Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 35, Number 11, 1 Nowemapa 2018 — Nov. 6 ballot includes Hawai'i's top offices [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Kōkua No ke kikokikona ma kēia Kolamu

Nov. 6 ballot includes Hawai'i's top offices

t EA s > G0VERNANCE 4

By Treena Shapiro The 2018 general election is days away and the results will determine the state's top leadership for the next four years. Every vote matters - Hawai'i's voter turnout was the lowest in the nation in 2016. While the number of ballots cast during the 2018 primary eleehon in August rose nearly 4 percent over 2016, fewer than 40 percent of resistered

voters took the time to fill out a ballot. Many of the 286,041 individuals who did vote skipped some of the races, particularly in Office of Hawaiian Affairs

Board of Trustees eontests. Nearly half of voters (49.6 percent) 1 submitted blank bal- I lots for OHA's three at-large races, while 41.3 percent opted out of selecting a candidate for OHA's O'ahu seat. Five of OHA's nine board seats will be on the general eleeīion ballot, giving voters a say

VS || in who will manage the Native Hawaiian-serving I agency's trast assets. Early voting is already under- '! way and same day registration is available. Visit I' the Office of Elections website at olvr.hawaii.gov for details. History shows that when Hawaiians rally around initiatives aimed at addressing injustices, they ean effect change in the voting booth. Issues facing Hawai'i voters today include affordable housing and homelessness, criminaljustice, waterrights, eommu-nity-based resource management and environmental protections, as well as pocketbook issues that affect

household ineome, Dozens of seats are at stake in 201 8 - tbere are contested races for Hawai'i's

lieutenant governor and governor, both seats in the U.S. House and one in the Senate, as well as the Maui and Kaua'i mayors. Many offices in the state Legislature and county councils are also up for eleeīion. In addition, voters will find constitutional and charter amendments on the ballot, including whether the state constitution should be opened up for revision

at a constitutional eonvention. The last constitutional convention in 1978 brought sweeping changes, including protections for Native Hawaiian culture and rights and the creation of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs. To help voters make informed decisions, OHA has sponsored televised gubernatorial, congressional and OHA candidate debates and forums. In addition, OHA surveyed candidates on issues important to the Hawaiian community and published the answers in an election guide as part of the October 2018 issue of Ka Wai Ola. Visit www.oha.org/vote to find the voter guide, video from an OHA trastee candidate foram and other information about this year's eleeīion. ■

Candidates for Office of Hawaiian Affairs' at-large trustee participated in a KITV forum at the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement's convention. Visit www.oha.org/vote for video. - Photo: Kawena Carvalho-Mattos