Both opposed the
7
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Petition, arguing it proposed inappropriate uses for productive
agricultural land.
3. Evidentiary Hearings
The LUC held evidentiary hearings on the Petition on March
19, 2009; March 20, 2009; May 15, 2009; June 25, 2009; June 26,
2009; October 20, 2011; October 21, 2011; November 17, 2011;
November 18, 2011; January 5, 2012; January 19, 2012; March 1,
2012; March 2, 2012; March 15, 2012; and March 16, 2012.
a. Evidence and Testimony on Agricultural Impacts
D.R. Horton-Schuler called Bruce Plasch, who was admitted
as an “expert in the field of agricultural economics.” D.R.
Horton-Schuler also submitted Plasch’s written direct testimony
and supplemental written direct testimony. First, Plasch
described the agronomic conditions of the Petition area as
follows, starting with soil conditions:
About 1,340 ± 65 acres of the Petition Area are comprised
of higher-quality soils (I and II for the NRCS ratings,
Prime for ALISH, and A and B for the LSB). This is about
2.4% of the 55,563 acres of Prime agricultural lands that
Oahu had in 1977, and about 2.5% of the 53,039 acres of A
and B lands that Oahu had in 1972.
In his supplemental written testimony he described agricultural
productivity at Hoopili as follows:
In 2010, the primary crops grown at Hoopili were bananas,
basil, snap beans, broccoli, cabbage, seed corn, sweet
corn, cucumbers, eggplant, lettuces, melons, dry onions,
bell peppers, squash, pumpkin, and tomatoes. This includes
crops grown for the local market as well as for export.
For vegetables, melons and fruits, about 1,027 acres were
harvested with an estimated yield of 15.3 million pounds.
8
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
This represented about 6% of Hawaii’s production of these
crops.
Second, Plasch testified that the contraction of plantation
agriculture has released hundreds of thousands of acres of
farmland:
During the past four decades, a vast amount of farmland has
become available for diversified crop farming due to the
contraction of plantation agriculture. In 1980, we had 17
large plantations in Hawaii that produced sugar and
pineapple for export: 14 sugar plantations and 3 pineapple
plantations. Now we have just one, the HC&S sugar
plantation on Maui (Dole’s pineapple operation remains on
Oahu, but it is no longer a large plantation growing
pineapple for export, but a farm that grows pineapple
primarily for the Hawaii market.)
In actual acreages, the contraction of plantation
agriculture released about 263,000 acres of farmland from
1968 to 2009. However, despite the availability of such
farmland, the demand for land for diversified crops over
the same period increased only by about 26,800 acres (about
10% of the land released from plantation agriculture).
Oahu experienced a similar trend. Since 1960, plantation
agriculture released about 73,500 acres on Oahu, while
acreage in diversified crops increased only by about 2,300
acres (about 3% of the land released from plantation
agriculture).
Third, Plasch estimated that about 177,000 ± 5,000 acres of
farmland remains available statewide for diversified
agriculture, with 30,000 acres available on Oahu.
Fourth, Plasch explained that the Wahiawa wastewater
treatment plant was in the process of being upgraded to provide
North Shore agricultural land with a water source:
[A] $30 million upgrade to the Plant is under construction,
and is slated for completion in October 2012. The decision
to upgrade the Plant is the result of a 1998 Consent Decree
with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”).
The purpose of the recommendation is to allow farmers to
use R-l water from the Wahiawa Reservoir to irrigate any
type of crop using any type of irrigation system. The
9
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
upgrade to the R-l water-quality standard will open up the
mid-level and high-level fields on the North Shore for
growing vegetable crops. Under the current R-2 water-
quality rating, water from the Reservoir can be used to
irrigate orchards and some other crops, but not vegetable
and melon crops. As a result, most vegetables and melon
crops on the North Shore must be grown at lower elevations
where they can be irrigated using groundwater which has no
restrictions on use.
In the meantime, landowners and some farmers on the North
Shore have reactivated and improved groundwater wells so
that more fields can be irrigated with groundwater only.
This has allowed some farmers to move some of their
operations to the North Shore.
Fifth, Plasch testified that existing agricultural lands
could be farmed more intensively:
The large diversified farmers on Oahu generally harvest
one, and sometimes two, crops per year from a given field.
As a result, land is in crop for about a third of the year,
and fallow for about two-thirds of the year.
There are many ways to increase yields, including:
• Farming two or more crops per year.
• For certain crops, going vertical using trellises, cages
or sticks to support plants.
• Growing plants using hydroponic farming in greenhouses.
For certain vegetable crops, a number of farmers are
already implementing more intensive farming that greatly
increases yields, and as a result, greatly reduces land
requirements. In particular, many of the tomatoes,
cucumbers, peppers, and lettuces sold in our supermarkets
are grown hydroponically in greenhouses by Hawaii and
mainland farmers.
Plasch also noted that although the capital costs are higher,
there are many benefits to hydroponics, including year-round
production, higher yields, higher quality produce, fewer pest
problems, less energy and water use, and lower transportation
costs. Plasch opined that intensive farming practices could
increase agricultural production without requiring more land.
10
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Sixth, Plasch testified that 100% self-sufficiency was
possible but unlikely in Hawaii:
Hawaii has ample farmland to achieve 100% self-sufficiency,
with or without Hoopili and other projects that are
consistent with City plans. But as I mentioned above, 100%
self-sufficiency in fresh vegetables, melons and fruits is
not achievable given competition from low-cost imports, and
would not provide food security.
Currently, approximately 15,000 acres of land is farmed
statewide to produce approximately 33% of our fresh
vegetables, melons and fruits. Therefore, achieving 100%
self-sufficiency in these crops would require about 45,000
acres of farmland. That would be 30,000 additional acres
statewide. It should be noted that this figure is high,
considering the fact that more intensive farming than is
currently the case would greatly reduce the amount of land
required. The additional land required is small compared to
the estimated 177,000 acres ± 5,000 acres of good farmland
that is available statewide. In addition, another 70,000+
acres could become available if shipping is interrupted to
such an extent that exporting crops becomes unfeasible.
A similar situation would apply to Oahu. About 23,000
additional acres would be required for 100% self-
sufficiency in fresh produce (45,000 acres for statewide
self-sufficiency x 67% for Oahu’s share of the population -
the existing 7,300 acres used to grow food crops on Oahu).
Again this estimate is high given inter-island shipping and
reduced land requirements from intensive farming. As
aforementioned, even if all of the farms within the Growth
Boundaries relocate to land outside the Growth Boundaries,
there would still be 30,000 acres of good farmland
available on Oahu outside the Growth Boundaries, plus about
4,700 acres used for export and non-food crops that could
come available if needed.
Seventh, as to Hoopili’s impact on the current agricultural
tenants at the Petition area, Plasch testified that the farms
currently operating in the Petition area had all found
sufficient lands outside of the urban growth boundary to
continue their operations. In Plasch’s professional opinion,
the Project will have little or no adverse impact on
Hawaii’s agricultural production because farmland is
available in upper Kunia and the North Shore to accommodate
the relocation of existing farms in Ewa. Also the
11
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
development of the Petition Area and the resulting loss of
agricultural land will not limit the growth of diversified
crops since ample agricultural land is available on Oahu
and the other islands.
Plasch’s supplemental written direct testimony also opined
Hoopili will have little to no adverse impact on Hawaii’s
agricultural production because ample farmland is available
on Oahu and the other islands to accommodate the relocation
of the existing Ewa farms as well as to accommodate the
future growth of diversified crop farming. Land is
available because of the closure or severe contraction of
all plantations in Hawaii with the single exception of one
sugar plantation, HC&S on Maui.
Agricultural tenants Aloun Farms and Sugarland Farms also
submitted letters in support of the Hoopili project. Alec Sou
of Aloun Farms stated that he had already secured “rights to 400
acres of farm land outside of the urban growth boundary with the
opportunity to acquire as much as 1,000 acres.” Thus, Sou
stated, “We do not view the plans by D.R. Horton as the end of
all farming in Honolulu, much less Hawaii. . . . We believe
there is more than sufficient land on Oahu to support our
farming operations. . . .” Larry Jefts of Sugarland Farms
stated he was “look[ing] forward to continu[ing] to farm as long
as [D.R. Horton-Schuler] would allow [him] to [at Hoopili] . . .
and [was] willing to move and cooperate with the development
plan to the advantage of Horton, to [the farm] and to the entire
community, who will benefit from the development, new schools,
the rail lines, etc.” Jefts stated that the development “will
not hurt [his] business model,” as he had “planned for it since
12
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
1994,” when he initially entered into a lease with the prior
owner, the James Campbell Company.
The OP called Russell Kokubun, the Chair of the Board of
Agriculture. He testified, “I understand that there will be a
loss of some very, very good agricultural lands. But the
Department is prepared to make available as much good
agricultural land as possible. And that’s part of our strategy
to expand our agricultural industry in the state.” On cross-
examination, Kokubun elaborated on the Department’s strategy as
follows:
A: Well, there are a number of agricultural lands that
are going to be made available, I think very good
agricultural lands.
Q: Such as?
A: One of the issues that the Department is working on
is there are –- there’s a proposed ag park on Kunia Road of
150 acres. There’s a parcel again off of Kunia Road, that
the DLNR will, is in the process of providing to the
Department of Agriculture for agricultural purposes of 400
acres. And we are on the threshold of completing the
purchase of the Galbraith Estate or Galbraith Trust Lands.
Q: Now, with respect to all of those, to your knowledge
do they have adequate existing supplies of water to grow
the kinds of crops that Aloun Farms is currently growing?
A: The 150-acre ag park does -- it needs the
infrastructure to get the water to the site. But that’s
something that the Department will do. The 400 acres also
has access to Waiahole ditch water. That would also have to
be a transmission line provided for that that we would be
prepared to do. And the Galbraith Trust Lands have one
well, but that’s not adequate to irrigate the entire 1700-
acre parcel. So we are working on getting some planning and
design money to take a look at this.
On cross-examination, Kokubun admitted that the Department did
not currently have funds to make water improvements on these
13
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
other lands, but that his Department was “working on getting
some planning and design money to take a look at” the
infrastructure.
Leon Stollenberger, who was admitted as an “expert on the
characteristics of agricultural lands in the Central and North
Shore areas of [Oahu],” testified that the Hoopili lands were
“one of the most suited to vegetable production literally in the
world.”
The Sierra Club called Hector Valenzuela, who was admitted
without objection as an expert in agriculture, in particular,
vegetable crops. He did not support the Petition because of the
loss of prime agricultural lands. He testified that the
Petition lands were “among the most productive and valuable
lands in the state because of their proximity to market and
ideal growing conditions,” which included higher solar radiation
and temperature, lower humidity, and ideal soil conditions
resulting in little erosion. These conditions contributed to
faster, earlier harvests and higher crop yields. Valenzuela
also testified that the state needs “isolated sections of land
. . . [to] grow crops competitively,” with these isolated
sections contributing to the “overall self-sufficiency and
sustainability of the state.” At Hoopili, Aloun Farms had been
successful in growing certain crops, providing 40 to 70 percent
of the entire production of those crops in the state.
14
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Valenzuela believed that “some of the crops that are grown in
Hoopili . . . may be very difficult to grow . . . competitively
in other parts of the state.” He disagreed that hydroponics
could replace the need for prime agricultural land on Oahu.
According to Valenzuela, hydroponics is capital-intensive; he
criticized D.R. Horton-Schuler’s lack of documentation
supporting the idea that greenhouses or other hi-tech farming
methods were “feasible and/or profitable in the proposed Hoopili
development area.”
The Sierra Club also called farmer Gary Maunakea-Forth, who
testified that finding available farmland for long-term lease
was difficult, and it was costly to prepare land for farming.
The Sierra Club also submitted into evidence an undated
scholarly article entitled “Agriculture” by C.N. Lee and H.C.
“Skip” Bittenbender that opined that “near self-sufficiency [in
Hawaii] would require an estimated 260,800 acres . . . to meet
projected resident needs in 2007. . . .”
Hee called former Governor John Waihee, who testified that
he was concerned that the replacement agricultural lands did not
have the same water supply that Hoopili enjoyed. Hee himself
testified that there may be available agricultural land, but it
is not prime agricultural land, and would require water to grow
crops productively and profitably. He also testified that the
15
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
state was “beyond the tipping point of food security.” Both
Waihee and Hee believed that the Hoopili development was not
reasonably necessary for urban growth, as tens of thousands of
homes were already approved and permitted for the region, and
because the Petition lands were among the most agriculturally
productive in the state.
b. Evidence and Testimony on the Need for the
Project
D.R. Horton-Schuler called Ann Bouslog, who was admitted as
an “expert in the field of market analysis and economics.” D.R.
Horton also submitted her written direct testimony and
supplemental written direct testimony. Bouslog testified to the
need for urban growth at the Petition area. Bouslog’s
supplemental written direct testimony stated that, by 2030,
there would be a 29,000-unit housing deficit if there were no
further residential entitlements. In her supplemental written
direct testimony, Bouslog opined that “Hoopili’s 11,750 units,
if entitled, would make a significant contribution towards
addressing this unmet need.” According to Bouslog, Hoopili is
“ideally situated” to help meet Oahu’s housing needs, as it is
“[l]ocated near the emerging Second City of Kapolei and along
the major transportation corridor between Kapolei and the
existing urbanized areas of Oahu.” Further, “the compact
development style and primary resident-orientation of the
16
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Project suggest that it would appeal to a broad range of
potential future buyers and renters, including substantial
shares of affordable and workforce housing.” Bouslog estimated
that “the overall average absorption at Hoopili” would be “650
unit sales per year,” with projected average sales of 725 units
per year in the first ten-year phase of development, and
projected “average sales of about 595 units per year” in the
second ten-year phase of development.
The DPP called Robert Stanfield, chief of the Development
Plans and Zone Change Branch of the DPP. He testified that the
“DPP supports the Petition to reclassify the land from
Agricultural District to the Urban District,” because “the
Petition is consistent with all relevant city plans.” He
testified that “an average of 1800 units a year will be needed
in Central Oahu and Ewa to successfully divert growth away from
the country areas and Windward Oahu and the East Honolulu
Sustainable Community areas.” Stanfield also testified that the
City estimated that about 34,000 units in the Ewa region were
slated for construction as of July 2010.
Bouslog believed that the DPP’s estimate of the number of
homes coming online was too high, because it included units
intended to be developed as second homes, timeshares, or resort
units. She estimated that 24,000 potential primary housing
17
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
units were planned for the Ewa region, which still fell far
below the number needed to meet Ewa’s housing needs.
In her supplemental written direct testimony, Bouslog
stated that the following negative impacts would occur without
development of the Hoopili project:
1. Island’s population and economic growth would likely be
constrained. In the medium- and long-term, this would
raise significant concerns:
a) Displacement of development activity away from the
planned Kapolei region and back into other areas of Oahu
or the neighbor islands – areas less suited to accommodate
significant growth;
b) Worsening shortage of primary housing on Oahu;
c) Accelerated price pressures on housing, especially Ewa
and Kapolei;
d) Higher prices associated with commercial and industrial
properties - possibly good for landlords, but a burden for
tenants and consumers; and
e) A less efficient and cost effective transit system, if
built.
2. Significant loss of potential jobs creation in East
Kapolei area, along with the economic and fiscal impacts
those would support.
c. Evidence and Testimony on the Project’s
Consistency with the Hawaii State Plan
D.R. Horton-Schuler called Vincent Shigekuni who was
admitted without objection as an “expert in the field of
planning.” He testified that the Hoopili project was consistent
with the Hawaii State Plan.
The OP called planning program administrator, Mary Lou
Kobayashi. She testified that the “proposed reclassification
generally conforms to the overall theme, goals, objectives and
policies and priority guidelines of the Hawaii State Plan,
particularly those relating to housing, the economy and
18
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
sustainability.” Specifically, she testified that “the
reclassification supports Hawaii State Plan policies to provide
increased job opportunities, to effectively provide housing
opportunities and address sustainability through energy and
water conservation measure.”
When cross-examined as to whether the Petition was
inconsistent with the Hawaii State Plan’s agricultural
objectives, Kobayashi answered, “No. . . [W]ith the fact that
there are additional lands available for agricultural use . . .
the reclassification would not necessarily adversely affect or
impact the . . . various agricultural objectives.” This was
because “there are other lands that are available within the
Agricultural District for agricultural activities such that the
State Plan policies with regard to agriculture as a whole are
still being supported.”
d. Evidence and Testimony on Important
Agricultural Lands
D.R. Horton-Schuler’s expert in the field of planning,
Shigekuni, testified that the “Petition Area is not designated
as Important Agricultural Land.”
DPP’s chief planning division head, Kathy Sokugawa, also
testified that DPP “would not be recommending [the Hoopili] area
as a potential IAL area.” Sokugawa also explained that the City
and County process for identifying IALs was supposed to start
19
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
when the state gave funding to the counties for that purpose.
Sokugawa testified that the state had not yet funded the
counties, but that the City and County of Honolulu had set aside
its own funds to begin the IAL designation process.
On March 7, 2012, while the LUC was in the midst of
evidentiary hearings on the Petition, counsel for Hee, Eric
Seitz, wrote a letter to DPP’s counsel, Don Kitaoka, drawing his
attention to the Honolulu City Council’s Resolution 12-23, which
he claimed “intended to expedite the classification of Important
Agricultural Lands . . . including those agriculturally
productive lands within the urban growth boundary classified as
prime agricultural lands.” Seitz contended that the Resolution
“may have a critical impact” on the pending Hoopili proceedings;
therefore, he asked that DPP “produce witnesses who will be able
to testify as to the possible effects of the Resolution on
testimony and opinions previously offered by individuals and
officials whose support for the project[] was based upon the
premise that the lands at issue could not and would not be
classified as Important Agricultural Lands.”
Seitz enclosed Resolution 12-23 with the letter. The
Resolution is entitled, “Urging the City’s Agricultural Liaison
to Expedite the Identifying and Mapping of Important
Agricultural Lands and Ensure that the City Works to Preserve
the Availability of Agricultural Lands for Farming.” The
20
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Resolution notes that “the City Administration has begun the
process of identification and mapping of IALs[.]” The
Resolution directed Laura Thielen, the then newly appointed city
Agricultural Liaison, to expedite the identification and mapping
of IALs and to report back to the City Council on the progress
of the City’s efforts. The Resolution also stated that
“agriculturally productive lands within urban growth boundaries
that are classified as prime agricultural lands, provided
adequate water supply is available” be “consider[ed]” in the IAL
identification process.
A week later, Kitaoka wrote a letter to the LUC alerting
them to Seitz’s letter. Kitaoka represented to the LUC that the
DPP’s position was “that production of any additional witnesses
regarding this matter for the aforementioned dockets [i.e., Koa
Ridge and Hoopili] is unnecessary,” but that additional
witnesses would be provided if the LUC thought it was necessary.
Further, Kitaoka noted that the City Council expressly did not
intend for Resolution 12-23 to “influence the state Land Use
Commission decision making process on any case pending before
the Commission,” referring to Koa Ridge and Hoopili. Indeed,
the City Council’s Committee on Zoning and Planning’s Report on
Resolution 12-23, attached to Kitaoka’s letter, states, “[I]t is
your committee’s intent that the City work within the parameters
set forth by state law [in identifying IALs] and not influence
21
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
the state Land Use Commission decision-making process on any
case pending before the Commission.”
After Resolution 12-23 entered the record, DPP re-called
chief planning division head Sokugawa. When asked on direct
examination whether the resolution “would impact or affect prior
testimony or positions taken by [the DPP] in support of the
pending Petition,” Sokugawa answered in the negative. Sokugawa
explained that the city’s development plans “designate [the
Hoopili parcel] for urban development, not agriculture.”
Sokugawa also highlighted “the last section of the committee
report [on Resolution 12-23, which] . . . states [that it] ‘is
not intended to influence the State Land Use Commission
decision-making process on any case pending before the
Commission.’” When the OP asked about the process of
recommending IALs, Sokugawa explained that DPP was about to hire
a consultant to help with the IAL designation process, and that
when DPP has completed its IAL recommendations, the
recommendations will go to the City Council, then on to the Land
Use Commission. One of the LUC Commissioners, Commissioner
Heller, also asked Sokugawa to provide a timeframe for the
completion of the IAL identification process. Sokugawa
testified that the process would begin later in 2012, and that
her “optimistic guess would be that there’d be something before
the City Council in a year.”
22
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
4. The LUC’s D&O
The LUC reclassified the Petition lands from the state
agricultural land use district to the state urban land use
district, subject to conditions that are not relevant on appeal.
The LUC’s D&O was 186 pages long and contained 666 findings of
fact (“FOFs,” or “FOF” in the singular), 32 conclusions of law
(“COLs,” or “COL” in the singular), and 26 conditions. Relevant
to this appeal, the LUC rendered 8 FOFs concerning the need for
the proposed project; 22 FOFs concerning the proposed project’s
impact on agricultural resources in the area; 11 FOFs finding
that the Petition area would not be designated as IAL; and 39
FOFs addressing the proposed project’s consistency with the
Hawaii State Plan. That left nearly 600 other FOFs detailing
procedural matters; economic impacts; social impacts; impacts on
flora, fauna, arthropods, archaeological and historical
resources, cultural resources, groundwater resources, and scenic
resources; environmental quality; public services and facilities
such as highway and roadway facilities, parks and recreational
facilities, water service, wastewater disposal, drainage, solid
waste disposal, schools, police and fire protection,
emergency/medical services, and electricity and telephone
services; and conformance to other state and county plans such
as the Hawaii State Functional Plan, the General Plan for the
City and County of Honolulu, and the Ewa Development Plan, as
23
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
well as the Coastal Zone Management Program. Clearly, these
latter findings are not relevant on appeal.
B. Circuit Court Appeal
Appellants appealed the LUC’s D&O to the circuit court,
alleging that the LUC violated Article XI, Section 3 of the
Hawaii State Constitution (Count 1), violated Act 183 (Count 2),
and violated HAR § 15-15-77 (Count 3). In their opening brief,
they did not identify any particular FOFs as clearly erroneous
or any COLs as wrong. At oral argument, the circuit court asked
the Appellants which particular FOFs they believed were in
error. Initially their response was “all of them”; however,
with further probing by the court Appellants clarified that they
challenged FOFs 428, 430-434, 437, 444-448, 567-568, 571-572,
and 574, which are discussed in greater detail infra, Section
IV.C. The circuit court then asked Appellants which subsections
of HRS § 91-14(g) (2012)3 applied to their agency appeal, as
3
HRS § 91-14(g) provides the following standards:
(g) Upon review of the record the court may affirm the
decision of the agency or remand the case with instructions
for further proceedings; or it may reverse or modify the
decision and order if the substantial rights of the
petitioners may have been prejudiced because the
administrative findings, conclusions, decisions, or orders
are:
(1) In violation of constitutional or statutory
provisions; or
(2) In excess of the statutory authority or
jurisdiction of the agency; or
(3) Made upon unlawful procedure; or
(4) Affected by other error of law; or
(continued. . .)
24
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
their Opening Brief did not specifically include that
information. Appellants’ response was all six subsections
applied; however, through further questioning, they clarified
that subsection 3 (unlawful procedure)4 and 4 (other error of
law) did not apply. The Appellants focused on subsection 1,
arguing that the LUC’s reclassification was “[i]n violation of
constitutional or statutory provisions,” specifically Article
XI, Section 3, HRS chapter 205, and HAR § 15-15-77. When the
circuit court asked for argument on subsection 5, in other
words, whether the LUC’s D&O was “[c]learly erroneous in view of
the reliable, probative, and substantial evidence on the whole
record,” the Appellants did not point to a specific place in the
record, besides their opening brief, where they challenged the
evidence adduced before the LUC.
After hearing argument from all the parties, the circuit
court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the LUC’s D&O. The
Appellants timely appealed, and this court accepted transfer of
their case.
(. . .continued)
(5) Clearly erroneous in view of the reliable,
probative, and substantial evidence on the whole
record; or
(6) Arbitrary, or capricious, or characterized by
abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise
of discretion.
4
At oral argument, counsel for Appellants represented, “We made it clear
[to the circuit court] that we were appealing the [LUC’s] process. . . .”
http://www.courts.state.hi.us/courts/oral_arguments/archive/oasc13_2266.htm
at 15:09-13. The record reveals, however, that Appellants abandoned any
challenge to the LUC’s D&O based on unlawful procedure.
25
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
III. Standard of Review
Review of a decision made by the circuit court upon its
review of an agency’s decision is a secondary appeal. The
standard of review is one in which this court must
determine whether the circuit court was right or wrong in
its decision, applying the standards set forth in HRS § 91-
14(g) . . . to the agency’s decision.
Dep’t of Env. Servs. v. Land Use Comm’n, 127 Hawaii 5, 12, 275
P.3d 809, 816 (2012)(citation omitted). An agency’s conclusions
of law are reviewed de novo, while an agency’s factual findings
are reviewed for clear error. Camara v. Agsalud, 67 Haw. 212,
216, 685 P.2d 794, 797 (1984).
In order to preserve the function of administrative
agencies in discharging their delegated duties and the
function of this court in reviewing agency determinations,
a presumption of validity is accorded to decisions of
administrative bodies acting within their sphere of
expertise and one seeking to upset the order bears “the
heavy burden of making a convincing showing that it is
invalid because it is unjust and unreasonable in its
consequences.”
In re Hawaii Elec. Light Co., 60 Haw. 625, 630, 594 P.2d 612,
617 (1979) (citations omitted).
IV. Discussion
A. Article XI, Section 3 Does Not Require the LUC to Stay
Reclassification Proceedings Pending the Completion of
the County IAL Designation Process
Appellants argue that that the LUC should be required to
stay reclassification of the potentially important agricultural
land at issue pending formal designation of IALs by the
counties, pursuant to the intent behind Article XI, Section 3 of
the Hawaii Constitution. Constitutional intent is to be found
26
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
in the language of the constitutional provision itself. See
Malahoff v. Saito, 111 Hawaii 168, 181, 140 P.3d 401, 414 (2006)
(“[T]he fundamental principle in interpreting a constitutional
provision is to give effect to [the] intent [of the framers and
the people adopting it]. This intent is to be found in the
instrument itself.”). The plain language of Article XI, Section
3 does not require the LUC to stay reclassification proceedings
until the IAL mapping process is complete. Again, Article XI,
Section 3 provides the following:
The State shall conserve and protect agricultural lands,
promote diversified agriculture, increase agricultural
self-sufficiency and assure the availability of
agriculturally suitable lands. The legislature shall
provide standards and criteria to accomplish the foregoing.
Lands identified by the State as important agricultural
lands needed to fulfill the purposes above shall not be
reclassified by the State or rezoned by its political
subdivisions without meeting the standards and criteria
established by the legislature and approved by a two-thirds
vote of the body responsible for the reclassification or
rezoning action.
The provision requires only that any “[l]ands identified by the
State as important agricultural lands . . . shall not be
reclassified by the State . . . without meeting the standards
and criteria established by the legislature and approved by a
two-thirds vote of the body responsible for the reclassification
. . . action.”
To the extent the Appellants argue that this constitutional
provision alone required the LUC to suspend reclassification
proceedings pending formal identification of IALs in order to
27
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
“conserve and protect” agricultural land, that argument has been
foreclosed by Save Sunset Beach, 102 Hawaii 465, 78 P.3d 1. In
that case, this court held that Article XI, Section 3, standing
alone, is “not self-executing, . . . has no effect and does not
act as a barrier to reclassification.” 102 Hawaii at 476, 78
P.3d at 12. This court explained that a non-self-executing
constitutional provision is one that “merely indicates
principles, without laying down rules by means of which those
principles may be given the force of law.” 102 Hawaii at 475,
78 P.3d at 11. Article XI, Section 3 by itself “merely
indicates principles” of agricultural conservation and
protection, and those principles do not have the force of law
absent the legislature’s provision of “standards and criteria to
accomplish” agricultural conservation and protection. The
legislature did not provide the necessary “implementing
legislation” until 2005, upon the enactment of Act 183, which is
described in greater detail in the next section.
The Appellants also analogize their case to Ka Paakai O
KaAina v. Land Use Comm’n, 94 Hawaii 31, 7 P.3d 1068 (2000).
That case held that Article XII, Section 7 required the LUC to
make specific findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding
the protection of customary and traditional native Hawaiian
rights when reclassifying land. 94 Hawaii at 47, 7 P.3d at
28
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
1084. Article XII, Section 7 provides, “The State reaffirms and
shall protect all rights, customarily and traditionally
exercised for subsistence, cultural and religious purposes and
possessed by ahupuaa tenants who are descendants of native
Hawaiians who inhabited the Hawaiian Islands prior to 1778,
subject to the right of the State to regulate such rights.” The
language of Article XII, Section 7 expressly places an
affirmative duty upon state agencies, unlike the language of
Article XI, Section 3, which contains a mandate to conserve and
protect agriculture and agricultural lands, pursuant to
“standards and criteria” that the legislature shall provide.
Due to differences in the language of the constitutional
provisions, Ka Paakai O KaAina does not support the argument
that Article XI, Section 3 places a free-standing affirmative
duty upon the LUC to conserve and protect the agricultural land
at issue in this case by staying reclassification until the
county IAL designation process has been completed. Rather,
Article XI, Section 3’s mandate is implemented with reference to
the legislature’s “standards and criteria,” which were enacted
via Act 183, which is discussed in greater detail in the next
section of this opinion.
As Article XI, Section 3 is not self-executing, and as the
plain language of Article XI, Section 3 expresses no intent to
require the LUC to stay reclassification proceedings pending the
29
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
formal identification of IALs, it is not appropriate to resort
to constitutional history to divine such intent. See Malahoff,
111 Hawaii at 181, 140 P.3d at 414 (“When the text of a
constitutional provision is not ambiguous, the court, in
construing it, is not at liberty to search for its meaning
beyond the instrument.”). In any event, the constitutional
history is silent on the issue of whether IALs must first be
formally identified before the LUC can reclassify land. While a
few delegates expressed strong concerns that the LUC had allowed
reclassification and urbanization of vast tracts of agricultural
land, no delegate suggested that the LUC should be required to
stay reclassification of land pending formal IAL designation.
See Committee of the Whole Report No. 18 in 1 Proceedings of the
Constitutional Convention of 1978, at 439-43. Contrary to the
Appellants’ assertion, this constitutional history does not
demonstrate that Article XI, Section 3 expresses such a
“substantive mandate.”
B. Act 183 Does Not Require the LUC to Stay
Reclassification Proceedings Pending the Completion of
the County IAL Designation Process
Save Sunset Beach held that Article XI, Section 3 was not
self-executing. 102 Hawaii at 476, 78 P.3d at 12. As such,
Article XI, Section 3 required implementing legislation to
effectuate its purpose of agricultural conservation and
protection. The enactment of Act 183 of the 2005 Legislative
30
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Session finally set forth the “standards and criteria” through
which the constitutional mandate would be fulfilled. The plain
language of Act 183 does not require the LUC to identify IALs
before reclassifying land. See Silva v. City and Cnty. of
Honolulu, 115 Hawaii 1, 6, 165 P.3d 247, 252 (2007) (“When
construing a statute, our foremost obligation is to ascertain
and give effect to the intention of the legislature, which is to
be obtained primarily from the language contained in the statute
itself.”)
Act 183 set forth the procedures by which IALs are
identified. There are two ways. Under the first method, a
“farmer or landowner with lands qualifying under section 205-44
may file with the [LUC] a petition for declaratory order to
designate the lands as important agricultural lands.” HRS
§ 205-45(a) (Supp. 2005). It is undisputed in this case that
D.R. Horton-Schuler does not desire to designate the Petition
lands as IAL. Rather, the dispute in this case centers upon the
second method by which IALs are identified, i.e., the method
initiated by the counties and culminating in the LUC’s formal
identification of IALs statewide.
Under the second method, “[e]ach county shall identify and
map potential important agricultural lands within its
jurisdiction based on the standards and criteria in section
205-44 and the intent of this part, except lands that have been
31
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
designated, through the state land use, zoning, or county
planning process, for urban use by the State or county.” HRS
§ 205-47(a) (Supp. 2005). The counties must then submit
“important agricultural lands maps . . . to the county council
for decision-making.” HRS § 205-47(e) (Supp. 2005). The county
councils “shall adopt the maps, with or without changes, by
resolution,” then transmit the maps “to the land use commission
for further action pursuant to section 205-48.” Id. HRS
§ 205-48 (Supp. 2005), in turn, states, “The land use commission
shall receive the county recommendations and maps” recommending
lands as IAL. Under HRS § 205-49(a) (Supp. 2005), the LUC
“shall then proceed to identify and designate important
agricultural lands. . . .” To date, although Kauai and the
City & County of Honolulu are currently in the process of
identifying proposed IALs, the counties have not submitted to
the county councils or the LUC their IAL recommendations. See
http://mapoahuagland.com/about/faq (“At this time, only Oahu and
Kauai Counties are conducting the Mandatory County Designation
process.”)5 (last visited Dec. 15, 2015).
Act 183 also amended HRS § 205-4, which sets forth the
general procedures for reclassifying land, but only to add that
5
Pursuant to Hawaii Rules of Evidence Rule 201(b)(2), this court takes
judicial notice of the information on DPP’s website, mapoahuagland.com, which
was created to publically disseminate information about the county’s IAL
identification process.
32
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
“lands designated or sought to be designated as important
agricultural lands,” like conservation lands and any lands of
greater than 15 acres, are to be reclassified by the LUC. 2005
Haw. Sess. Laws Act 183, § 4 at 588-89. Had the legislature
intended to suspend reclassification of land until IALs are
identified, it could have further amended HRS § 205-4 to so
state. Nothing in the plain language of Act 183, however,
indicates an intent to have IALs designated first before
reclassification of land may proceed.
Act 183 sets forth methods for identifying IALs, and
Article XI, Section 3 then mandates heightened protection of
IALs so identified. Act 183 is not ambiguous, and there is no
express requirement within it prohibiting the LUC from
reclassifying land pending formal identification of IALs. As
such, there is no need to resort to legislative history to
divine such intent. See Silva, 115 Hawaii at 6, 165 P.3d at 252
(holding that “the courts may resort to . . . the use of
legislative history as an interpretive tool” in “construing an
ambiguous statute. . . .”).
Even if this court were to resort to legislative history,
an examination of that history reveals silence on the issue of
whether the LUC must stay reclassification proceedings until
IALs are formally identified. There is no suggestion in
committee reports or floor speeches of such an intent. See 2005
33
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Haw. Sess. Laws Act 183, pp. 580-93; H. Stand. Comm. Rep. No.
194, in 2005 House Journal, at 1127; H. Stand. Comm. Rep. No.
531, in 2005 House Journal, at 1245; 2005 House Journal, at 298
(floor speech); H. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 968, in 2005 House
Journal, at 1411-12; 2005 House Journal, at 993-99 (floor
speeches); S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 1281, in 2005 Senate
Journal, at 1639-41; S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 1592, in 2005
Senate Journal, at 1775-77; Conf. Comm. Rep. No. 175, in 2005
House Journal, at 1818-19, 2005 Senate Journal, at 1080-81.
Appellants also assert that the LUC must adopt rules and
regulations regarding designation of Important Agricultural
Lands. The LUC did, however, recently adopt the following rules
and regulations regarding county designation of IALs, thus
mooting the Appellants’ argument: HAR §§ 15-15-125 (effective
2013) (“County identification of important agricultural lands”)
and -126 (effective 2013) (“Criteria for designation of lands as
important agricultural lands pursuant to county
recommendation”). To the extent that the Appellants argue that
there should be rules and regulations allowing the LUC to
designate IALs independently of the processes described in HRS
§§ 205-47 through -49, such argument is not supported by the
plain language of those statutes.
Lastly, one crucial fact severely undermines the
Appellants’ argument that the LUC should stay reclassification
34
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
of the Petition lands in this case because they would likely
qualify as IALs. HRS § 205-47(a) exempts from IAL designation
“lands that have been designated, through the . . . county
planning process, for urban use by the State or county.” The
Petition area is located within the Urban Growth Boundary of the
Ewa Development Plan. The Petition lands have, therefore, been
designated through the county planning processes for urban use
and are, as a result, disqualified as IAL. Although the
Appellants argue that the land could be taken out of the Urban
Growth Boundary upon the revision of the Ewa Development Plan,
this court takes judicial notice of the recently amended Ewa
Development Plan, which continues to include Hoopili within the
Urban Growth Boundary. Further, at the hearing before the LUC,
DPP also expressly testified that it would exclude the Petition
land from its IAL recommendations. Even after the City
Council’s Resolution 12-23 became part of the record, DPP’s
witness testified that DPP’s plan to exclude the Petition land
as IAL would not change. In fact, the DPP has excluded the
Petition lands from its current IAL recommendation. See
http://mapoahuagland.com/about/faq/ (“Can lands reserved for
[the] Hoopili . . . development[] be designated as IAL? No,
[this] project[ is] excluded from consideration as IAL because
[it has] long been included in County land use plans for urban
35
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
use. State law does not allow land identified for urban use by
the State or county to be designated as IAL.”) (last visited
Dec. 15, 2015). In short, even if the LUC were to stay the
instant reclassification proceedings to allow the county-
initiated IAL designation process to run its course, it would
make no difference for the particular lands at issue in this
case.
C. Reliable, Probative, and Substantial Evidence
Supported the LUC’s Findings That the Reclassification
Complied with HAR § 15-15-77
The Appellants argue before this court that the circuit
court erred in upholding the LUC’s decision and order, because
the LUC “simply ignor[ed]” “overwhelming and dispositive
evidence” that alternative agricultural lands were insufficient,
that agriculture on Oahu would not be harmed by the
reclassification, and that the Hoopili lands are needed for
urban growth, all in violation of HAR § 15-15-77.
Preliminarily, we note that, despite pinpointing specific
challenged FOFs at oral argument before the circuit court, the
Appellants’ Opening Brief once again pursues a global attack on
the LUC’s D&O. The Opening Brief before this court, like the
opening brief before the circuit court, fails to identify which
FOFs the Appellants view as clearly erroneous. As such, this
court is bound by all of the LUC’s unchallenged FOFs. See
Bremer v. Weeks, 104 Hawaii 43, 63, 85 P.3d 150, 170 (2004)
36
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
(holding that “findings of fact . . . that are not challenged on
appeal are binding on the appellate court”) (citations omitted).
We remind counsel that Hawaii Rules of Appellate Procedure
(“HRAP”) Rule 28(b)(4)(C) (2010) requires that an appellant’s
opening brief concisely state points of error, and, “when the
point involves a finding or conclusion of the . . . agency,
either a quotation of the finding or conclusion urged as error
or reference to appended findings and conclusions. . . .” This
court has looked past violations of HRAP Rule 28(b)(4) to reach
the merits of a case where issues of great importance are at
stake. See, e.g., Morgan v. Planning Dep’t, 104 Hawaii 173,
181, 86 P.3d 982, 990 (2004) (“[B]ecause the issues raised in
the instant case are of great importance [i.e., the Hawaii
constitution’s recognition of the significance of conserving and
protecting Hawaii’s natural beauty and natural resources], we
address the merits of the issues raised . . . notwithstanding
the [Appellants’] technical violation of HRAP Rule 28(b)(4).”)
In this case, we note that the Appellants did specifically
challenge FOFs 428, 430-434, 437, 444-448,6 567-568, 571-572, and
6
FOFs 444-448 concern whether there is enough groundwater for the
Hoopili development. These findings, however, are only tangentially related
to the HAR § 15-15-77 issue. The Appellants brought up groundwater only to
argue that “[r]emoving land from agricultural production will have grave
impacts for this island, including potentially substantial impacts to the
groundwater.” Whether or not the future Hoopili residents will have enough
groundwater, however, is an issue unconnected to whether the reclassification
(1) will not impair agricultural production or (2) is necessary for urban
(continued. . .)
37
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
574 before the circuit court, and due to the public importance
of this case, we will consider the Appellants’ appeal as
continuing to challenge these particular FOFs. Even given this
latitude, however, the Appellants fail to carry their burden of
showing why the LUC’s D&O should not be affirmed.
1. HAR § 15-15-77(b)(6)
HAR § 15-15-77(b)(6) provides the following:
Lands in intensive agricultural use for two years prior to
date of filing of a petition or lands with a high capacity
for intensive agricultural use shall not be taken out of
the agricultural district unless the commission finds
either that the action:
(A) Will not substantially impair actual or potential
agricultural production in the vicinity of the subject
property or in the county or State; or
(B) Is reasonably necessary for urban growth.
(Emphasis added). This regulation is stated in the disjunctive.
Therefore, if the LUC’s reclassification satisfies one prong,
the reclassification will be upheld.
a. Reasonable Necessity of Urban Growth
The LUC’s FOFs concerning the necessity of urban growth
were numbered 356-363. Even giving Appellants the latitude of
considering the particular FOFs challenged before the circuit
court, the fact remains that the Appellants did not challenge
these findings, and they are binding upon this court. Bremer,
104 Hawaii at 63, 85 P.3d at 170. As such, this court must
(. . .continued)
growth. In other words, the groundwater issue is separate from Appellants’
point of error concerning HAR § 15-15-77, and is therefore not further
discussed in this opinion.
38
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
accept that the reclassification was necessary for urban growth.
Further, that singular finding under HAR § 15-15-77(b)(6)
justifies the LUC’s reclassification, as HAR § 15-15-77(b)(6) is
stated in the disjunctive.
b. No Substantial Impairment of Agricultural
Production
As this court is procedurally bound by the LUC’s
determination that the reclassification was reasonably necessary
for urban growth due to Appellants’ failure to challenge that
determination, there is no need to examine Appellants’ challenge
to the LUC’s FOFs as to whether the reclassification will impair
agricultural production. However, once again giving latitude
due to the public importance of this case, we note that the
Appellants did challenge the following FOFs on this issue:
428. The DOA, [sic] is working to make good agricultural
land available as part of its strategy to expand our
agricultural industry in the State, including land for the
possible relocation of the tenants of the Petition Area.
Such lands include the proposed 150-acre agricultural park
on Kunia Road, a 400-acre parcel off of Kunia Road held by
the DLNR, and the 1,700-acre Galbraith Trust Lands
currently in the process of being purchased by the DOA. The
DOA is working to provide the infrastructure necessary to
provide water to these lands.
. . . .
430. An increasing number of farmers in Hawaii are
implementing intensive farming methods, such as farming two
or more crops per year; using trellises, cages or sticks to
support plants; and growing plants using hydroponic farming
in greenhouses, which have resulted in increasing
production without requiring more land. In particular, many
of the tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and lettuces sold in
our supermarkets are grown hydroponically in greenhouses by
Hawaii and mainland farmers.
39
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
431. There are disputing [sic] opinions as to whether good
farm lands are or are not necessary because of hydroponics.
According to some experts, hydroponics is highly capital
intensive and its feasibility and profitability is unproven
in Hawaii.
432. Estimates of the amount of acreage needed to increase
food self-sufficiency vary widely. The Petitioner estimates
that approximately an additional 23,000 acres on Oahu would
be required for 100% self-sufficiency in fresh produce.
Faculty researchers from the University of Hawaii
calculated that “near self-sufficiency” for a range of
vegetables, grains, fruits, other crops, meat, and dairy
would require an estimated 260,800 acres statewide.
433. Currently, approximately 15,000 acres of land is
farmed statewide to produce approximately 33% of the
State’s fresh vegetables, melons and fruits. Therefore,
achieving 100% self-sufficiency in these crops would
require about 30,000 additional acres of farmland
statewide. The additional land required is small compared
to the estimated 177,000 acres ± 5,000 acres of good
farmland that is available statewide. In addition, another
70,000+ acres could become available if shipping is
interrupted to such an extent that exporting crops becomes
unfeasible.
434. For the Island of Oahu, approximately 23,000
additional acres would be required for 100% self-
sufficiency in fresh produce. This estimate is high, given
inter-island shipping and reduced land requirements from
intensive farming.
. . . .
437. The Project will have little or no adverse impact on
Hawaii’s agricultural production, as other farmland is
available on the island of Oahu to accommodate the
relocation of the existing Ewa farms, as well as to
accommodate the future growth of diversified crop farming.
Land is available because of the contraction of statewide
agriculture.
The Appellants’ Opening Brief contains no argument or record
citations referencing (1) how much land is necessary for 100%
self-sufficiency; or (2) intensive farming methods, particularly
hydroponics; therefore, “[p]oints not argued may be deemed
waived.” HRAP Rule 28(b)(7) (2010). Thus, Appellants have
40
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
waived review of FOFs 430-434. Therefore, the only remaining
FOFs not waived on the agricultural impact issue are FOFs 428
and 437.
As to FOF 428, the Appellants argue that Director Kokubun
himself testified that the State does not yet have the funds to
invest in water infrastructure improvement. The Appellants’
point is consistent with the FOF, which states that the State is
“working to provide the infrastructure necessary to provide
water to these lands.” Kokubun’s testimony (that the Department
of Agriculture was “working on getting some planning and design
money to take a look at” the infrastructure needs of the
available agricultural land) supports this FOF. Consequently,
this FOF is not clearly erroneous.
Turning to FOF 437, it is clear that this fact is the one
the Appellants primarily challenge. They disagree with the
premise that there is enough available agricultural land on Oahu
to relocate the Hoopili tenants and accommodate the future
growth of diversified farming. The Appellants contend that the
LUC “simply ignor[ed]” their evidence that it was hard for
farmers to find available agricultural land; to secure long-term
leases on agricultural land; and to economically prepare land
for farming, particularly where water infrastructure must be
developed or improved. Additionally, Appellants argue that
41
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
there was no “record of productivity” on replacement
agricultural lands.
The LUC represented in its Answering Brief, however, that
it did not “simply ignore” testimony that “lands had been in
cultivation, but considered the specific replacement lands as
well as other evidence concerning agriculture in Hawaii in
general.” Indeed, the LUC considered testimony from Plasch that
“the Project will have little or no adverse impact on Hawaii’s
agricultural production because farmland is available in upper
Kunia and the North Shore to accommodate the relocation of
existing farms in Ewa.” Plasch also testified that “the
development of the Petition Area and the resulting loss of
agricultural land will not limit the growth of diversified crops
since ample agricultural land is available on Oahu and the other
islands.” Plasch explained that 263,000 acres of farmland have
been released statewide from 1968 to 2009 due to the contraction
of plantation agriculture, with about 177,000 ± 5,000 acres of
good farmland now available for diversified agriculture. On
Oahu alone, Plasch testified, there are 30,000 acres of high
quality farmland available for diversified agriculture. He
further testified that the farms on Hoopili have sufficient
lands outside of the urban growth boundary to continue their
operations.
42
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
For their part, Hoopili tenants Aloun Farms and Sugarland
Farms attested to the suitability of the replacement lands.
Director Kokubun also testified as to the thousands of acres in
Kunia and Wahiawa that the Department of Agriculture was going
to make available for agricultural production, with plans to
improve water infrastructure. In summary, Plasch, Kokubun, Sou,
and Jefts provided reliable, probative, and substantial evidence
supporting the LUC’s FOF 437. Substantial evidence is “credible
evidence which is of sufficient quality and probative value to
enable a person of reasonable caution to support a conclusion.”
In Re Water Use Permit Applications, 94 Hawaii 97, 119, 9 P.3d
409, 431 (2000) (citations omitted). We are, therefore, bound
by this finding. A court reviewing an agency’s decision cannot
“consider the weight of the evidence to ascertain whether it
weighs in favor of the administrative findings, or . . . review
the agency’s findings of fact by passing upon the credibility of
witnesses or conflicts in testimony, especially the finding of
an expert agency in dealing with a specialized field.”
Application of Hawaiian Elec. Co., Inc., 81 Hawaii 459, 465, 918
P.2d 561, 567 (1996) (citation omitted).
Appellants have not shown how finding of fact number 437
was clearly erroneous. In short, the Appellants have not met
their burden of proving that the LUC’s finding that the
43
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
reclassification would not impair agricultural production was
clearly erroneous.
2. HAR § 15-15-77(a)
HAR § 15-15-77(a) requires reclassifications to conform to
the Hawaii State Plan. Although the Appellants challenged five
FOFs (at oral argument before the circuit court) regarding the
project’s conformance with the Hawaii State Plan, Appellants’
Opening Brief contains no supporting argument. The Opening
Brief states only, “The Hawaii State Plan provides that the
state shall ‘assure the availability of agriculturally suitable
lands with adequate water to accommodate present and future
needs. HRS § 226-7.” Under HRAP Rule 28(b)(7), then, the
argument that the LUC’s reclassification violated HAR § 15-15-
77(a) is waived.
D. The LUC’s Conclusions of Law
We note that HRS § 205-4(h) (Supp. 2005) requires the LUC
to approve a proposed boundary amendment only after concluding,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that it is “reasonable, not
violative of section 205-2 and part III of this chapter, and
consistent with the policies and criteria established pursuant
to sections 205-16 and 205-17.” (Emphasis added). HAR § 15-15-
77 further requires that any approved boundary amendment be
consistent with HRS § 205A-2 (Hawaii’s Coastal Zone Management
Program). In this case, in COL 12, the LUC concluded that the
44
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
reclassification “is reasonable, not violative of HRS § 205-2,
and is consistent with the policies and criteria established
pursuant to HRS §§ 205-16, 205-17, and 205A-2,” omitting any
conclusion regarding part III of HRS Chapter 205. The
Appellants did not challenge COL 12, but this court may freely
review the LUC’s COLs. Ka Paakai O KaAina, 94 Hawaii at 41, 7
P.3d at 1078. We note that the LUC did render the following
COL 7:
The Commission, notwithstanding the agricultural use or
agricultural classification of the Petition Area, has
authority to entertain this Petition and render a decision
thereon without consideration of the standards and criteria
for the reclassification or rezoning of IAL set forth in
HRS § 205-50, because the Petition Area is not currently
designated as IAL under Act 183 (2005) and HRS Chapter 205.
This COL, however, merely states that the reclassification of
the Petition lands was not being made pursuant to HRS § 205-50,
which governs reclassification of IALs only. This statement is
true, in that the instant reclassification was made pursuant to
HRS § 205-4, which governs all land reclassifications. This
COL, however, does not fulfill the requirement under HRS § 205-
4(h) that the LUC conclude, by a preponderance of the evidence,
that the reclassification did not violate part III of Chapter
205. Hence, the LUC erred in failing to conclude, by a
preponderance of the evidence, that the reclassification was not
violative of part III of Chapter 205.
45
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Under the circumstances of this case, however, this error
is harmless because the LUC made separate findings on Important
Agricultural Lands that would have supported a conclusion that
it had complied with part III of Chapter 205 to the extent that
it could, given the unfinished state of the formal county IAL
designation process. These FOFs were as follows:
555. The City IAL Process is set forth in HRS § 205-47.
556. DPP is currently in the process of hiring a consultant
to provide assistance in making its IAL designation
recommendations to the City Council. The DPP is expected to
start the recommendation process later in 2012. In doing
so, DPP will work with the City Agricultural Liaison;
however, the process is ultimately a DPP initiative.
Moreover, with regard to the particular lands at issue, it would
make no difference if the LUC awaited the completion of the
formal IAL identification process, as the Petition lands were
not designated IAL, were slated for urban development under
county plans, and the county was not going to designate them as
IAL, notwithstanding Resolution 12-23, which the following FOFs
make clear:
557. The Petition Area is currently not designated as IAL,
and the DPP stated that it will not be recommending the
Petition Area as a potential.
558. On February 15, 2012, the City Council passed
Resolution No. 12-23, entitled “Urging the City’s
Agricultural Liaison to Expedite the Identifying and
Mapping of Important Agricultural Lands and Ensure that the
City Works to Preserve the Availability of Agricultural
Lands for Farming.”
559. Resolution No. 12-23 would not change DPP’s position
on not including the Petition Area as a potential IAL area.
560. HRS §§ 205-44(c)(6) and 205-47(a) and (d), requires
DPP to consider consistency with the Ewa DP and with the
46
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
Urban Boundary contained therein, in identifying IALs. HRS
§§ 205-44, 205-47.
561. The City Council Committee Report No. 74, which was
adopted by the Committee on Planning and Zoning in
conjunction with Resolution No. 12-23, specifically states
that the resolution “is not intended to influence the state
Land Use Commission decision-making process on any case
pending before the Commission.”
This court again takes judicial notice of the fact that the
DPP’s current recommended IALs do not include Hoopili. See
http://mapoahuagland.com/about/faq/ (last visited Dec. 15,
2015). Thus, under the facts of this case, reclassification
would not be “violative of part III” because this particular
parcel was not, and would not be, identified as IAL.
V. Conclusion
The LUC in this case properly reclassified D.R. Horton-
Schuler’s property from the agricultural land use district to
the urban land use district. Article XI, Section 3 and Act 183
reveal no intent to require the LUC to stay reclassification
proceedings pending formal designations of IALs. Further, the
Appellants did not provide persuasive argument that the LUC’s
D&O violated HAR § 15-15-77. First, the Appellants did not
challenge the LUC’s finding that the reclassification was
reasonably necessary for urban growth; therefore, this court is
bound by that finding. Even if it were not, substantial
evidence supported the LUC’s additional findings that the
reclassification would not substantially impair agricultural
47
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
production. Second, the Appellants did not provide argument on
the issue of whether the reclassification violated the Hawaii
State Plan. Consequently, we cannot conclude that the LUC’s D&O
violated HAR § 15-15-77. For the foregoing reasons, the circuit
court’s decision and order, which affirmed the LUC’s D&O and
dismissed the Appellants’ appeal, is affirmed.
We take this opportunity to reiterate, however, that
pursuant to the first statute within Part III, HRS § 205-41, the
legislature has declared as follows:
Declaration of policy. It is declared that the people of
Hawaii have a substantial interest in the health and
sustainability of agriculture as an industry in the State.
There is a compelling state interest in conserving the
State’s agricultural land resource base and assuring the
long-term availability of agricultural lands for
agricultural use to achieve the purposes of:
(1) Conserving and protecting agricultural lands;
(2) Promoting diversified agriculture;
(3) Increasing agricultural self-sufficiency; and
(4) Assuring the availability of agriculturally
suitable lands,
pursuant to article XI, section 3, of the Hawaii State
Constitution.
Accordingly, although there is no basis under the law to
overturn this reclassification, the state and county governments
are reminded of the importance of agriculture to the future of
48
*** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
this state and of the need to effectuate the mandate of Article
XI, Section 3 through the implementation of Act 183.
Eric A. Seitz, /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
Della A. Belatti,
and Sarah R. Devine, /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
for petitioners
/s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
Gregory W. Kugle
and Matthew T. Evans /s/ Gary W. B. Chang
for respondent
D.R. Horton-Schuler
Homes, LLC
49