Hawaii 2022 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HCR26 Compare Versions

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11 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.C.R. NO. 26 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022 STATE OF HAWAII HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION urging the board of education and department of education to change the name of president William mckinley high school back to honolulu high school and remove the statue of president mckinley from the school premises.
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33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.C.R. NO. 26
44 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022
55 STATE OF HAWAII
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3131 RESOLUTION
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3737 urging the board of education and department of education to change the name of president William mckinley high school back to honolulu high school and remove the statue of president mckinley from the school premises.
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4545 WHEREAS, what is currently named President William McKinley High School was previously named Honolulu High School, which was established in the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1865 and is one of the oldest secondary schools in the Hawaiian islands; and WHEREAS, the name of Honolulu High School was changed to President William McKinley High School in 1907 as a key component of the political indoctrination strategy to deliberately convince the people living in the Hawaiian islands that they are American; and WHEREAS, when the statue of William McKinley was erected in 1911, several years after the renaming of the school, it was not to honor the President of the United States, but rather as a symbol to perpetuate the subjugation of Native Hawaiians and reinforce the lie that the Hawaiian islands belong to the United States of America; and WHEREAS, the name of the school and the statue of William McKinley holding the fabricated "Annexation Treaty" perpetuates the allegation that people in the Hawaiian islands wanted to become Americans, even though eighty percent of the adult population signed the Kūe Petitions against annexation in 1897; and WHEREAS, on July 6, 1898, President McKinley committed fraud to continue the occupation of the Hawaiian islands by the United States by signing a Joint Resolution of Congress, entitled the "Newlands Resolution" that purported the annexation of Hawaii; and WHEREAS, the Newlands Resolution illegitimately claimed United States annexation of the Hawaiian islands, even though such a document does not have any power or legitimacy to annex an internationally recognized nation with official treaties in eighteen foreign states dating as far back as 1846; and WHEREAS, the result of the illegal annexation turned Hawaii into an overseas colony completely dependent on the United States of America and displaced Native Hawaiians, robbing them of their birth right, cultural identity, nationality, language, and homes, while negatively impacting their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being; and WHEREAS, following the enactment of the Newlands Resolution, Hawaii's public education system was pressed into service to indoctrinate, denationalize, "Americanize", and convert generations of Hawaii's children into patriotic United States citizens; and WHEREAS, U.S. Public Law 103-150, informally known as the "Apology Resolution", a Joint Resolution of the United States Congress signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993, acknowledges that "the Native Hawaiian people never directly relinquished to the United States their claims to their inherent sovereignty over their national lands, either through a plebiscite or referendum"; and WHEREAS, William McKinley also turned a blind eye to racial atrocities being committed throughout the United States during his presidency, including the genocide of Native Americans in California and lynching of African-Americans in the southern states; and WHEREAS, William McKinley also signed the Curtis Act of 1898, which was intended to dismember the sovereign status of the Five Civilized Tribes, abolish the tribes' governments, invalidate their laws, dissolve their court systems, and subject native people to United States federal law; and WHEREAS, in recent years, the Department of Education has recognized the need to replace school names and symbols that have racially complicated origins with place-based alternatives; and WHEREAS, examples of the Department of Education's commitment to healing the State's school system from historical trauma include the renaming of Central Middle School to Princess Ruth Keelikolani Middle School in 2021, noting that the princess' home, Keoua Hale, once stood on the grounds of the current campus; and WHEREAS, the Board of Education purchased the property for what became Honolulu High School in 1895, which later became Keelikolani School before the name was changed to Central Junior High School in 1928, then Central Intermediate School in 1932, and Central Middle School in 1997; and WHEREAS, according to the principal of Princess Ruth Keelikolani Middle School, Joseph Passantino, Central Middle School was established as the school's name "in the 1930s because people couldn't pronounce the Hawaiian name"; and WHEREAS, regarding the restoration of the school's Hawaiian name, Mr. Passantino also said that "the significance is huge, especially for the staff who's dedicated over two years to give her that duty and honor"; and WHEREAS, additional actions have been taken at other public schools to address racially insensitive signifiers, such as the replacement of Kahuku High School's "Red Raiders" mascot, logo, and offensive chants after the Department of Education's Civil Rights Compliance Branch deemed them to be disrespectful and potentially discriminatory toward Native Americans; and WHEREAS, in an effort to overcome structural racism, communities across the United States have removed statues and symbols that deepen historical trauma, racial suppression, and white supremacy, including a statue of William McKinley in Arcata, California in 2019; and WHEREAS, in 2021, the Legislature adopted House Concurrent Resolution No. 112, declaring racism to be a public health crisis; and WHEREAS, Hawaii's public school system has a responsibility to promote historical understanding, racial equity, and civil rights; now, therefore, BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Thirty-first Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2022, the Senate concurring, that the Board of Education and Department of Education are urged to replace the name of President William McKinley High School with the previous name of Honolulu High School and remove the statue of President William McKinley from the school premises; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that to the greatest extent possible, the Board of Education and Department of Education are requested to ensure that public school curricula are inclusive of content on the historical injustice and discrimination endured by Hawaii's indigenous people; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the members of the Hawaii's Congressional delegation, Governor, Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Chairperson of the Board of Education, Superintendent of Education, Kaimuki‑McKinley‑Roosevelt Complex Area Superintendent, and President of the McKinley High School Foundation. OFFERED BY: _____________________________ Report Title: President William McKinley High School; Honolulu High School
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4747 WHEREAS, what is currently named President William McKinley High School was previously named Honolulu High School, which was established in the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1865 and is one of the oldest secondary schools in the Hawaiian islands; and
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5151 WHEREAS, the name of Honolulu High School was changed to President William McKinley High School in 1907 as a key component of the political indoctrination strategy to deliberately convince the people living in the Hawaiian islands that they are American; and
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5555 WHEREAS, when the statue of William McKinley was erected in 1911, several years after the renaming of the school, it was not to honor the President of the United States, but rather as a symbol to perpetuate the subjugation of Native Hawaiians and reinforce the lie that the Hawaiian islands belong to the United States of America; and
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5959 WHEREAS, the name of the school and the statue of William McKinley holding the fabricated "Annexation Treaty" perpetuates the allegation that people in the Hawaiian islands wanted to become Americans, even though eighty percent of the adult population signed the Kūe Petitions against annexation in 1897; and
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6363 WHEREAS, on July 6, 1898, President McKinley committed fraud to continue the occupation of the Hawaiian islands by the United States by signing a Joint Resolution of Congress, entitled the "Newlands Resolution" that purported the annexation of Hawaii; and
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6767 WHEREAS, the Newlands Resolution illegitimately claimed United States annexation of the Hawaiian islands, even though such a document does not have any power or legitimacy to annex an internationally recognized nation with official treaties in eighteen foreign states dating as far back as 1846; and
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7171 WHEREAS, the result of the illegal annexation turned Hawaii into an overseas colony completely dependent on the United States of America and displaced Native Hawaiians, robbing them of their birth right, cultural identity, nationality, language, and homes, while negatively impacting their physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being; and
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7575 WHEREAS, following the enactment of the Newlands Resolution, Hawaii's public education system was pressed into service to indoctrinate, denationalize, "Americanize", and convert generations of Hawaii's children into patriotic United States citizens; and
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7979 WHEREAS, U.S. Public Law 103-150, informally known as the "Apology Resolution", a Joint Resolution of the United States Congress signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993, acknowledges that "the Native Hawaiian people never directly relinquished to the United States their claims to their inherent sovereignty over their national lands, either through a plebiscite or referendum"; and
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8383 WHEREAS, William McKinley also turned a blind eye to racial atrocities being committed throughout the United States during his presidency, including the genocide of Native Americans in California and lynching of African-Americans in the southern states; and
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8787 WHEREAS, William McKinley also signed the Curtis Act of 1898, which was intended to dismember the sovereign status of the Five Civilized Tribes, abolish the tribes' governments, invalidate their laws, dissolve their court systems, and subject native people to United States federal law; and
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9191 WHEREAS, in recent years, the Department of Education has recognized the need to replace school names and symbols that have racially complicated origins with place-based alternatives; and
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9595 WHEREAS, examples of the Department of Education's commitment to healing the State's school system from historical trauma include the renaming of Central Middle School to Princess Ruth Keelikolani Middle School in 2021, noting that the princess' home, Keoua Hale, once stood on the grounds of the current campus; and
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9999 WHEREAS, the Board of Education purchased the property for what became Honolulu High School in 1895, which later became Keelikolani School before the name was changed to Central Junior High School in 1928, then Central Intermediate School in 1932, and Central Middle School in 1997; and
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103103 WHEREAS, according to the principal of Princess Ruth Keelikolani Middle School, Joseph Passantino, Central Middle School was established as the school's name "in the 1930s because people couldn't pronounce the Hawaiian name"; and
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107107 WHEREAS, regarding the restoration of the school's Hawaiian name, Mr. Passantino also said that "the significance is huge, especially for the staff who's dedicated over two years to give her that duty and honor"; and
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111111 WHEREAS, additional actions have been taken at other public schools to address racially insensitive signifiers, such as the replacement of Kahuku High School's "Red Raiders" mascot, logo, and offensive chants after the Department of Education's Civil Rights Compliance Branch deemed them to be disrespectful and potentially discriminatory toward Native Americans; and
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115115 WHEREAS, in an effort to overcome structural racism, communities across the United States have removed statues and symbols that deepen historical trauma, racial suppression, and white supremacy, including a statue of William McKinley in Arcata, California in 2019; and
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119119 WHEREAS, in 2021, the Legislature adopted House Concurrent Resolution No. 112, declaring racism to be a public health crisis; and
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123123 WHEREAS, Hawaii's public school system has a responsibility to promote historical understanding, racial equity, and civil rights; now, therefore,
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127127 BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Thirty-first Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2022, the Senate concurring, that the Board of Education and Department of Education are urged to replace the name of President William McKinley High School with the previous name of Honolulu High School and remove the statue of President William McKinley from the school premises; and
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131131 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that to the greatest extent possible, the Board of Education and Department of Education are requested to ensure that public school curricula are inclusive of content on the historical injustice and discrimination endured by Hawaii's indigenous people; and
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135135 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the members of the Hawaii's Congressional delegation, Governor, Chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Chairperson of the Board of Education, Superintendent of Education, Kaimuki‑McKinley‑Roosevelt Complex Area Superintendent, and President of the McKinley High School Foundation.
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143143 OFFERED BY: _____________________________
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155155 Report Title:
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157157 President William McKinley High School; Honolulu High School