最近的一份報告涉及來自「夏威夷房地產部門和機構」 “Hawaii Real Estate Department and Agencies” (一個不存在的政府實體)的欺詐性信件。該信件試圖欺騙受害者,並為該騙局提供合法性,信函中包含未經授權使用夏威夷州印章的信箋,並附有虛假房地產投資公司“Welfare Estate”的徽標,該公司虛假地聲稱為夏威夷各地不存在的房產提供投資機會。這封信聲稱來自夏威夷商業和消費者事務部,進一步誤導了消費者。這種策略是更廣泛計劃的一部分,旨在歪曲政府官員和機構,以向潛在買家驗證這些騙局的合法性。
Posted by Tam Bao Inc in 政府. Tagged: Akina, Grassroot, state bills. 在〈Halloween is over, but there is still a monster that threatens us〉中留言功能已關閉
In years past, I have talked about the dangers of zombie and Frankenstein bills at the state Capitol. But there is another monster lurking there, quietly devouring the time and attention of all it touches. It is that large, shapeless mass of new legislation introduced every year that I shall call the Blob.
Richard Wiens, an editor at Honolulu Civil Beat, explained in a recent commentary that Hawaii has no meaningful limit on the number of bills legislators are allowed to introduce each session. As a result, a staggering 5,810 bills were introduced during the 2023-2024 biennium, with only 536 passing both houses and an even fewer 516 being signed into law — less than 10% of the original total.
The onslaught of new legislation introduced every year embodies a real drain on public time and money. A majority of these bills never even get a hearing, yet legislative staffers must research and write them, process them and refer them to committees.
One of the worst effects of the Blob comes at the end of each session, when legislators run out of time and hurry to pass important bills before adjournment.
So how do we fight the Blob? Thankfully, all we need is a little bit of discipline.
Specifically, our representatives and senators could use the power they have to set internal rules that would limit the number of bills each member is allowed to introduce per session. At least 24 other state legislatures do this, with some limiting the number to a mere five or six bills per year.
According to Wiens, former House Speaker Scott Saiki made an attempt at the beginning of the 2023-2024 biennium to contain the Blob by introducing an internal limit of 20 bills per session for House members, with a higher limit for committee chairs. But that restriction also allowed waivers, and in 2023, 36 of the 51 representatives exceeded the cap.
Hawaii’s senators, meanwhile, introduced even more bills than our representatives, despite their chamber comprising half as many members.
New House member Kim Coco Iwamoto has suggested a limit of seven bills per representative per session. I endorse that idea, and I hope our state senators will find a way to limit themselves as well.
Perhaps such a limit could even discourage the use of procedural shenanigans such as “blankety-blank” bills, in which proposed spending or tax amounts are undisclosed until the end of the session — and which in the spirit of Halloween I will call “bills without a brain.”
In any case, in the spirit of bolstering transparency and making the legislative process more productive and efficient, it’s time that we finally vanquish the Blob.
E hana kākou! (Let’s work together!)
Keli’i Akina, Ph.D. President / CEO Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
據市檀香山市政府秘書長麥克·福姆比(Mike Formby)稱,已向夏威夷州警察組織(State of Hawaii Organization of Police Officers-SHOPO)和夏威夷政府僱員協會(Hawaii Government Employees Association-HGEA)提出建議,付款方式不要100%的現金。
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