HILO — With a county voucher program set to expire at the end of next month, Hawaii Island legislators are once again hoping to secure state funding that would help residents combat invasive little fire ants.
HILO — With a county voucher program set to expire at the end of next month, Hawaii Island legislators are once again hoping to secure state funding that would help residents combat invasive little fire ants.
All eight of the island’s representatives in the House have signed on to House Bill 481, introduced by Rep. Richard Onishi, D-Hilo, Keaau, Kurtistown, Volcano. This marks the third year Onishi has introduced a version of the measure, which would create a pilot pesticide treatment program within the state Department of Agriculture.
The bill would provide coupons for a one-year treatment plan to people who have documented little fire ants on their property, appropriating $300,000 from Hawaii general revenues to do so.
At the same time, the DOA would create a map of all known infestation sites on Hawaii Island. One of the primary issues with containing the pests is that neighbors often do not know when there are fire ants on nearby property, which allows the ants to spread.
In both the 2015 and 2016 sessions, the bill cleared the House. Last year, it passed both chambers and made it to conferencing, but did not get funded.
More than 20 representatives have signed on to HB 481 this year.
“I think the Legislature is keenly aware that the Big Island’s little fire ant issue is not just affecting the residents and property (here); it has the potential for affecting the entire state,” Onishi told the Tribune-Herald Thursday.
So far this year, HB 481 has cleared a joint committee hearing and is awaiting a hearing with the Finance committee. Its Senate companion bill, introduced by Sens. Lorraine Inouye and Josh Green, has yet to receive a hearing.
Hawaii County Council is at work on a resolution urging the Senate and House to support “any and all legislation related to the little fire ant program,” councilwoman Sue Lee Loy said Tuesday during a meeting of the county Agriculture, Water and Energy Sustainability Committee.
Lee Loy submitted written testimony in support of the bill to its most recent hearings before the House Agriculture and Energy and Environmental Protection committees. HB 418 also received support from organizations such as the Conservation Council for Hawaii, Hawaii Farm Bureau, Hawaii Pest Control Association and Democratic Party of Hawaii.
The DOA provided comments on the measure stating its concern that “it would be very difficult for the department, with its given resources, to verify and monitor if the pesticides were being used for the purpose of controlling (little fire ants) or for other purposes.”
The comments also pointed to a successful voucher program currently in use by Hawaii County. That program, funded by a grant from the Hawaii Invasive Species Council, began last November. As with HB 481, it offers vouchers to residents, who are required to attend a pesticide treatment training session hosted by the Big Island Invasive Species Committee or the Hawaii Ant Lab before receiving their coupons.
Because it is grant-funded, however, that program ends March 31. The training sessions themselves were funded in part by county contingency relief money.
Email Ivy Ashe at iashe@hawaiitribune-herald.com.
There are three remaining BIISC training sessions left: Feb. 25 (Keokea Park in North Kohala), March 4 (Hawaiian Paradise Park Community Center), and March 11 (Panaewa Park).
The Hawaii Ant Lab has two more sessions with space, on March 11 and March 15. Both will be held in the Aupuni Center Conference Room.
To RSVP for a little fire ant voucher training session, visit https://www.biisc.org/rsvpforlfatraining/ or https://www.hawaiicounty.gov/rd-agriculture.