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Turism&Travel : Hawaii development shows no integrity when it comes to preserving culture
Monday 19 December 2011HAWAII - Photos of Ewa Mooring Mast Field from 1925, prior to construction, indicate archeological evidence of significant numbers of coral karst sinkholes, which possibly could contain Hawaiian burial remains.
Glenn Oamilda, of the 50-year-old Ewa Beach Community Association and Section 106 Consultant to the current Navy-Hunt KREP-Ewa Field development plan under 106 review, believes that this area likely contains an underground karst water system, as well as possible Hawaiian burial remains. It is of especially great concern, because this current work has been going on at odd hours of the night. The large machinery doing this work has been piling up large amounts or coral rocks and beach sand, as well as very large tree trunks pulled out of the ground. This does not seem to fit the allowed "grubbing" activity that is supposedly permitted without a Section 106. Mike Lee, a living descendent of Hawaiian royalty, has been asked to become a community consultant on this on-going damage of heavy-equipment digging and leveling in the Ewa Field area, and after reviewing the 1925 Ewa Mooring Mast pre-construction photos, he has great concern about damage that may be done to possible cultural and Hawaiian burial sites that likely exist just below the surface. The 1941 Ewa Field Command History speaks of caverns as large as railway boxcars that had to be filled up with beach sand, in many cases from nearby beach dunes, which have been known to also contain Hawaiian bones and artifacts. Mike Lee and Glenn Oamilda believe that the Ewa Field area is part of a contiguous Hawaiian burial area linked to the significant Onelua beach burial and heiau area directly to the south of this Ewa Field area. Where Hunt Corp is currently bulldozing and clearing, it is exposing sand and coral rock. Part of the area they are clearing isn't even on their leased parcel. The Navy is apparently allowing them to do this. Hunt Corp has just recently allowed a TV film crew to use a 1943 Quonset Hunt 1545 (which really wasn't on their leased property), and now inspection reveals missing windows, door, a large WW-II building 1545 sign designator, and two large holes cut into the side of the building for film cameras. This seems to be a very typical of the pattern - a constant chipping away of historic structures to satisfy a goal of "no integrity," which Hunt and the Navy share as a development objective. Before the Quonset hut, they knocked down the landmark 1943 Ewa Field Squadron Wall along Roosevelt Avenue without any public input or notice. Hunt apparently believes that no one can stop them from continuously damaging everything that is of historic value at Ewa Field. The Navy is doing nothing to prevent this from happening. Those concerned can only record their on-going damage after they have done it. The State Historic Preservation Office doesn't seem to care anymore either. Source: Save Ewa FieldAutor: eTurboNews |
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