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Honolulu Council to review $11M in general obligation bonds for rail
Honolulu Council to review $11M in general obligation bonds for rail

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Honolulu Council to review $11M in general obligation bonds for rail

Mayor Rick Blan ­giardi's administration has requested more funding to pay the city's required annual subsidy toward the Hono ­lulu Authority for Rapid Transportation's construction of the over-$10 billion rail line. To that end, the City Council on Wednesday is scheduled to review for adoption Resolution 150. If approved, the resolution will authorize the city Department of Budget and Fiscal Services director to issue and sell $11 million in general obligation bonds for fiscal year 2026, starting July 1. GO bond proceeds will finance capital costs for Skyline. Joey Manahan, HART's director of government relations and public involvement, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser the city subsidy is part of Honolulu's overall $214 million financial plan for rail. 'It's an annual disbursement of city money to HART, ' he added. 'It's in the city budget.' This year the city's disbursement to HART was anticipated to be $10 million. But in a May 15 letter to the Council regarding Resolution 150, BFS Director Andy Kawano asserted that the requested $11 million principal amount of '$10, 000, 000 is the city subsidy for fiscal year 2026 which is included in the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation Recovery Plan of 2022 for the HRTP dated June 3, 2022, and approved by the Federal Transit Authority in September 2022.' 'Due to uncertainty of future interest rates in the market, the not to exceed amount of $11, 000, 000 in the draft resolution is set higher than the actual city's subsidy to HART of $10, 000, 000, ' Kawano wrote. 'The excess amount is to cover any costs of issuance or potential discount amounts which is a possibility in the current market conditions.' Meanwhile, this GO bond resolution is connected to Bill 24. That measure, if adopted by the Council on third reading Wednesday, will legally allow the city to pay for capital projects—like rail as well as other transportation and municipal solid-waste sanitation projects—via bond financing. And on Wednesday the Council is expected to take a final vote on Bill 27—HART's capital budget for fiscal 2026—which proposes a $793.6 million capital spending plan, above the current $574 million—a nearly 38.3 % increase. The rail agency's latest capital budget includes future contract awards for Skyline's Pearl Highlands Transit Center as well as an H-2 freeway access ramp. A planned Waipahu Station makai entrance—originally earmarked for $14 million—is now being proposed at $20 million, the CIP indicates. The city's sale of GO bonds in relation to HART has occurred before. In August 2023 the city administration announced it sold $271 million in GO bonds to subsidize its 2024 capital improvement program and ongoing construction of the rail project. That year, the city said it received more than $477 million in total retail and institutional orders from investors, including orders from individual Hawaii residents. 'The GO bond proceeds will fund the administration's and Council's joint capital improvement priorities and replacement of equipment to better serve our communities, ' Blan ­giardi said at the time in a statement. Previously, Kawano told the Star-Advertiser that GO bonds are not 'specifically designated to a particular part of the rail line '—such as the 5.2-mile segment from the old Aloha Stadium in Ha ­lawa to Middle Street in Kalihi, which is planned to open for public ridership by Oct. 1—but would instead act as 'bridge financing for the rail construction ' overall. The Council meeting begins at 10 a.m. inside the Council chambers, 530 S. King St.

Honolulu EMS unveils new ambulances
Honolulu EMS unveils new ambulances

Yahoo

time07-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Honolulu EMS unveils new ambulances

The Honolulu Emergency Services Department held something akin to an outdoor car show at Keehi Lagoon Beach Park on Tuesday morning. In a line that stretched the length of one of the park's parking lots, the city showed off 16 brand-new or newly refurbished ambulances—namely, 14 Emergency Medical Serv ­ices rigs and two Crisis Outreach Engagement and Response Sprinter vans—meant to respond to a myriad of lifesaving emergencies and medical care incidents across Oahu, on a 24 /7 basis. Most of the ambulances on display featured placards—'Makiki, ' 'Kahuku, ' 'Kailua ' and 'Hawaii Kai, ' among others—that denoted their respective areas of service on the island. The department also showed off its first-ever outfitted AmbuBus—deemed a state-of-the-art mass casualty vehicle that can treat and transport multiple patients at a time. Mayor Rick Blan ­giardi, HESD Director Dr. Jim Ireland, three Honolulu City Council members and dozens of city EMS and CORE personnel were in attendance. 'Today is a monumentous day for us, and I still can't believe, really, what I'm seeing, ' Ireland told those gathered. 'When I drove in I knew the numbers, I knew what we had purchased, but to just see this ; we've never had a purchase this big, or an acquisition.' He said that two years ago, 'when this kind of started, I wasn't even sure we were going to be able to get one ambulance.' 'We were coming out of COVID, there were supply chain issues, there were no chassis available, some chip was missing … all these factors were against us, ' he added. In spite of the difficulties, Ireland claimed the city put together a procurement package that includes the purchase of six new ambulances and eight remounted rigs. 'And these are existing boxes that for about half the price of a new ambulance, we were able to pick up and drop on a brand-new chassis, relieving an ambulance that might have been in excess of 300, 000 miles, at the end of its service life, ' he said. 'Instead of just auctioning it off, sending it off, putting it somewhere, we were able to remount that, get more ambulances for our dollar, save the taxpayers some money but, at the same time, give our teams the absolute best that they deserve and need to take care of people.' The new fleet includes four-wheel drive ambulances, too. 'I believe Kahuku and Waialua are getting four-wheel drive, ' Ireland said. 'We don't encourage four-wheel driving per se, but if they get into a muddy or sandy environment, that will help them kind of get out of that.' CORE's two Sprinter vans will help the group's effort to provide medical and social services to Oahu's homeless population, he said. HESD's director related how CORE's vans replaced an old 911 ambulance—dubbed '8080, ' based on its city and county license plate number—that racked up 330, 000 miles. 'It took us through up until maybe just a couple of weeks ago, ' Ireland said. 'And then we finally retired 8080, and we got these two new Sprinter vans for the CORE team.' He added that he was 'happy to report 8080 is scheduled to be one of our next remounts.' 'Because as many ambulances as this is—14 plus the two CORE—we're getting four more remounts in three months, ' he announced. 'Three to six months after that, we're getting four brand-new ambulances. So our entire EMS fleet for Oahu will be under a year old within about six months or so.' Blangiardi said the city's latest ambulance procurement was a 'historic day.' 'What I'm really proud of is the capability this gives our city, ' the mayor added. 'When we talk in terms of public safety and the concerns that people have, I don't think there's a more chilling sentence that I hope never to really have to utter again, I've done once before, but which is when you say, 'Call an ambulance.'' Later, Kahu Brutus La Benz performed a traditional Hawaiian blessing on the EMS vehicles, which involved sprinkling rainwater he'd collected at his Moiliili home on the ambulance rigs and their respective crews. The kahu also highlighted the efforts of the city's EMS and CORE personnel. 'You folks are the first ones to respond to our loved ones, ' La Benz said. Out of 14 EMS ambulances, six new ones cost about $377, 000 each. The eight refurbished and remounted rigs cost about $250, 000 each. The CORE Sprinter vans cost $304, 347 each, while the AmbuBus cost $650, 000, EMS officials said. The total cost for the new fleet is over $5.5 million, officials said. At the event, EMS Chief of Operations Jeff Zuckernick told the Honolulu Star-­Advertiser that refurbishing old ambulances—with many reaching 250, 000 to 350, 000 miles—can save taxpayers about $120, 000 per rig, 'which means then we can purchase more ambulances.' 'Our fleet was well past its due date, and this comes as a blessing, ' he said, adding that city and county ambulances typically last six to eight years, though some can reach 10 years old 'at the extreme.' Besides these new ambulances, Zuckernick said there are more city ambulances in service. 'There's 23 ambulances in service during the daytime, 21 ambulances at night, ' he explained. 'We have a rapid-response vehicle … that's during the daytime. We have four district chiefs that are always running calls, too.' 'So these (new ) ambulances are mostly going to replace the 23 ambulances that are on the road right now, ' he said. 'And then the 23 that are on the road right now will go into reliever or backup status.' The city, according to Zuckernick, ships its old ambulances to Braun Custom Ambulances in Washington state. There the company remounts the vehicles' boxes—the portion of the ambulance containing medical equipment, stretchers and first aid supplies—then ships the completed vehicle back to Oahu. 'Four are on the way right now, ' he added, 'and we have budgeted eight more ambulances next year.' Ireland, whose Council renomination in April to a second four-year term as head of HESD, which includes the paramedics division, initially faced months of vocal opposition. Opponents to Ireland's appointment—largely former EMS workers—leveled complaints and allegations about low morale, chronic understaffing, employee favoritism and frequent resignations during his directorship that allegedly affected the timely response of ambulances to emergencies on Oahu. But at the Council's April 16 meeting, Ireland told the panel his continued leadership at EMS would improve and advance the paramedic service well into the city's future. He said that work included purchasing more ambulances to reduce lengthy response times to 911 calls.

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