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Kū Kiaʻi Mauna 3

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Videos videoed and edited by
Kerri Peterson Marks of Occupy Hawaiʻi
and
Oren Tsutsumi
further tv Editin by
Oren Tsutsumi
Full versions of videos on
youtube under uploads at:
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Occupy Hawaiʻi
and Pono Kealoha
Mahalo Nui Loa
Kerri Peterson Marks of Occupy Hawaiʻi
and everybody
hash
#WeAreMaunaKea
#alohaaina
#aoletmt
#deoccupyhawaii
#hawaiiankingdom
#idlenomore
#kukiaimauna
#maunakea
#protectmaunakea
#protectorsnotprotesters
#thirtymetertelescope
#tmt
#tmtshutdown
#tmtshutdownhq
#wearemaunakea
#worldwidesignwaving
#worldwidesignwavingformaunakea
A completed structural footprint of the TMT would be larger than
the footprint of the Eiffel Tower,
5 acres,
3 football fields
or 217,800 square feet.
The telescope itsself would take up 34,000 square feet.
The support and office building would cover 21,000 square feet.
It would add 3,400 ft of new road.
The construction footprint of the project would disturb over 8 acres.
excavate 64,000 cubic yards of summit area.
The construction is proposed for the northern plateau, some of the last undeveloped area on the summit. The structure would interrupt view plane to Haleakalā It would be visible from 14% of the island, including Waimea Park, Puʻu Kapu & Wa'awa'a, Honoka'a, & Pu'ukohalā
Current telescopes are visible from 43% of the island.
Telescope operations will create 74 dbA of noise.
Would produce 120-250 cubic feet of solid waste a week.
Would use 5,000 gallon underground tank to store hazzardous chemicals
Road would require additional construction on Puʻu Kūkahau'ula.
The University Board of Regents and the developers of this project have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars propaganda, assuring us that TMT will have little impact on the summit and that past problems with resource management have been fixed.
Even what some call the illegal occupational government's and what others call the usurpative presenses law, doesn't allow for the TMT to built. Hawaiʻi Administrative Rules section 13-5 (page 5-21) outlines again eight criteria that must be met before the Board can allow construction in a conservation district, like Mauna Kea.
The most obvious:
4. The proposed land use will not cause substantial adverse impact to existing natural resources within the surrounding area, community, or region;
5. The proposed land use, including buildings, structures and facilities, shall be compatible with the locality and surrounding areas, appropriate to the physical conditions and capabilities of the specific parcel or parcels;
6. The existing physical and environmental aspects of the land, such as natural beauty and open space characteristics, will be preserved or improved upon, whichever is applicable;
The TMT can't satisfy these criteria. It would multiply industrial land use on Mauna Kea, forever altering the natural beauty and sacred vista of the northern plateau. Construction will impact
fragile habitats of native plants and animals found only on Mauna Kea, with no guarantee of restoration when the lease term ends, in a mere 22 years.
The mountain, and the people, have already suffered forty years of unjust, unlawful industrial development. Mauna Kea is conservation lands, public trust lands, and "ceded" crown lands. Mauna Kea is wahi pana, wao akua, dwelling of Wākea, home of Poli'ahu, and beloved of Līlīnoe.
University of Hawaiʻi