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Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
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January 06, 2009 11:16 AM |
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President George W. Bush at a news conference today in Washington, D.C. announced the nomination of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Centre for consideration to the World Heritage List.
The Monument, which includes the islands and waters of the northwestern Hawaiian archipelago, is the nation's largest protected area. Also being nominated to the World Heritage List is Mount Vernon, Virginia, home of America's first president, George Washington. These are the United States' first nominations to be forwarded for consideration on the World Heritage List since 1994.
"The nomination of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument recognizes its exceptional geological and ecological processes, its provision of critical habitat for some of the world's most endangered species, and its sacred place in the history and culture of Native Hawaiian people," said Governor Linda Lingle.
"World Heritage sites truly belong to all people of the world. They incorporate the most universal and significant aspects of natural and cultural heritage as well as legacy of the past and present for future generations," Governor Lingle added.
The United States will now submit its nominations to the UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Following the submission of the nomination package, Papahānaumokuākea will undergo an 18-month review by the advisory bodies to UNESCO World Heritage Centre, International Union for Conservation of Nature for its natural resource heritage, and by the International Council on Monuments and Sites for its cultural resource heritage. The final nominations would be considered by the World Heritage Committee in the summer of 2010.
If inscribed under the World Heritage Convention, Papahānaumokuākea would join a globally exclusive list of sites with outstanding universal value that are unique and diverse - such as East Africa's Serengeti, the Egyptian Pyramids, Australia's Great Barrier Reef, Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park, and the Galapagos Islands.
Papahānaumokuākea is the first site nominated with cultural connections to the sea, and adds to underrepresented World Heritage sites from the Pacific. It would be the U.S.'s first marine site, and the world's first cultural seascape. If inscribed, it will become only the 26th World Heritage Site to be recognized globally for both its natural and cultural significance, out of 878 sites currently on the list.
Papahānaumokuākea is being nominated as a "mixed" site (for both its natural and cultural resource values) because of its unique geology, ecology, biology, Native Hawaiian cultural heritage, and its significance to the world.
Native Hawaiians view the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI) as an integral part of the archipelago and a deeply spiritual location. Physical remnants of wahi kūpuna (ancestral places) and oral traditions provide evidence of the various past uses of the islands and surrounding ocean by Native Hawaiians both as a home and a place of worship.
The Monument contains one of the world's most significant marine and island ecosystems, representing a major stage of the earth's evolutionary history, and habitats where rare and endangered plant and animal species still survive. It is home to more than 7,000 marine species, a quarter of which are found nowhere else on Earth, the largest nesting albatross colony in the world, and the primary habitat for critically endangered Hawaiian monk seals and threatened green turtles.
The NWHI provide habitat for 23 threatened and endangered species, most found nowhere else in the world, such as the Nihoa Finch and a species of loulu or palm called Pritchardia remota.
The beaches and waters constitute the foraging and nesting grounds for nearly the entire population of the critically endangered Hawaiian Monk Seal, and 90 percent of the threatened Hawaiian Green Turtle.
Over 14 million seabirds nest in the islands and forage in the waters of the Monument, making the NWHI the world's largest tropical seabird rookery.
UNESCO's World Heritage List protects and preserves natural and cultural heritage sites of "outstanding universal value" as determined by the standards and process established under the World Heritage Convention, the most widely adopted international agreement for the conservation of natural and preservation of culture.
World Heritage Sites currently include 878 sites from 144 countries - 679 cultural, 174 natural, and 25 mixed natural and cultural sites. |
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Last Updated ( January 06, 2009 11:16 AM )
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Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
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January 06, 2009 11:12 AM |
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today issued final decisions to not renew the City and County of Honolulu's variances exempting the Sand Island and Honouliuli Wastewater Treatment plants from full secondary treatment requirements.
EPA has concluded that the discharges from the two plants do not meet the Clean Water Act's conditions for renewed variances from requirements which apply to most of the nation's municipal sewage treatment plants. Specifically, the discharges from the two plants do not meet all applicable water quality standards. Neither of the plants' discharges protect recreational use or marine life in the vicinity of the ocean outfalls. As a result, the two plants do not qualify for renewed variances.
"This action will ensure that residents and visitors using Hawaii's ocean waters are protected from inadequately treated sewage," said Wayne Nastri, the EPA's Administrator for the Pacific Southwest region. "We will work with the city on a realistic schedule to upgrade its two largest wastewater plants, taking into account the other priorities for improvements to Honolulu's wastewater system."
The city's Sand Island plant, located in Honolulu, and the Honouliuli plant, located in Ewa, were both operating under variances from secondary treatment. With the final decision to not renew the variances, both plants will be required to upgrade to full secondary treatment.
In reaching these final decisions, EPA considered nearly 600 comments received in writing and presented verbally at two public hearings. Written responses to all comments received have been posted on EPA's website. In response to these comments, EPA made modifications to tentative Decision Documents released in 2007, but these changes did not alter the overall conclusions that the two plants do not qualify for renewed variances.
Primary treatment generally involves screening out large floating objects, such as rags and sticks, removing grit, such as cinders, sand and small stones, and allowing wastewater to settle, followed by the removal of collected solids. When secondary treatment is used, primary-treated wastewater flows into another facility where a large portion of the organic matter in the wastewater is removed by making use of the bacteria in the sewage. There are a variety of different biological treatment techniques that allow the bacteria to consume most of the waste's organic matter. |
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Last Updated ( January 06, 2009 11:12 AM )
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Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
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January 06, 2009 11:09 AM |
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President-elect Barack Obama is adding a "Youth Ball" and an Illinois-Hawaii ball to the parties planned to celebrate his Jan. 20 inauguration. The Presidential Inaugural Committee said Tuesday the ball for people aged 18 to 35 would celebrate "the role young Americans can play to serve their communities." Tickets will be available for a reduced price of $75. Most inaugural ball tickets are $150. The committee also announced balls for guests from Obama's home states of Illinois and Hawaii and another one for Vice President-elect Joe Biden's home states of Delaware and Pennsylvania.
There will also be regional balls for guests from the Midwest, West, East, South and Mid-Atlantic regions of the country. The committee says there will be a total of 10 official inaugural balls. |
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Last Updated ( January 06, 2009 11:09 AM )
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Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
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January 06, 2009 10:49 AM |
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It's a brand new year with a few brand new laws. One in particular is aimed at protecting Hawaii's children from Internet predators and other sex offenders.
Here with us this morning to explain how the law works is Hawaii attorney general Mark Bennett. |
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Last Updated ( January 06, 2009 10:50 AM )
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Written by KGMB9 News - news@kgmb9.com
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January 06, 2009 10:45 AM |
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Most of us can remember at least one person who showed us the way, gave us a pat on the back when we needed it, and served as a role model.
Guess what guys, it's your turn. |
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Last Updated ( January 06, 2009 10:50 AM )
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