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  <title>Update on Iolani Palace -- DLNR to Maoli &amp;quot;you have to pay to park&amp;quot; - Hawaiian Culture and Independence - tribe.net</title>
  <link rel="alternate" href="http://hawaiialoha.tribe.net/thread/5f1256af-7e7b-4134-ab8d-d148e1c5da14?format=atom" />
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  <entry>
    <title>Update on Iolani Palace -- DLNR to Maoli "you have to pay to park"</title>
    <link rel="alternate" href="http://HawaiiAloha.tribe.net/thread/5f1256af-7e7b-4134-ab8d-d148e1c5da14#f15640d7-015c-448d-97e8-b0486e62da15" />
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      <name>$item.owner.firstName</name>
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    <id>http://HawaiiAloha.tribe.net/thread/5f1256af-7e7b-4134-ab8d-d148e1c5da14#f15640d7-015c-448d-97e8-b0486e62da15</id>
    <updated>2008-05-04T15:15:49Z</updated>
    <published>2008-05-04T15:15:49Z</published>
    <summary type="html">May 3, 2008 From Honolulu Advertiser&#xD;
Law spelled out to protesters&#xD;
&#xD;
Sovereignty group at palace must pay to park, DLNR warns&#xD;
&#xD;
By gordon Y.k. pang&#xD;
Advertiser Staff Writer &#xD;
Officials with the Department of Land and Natural Resources are telling a&#xD;
Hawaiian sovereignty group that has gathered daily since Wednesday on the&#xD;
grounds of 'Iolani Palace that they need to abide by the same parking and&#xD;
other park rules as everyone else.&#xD;
Members of the Hawaiian Kingdom Government were told yesterday that their&#xD;
cars would be ticketed if they did not feed their meters. The organization&#xD;
also was told it would need to obtain a permit to assemble if it intends to&#xD;
return to the palace lawn on Monday as it has announced.&#xD;
"We've made it clear to them that if there are any violations, we are going&#xD;
to enforce our existing rules and whether they understand those rules or had&#xD;
read them previously is irrelevant," said Laura H. Thielen, the state's Land&#xD;
Board chairwoman and head of the Department of Land and Natural Resources.&#xD;
Mahealani Kahau, described as "head of state" for the Hawaiian Kingdom&#xD;
Government, said her group has applied for a permit to assemble next week,&#xD;
but stressed that it attached language from the Hawaiian Kingdom civil code&#xD;
and penal code.&#xD;
"We're complying with our civil code and penal code," Kahau said yesterday&#xD;
afternoon. As for whether she and her staff will begin feeding parking&#xD;
meters on the site, Kahau said, "if it happens, it happens. If it doesn't,&#xD;
it doesn't. Everything we do is under kingdom law."&#xD;
The group has occupied the mauka lawn of the palace over the past three&#xD;
days, stating that it is the legitimate government and that the palace&#xD;
grounds are its "seat of government."&#xD;
Up to 75 of its members have spent the daylight hours of the past three&#xD;
days, in the words of the group's leaders, "conducting business" on the&#xD;
property, although they have not entered the palace itself. On Wednesday,&#xD;
for about eight hours, it also blocked access onto the grounds to&#xD;
non-Hawaiians.&#xD;
A number of the group members have parked at metered stalls on the property&#xD;
and not fed the meters but have not been cited, according to state&#xD;
officials.&#xD;
Thielen said two of her top lieutenants — Parks Division Administrator Dan&#xD;
Quinn and Conservation and Resources Enforcement Division Administrator Gary&#xD;
Moniz — met with leaders of the Hawaiian Kingdom Government yesterday&#xD;
morning to detail the specific rules the group needs to follow if it intends&#xD;
to stay over a longer period of time.&#xD;
Among the areas covered by the state administrators were "parking rules,&#xD;
assembly rules, (and) noise levels," she said.&#xD;
The two administrators also explained areas that contain burials or cultural&#xD;
or historical objects that the public is asked to stay away from "in order&#xD;
to protect those resources," she said.&#xD;
The group also was instructed on the procedure for applying for a permit to&#xD;
conduct a First Amendment rally, required when there are gatherings of 25 or&#xD;
more people.&#xD;
"They also discussed the consequences for failure to follow the rules, which&#xD;
include civil penalties and petty criminal misdemeanor (charges)," she said.&#xD;
Thielen said group leaders were agreeable to the rules. "They understand&#xD;
what the consequences are," she said, noting that yesterday's talk was one&#xD;
of a series that have been held with the group since Wednesday.&#xD;
The group submitted an assembly application to DLNR yesterday, but it was&#xD;
returned because it was incomplete, Thielen said.&#xD;
Kahau insisted that the application will point out that the group will abide&#xD;
only by its laws. "They said we need to abide by administrative rules, and&#xD;
we said we will abide by Hawaiian Kingdom law, which they are also subject&#xD;
to," Kahau said.&#xD;
Group officials have asked for office space at the Kana'ina Building as well&#xD;
some free parking stalls. "We told them that request cannot be accommodated,&#xD;
that these are public park lands," Thielen said. "They need to abide by the&#xD;
rules like anybody else."&#xD;
Thielen said she understands the group's position that it has a right to the&#xD;
property. "We have told them that if they want to claim ownership to the&#xD;
area, the venue they would have to take that to is the courts," Thielen&#xD;
said.&#xD;
Kippen de Alba Chu, executive director of Friends of 'Iolani Palace, which&#xD;
has the lease to maintain and run the historic facilities as a museum, said&#xD;
the Hawaiian Kingdom Government's presence has been disruptive. Some palace&#xD;
volunteers uncomfortable with the presence of the group chose to stay home&#xD;
this week.&#xD;
Meanwhile, parking was at a premium through the week, he said. That issue&#xD;
began to ease yesterday afternoon when state officers began citing cars that&#xD;
were illegally parked, Chu said.&#xD;
"Some of their (Hawaiian Kingdom) cars got cited and then they moved them&#xD;
off the property," he said.&#xD;
Group members have criticized the media for unfair reporting of the&#xD;
situation. For instance, the group vehemently denies placing locks on any of&#xD;
the gates to the palace grounds on Wednesday.&#xD;
But Thielen said it's clear to her that the group placed chains and locks on&#xD;
the gates when they arrived Wednesday morning and began turning people away.&#xD;
State law enforcement officers who arrived at the palace at 6 a.m. Wednesday&#xD;
"observed there were cables and locks around the gates for the four main&#xD;
vehicle access gates, that people had brought in a gate for one of the&#xD;
pedestrian gates, and had other areas closed and barred," Thielen said.&#xD;
"These were not the state's cables or locks."</summary>
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    <dc:date>2008-05-04T15:15:49Z</dc:date>
  </entry>
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