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The state Thursday filed an appeal of a court decision requiring the state to sufficiently fund administrative and operating expenses for the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands.
A March ruling by Circuit Court Judge Jeannette Castagnetti ordered the state to fulfill its constitutional duty by appropriating sufficient general funds for DHHL’s operations.
The appeal will not affect the $17.1 million that Gov. David Ige proposed and the Legislature approved for the department’s fiscal 2015-2016 operating budget or the $23.9 million appropriated for the following year, according to a news release from the attorney general’s office.
But Attorney General Douglas Chin said the court decision raises questions about separation of powers and what expenses are appropriately included in DHHL’s budget pursuant to the state Constitution.
“Some believe this year’s appropriation is too much, while others feel it is still not enough,” Chin said in a written statement. “A decision from the state Supreme Court should help provide more direction in future years and may avoid more lawsuits down the road.”
The litigation, commonly referred to as the Nelson case after its lead plaintiff, Richard Nelson III, began in 2007 when he and five other Native Hawaiian beneficiaries sued the state, saying it failed to appropriate
sufficient sums for DHHL
as required by the Hawaii
Constitution.