HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

H.C.R. NO.

149

TWENTY-FOURTH LEGISLATURE, 2007

 

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

HOUSE CONCURRENT

RESOLUTION

 

 

URGING SUPPORT FOR MALAMA O KAMALI`I MAKAMAE IN ITS EFFORTS TO DEVELOP CARE HOME FACILITIES FOR ENDANGERED YOUNG CHILDREN FROM LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, INCLUDING NATIVE HAWAIIAN CHILDREN AT HIGH RISK.

 

 

 


     WHEREAS, Malama O Kamali`i Makamae (Protect and Honor Our Precious Children), a nonprofit organization, was organized for the purpose of helping children from low-income households, including but not limited to native Hawaiian children by developing and operating state of the art care facilities throughout the State of Hawai`i for children in imminent danger of their physical, emotional, mental, social, and educational well-bring, the missing link in behalf of preserving our Na Kamali`i O Hawaii Nei; and

 

     WHEREAS, the "Senate of the Twenty-second Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2004, the House of Representatives concurring," passed the Senate Concurrent Resolution (SCR) 189, "that the Legislature encourages the support of Malama O Kamali`i Makamae in its efforts to develop state of the art care home facilities for needy children of Hawaiian ancestry who are thirteen years old or younger;"; and

 

     WHEREAS, the State's Foster Care system, Human and Social Services, Child Protective and Welfare agencies are still suffering from a case-overload syndrome; and

 

     WHEREAS, we still experience tragic scenarios despoiling our children, and we must now add other innocent children to our statistics of having been lost in the State's protective, welfare, education, community and faith-based systems, as a total societal failure to 10-year old Alexis of Puna, Hawaii, 5-year old Talia Williams of Oahu and the latest two infant tragedies and the 11-year old several maltreatment cases; and

 

     WHEREAS, such traumas to survivors are categorical indicators to physical, emotional and mental scarring, which adversely affect their growth & development, behavioral and learning abilities; and

 

     WHEREAS, Malama O Kamali`i Makamae's care facilities will provide a wellness refuge for them to begin to feel safe, promote health and nutrition and being an overall healing journey in their short and/or long-term care needs in the Hawaiian cultural Hanai `Ohana style project; and

 

     WHEREAS, due to the shortage of qualified state child care workers, too many children are neglected and fall through the cracks of the Child Protective & Welfare systems, and still there are insufficient emergency care facilities to meet the growing need of very young children in imminent danger in their present living environment; and

 

     WHEREAS, Hawai`i's children of Hawaiian ancestry are at high risk of falling into the behavioral, lifestyle, and substance abuse patterns of their adult family members or other care givers, and are also at imminent risk for their health, safety, well being, and economic status in their present environment, which would affect their ability to grow, develop, and learn; and

 

     WHEREAS, the Kamehameha Schools' Ka Huaka`i Native Hawaiian Educational Assessment (2005) stated that academic disparities are pronounced in rural regions with high concentrations of Native Hawaiians, and with a more rapid escalating rate of special education referrals than that of their peers (18.5% or 1 of every 5 Native Hawaiian students); and

 

     WHEREAS, Native Hawaiian youth have a higher rate of depression (34.5%) and are more likely to attempt suicide (22.6%) than their peers; and

 

     WHEREAS, a study conducted by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University (CASA) found that "the child welfare agencies devoted most of their resources to investigation, foster care and permanent custody decisions while provisions of services to prevent the recurrence of child abuse/neglect was a lower budget priority"; and

 

 

     WHEREAS, the CASA study "found six critical weaknesses that gobble child welfare officials' efforts to protect the child" and also "noted that the child's development needs should take precedence over the timing of parental recovery"; now, therefore,

 

     BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Twenty-fourth Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2007, the Senate concurring, that the Legislature urges support of Malama O Kamali`i Makamae in its efforts to develop and operate state of the art care facilities for endangered young children from low-income households, including Native Hawaiian children at high risk, which was a need recognized by the Joint House-Senate Task Force on Ice and Drug Abatement in 2004 to develop a drug endangered child protection program; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature recognize that significant benefits would be achieved by requesting the Child Care and Welfare Service agencies of the department of human services to partner with Malama O Kamali`i Makamae, as a pilot project and model, to assist these agencies with the overload of emergency care and other social and educational services to aforesaid children ages zero to thirteen years; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature recommends the child care and welfare service agencies of the departments of Human Services and Health to add Malama O Kamali`i Makamae to their lists of authorized "Diversion Services", "Community-Based Care Service" providers, and partnering with Malama O Kamali`i Makamae for cost effective savings to the State's expenses, as indicated in the Department of Human Services' Financial Expenditure Report FY 2002-03; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature supports Malama O Kamali`i Makamae's provision of needed services to Hawai`i's young children through the House and Senate 2007 Grants-in-Aid (GIA) program relating to child endangerment and abuse prevention programs; and

 

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the directors of the Departments of Human Services and Health, the Deputy Director of the Department of Human Services, the Governor and the Lieutenant Governor of the State of Hawai`i, and the President of Malama O Kamali`i Makamae.

 

 

 

 

OFFERED BY:

_____________________________

 

 

Report Title: 

Malama O Kamali`i Makamae; support