The
Maui Chamber of Commerce’s COMPAC (Chamber of Maui Political
Action Committee) completed its County and State candidate endorsement
process to identify, promote and elect business friendly candidates.
All County and State candidates, for the 17 races, were invited
to participate and were sent questions for their race in advance.
They were informed that they must fully participate in the process
by providing both a written response to the questions and participating
in the interview process to receive a Chamber endorsement. The initial
questions were based on issues we expect them to vote on, if elected,
while in office the next two years.
County Council questions asked for the candidate’s stance
on and how they would address: transient vacation rental legislation,
infrastructure development and maintenance, home based business
legislation, streamlining our permitting process, resolving the
issue of water availability, creating new affordable housing and
rentals, support for the visitor industry, urban growth boundaries,
a fair and equitable system to cover a shortfall in real property
tax revenues, utilization of county property by commercial operators,
and expeditiously moving forward with a West Maui hospital.
Questions to State House of Representatives and Senate candidates
asked their positions on and how they would address: legislation
to positively impact businesses, legislation that negatively impacts
businesses, funding for the visitor industry, added support for
agriculture, maintenance and expansion of Maui's infrastructure,
Maui’s transportation issues, the recommendations of the
Maui Health Care Initiative Task Force, workers compensation and
tort reform, moving us out of being one of the worst states in
the nation to do business in, commercial use of state resources,
and a Constitutional Convention.
At least one candidate for each of 15 races, out of 17 total
County and State races, participated in our endorsement process,
with 29 out of 39 total candidates participating.
State Races
We interviewed at least one candidate in 7 of the 8 state
races, as Representative Mele Carroll is running unopposed and
did not respond in time and could not be considered. For Senate
District 5 and House Districts 11 and 12, we interviewed all three
candidates for each race. Candidate Tasha Kama, for House District
8, running against Joe Souki, noted she was busy with other endorsements,
did not respond, and was not considered for endorsement. Incumbent
Bob Nakasone of House District 9 did not respond in time and was
not considered for endorsement and candidate Ramon Madden, for
House District 10, running against Angus McKelvey, did not respond
and was not considered for endorsement.
Council Races
We interviewed at least two candidates in 8 of the 9 County Council
seat races, and interviewed for 8 of the 9 races as Council Member
Danny Mateo is running unopposed, did not respond, and was not
considered for endorsement. Council Member Mike Victorino is running
unopposed and participated in our endorsement process. Council
Member JoAnne Johnson does not seek any endorsements and was not
considered for endorsement. The other two candidates for the West
Maui seat did participate and were considered. South Maui candidate
Wayne Nishiki submitted a written response, but did not schedule
an interview. Therefore, he was not considered for endorsement.
There we five candidates for the Lanai seat. 2 Lanai candidates
did participate, however, 2 candidates, Sol Kaho'ohalahal and
Matthew Mano, did not respond and were not considered for endorsement
and Winnifred Basques did not provide a written response and could
not be considered.
Click
here for the full set of questions.
Candidates were scored by each COMPAC member based on their written
and oral responses to the questions they received and replied
to, with each question specifically scored on a point scale. The
point totals from all COMPAC member scorecards for each candidate
were totaled to reach an overall candidate total. This number
was then divided by the number of COMPAC members to obtain an
average score for each candidate. A minimum score of 60% of the
total points available (as set by the COMPAC) was required for
a candidate to be endorsed. The candidate who met the required
minimum score and whose responses were most congruent with the
Chamber’s values and positions in each race became the candidate
the Chamber endorsed.
While we endorsed democrats and republicans, party affiliation
is not scored. Scores are based on the candidate’s written
response; interview; prior, proactive business legislative stance;
alignment with the Chamber’s outlook on issues; business
background and experience; community involvement; and our perception
of their ability to accomplish stated goals and objectives.
Stepping up to run for office is not an easy task and we want
to thank all candidates for running and presenting choices. We
especially thank those who took part in our process and candidly
shared their opinions so that we could make an informed choice.
After vetting candidates on important business issues, the COMPAC
Committee and Chamber have chosen to endorse the following highly
motivated individuals, with strong plans, who will stand up for
businesses.
We believe these are the best candidates to move a business agenda
forward.
Please join us in electing this team to strengthen the business
sector, the economy and our community.