Elizabeth Jubin Fujiwara is a civil rights and employment discrimination attorney, expert and author with the civil rights Honolulu law firm Fujiwara and Rosenbaum. She contributes to state and local advocacy through her role on the AAUW Hawai‘i Public Policy Committee and as chair of the AAUW-Hilo Branch Food Sustainability Committee, where she champions policy initiatives focused on women, economic justice and food security.
Federal cuts threaten vital assistance programs like SNAP. Yet our leaders won’t act.
Let us not stand by while our children go hungry. The burden does not fall on their small shoulders, but on ours.
We, the stewards, the leaders, and the lawmakers, bear the kuleana. If we fail to care for our keiki, we fail as a people.
Across Hawaiʻi island, families face hunger every day. Now, with federal food assistance programs like SNAP suffering recent cuts, the threat of starvation is no longer abstract — it is urgent. And still, our county government has failed to act.
On June 5, in the face of federal cuts already impacting our communities, council member Jennifer Kagiwada (District 2) introduced a modest but vital amendment — $2 million for local food security programs. But the amendment was voted down.
Council members Matt Kaneali’i-KleinfeIder (District 5), Holeka Inaba (District 8), Dennis “Fresh” Onishi (District 3), James Hustace (District 9) along with Kona council member Rebecca Villegas (District 7) voted against it. The amendment was supported only by council members Kagiwada, Michelle Galimba (District 6), and Heather Kimball (District 1). Council member Ashley Kierkiewicz (District 4) was absent.
The excuse for voting against food security programs? “Too last minute.” “No plan.”
Yet this same council passed a $950 million budget. Surely, if they are wise enough to pass such a monumental budget, they are wise enough to convene a subcommittee — or a task force — to figure out a plan to feed their own people.
Hungry Households
The numbers are staggering. Over 40% of Native Hawaiians, Pacific Islanders, Filipinos and American Indian/Alaska Natives in Hawaiʻi live in food-insecure households, according to the Hawaiʻi Foodbank’s statewide 2023 survey. Not surprisingly, students and folks without a college education are the most affected by food insecurity.
On Hawaiʻi island, 40% of families are food insecure — the highest rate in the state. The reality is undeniable: “He pilikia koʻikoʻi kēia” — this is a serious, urgent problem.
The Hawaiʻi County Council recently voted down an amendment to support food security programs. (Office of Gov. Josh Green)
To our County Council and Mayor Kimo Alameda: if hunger is not your preeminent task, what is? Our keiki cry out not for your speeches, but for your action. “He aliʻi ka ʻāina; he kauwā ke kanaka.” (The land is the chief, man is its servant.)
The land, and by extension its people — especially its children — are chief. Leaders must serve. They must feed.
Hawaiʻi island is sacred. It is the home of Pele. It is steeped in the values and wisdom of the kūpuna. You can feel that manaʻo — the spiritual intelligence of this place — in every breeze, every stone, every ʻohana gathering.
It tells us: feed the people. Care for the next generation. Protect the dignity of the hungry.
Crucial funding has been paused, including FEMA’s Emergency Food and Shelter Program which funded local meal services like Peanut Butter Ministries in Hilo, which serves hot meals to our houseless neighbors twice a week.
Students and folks without a college education are the most affected by food insecurity.
These programs run on aloha, but aloha alone will not pay for rice, eggs or gas. Without county leadership, our community’s capacity to care for one another will collapse under the weight of unmet need.
We are grateful to council members Jennifer Kagiwada, Michelle Galimba and Heather Kimball. Your courage and compassion will be remembered. To the rest of our leaders: “I ka nānā no a ʻike.” (By observing, one learns). If you truly observe, you will see the hunger in our children’s eyes — and you will act.
The County Council has kuleana to care for those they represent. It is not optional. It’s part of what they were entrusted to do. Let us not be remembered as the generation who looked away while children went hungry on the sacred slopes of Hawaiʻi.
If food security matters to you, the reader, please contact your council member and the mayor’s office.
Civil Beat’s coverage of environmental issues on Hawaiʻi island is supported in part by a grant from the Dorrance Family Foundation.
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Elizabeth Jubin Fujiwara is a civil rights and employment discrimination attorney, expert and author with the civil rights Honolulu law firm Fujiwara and Rosenbaum. She contributes to state and local advocacy through her role on the AAUW Hawai‘i Public Policy Committee and as chair of the AAUW-Hilo Branch Food Sustainability Committee, where she champions policy initiatives focused on women, economic justice and food security.
Our leaders have a mandate both from the People and from God to take care of the poor and indigent. Usually I find myself at odds with Kimball and Kagiwada's left wing, socialist, "more government is the answer for everything" policies, but in this case, given what is happening in Washington, I find myself in agreement with them.Things have the potential to get very bad for people in need this year and an extra $2M ( about 1/5th the amount the affordable housing coordinator embezzled without Kimball even noticing ) would go a long way to feeding those in need.I'm not a particularly religious man, but if I were asked to find one piece of Truth in the Bible I would quote Matthew 25:40 - âTruly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.âPut another way, FDR told us in 1937 "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."If Government has any role in our society at all it is not to attack homeowners on behalf of hotels ( Bill 47 ), but to help provide food for the starving.
oojoshua·
10 months ago
Great "Article Liz!" A Society that does NOT "Ensure & Hold Paramount" that "All Keikis in their Communties" that are NOT receiving meals on a daily basis, Is a Society that is "Devoid of The Most Common Human Instinct of Compassion and Aloha!"Our Keikis are the Future of our Society, thus "The Legislators, City Council, etc." Must Always Provide Funds 1st. & make Priority the Keikis-Food Programs are always at the Top of their Agenda & Appropiations.This is a "No Brainer, or is It?"Obviously, the %-of-Keikis potentially impacted is quite "Alarming and Very Disturbingly Unwarranted!"
PSpects·
10 months ago
The real food insecurity in Hawaii is our utter inability to feed ourselves. Instead of proposing more welfare handouts, why not promote self sufficiency, resiliance, and enterprise? Teach people to grow their own food, and provide them places to do it from the large inventory of arable land on the island. Help farmers increase production (and prosperity) through low cost land leases, free training, and subsidies for labor expenses. And (gasp!) we could even use prisoners for low cost labor and achieve exercise and rehabilitation at the same time Require the business beneficiaries of the help I suggest to give some of their produce to the low income folks who can't work. There's an old much repeated adage that has relevance here:"Give a man a fish, and you've fed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you've fed him for a lifetime."
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