Kirk Caldwell
Full Name: Kirk Caldwell
Name on Ballot: Kirk Caldwell
Age: 63
District: City and County of Honolulu
Email Address: admin@kirkcaldwell.org
Current Job: Mayor, City and County of Honolulu
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Place of birth: Waipahu
Campaign website: kirkcaldwell.org
Job history past 10 years:
Mayor, City and County of Honolulu (January 2013 – present)
Attorney, Ashford & Wriston (2011-2012, 1984-2008)
Acting Mayor, City and County of Honolulu (July-October 2010)
Managing Director, City and County of Honolulu (January 2009-July 2010)
Member, state House of Representatives, District 24 Manoa (2003- 2008)
Ever run for public office? If so, when? Outcome?
Hawaii House of Representatives, District 24: elected in 2002, 2004, 2006
Mayor, City and County of Honolulu: 2010, elected in 2012
Other civic experience or community service?
Served on many boards and commissions over the past 30 years
Anything else you’d like voters to know about you?
Born in Waipahu, grew up in Hilo, son of a plantation doctor. Graduated from Tufts University (BA), Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (MA); UH Richardson School of Law (JD). Married to Donna Tanoue, vice chairwoman, Bank of Hawaii; one daughter, recently graduated from college.
What makes you qualified to be mayor?
My administration has proven its ability to respond to the many concerns of our residents, maintain a high level of services while trying to improve core services. We’ve made steady progress toward solving these concerns. No other candidate demonstrates this level of experience with running a large city government.
What is your one big idea?
Establish a Resiliency Office. The Rockefeller Foundation selected Honolulu as one of the 100 Most Resilient Cities in the World and is providing us with a resiliency officer who is tasked with addressing the effects of climate change and sea level rise on our island environment, including technological solutions.
What steps should elected city officials take next regarding the rail project?
I am committed to finding funding for the remaining 4.3-mile rail line (Middle Street to Ala Moana) by working with all stakeholders. Further, I intend to improve the governance of the HART administration, strengthen the powers of the HART board, impose greater oversight of costs and improve transparency.
Why has the city not been able to take more homeless off the street and what would you do to improve the situation?
Moving homeless into shelter takes effort by city, state, federal and community organizations all working together – the responsibility does not fall only on the city. Honolulu has made steady progress with our Housing First approach. Nearly 1,000 homeless have been placed in housing with hundreds more placements expected next year.
What steps can elected officials take to ensure city employees behave ethically?
When I selected my administration, I asked them to confirm commitment to these core values: integrity, honesty, transparency, “no silos” and respect. When issues arise that compromise those values, my departments are charged with investigating, documenting, and taking appropriate action, in consultation with Ethics Commission, Corporation Counsel and Human Resources.
As an elected city official, what would you do to improve the city’s affordable housing supply?
My affordable housing strategy balances set aside requirements with a mix of financial incentives (fee waivers, tax credits etc.), development incentives (zoning, increased density, code waivers) and funding for private developers to build affordable workforce housing. My ADU ordinance and fee waivers encourage homeowners to add a small rental unit.
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