Hawaii 2023 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB1522 Compare Versions

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1-THE SENATE S.B. NO. 1522 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 S.D. 2 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+THE SENATE S.B. NO. 1522 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 S.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the Hawaii tourism authority has failed to effectively execute its duties to manage the tourism marketing plan for the State. In 2021, the legislature repealed the Hawaii tourism authority's exemption from the Hawaii public procurement code through Act 1, Special Session Laws of Hawaii 2021. As a result, all procurements by the Hawaii tourism authority must comply with the Hawaii public procurement code. Due to mismanagement by the Hawaii tourism authority, the award of a $34,000,000 contract for the marketing of Hawaii as a tourism destination to the United States major market area has been in a state of uncertainty since 2021. This situation has been widely publicized and has demonstrated the Hawaii tourism authority's noncompliance with the Hawaii public procurement code. The legislature finds that it is necessary and appropriate to dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Establish an office of tourism and destination management that will be governed by a nine-member board of directors consisting of: (A) A member from the county of Hawaii; (B) A member from the county of Maui; (C) A member from the county of Kauai; (D) A member from the city and county of Honolulu; (E) A member from the hospitality industry; (F) A member from the airline industry; (G) A member from the retail industry; and (H) A member with a background in Hawaiian culture; and (I) A member with a background in agriculture; (2) Transfer the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii tourism authority to the office of tourism and destination management; (3) Require the office of tourism and destination management to implement certain county destination management action plans; (4) Dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority; and (5) Appropriate funds. SECTION 2. Chapter 201, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new part to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "Part . OFFICE OF TOURISM AND DESTINATION MANAGEMENT §201-A Definitions. As used in this part: "Agency" means any agency, department, authority, board, commission, the University of Hawaii, or any other unit of the State or its political subdivisions. "Best practice destination management" means a holistic process that ensures that tourism adds value to the economy, social fabric, and ecology of communities. "Convention center facility" or "convention center" means the Hawaii Convention Center. "Executive director" means the executive director of tourism and destination management. "Hawaii brand" means the programs that collectively differentiate the Hawaii experience from other destinations. "Office" means the office of tourism and destination management established under section 201-B. "Regenerative tourism" means a Hawaiian cultural heritage business model that is community-based with cultural development strategies and implements an innovative economic development plan to link consumers and a Hawaiian sense of place through holistic efforts to: (1) Make net positive contributions; (2) Create conditions that allow communities to flourish; and (3) Improve destinations for current and future generations for the well-being of the environment, residents, indigenous communities, and visitors. §201-B Office of tourism and destination management; establishment; responsibilities. (a) There is established within the department of business, economic development, and tourism for administrative purposes the office of tourism and destination management to: (1) Create, design, and implement a long-range strategic plan for tourism in Hawaii; (2) Grow and enhance the tourism industry in the State; provided that the office's initiatives shall follow best practice destination management practices and integrate regenerative tourism; (3) Conduct strategic research through contractual services with the University of Hawaii or any qualified agency or persons that target social, economic, cultural, and environmental aspects of tourism development in the State; (4) Provide technical or other assistance to agencies and private industry upon request; (5) Focus on perpetuating the uniqueness of the Native Hawaiian culture and community, and their significance to the quality of the visitor experience, by ensuring that: (A) The Hawaiian culture is accurately portrayed by Hawaii's visitor industry; (B) Hawaiian language is supported and normalized as an official language of the State as well as the foundation of the host culture that attracts visitors to Hawaii; (C) Hawaiian cultural practitioners and cultural sites that give value to Hawaii's heritage are supported, nurtured, and engaged in sustaining the visitor industry; and (D) A Native Hawaiian cultural education and training program is provided for the members of the visitor industry workforce who have direct contact with visitors; and (6) Review annually the expenditure of public funds by any visitor industry organization that contracts with the office to implement tourism promotion, development, and management and make recommendations necessary to ensure the effective use of the funds for the development and management of tourism. (b) There is established within the office of tourism and destination management: (1) A tourism and marketing branch that shall implement integrated marketing efforts that positively portray Hawaii with a focus on its people and culture; (2) A convention center branch to manage the convention center and administer the convention center enterprise special fund; and (3) A destination management branch that shall develop and implement a plan that is inclusive of all islands and promotes a dignified and healthy relationship with the State's natural resources and Hawaiian culture. (c) The office shall be headed by a board of directors that shall consist of nine members to be appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34; provided that: (1) One member shall reside in the county of Hawaii; (2) One member shall reside in the county of Maui; (3) One member shall reside in county of Kauai; (4) One member shall reside in city and county of Honolulu; (5) One member shall represent the hospitality industry; (6) One member shall represent the airline industry; (7) One member shall represent the retail industry; (8) One member shall have a background in Hawaiian culture; and (9) One member shall have with a background in agriculture. The board of directors shall elect a chairperson from among the members. The members shall serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for expenses, including traveling expenses, necessary for the performance of their duties. (d) There shall be an executive director of tourism and destination management who shall: (1) Be appointed and may be removed by the board of directors; (2) Report to the board of directors; (3) Have knowledge, experience, and expertise in the areas of accommodations, transportation, retail, entertainment, Hawaiian culture, and agricultural lands; (4) Be responsible for the day-to-day operations of the office; and (5) Not be subject to chapter 76. §201-C Powers and functions, generally. (a) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office may: (1) Sue and be sued; (2) Make and alter bylaws for its organization and internal management; (3) Procure insurance against any loss in connection with its property and other assets and operations in amounts and from insurers as it deems desirable; (4) Contract for or accept revenues, compensation, proceeds, and gifts or grants in any form from any public agency or any other source; (5) Design, coordinate, and implement state policies and directions for tourism and related activities taking into account the economic, social, cultural, and physical impacts of tourism on the State, Hawaii's natural environment, areas frequented by visitors, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism; (6) Have a permanent and strong focus on Hawaii brand management; (7) Coordinate all agencies and engage the private sector in the development of tourism-related activities and resources; (8) Work to eliminate or reduce barriers to travel by providing a positive and competitive business environment, including coordination with the department of transportation on issues affecting airlines and air route development; (9) Market and promote sports-related and entertainment-related activities and events; (10) Coordinate the development of new products with the counties and other persons in the public sector and private sector, including the development of sports, cultural, health and wellness, education, technology, agriculture, and environmental tourism; (11) Establish: (A) A public information and educational program to inform the public of tourism and tourism-related problems; and (B) A program to monitor, investigate, and respond to complaints about problems resulting directly or indirectly from the tourism industry and taking appropriate action as necessary; (12) Encourage and engage in the development of tourism education, training, and career counseling programs; (13) Develop and implement emergency measures to respond to any adverse effects on the tourism industry, pursuant to section 201-I; (14) Set and collect rents, fees, charges, or other payments for the lease, use, occupancy, or disposition of the convention center facility without regard to chapter 91; (15) Notwithstanding chapter 171, acquire, lease as lessee or lessor, own, rent, hold, and dispose of the convention center facility in the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties under this part; (16) Acquire by purchase, lease, or otherwise, and develop, construct, operate, own, manage, repair, reconstruct, enlarge, or otherwise effectuate, either directly or through developers, a convention center facility; and (17) Adopt rules in accordance with chapter 91 with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities. (b) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office, through the executive director may: (1) Make and execute contracts and all other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers and functions under this part; provided that the office may enter into contracts and agreements for a period of up to five years, subject to the availability of funds; provided further that the office may enter into agreements for the use of the convention center facility for a period of up to ten years; (2) Represent the office in communications with the governor and the legislature; (3) Provide for the appointment of officers, agents, a sports coordinator, and employees, prescribing their duties and qualifications, and fixing their salaries, without regard to chapters 76 and 78, if funds have been appropriated by the legislature and allotted as provided by law; (4) Purchase supplies, equipment, or furniture; (5) Allocate the space or spaces that are to be occupied by the office and appropriate staff; (6) Engage the services of qualified persons to implement the State's strategic tourism management plan or portions thereof as determined by the office; and (7) Engage the services of consultants on a contractual basis for rendering professional and technical assistance and advice. (c) The office may enter into contracts and agreements that include the following: (1) Tourism promotion, development, and management; (2) Product development and diversification issues focused on visitors; (3) Promotion, development, and coordination of sportsrelated and entertainment-related activities and events; (4) Promotion of Hawaii, through a coordinated statewide effort, as a place to do business, including high technology business, and as a business destination; (5) Reduction of barriers to travel; (6) Marketing, management, use, operation, or maintenance of the convention center facility, including the purchase or sale of goods or services, logo items, concessions, sponsorships, and license agreements, or any use of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise; provided that contracts issued pursuant to this paragraph for the marketing of all uses of the convention center facility may be issued separately from the management, use, operation, or maintenance of the facility; (7) Tourism research, market development-related research, and statistics to: (A) Measure and analyze tourism trends; (B) Provide information and research to assist in the development and implementation of state tourism policy; and (C) Provide tourism information on: (i) Visitor arrivals, visitor characteristics, and expenditures; (ii) The number of transient accommodation units available, occupancy rates, and room rates; (iii) Airline-related data, including seat capacity and number of flights; (iv) The economic, social, and physical impacts of tourism on the State; and (v) The effects of the office's strategic tourism management plan on the measures of effectiveness developed pursuant to section 201-D; and (8) Any and all other activities necessary to carry out the intent of this part. (d) The office may delegate to staff the responsibility for soliciting, awarding, and executing contracts and for monitoring and facilitating any and all contracts and agreements developed in accordance with subsection (c). (e) Where public disclosure of information gathered or developed by the office may place a business at a competitive disadvantage or may impair or frustrate the office's ability to either compete as a visitor destination or obtain or utilize information for a legitimate government function, the office may withhold from public disclosure competitively sensitive information, including: (1) Completed survey forms and questionnaire forms; (2) Coding sheets; and (3) Database records of the information. (f) The office shall do any and all things necessary to carry out its purposes, to exercise the powers and responsibilities given in this part, and to perform other functions required or authorized by law. (g) The powers and functions granted to and exercised by the office under this part are declared to be public and governmental functions, exercised for a public purpose, and matters of public necessity. §201-D Strategic tourism management plan; measures of effectiveness. (a) The office shall develop a strategic tourism management plan that promotes tourism marketing, complies with best practice destination management, and promotes regenerative tourism. The plan shall be a single, comprehensive document that shall be updated annually and include the following: (1) Statewide Hawaii brand management efforts and programs; (2) Targeted markets; (3) Efforts to enter into Hawaii brand management projects that make effective use of cooperative programs; (4) Program performance goals and targets that can be monitored as market gauges and used as attributes to evaluate the office's programs; and (5) The office's guidance and direction for the development and coordination of promotional and marketing programs that build and promote the Hawaii brand, which shall be implemented through county contracts and agreements with destination marketing organizations or other qualified organizations, including: (A) Target markets and the results being sought; (B) Key performance indicators; and (C) Private sector collaborative or cooperative efforts that may be required. (b) In accordance with subsection (a), the office shall develop measures of effectiveness to assess the overall benefits and effectiveness of the strategic tourism management plan and include documentation of the progress of the strategic tourism management plan toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals. §201-E Destination management action plan; objectives; county destination management action plans. To meet the destination management objectives for each county, the office shall perform the actions specified in each of the following three-year plans: (1) Oahu destination management action plan; (2) Maui Nui destination management action plan; (3) Hawaii island destination management action plan; and (4) Kauai destination management action plan, during the specified phases. §201-F Assistance by state and county agencies; advisory group. (a) Any state or county agency may render services upon request of the office. (b) The office may establish an advisory group that may meet monthly or as often as the office deems necessary and may include the executive director, director of transportation, chairperson of the board of land and natural resources, chairperson of the board of trustees of the office of Hawaiian affairs, executive director of the state foundation on culture and the arts, and chair of the travel industry management advisory council of the University of Hawaii to advise the office on matters relating to their respective departments or agency in the preparation and execution of suggested: (1) Measures to respond to tourism emergencies pursuant to section 201-I; (2) Programs for the management, improvement, and protection of Hawaii's natural environment and other areas frequented by visitors and residents; (3) Measures to address issues affecting airlines, air routes, and barriers to travel to Hawaii; (4) Programs to perpetuate the culture of Hawaii and engage local communities to sustain and preserve the Native Hawaiian culture; and (5) Programs that include tourism marketing, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism as part of an overall strategic tourism management plan. §201-G Applicability of Hawaii public procurement code; convention center contractor; construction contracts. The construction contracts for the maintenance of the convention center facility by the private contractor that operates the convention center, by its direct or indirect receipt of, and its expenditure of, public funds from the department or the office, or both, shall be subject to part III of chapter 103D. §201-H Convention center enterprise special fund. (a) There is established in the state treasury the convention center enterprise special fund, into which shall be deposited: (1) A portion of the revenues from the transient accommodations tax, as provided by section 237D-6.5; (2) All revenues or moneys derived from the operations of the convention center to include all revenues from the food and beverage service, all revenues from the parking facilities or from any concession, and all revenues from the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or any other items offered for purchase at the convention center; (3) Private contributions, interest, compensation, gross or net revenues, proceeds, or other moneys derived from any source or for any purpose arising from the use of the convention center facility; and (4) Appropriations by the legislature for marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(6). (b) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund shall be used by the office for: (1) The payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility; (2) The sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items; (3) Any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and (4) Marketing the facility pursuant to section 201C(c)(6). (c) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund may be: (1) Placed in interest-bearing accounts; provided that the depository in which the money is deposited furnishes security as provided in section 38-3; or (2) Otherwise invested by the office until the time the moneys may be needed; provided that the office shall limit its investments to those listed in section 3621. All interest accruing from investment of the moneys shall be credited to the convention center enterprise special fund. §201-I Tourism emergency. (a) If the executive director determines that the occurrence of a world conflict, terrorist threat, national or global economic crisis, natural disaster, outbreak of disease, or other catastrophic event adversely affects Hawaii's tourism industry by resulting in a substantial interruption in the commerce of the State and adversely affecting the welfare of its people, the executive director shall submit a request to the governor to declare that a tourism emergency exists. (b) Upon declaration by the governor that a tourism emergency exists pursuant to subsection (a), the office shall develop and implement measures to respond to the tourism emergency, including providing assistance to visitors during the emergency; provided that any tourism emergency response measure implemented pursuant to this subsection shall not include any provision that would adversely affect the organized labor force in tourism-related industries. With respect to a national or global economic crisis only, in addition to the governor's declaration of the existence of a tourism emergency, no action in response to the tourism emergency declaration may be taken by the office without the governor's express approval. §201-J Tourism emergency special fund. (a) There is established outside the state treasury a tourism emergency special fund to be administered by the executive director, into which shall be deposited the revenues prescribed by section 237D‑6.5(b) and all investment earnings credited to the assets of the fund. (b) Moneys in the special fund shall be used exclusively to provide for the development and implementation of emergency measures to respond to any tourism emergency pursuant to section 201-I, including providing emergency assistance to visitors during the tourism emergency. (c) Use of the special fund, consistent with subsection (b), shall be provided for in articles, bylaws, resolutions, or other instruments executed by the executive director. §201-K Exemption from taxation. All revenues and receipts derived by the office from any project or a project agreement or other agreement pertaining thereto shall be exempt from all state taxation. Any right, title, and interest of the office in any project shall also be exempt from all state taxation. Except as otherwise provided by law, the interest of a qualified person or other user of a project or a project agreement or other agreements related to a project shall not be exempt from taxation to a greater extent than it would be if the costs of the project were directly financed by the qualified person or user. §201-L Private attorneys. (a) The executive director may appoint or retain by contract one or more attorneys who are independent of the attorney general to provide legal services for the office solely in cases of contract negotiations in which the attorney general lacks sufficient expertise; provided that the independent attorney shall consult and work in conjunction with the designated deputy attorney general assigned to the office. (b) The executive director may fix the compensation of the attorneys appointed or retained pursuant to this section. Attorneys appointed or retained by contract shall be exempt from chapters 76, 78, and 88. §201-M Court proceedings; preferences; venue. (a) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be a party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part, shall be preferred over all other civil cases, except election cases, in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, and shall be heard and determined in preference to all other civil cases pending therein except election cases, irrespective of position on the calendar. (b) Upon application of counsel to the office, the same preference shall be granted in any action or proceeding questioning the validity of this part in which the office may be allowed to intervene. (c) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part or any portion of this part, or any action of the office may be filed in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, which court is hereby vested with original jurisdiction over the action. (d) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, declaratory relief from the circuit court may be obtained for any action. (e) Any party aggrieved by the decision of the circuit court may appeal in accordance with part I of chapter 641 and the appeal shall be given priority. §201-N Annual report. The office shall submit a complete and detailed report of its activities, expenditures, and results, including the progress of the strategic tourism management plan, developed pursuant to section 201-D, toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals, to the governor and the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. The annual report shall include the descriptions and evaluations of programs funded, any contracts and agreements entered into by the office during the preceding calendar year, and any recommendations the office may make." SECTION 3. Section 28-8.3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows: 1. By amending subsection (a) to read: "(a) No department of the State other than the attorney general may employ or retain any attorney, by contract or otherwise, for the purpose of representing the State or the department in any litigation, rendering legal counsel to the department, or drafting legal documents for the department; provided that the foregoing provision shall not apply to the employment or retention of attorneys: (1) By the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, and the Hawaii labor relations board; (2) By any court or judicial or legislative office of the State; provided that if the attorney general is requested to provide representation to a court or judicial office by the chief justice or the chief justice's designee, or to a legislative office by the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate jointly, and the attorney general declines to provide such representation on the grounds of conflict of interest, the attorney general shall retain an attorney for the court, judicial, or legislative office, subject to approval by the court, judicial, or legislative office; (3) By the legislative reference bureau; (4) By any compilation commission that may be constituted from time to time; (5) By the real estate commission for any action involving the real estate recovery fund; (6) By the contractors license board for any action involving the contractors recovery fund; (7) By the office of Hawaiian affairs; (8) By the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the enforcement of violations of chapters 480 and 485A; (9) As grand jury counsel; (10) By the Hawaii health systems corporation, or its regional system boards, or any of their facilities; (11) By the auditor; (12) By the office of ombudsman; (13) By the insurance division; (14) By the University of Hawaii; (15) By the Kahoolawe island reserve commission; (16) By the division of consumer advocacy; (17) By the office of elections; (18) By the campaign spending commission; (19) By the [Hawaii tourism authority, as provided in section 201B-2.5;] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L; (20) By the division of financial institutions; (21) By the office of information practices; (22) By the school facilities authority; (23) By the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority; or (24) By a department, if the attorney general, for reasons deemed by the attorney general to be good and sufficient, declines to employ or retain an attorney for a department; provided that the governor waives the provision of this section." 2. By amending subsection (c) to read: "(c) Every attorney employed by any department on a fulltime basis, except an attorney employed by the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, the Hawaii labor relations board, the office of Hawaiian affairs, the Hawaii health systems corporation or its regional system boards, the department of commerce and consumer affairs in prosecution of consumer complaints, insurance division, the division of consumer advocacy, the University of Hawaii, [the Hawaii tourism authority as provided in section 201B-2.5,] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L, the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority, the office of information practices, or as grand jury counsel, shall be a deputy attorney general." SECTION 4. Section 36-27, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) Except as provided in this section, and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, from time to time, the director of finance, for the purpose of defraying the prorated estimate of central service expenses of government in relation to all special funds, except the: (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310; (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education; (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii; (4) Convention center enterprise special fund under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (5) Special funds established by section 206E-6; (6) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17; (7) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109; (8) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P; (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards; (10) Universal service fund established under section 26942; (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L3; (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130; (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5; (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4; (15) Glass advance disposal fee established by section 342G-82; (16) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A2163; (17) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5; (18) Solicitation of funds for charitable purposes special fund established by section 467B-15; (19) Land conservation fund established by section 173A-5; (20) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5; (21) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5; (22) Hawaii cancer research special fund; (23) Community health centers special fund; (24) Emergency medical services special fund; (25) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; (26) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43; (27) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136; (28) Deposit beverage container deposit special fund under section 342G-104; (29) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4; (30) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund under section 346F-4; (31) Hawaii 3R's school improvement fund under section 302A-1502.4; (32) After-school plus program revolving fund under section 302A-1149.5; (33) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 32130.2; and [[](34)[]] Stadium development special fund under section 1093.5, shall deduct five per cent of all receipts of all other special funds, which deduction shall be transferred to the general fund of the State and become general realizations of the State. All officers of the State and other persons having power to allocate or disburse any special funds shall cooperate with the director in effecting these transfers. To determine the proper revenue base upon which the central service assessment is to be calculated, the director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 for the purpose of suspending or limiting the application of the central service assessment of any fund. No later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session of the legislature, the director shall report all central service assessments made during the preceding fiscal year." SECTION 5. Section 36-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) Each special fund, except the: (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310; (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education; (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii; (4) Special funds established by section 206E-6; (5) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17; (6) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109; (7) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P; (8) Convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards; (10) Universal service fund established under section 26942; (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L3; (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130; (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5; (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4; (15) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A2163; (16) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5; (17) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5; (18) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5; (19) Hawaii cancer research special fund; (20) Community health centers special fund; (21) Emergency medical services special fund; (22) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; (23) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43; (24) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund established pursuant to section 346F-4; (25) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136; (26) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4; (27) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 32130.2; and [[](28)[]] Stadium development special fund under section 1093.5, shall be responsible for its pro rata share of the administrative expenses incurred by the department responsible for the operations supported by the special fund concerned." SECTION 6. Section 84-18, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (e) to read as follows: "(e) Subject to the restrictions imposed in subsections (a) through (d), the following individuals shall not represent any person or business for a fee or other consideration regarding any legislative action or administrative action, as defined in section 97-1, for twelve months after termination from their respective positions: (1) The governor; (2) The lieutenant governor; (3) The administrative director of the State; (4) The attorney general; (5) The comptroller; (6) The chairperson of the board of agriculture; (7) The director of corrections and rehabilitation; (8) The director of finance; (9) The director of business, economic development, and tourism; (10) The director of commerce and consumer affairs; (11) The adjutant general; (12) The superintendent of education; (13) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission; (14) The director of health; (15) The director of human resources development; (16) The director of human services; (17) The director of labor and industrial relations; (18) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources; (19) The director of law enforcement; (20) The director of taxation; (21) The director of transportation; (22) The president of the University of Hawaii; (23) The executive administrator of the board of regents of the University of Hawaii; (24) The administrator of the office of Hawaiian affairs; (25) The chief information officer; (26) The executive director of the agribusiness development corporation; (27) The executive director of the campaign spending commission; (28) The executive director of the Hawaii community development authority; (29) The executive director of the Hawaii housing finance and development corporation; (30) The [president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority;] executive director of the office of tourism and destination management; (31) The executive officer of the public utilities commission; (32) The state auditor; (33) The director of the legislative reference bureau; (34) The ombudsman; (35) The permanent employees of the legislature, other than persons employed in clerical, secretarial, or similar positions; (36) The administrative director of the courts; (37) The executive director of the state ethics commission; (38) The executive officer of the state land use commission; (39) The executive director of the natural energy laboratory of Hawaii authority; (40) The executive director of the Hawaii public housing authority; and (41) The first deputy to the chairperson of the commission on water resource management; provided that this subsection shall not apply to any person who has held one of the positions listed above only on an interim or acting basis and for a period of less than one hundred eighty-one days." SECTION 7. Section 88-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (d) to read as follows: "(d) A retirant may be employed without reenrollment in the system and suffer no loss or interruption of benefits provided by the system or under chapter 87A if the retirant is employed: (1) As an elective officer pursuant to section 88-42.6(c) or as a member of the legislature pursuant to section 88-73(d); (2) As a juror or precinct official; (3) As a part-time or temporary employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-43, as a session employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-54.2, as the [president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 201B-2,] executive director of the office of tourism and destination management excluded from membership in the system, or as any other employee expressly excluded by law from membership in the system; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the six calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; and (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; (4) In a position identified by the appropriate jurisdiction as a labor shortage or difficult-to-fill position; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and (C) Each employer shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability; or (5) As a teacher or an administrator in a teacher shortage area identified by the department of education or in a charter school or as a mentor for new classroom teachers; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and (C) The department of education or charter school shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability." SECTION 8. Section 206E-34, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall: (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the cultural public market; (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [and agencies]: (A) The department of agriculture; (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism; (C) The department of land and natural resources; (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; and (E) The [Hawaii tourism authority;] office of tourism and destination management; (3) Consider and determine the propriety of using publicprivate partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market; (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market." SECTION 9. Section 225P-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The commission shall include the following members: (1) The chairs of the standing committees of the legislature with subject matter jurisdiction encompassing environmental protection and land use; (2) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources or the chairperson's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission; (3) The director of the office of planning and sustainable development or the director's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission; (4) The director of business, economic development, and tourism or the director's designee; (5) The chairperson of the board of directors of the [Hawaii tourism authority] office of tourism and destination management or the chairperson's designee; (6) The chairperson of the board of agriculture or the chairperson's designee; (7) The chief executive officer of the office of Hawaiian affairs or the officer's designee; (8) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission or the chairperson's designee; (9) The director of transportation or the director's designee; (10) The director of health or the director's designee; (11) The adjutant general or the adjutant general's designee; (12) The chairperson of the board of education or the chairperson's designee; (13) The directors of each of the county planning departments, or the directors' designees; and (14) The manager of the coastal zone management program." SECTION 10. Section 237-24.75, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§237-24.75 Additional exemptions. In addition to the amounts exempt under section 237-24, this chapter shall not apply to: (1) Amounts received as a beverage container deposit collected under chapter 342G, part VIII; (2) Amounts received by the operator of the Hawaii convention center for reimbursement of costs or advances made pursuant to a contract with the [Hawaii tourism authority under section 201B‑7;] office of tourism and destination management under subsection 201-C(c); and (3) Amounts received by a professional employer organization that is registered with the department of labor and industrial relations pursuant to chapter 373L, from a client company equal to amounts that are disbursed by the professional employer organization for employee wages, salaries, payroll taxes, insurance premiums, and benefits, including retirement, vacation, sick leave, health benefits, and similar employment benefits with respect to covered employees at a client company; provided that this exemption shall not apply to amounts received by a professional employer organization after: (A) Notification from the department of labor and industrial relations that the professional employer organization has not fulfilled or maintained the registration requirements under this chapter; or (B) A determination by the department that the professional employer organization has failed to pay any tax withholding for covered employees or any federal or state taxes for which the professional employer organization is responsible. As used in this paragraph, "professional employer organization", "client company", and "covered employee" shall have the meanings provided in section 373L-1." SECTION 11. Section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) Except for the revenues collected pursuant to section 237D-2(e), revenues collected under this chapter shall be distributed in the following priority, with the excess revenues to be deposited into the general fund: (1) $1,500,000 shall be allocated to the Turtle Bay conservation easement special fund beginning July 1, 2015, for the reimbursement to the state general fund of debt service on reimbursable general obligation bonds, including ongoing expenses related to the issuance of the bonds, the proceeds of which were used to acquire the conservation easement and other real property interests in Turtle Bay, Oahu, for the protection, preservation, and enhancement of natural resources important to the State, until the bonds are fully amortized; (2) $11,000,000 shall be allocated to the convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (3) An allocation shall be deposited into the tourism emergency special fund, established in section [201B10,] 201-J, in a manner sufficient to maintain a fund balance of $5,000,000 in the tourism emergency special fund; and (4) $3,000,000 shall be allocated to the special land and development fund established under section 171-19; provided that the allocation shall be expended in accordance with the Hawaii tourism [authority] authority's 2020-2025 strategic plan for: (A) The protection, preservation, maintenance, and enhancement of natural resources, including beaches, important to the visitor industry; (B) Planning, construction, and repair of facilities; and (C) Operation and maintenance costs of public lands, including beaches, connected with enhancing the visitor experience. All transient accommodations taxes shall be paid into the state treasury each month within ten days after collection and shall be kept by the state director of finance in special accounts for distribution as provided in this subsection." SECTION 12. Act 231, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005, section 2, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall: (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the public market; (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [and agencies:]: (A) The department of agriculture; (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism; (C) The department of land and natural resources; (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; and (E) The [Hawaii tourism authority;] office of tourism and destination management; (3) Consider and determine the propriety of [utilizing] using public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market; (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market." SECTION 13. Chapter 201B, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed. SECTION 14. Sections 6E-18, 23-13, 23-76, 46-11, and 171173, Hawaii Revised Statutes, are amended by substituting the term "the office of tourism and destination management", or similar term, wherever the term "Hawaii tourism authority", or similar term, appears, as the context requires. SECTION 15. All rights, powers, functions, and duties of the Hawaii tourism authority are transferred to the office of tourism and destination management. SECTION 16. All employees who occupy civil service positions and whose functions are transferred to the office of tourism and destination management by this Act shall retain their civil service status, whether permanent or temporary. Employees shall be transferred without loss of salary, seniority (except as prescribed by applicable collective bargaining agreements), retention points, prior service credit, any vacation and sick leave credits previously earned, and other rights, benefits, and privileges, in accordance with state personnel laws and this Act; provided that the employees possess the minimum qualifications and public employment requirements for the class or position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable civil service and compensation laws. Any employee who, prior to this Act, is exempt from civil service and is transferred as a consequence of this Act may retain the employee's exempt status, but shall not be appointed to a civil service position as a consequence of this Act. An exempt employee who is transferred by this Act shall not suffer any loss of prior service credit, vacation or sick leave credits previously earned, or other employee benefits or privileges as a consequence of this Act; provided that the employees possess legal and public employment requirements for the position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable employment and compensation laws. The executive director of the office of tourism and destination management may prescribe the duties and qualifications of these employees and fix their salaries without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes. SECTION 17. All appropriations, records, equipment, machines, files, supplies, contracts, books, papers, documents, maps, and other personal property heretofore made, used, acquired, or held by the Hawaii tourism authority relating to the functions transferred to the office of tourism and destination management shall be transferred with the functions to which they relate. SECTION 18. All rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material adopted or developed by the Hawaii tourism authority to implement provisions of the Hawaii Revised Statutes that are made applicable to the office of tourism and destination management by this Act, shall remain in full force and effect until amended or repealed by the department of business, economic development, and tourism pursuant to chapter 91, Hawaii Revised Statutes. In the interim, every reference to the Hawaii tourism authority or the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority in those rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material is amended to refer to the office of tourism and destination management and the executive director of the office of tourism and destination management, as appropriate. SECTION 19. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $50,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for the establishment, administration, operation of the office of tourism and destination management and to fund the positions as provided in section 20. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the office of tourism and destination management for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 20. (a) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the office of tourism and destination management shall be organized as provided in this section for fiscal years 2023‑2024 and 2024-2025. (b) The office of tourism and destination management shall be headed by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) executive director position, who shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) assistant executive director position; provided that the executive director shall be paid a salary not to exceed the salary of the director of business, economic development, and tourism. The assistant executive director shall be paid a salary not to exceed ninety per cent of the executive director's salary. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) management analyst position and one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) executive assistant position, who shall report to the assistant executive director. (c) There shall be one full-time (1.0 FTE) equivalent chief financial officer position, who shall report to the assistant executive director. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) budget and fiscal officer position and one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) procurement manager position, who shall report to the chief financial officer. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position, who shall report to the procurement manager. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position, who shall report to the budget and fiscal officer. (d) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) chief branding, cultural, and marketing officer position, who shall report to the assistant executive director and show shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position. There is established one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) senior brand manager position and one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) senior cultural manager position, who shall report to the chief branding, cultural, and marketing officer. There shall be established three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) brand manager positions, who shall report to the senior branding manager. There shall be established one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) cultural specialist position, who shall report to the senior cultural manager. (e) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) director of destination management position, who shall report to the assistant executive director and who shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position. There is established one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) natural resource manager position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Oahu community specialist position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Kauai community specialist position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Maui community specialist position, and one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Hawaii island community specialist position, who shall report to the director of destination management. (f) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) director of the convention center position, who shall report to the assistant executive director. SECTION 21. There is appropriated out of the convention center enterprise special fund the sum of $28,500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility; the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items; for any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and for marketing the convention center facility. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 22. In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act. SECTION 23. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 24. This Act shall take effect on January 6, 2050; provided that sections 19 through 21 of this Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided further that changes made to section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall not be repealed when that section is repealed and reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 5 of Act 229, Session Laws of Hawaii 2021.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the Hawaii tourism authority has failed to effectively execute its duties and functions manage the tourism marketing plan for the State. In 2021, the legislature repealed the Hawaii tourism authority's exemption from the State procurement code through Act 1, Special Session Laws of Hawaii 2021. As a result, all procurements by the Hawaii tourism authority must comply with the state procurement code. Due to the mismanagement by the Hawaii tourism authority, the award of a $34,000,000 contract for the marketing of Hawaii as a tourism destination to the United States major market area has been in limbo since 2021. This situation has been widely publicized and has demonstrated the Hawaii tourism authority's noncompliance with the state procurement code. The legislature additionally finds that, prior to the establishment of the Hawaii tourism authority, the department of business, economic development, and tourism managed the tourism marketing contracts for the State. To re-establish public confidence in the State procurement process, the legislature finds that it is necessary and appropriate to dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority and transfer its duties and functions to the department of business, economic development, and tourism. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Establish an office of tourism and destination management within the department of business, economic development, and tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management; (2) Transfer the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii tourism authority to the office of tourism and destination management; (3) Require the office of tourism and destination management to implement certain county destination management action plans; (4) Dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority; and (5) Appropriate funds. SECTION 2. Chapter 201, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new part to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "Part . OFFICE OF TOURISM AND DESTINATION MANAGEMENT §201-A Definitions. As used in this part: "Administrator" means the administrator of tourism and destination management. "Agency" means any agency, department, authority, board, commission, the University of Hawaii, or any other unit of the State or its political subdivisions. "Best practice destination management" means a holistic process that ensures that tourism adds value to the economy, social fabric, and ecology of communities. "Convention center facility" or "convention center" means the Hawaii Convention Center. "Director" means the director of business, economic development, and tourism. "Hawaii brand" means the programs that collectively differentiate the Hawaii experience from other destinations. "Office" means the office of tourism and destination management established under section 201-B. "Regenerative tourism" means tourism that focuses on reducing the harm associated with tourism, and restoring the natural environment from the harm already done by tourism, through collective holistic efforts to: (1) Make net positive contributions; (2) Create conditions that allow communities to flourish; and (3) Improve destinations for current and future generations for the well-being of the environment, residents, indigenous communities, and visitors. §201-B Office of tourism and destination management; establishment; responsibilities. (a) There is established within the department an office of tourism and destination management to: (1) Create, design, and implement a long-range strategic plan for tourism in Hawaii; (2) Grow and enhance the tourism industry in the State; provided that the office's initiatives shall follow best practice destination management practices and integrate regenerative tourism; (3) Conduct strategic research through contractual services with the University of Hawaii or any qualified agency or persons that target social, economic, cultural, and environmental aspects of tourism development in the State; (4) Provide technical or other assistance to agencies and private industry upon request; (5) Focus on perpetuating the uniqueness of the Native Hawaiian culture and community, and their significance to the quality of the visitor experience, by ensuring that: (A) The Hawaiian culture is accurately portrayed by Hawaii's visitor industry; (B) Hawaiian language is supported and normalized as an official language of the State as well as the foundation of the host culture that attracts visitors to Hawaii; (C) Hawaiian cultural practitioners and cultural sites that give value to Hawaii's heritage are supported, nurtured, and engaged in sustaining the visitor industry; and (D) A Native Hawaiian cultural education and training program is provided for the members of the visitor industry workforce who have direct contact with visitors; and (6) Review annually the expenditure of public funds by any visitor industry organization that contracts with the office to implement tourism promotion, development, and management and make recommendations necessary to ensure the effective use of the funds for the development and management of tourism. (b) There is established within the office of tourism and destination management: (1) A tourism and marketing branch to carry out the duties and functions of the office relating to tourism and marketing; (2) A convention center branch to manage the convention center and administer the convention center enterprise special fund; and (3) A destination management branch to deliver and administer programs that support best practice destination management in the State. (c) There shall be an administrator of tourism and destination management, who shall be appointed, and may be removed by the director, and who shall have knowledge, experience, and expertise in the area of accommodations, transportation, retail, entertainment, or attractions. The administrator shall be responsible for the day-to-day operations of the office. The administrator shall report to the director. The administrator shall, in the absence of the director, have all the duties and responsibilities of the director, and shall report directly to the governor. The administrator shall not be subject to chapter 76. §201-C Powers and functions, generally. (a) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office may: (1) Sue and be sued; (2) Make and alter bylaws for its organization and internal management; (3) Procure insurance against any loss in connection with its property and other assets and operations in amounts and from insurers as it deems desirable; (4) Contract for or accept revenues, compensation, proceeds, and gifts or grants in any form from any public agency or any other source; (5) Design, coordinate, and implement state policies and directions for tourism and related activities taking into account the economic, social, cultural, and physical impacts of tourism on the State, Hawaii's natural environment, areas frequented by visitors, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism; (6) Have a permanent and strong focus on Hawaii brand management; (7) Coordinate all agencies and engage the private sector in the development of tourism-related activities and resources; (8) Work to eliminate or reduce barriers to travel by providing a positive and competitive business environment, including coordination with the department of transportation on issues affecting airlines and air route development; (9) Market and promote sports-related and entertainment-related activities and events; (10) Coordinate the development of new products with the counties and other persons in the public sector and private sector, including the development of sports, cultural, health and wellness, education, technology, agriculture, and environmental tourism; (11) Establish: (A) A public information and educational program to inform the public of tourism and tourism-related problems; and (B) A program to monitor, investigate, and respond to complaints about problems resulting directly or indirectly from the tourism industry and taking appropriate action as necessary; (12) Encourage and engage in the development of tourism education, training, and career counseling programs; (13) Develop and implement emergency measures to respond to any adverse effects on the tourism industry, pursuant to section 201-I; (14) Set and collect rents, fees, charges, or other payments for the lease, use, occupancy, or disposition of the convention center facility without regard to chapter 91; (15) Notwithstanding chapter 171, acquire, lease as lessee or lessor, own, rent, hold, and dispose of the convention center facility in the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties under this part; (16) Acquire by purchase, lease, or otherwise, and develop, construct, operate, own, manage, repair, reconstruct, enlarge, or otherwise effectuate, either directly or through developers, a convention center facility; and (17) Adopt rules in accordance with chapter 91 with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities. (b) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office may, through the director: (1) Make and execute contracts and all other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers and functions under this part; provided that the office may enter into contracts and agreements for a period of up to five years, subject to the availability of funds; provided further that the office may enter into agreements for the use of the convention center facility for a period of up to ten years; (2) Represent the office in communications with the governor and the legislature; (3) Provide for the appointment of an administrator, officers, agents, a sports coordinator, and employees, prescribing their duties and qualifications, and fixing their salaries, without regard to chapters 76 and 78, if funds have been appropriated by the legislature and allotted as provided by law; (4) Purchase supplies, equipment, or furniture; (5) Allocate the space or spaces that are to be occupied by the office and appropriate staff; (6) Engage the services of qualified persons to implement the State's strategic tourism management plan or portions thereof as determined by the office; and (7) Engage the services of consultants on a contractual basis for rendering professional and technical assistance and advice. (c) The office may enter into contracts and agreements that include the following: (1) Tourism promotion, development, and management; (2) Product development and diversification issues focused on visitors; (3) Promotion, development, and coordination of sports-related and entertainment-related activities and events; (4) Promotion of Hawaii, through a coordinated statewide effort, as a place to do business, including high technology business, and as a business destination; (5) Reduction of barriers to travel; (6) Marketing, management, use, operation, or maintenance of the convention center facility, including the purchase or sale of goods or services, logo items, concessions, sponsorships, and license agreements, or any use of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise; provided that contracts issued pursuant to this paragraph for the marketing of all uses of the convention center facility may be issued separately from the management, use, operation, or maintenance of the facility; (7) Tourism research, market development-related research, and statistics to: (A) Measure and analyze tourism trends; (B) Provide information and research to assist in the development and implementation of state tourism policy; and (C) Provide tourism information on: (i) Visitor arrivals, visitor characteristics, and expenditures; (ii) The number of transient accommodation units available, occupancy rates, and room rates; (iii) Airline-related data, including seat capacity and number of flights; (iv) The economic, social, and physical impacts of tourism on the State; and (v) The effects of the office's strategic tourism management plan on the measures of effectiveness developed pursuant to section 201-D; and (8) Any and all other activities necessary to carry out the intent of this part. (d) The office may delegate to staff the responsibility for soliciting, awarding, and executing contracts and for monitoring and facilitating any and all contracts and agreements developed in accordance with subsection (c). (e) Where public disclosure of information gathered or developed by the office may place a business at a competitive disadvantage or may impair or frustrate the office's ability to either compete as a visitor destination or obtain or utilize information for a legitimate government function, the office may withhold from public disclosure competitively sensitive information, including: (1) Completed survey forms and questionnaire forms; (2) Coding sheets; and (3) Database records of the information. (f) The office shall do any and all things necessary to carry out its purposes, to exercise the powers and responsibilities given in this part, and to perform other functions required or authorized by law. (g) The powers and functions granted to and exercised by the office under this part are declared to be public and governmental functions, exercised for a public purpose, and matters of public necessity. §201-D Strategic tourism management plan; measures of effectiveness. (a) The office shall be responsible for developing a strategic tourism management plan that promotes tourism marketing, complies with best practice destination management, and promotes regenerative tourism. The plan shall be a single, comprehensive document that shall be updated annually and include the following: (1) Statewide Hawaii brand management efforts and programs; (2) Targeted markets; (3) Efforts to enter into Hawaii brand management projects that make effective use of cooperative programs; (4) Program performance goals and targets that can be monitored as market gauges and used as attributes to evaluate the office's programs; and (5) The office's guidance and direction for the development and coordination of promotional and marketing programs that build and promote the Hawaii brand, which shall be implemented through county contracts and agreements with destination marketing organizations or other qualified organizations, including: (A) Target markets and the results being sought; (B) Key performance indicators; and (C) Private sector collaborative or cooperative efforts that may be required. (b) In accordance with subsection (a), the office shall develop measures of effectiveness to assess the overall benefits and effectiveness of the strategic tourism management plan and include documentation of the progress of the strategic tourism management plan toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals. §201-E Destination management action plan; objectives; county destination management action plans. To meet the destination management objectives for each county, the office shall perform the actions specified in each of the following three-year plans: (1) Oahu destination management action plan; (2) Maui Nui destination management action plan; (3) Hawaii island destination management action plan; and (4) Kauai destination management action plan, during the specified phases. §201-F Assistance by state and county agencies; advisory group. (a) Any state or county agency may render services upon request of the office. (b) The office may establish an advisory group that may meet monthly or as the office deems necessary and may include the director, director of transportation, chair of the board of land and natural resources, chairperson of the board of trustees of the office of Hawaiian affairs, executive director of the state foundation on culture and the arts, and chair of the school of travel industry management of the University of Hawaii to advise the office on matters relating to their respective departments or agency in the preparation and execution of suggested: (1) Measures to respond to tourism emergencies pursuant to section 201-I; (2) Programs for the management, improvement, and protection of Hawaii's natural environment and other areas frequented by visitors and residents; (3) Measures to address issues affecting airlines, air routes, and barriers to travel to Hawaii; (4) Programs to perpetuate the culture of Hawaii and engage local communities to sustain and preserve the Native Hawaiian culture; and (5) Programs that include tourism marketing, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism as part of an overall strategic tourism management plan. §201-G Applicability of Hawaii public procurement code; convention center contractor; construction contracts. The construction contracts for the maintenance of the convention center facility by the private contractor that operates the convention center, by its direct or indirect receipt of, and its expenditure of, public funds from the department or the office, or both, shall be subject to part III of chapter 103D. §201-H Convention center enterprise special fund. (a) There is established in the state treasury the convention center enterprise special fund, into which shall be deposited: (1) A portion of the revenues from the transient accommodations tax, as provided by section 237D-6.5; (2) All revenues or moneys derived from the operations of the convention center to include all revenues from the food and beverage service, all revenues from the parking facilities or from any concession, and all revenues from the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or any other items offered for purchase at the convention center; (3) Private contributions, interest, compensation, gross or net revenues, proceeds, or other moneys derived from any source or for any purpose arising from the use of the convention center facility; and (4) Appropriations by the legislature for marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(7). (b) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund shall be used by the office for: (1) The payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility; (2) The sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items; (3) Any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and (4) Marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(7). (c) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund may be: (1) Placed in interest-bearing accounts; provided that the depository in which the money is deposited furnishes security as provided in section 38-3; or (2) Otherwise invested by the office until the time the moneys may be needed; provided that the office shall limit its investments to those listed in section 36-21. All interest accruing from investment of the moneys shall be credited to the convention center enterprise special fund. §201-I Tourism emergency. (a) If the director determines that the occurrence of a world conflict, terrorist threat, national or global economic crisis, natural disaster, outbreak of disease, or other catastrophic event adversely affects Hawaii's tourism industry by resulting in a substantial interruption in the commerce of the State and adversely affecting the welfare of its people, the director shall submit a request to the governor to declare that a tourism emergency exists. (b) Upon declaration by the governor that a tourism emergency exists pursuant to subsection (a), the office shall develop and implement measures to respond to the tourism emergency, including providing assistance to visitors during the emergency; provided that any tourism emergency response measure implemented pursuant to this subsection shall not include any provision that would adversely affect the organized labor force in tourism-related industries. With respect to a national or global economic crisis only, in addition to the governor's declaration of the existence of a tourism emergency, no action in response to the tourism emergency declaration may be taken by the office without the governor's express approval. §201-J Tourism emergency special fund. (a) There is established outside the state treasury a tourism emergency special fund to be administered by the director, into which shall be deposited the revenues prescribed by section 237D‑6.5(b) and all investment earnings credited to the assets of the fund. (b) Moneys in the special fund shall be used exclusively to provide for the development and implementation of emergency measures to respond to any tourism emergency pursuant to section 201-I, including providing emergency assistance to visitors during the tourism emergency. (c) Use of the special fund, consistent with subsection (b), shall be provided for in articles, bylaws, resolutions, or other instruments executed by the director as administrator for the special fund. §201-K Exemption from taxation. All revenues and receipts derived by the office from any project or a project agreement or other agreement pertaining thereto shall be exempt from all state taxation. Any right, title, and interest of the office in any project shall also be exempt from all state taxation. Except as otherwise provided by law, the interest of a qualified person or other user of a project or a project agreement or other agreements related to a project shall not be exempt from taxation to a greater extent than it would be if the costs of the project were directly financed by the qualified person or user. §201-L Private attorneys. (a) The director may appoint or retain by contract one or more attorneys who are independent of the attorney general to provide legal services for the office solely in cases of contract negotiations in which the attorney general lacks sufficient expertise; provided that the independent attorney shall consult and work in conjunction with the designated deputy attorney general assigned to the office. (b) The director may fix the compensation of the attorneys appointed or retained pursuant to this section. Attorneys appointed or retained by contract shall be exempt from chapters 76, 78, and 88. §201-M Court proceedings; preferences; venue. (a) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be a party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part, shall be preferred over all other civil cases, except election cases, in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, and shall be heard and determined in preference to all other civil cases pending therein except election cases, irrespective of position on the calendar. (b) Upon application of counsel to the office, the same preference shall be granted in any action or proceeding questioning the validity of this part in which the office may be allowed to intervene. (c) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part or any portion of this part, or any action of the office may be filed in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, which court is hereby vested with original jurisdiction over the action. (d) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, declaratory relief from the circuit court may be obtained for any action. (e) Any party aggrieved by the decision of the circuit court may appeal in accordance with part I of chapter 641 and the appeal shall be given priority. §201-N Annual report. The office shall submit a complete and detailed report of its activities, expenditures, and results, including the progress of the strategic tourism management plan, developed pursuant to section 201-D, toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals, to the governor and the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. The annual report shall include the descriptions and evaluations of programs funded, any contracts and agreements entered into by the office during the calendar year, and any recommendations the office may make." SECTION 3. Section 28-8.3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows: 1. By amending subsection (a) to read: "(a) No department of the State other than the attorney general may employ or retain any attorney, by contract or otherwise, for the purpose of representing the State or the department in any litigation, rendering legal counsel to the department, or drafting legal documents for the department; provided that the foregoing provision shall not apply to the employment or retention of attorneys: (1) By the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, and the Hawaii labor relations board; (2) By any court or judicial or legislative office of the State; provided that if the attorney general is requested to provide representation to a court or judicial office by the chief justice or the chief justice's designee, or to a legislative office by the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate jointly, and the attorney general declines to provide such representation on the grounds of conflict of interest, the attorney general shall retain an attorney for the court, judicial, or legislative office, subject to approval by the court, judicial, or legislative office; (3) By the legislative reference bureau; (4) By any compilation commission that may be constituted from time to time; (5) By the real estate commission for any action involving the real estate recovery fund; (6) By the contractors license board for any action involving the contractors recovery fund; (7) By the office of Hawaiian affairs; (8) By the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the enforcement of violations of chapters 480 and 485A; (9) As grand jury counsel; (10) By the Hawaii health systems corporation, or its regional system boards, or any of their facilities; (11) By the auditor; (12) By the office of ombudsman; (13) By the insurance division; (14) By the University of Hawaii; (15) By the Kahoolawe island reserve commission; (16) By the division of consumer advocacy; (17) By the office of elections; (18) By the campaign spending commission; (19) By the [Hawaii tourism authority, as provided in section 201B-2.5;] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L; (20) By the division of financial institutions; (21) By the office of information practices; (22) By the school facilities authority; (23) By the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority; or (24) By a department, if the attorney general, for reasons deemed by the attorney general to be good and sufficient, declines to employ or retain an attorney for a department; provided that the governor waives the provision of this section." 2. By amending subsection (c) to read: "(c) Every attorney employed by any department on a full-time basis, except an attorney employed by the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, the Hawaii labor relations board, the office of Hawaiian affairs, the Hawaii health systems corporation or its regional system boards, the department of commerce and consumer affairs in prosecution of consumer complaints, insurance division, the division of consumer advocacy, the University of Hawaii, [the Hawaii tourism authority as provided in section 201B-2.5,] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L, the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority, the office of information practices, or as grand jury counsel, shall be a deputy attorney general." SECTION 4. Section 36-27, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) Except as provided in this section, and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, from time to time, the director of finance, for the purpose of defraying the prorated estimate of central service expenses of government in relation to all special funds, except the: (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310; (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education; (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii; (4) Convention center enterprise special fund under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (5) Special funds established by section 206E-6; (6) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17; (7) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109; (8) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P; (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards; (10) Universal service fund established under section 269-42; (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3; (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130; (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5; (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4; (15) Glass advance disposal fee established by section 342G-82; (16) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163; (17) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5; (18) Solicitation of funds for charitable purposes special fund established by section 467B-15; (19) Land conservation fund established by section 173A-5; (20) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5; (21) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5; (22) Hawaii cancer research special fund; (23) Community health centers special fund; (24) Emergency medical services special fund; (25) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; (26) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43; (27) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136; (28) Deposit beverage container deposit special fund under section 342G-104; (29) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4; (30) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund under section 346F-4; (31) Hawaii 3R's school improvement fund under section 302A-1502.4; (32) After-school plus program revolving fund under section 302A-1149.5; (33) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 321-30.2; and [[](34)[]]Stadium development special fund under section 109-3.5, shall deduct five per cent of all receipts of all other special funds, which deduction shall be transferred to the general fund of the State and become general realizations of the State. All officers of the State and other persons having power to allocate or disburse any special funds shall cooperate with the director in effecting these transfers. To determine the proper revenue base upon which the central service assessment is to be calculated, the director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 for the purpose of suspending or limiting the application of the central service assessment of any fund. No later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session of the legislature, the director shall report all central service assessments made during the preceding fiscal year." SECTION 5. Section 36-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) Each special fund, except the: (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310; (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education; (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii; (4) Special funds established by section 206E-6; (5) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17; (6) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109; (7) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P; (8) Convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards; (10) Universal service fund established under section 269-42; (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3; (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130; (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5; (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4; (15) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163; (16) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5; (17) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5; (18) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5; (19) Hawaii cancer research special fund; (20) Community health centers special fund; (21) Emergency medical services special fund; (22) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; (23) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43; (24) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund established pursuant to section 346F-4; (25) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136; (26) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4; (27) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 321-30.2; and [[](28)[]]Stadium development special fund under section 109-3.5, shall be responsible for its pro rata share of the administrative expenses incurred by the department responsible for the operations supported by the special fund concerned." SECTION 6. Section 84-18, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (e) to read as follows: "(e) Subject to the restrictions imposed in subsections (a) through (d), the following individuals shall not represent any person or business for a fee or other consideration regarding any legislative action or administrative action, as defined in section 97-1, for twelve months after termination from their respective positions: (1) The governor; (2) The lieutenant governor; (3) The administrative director of the State; (4) The attorney general; (5) The comptroller; (6) The chairperson of the board of agriculture; (7) The director of corrections and rehabilitation; (8) The director of finance; (9) The director of business, economic development, and tourism; (10) The director of commerce and consumer affairs; (11) The adjutant general; (12) The superintendent of education; (13) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission; (14) The director of health; (15) The director of human resources development; (16) The director of human services; (17) The director of labor and industrial relations; (18) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources; (19) The director of law enforcement; (20) The director of taxation; (21) The director of transportation; (22) The president of the University of Hawaii; (23) The executive administrator of the board of regents of the University of Hawaii; (24) The administrator of the office of Hawaiian affairs; (25) The chief information officer; (26) The executive director of the agribusiness development corporation; (27) The executive director of the campaign spending commission; (28) The executive director of the Hawaii community development authority; (29) The executive director of the Hawaii housing finance and development corporation; [(30) The president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority; (31)] (30) The executive officer of the public utilities commission; [(32)] (31) The state auditor; [(33)] (32) The director of the legislative reference bureau; [(34)] (33) The ombudsman; [(35)] (34) The permanent employees of the legislature, other than persons employed in clerical, secretarial, or similar positions; [(36)] (35) The administrative director of the courts; [(37)] (36) The executive director of the state ethics commission; [(38)] (37) The executive officer of the state land use commission; [(39)] (38) The executive director of the natural energy laboratory of Hawaii authority; [(40)] (39) The executive director of the Hawaii public housing authority; and [(41)] (40) The first deputy to the chairperson of the commission on water resource management; provided that this subsection shall not apply to any person who has held one of the positions listed above only on an interim or acting basis and for a period of less than one hundred eighty-one days." SECTION 7. Section 88-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (d) to read as follows: "(d) A retirant may be employed without reenrollment in the system and suffer no loss or interruption of benefits provided by the system or under chapter 87A if the retirant is employed: (1) As an elective officer pursuant to section 88-42.6(c) or as a member of the legislature pursuant to section 88-73(d); (2) As a juror or precinct official; (3) As a part-time or temporary employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-43, as a session employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-54.2[, as the president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 201B-2,] or as any other employee expressly excluded by law from membership in the system; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the six calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; and (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; (4) In a position identified by the appropriate jurisdiction as a labor shortage or difficult-to-fill position; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and (C) Each employer shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability; or (5) As a teacher or an administrator in a teacher shortage area identified by the department of education or in a charter school or as a mentor for new classroom teachers; provided that: (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and (C) The department of education or charter school shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability." SECTION 8. Section 206E-34, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall: (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the cultural public market; (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [and agencies]: (A) The department of agriculture; (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism; (C) The department of land and natural resources; and (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; [and (E) The Hawaii tourism authority;] (3) Consider and determine the propriety of using public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market; (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market." SECTION 9. Section 225P-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The commission shall include the following members: (1) The chairs of the standing committees of the legislature with subject matter jurisdiction encompassing environmental protection and land use; (2) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources or the chairperson's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission; (3) The director of the office of planning and sustainable development or the director's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission; (4) The director of business, economic development, and tourism or the director's designee; [(5) The chairperson of the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority or the chairperson's designee; (6)] (5) The chairperson of the board of agriculture or the chairperson's designee; [(7)] (6) The chief executive officer of the office of Hawaiian affairs or the officer's designee; [(8)] (7) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission or the chairperson's designee; [(9)] (8) The director of transportation or the director's designee; [(10)] (9) The director of health or the director's designee; [(11)] (10) The adjutant general or the adjutant general's designee; [(12)] (11) The chairperson of the board of education or the chairperson's designee; [(13)] (12) The directors of each of the county planning departments, or the directors' designees; and [(14)] (13) The manager of the coastal zone management program." SECTION 10. Section 237-24.75, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§237-24.75 Additional exemptions. In addition to the amounts exempt under section 237-24, this chapter shall not apply to: (1) Amounts received as a beverage container deposit collected under chapter 342G, part VIII; (2) Amounts received by the operator of the Hawaii convention center for reimbursement of costs or advances made pursuant to a contract with the [Hawaii tourism authority under section 201B‑7;] office of tourism and destination management under subsection 201-C(c); and (3) Amounts received by a professional employer organization that is registered with the department of labor and industrial relations pursuant to chapter 373L, from a client company equal to amounts that are disbursed by the professional employer organization for employee wages, salaries, payroll taxes, insurance premiums, and benefits, including retirement, vacation, sick leave, health benefits, and similar employment benefits with respect to covered employees at a client company; provided that this exemption shall not apply to amounts received by a professional employer organization after: (A) Notification from the department of labor and industrial relations that the professional employer organization has not fulfilled or maintained the registration requirements under this chapter; or (B) A determination by the department that the professional employer organization has failed to pay any tax withholding for covered employees or any federal or state taxes for which the professional employer organization is responsible. As used in this paragraph, "professional employer organization", "client company", and "covered employee" shall have the meanings provided in section 373L-1." SECTION 11. Section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) Except for the revenues collected pursuant to section 237D-2(e), revenues collected under this chapter shall be distributed in the following priority, with the excess revenues to be deposited into the general fund: (1) $1,500,000 shall be allocated to the Turtle Bay conservation easement special fund beginning July 1, 2015, for the reimbursement to the state general fund of debt service on reimbursable general obligation bonds, including ongoing expenses related to the issuance of the bonds, the proceeds of which were used to acquire the conservation easement and other real property interests in Turtle Bay, Oahu, for the protection, preservation, and enhancement of natural resources important to the State, until the bonds are fully amortized; (2) $11,000,000 shall be allocated to the convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H; (3) An allocation shall be deposited into the tourism emergency special fund, established in section [201B-10,] 201-J, in a manner sufficient to maintain a fund balance of $5,000,000 in the tourism emergency special fund; and (4) $3,000,000 shall be allocated to the special land and development fund established under section 171-19; provided that the allocation shall be expended in accordance with the Hawaii tourism [authority] authority's 2020-2025 strategic plan for: (A) The protection, preservation, maintenance, and enhancement of natural resources, including beaches, important to the visitor industry; (B) Planning, construction, and repair of facilities; and (C) Operation and maintenance costs of public lands, including beaches, connected with enhancing the visitor experience. All transient accommodations taxes shall be paid into the state treasury each month within ten days after collection and shall be kept by the state director of finance in special accounts for distribution as provided in this subsection." SECTION 12. Act 231, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005, section 2, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall: (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the public market; (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [or agencies:]: (A) The department of agriculture; (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism; (C) The department of land and natural resources; and (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; [and (E) The Hawaii tourism authority;] (3) Consider and determine the propriety of utilizing public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market; (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market." SECTION 13. Chapter 201B, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed. SECTION 14. Sections 6E-18, 23-13, 23-76, 46-11, and 171-173, Hawaii Revised Statutes, are amended by substituting the term "the office of tourism and destination management", or similar term, wherever the term "Hawaii tourism authority", or similar term, appears, as the context requires. SECTION 15. All rights, powers, functions, and duties of the Hawaii tourism authority are transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism. SECTION 16. All employees who occupy civil service positions and whose functions are transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism by this Act shall retain their civil service status, whether permanent or temporary. Employees shall be transferred without loss of salary, seniority (except as prescribed by applicable collective bargaining agreements), retention points, prior service credit, any vacation and sick leave credits previously earned, and other rights, benefits, and privileges, in accordance with state personnel laws and this Act; provided that the employees possess the minimum qualifications and public employment requirements for the class or position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable civil service and compensation laws. Any employee who, prior to this Act, is exempt from civil service and is transferred as a consequence of this Act may retain the employee's exempt status, but shall not be appointed to a civil service position as a consequence of this Act. An exempt employee who is transferred by this Act shall not suffer any loss of prior service credit, vacation or sick leave credits previously earned, or other employee benefits or privileges as a consequence of this Act; provided that the employees possess legal and public employment requirements for the position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable employment and compensation laws. The director of the department of business, economic development, and tourism may prescribe the duties and qualifications of these employees and fix their salaries without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes. SECTION 17. All appropriations, records, equipment, machines, files, supplies, contracts, books, papers, documents, maps, and other personal property heretofore made, used, acquired, or held by the Hawaii tourism authority relating to the functions transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism shall be transferred with the functions to which they relate. SECTION 18. All rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material adopted or developed by the Hawaii tourism authority to implement provisions of the Hawaii Revised Statutes that are made applicable to the office of tourism and destination management by this Act, shall remain in full force and effect until amended or repealed by the department of business, economic development, and tourism pursuant to chapter 91, Hawaii Revised Statutes. In the interim, every reference to the Hawaii tourism authority or the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority in those rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material is amended to refer to the office of tourism and destination management and the director of the department of business, economic development, and tourism, as appropriate. SECTION 19. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $50,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for the establishment, administration, and operation of the office of tourism and destination management. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 20. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $28,500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to be deposited into the convention center enterprise special fund. SECTION 21. There is appropriated out of the convention center enterprise special fund the sum of $28,500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility; the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items; for any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and for marketing the convention center facility. The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 22. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $140,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to fund one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrator position in the office of tourism and destination management for the day-to-day operations of the office. The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act. SECTION 23. In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act. SECTION 24. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 25. This Act shall take effect on January 6, 2050; provided that sections 19 through 21 of this Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided further that changes made to section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall not be repealed when that section is repealed and reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 5 of Act 229, Session Laws of Hawaii 2021.
4848
49- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the Hawaii tourism authority has failed to effectively execute its duties to manage the tourism marketing plan for the State.
49+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the Hawaii tourism authority has failed to effectively execute its duties and functions manage the tourism marketing plan for the State.
5050
51- In 2021, the legislature repealed the Hawaii tourism authority's exemption from the Hawaii public procurement code through Act 1, Special Session Laws of Hawaii 2021. As a result, all procurements by the Hawaii tourism authority must comply with the Hawaii public procurement code.
51+ In 2021, the legislature repealed the Hawaii tourism authority's exemption from the State procurement code through Act 1, Special Session Laws of Hawaii 2021. As a result, all procurements by the Hawaii tourism authority must comply with the state procurement code.
5252
53- Due to mismanagement by the Hawaii tourism authority, the award of a $34,000,000 contract for the marketing of Hawaii as a tourism destination to the United States major market area has been in a state of uncertainty since 2021. This situation has been widely publicized and has demonstrated the Hawaii tourism authority's noncompliance with the Hawaii public procurement code.
53+ Due to the mismanagement by the Hawaii tourism authority, the award of a $34,000,000 contract for the marketing of Hawaii as a tourism destination to the United States major market area has been in limbo since 2021. This situation has been widely publicized and has demonstrated the Hawaii tourism authority's noncompliance with the state procurement code.
5454
55- The legislature finds that it is necessary and appropriate to dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority.
55+ The legislature additionally finds that, prior to the establishment of the Hawaii tourism authority, the department of business, economic development, and tourism managed the tourism marketing contracts for the State. To re-establish public confidence in the State procurement process, the legislature finds that it is necessary and appropriate to dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority and transfer its duties and functions to the department of business, economic development, and tourism.
5656
5757 Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
5858
59- (1) Establish an office of tourism and destination management that will be governed by a nine-member board of directors consisting of:
60-
61- (A) A member from the county of Hawaii;
62-
63- (B) A member from the county of Maui;
64-
65- (C) A member from the county of Kauai;
66-
67- (D) A member from the city and county of Honolulu;
68-
69- (E) A member from the hospitality industry;
70-
71- (F) A member from the airline industry;
72-
73- (G) A member from the retail industry; and
74-
75- (H) A member with a background in Hawaiian culture; and
76-
77- (I) A member with a background in agriculture;
59+ (1) Establish an office of tourism and destination management within the department of business, economic development, and tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management;
7860
7961 (2) Transfer the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii tourism authority to the office of tourism and destination management;
8062
8163 (3) Require the office of tourism and destination management to implement certain county destination management action plans;
8264
8365 (4) Dissolve the Hawaii tourism authority; and
8466
8567 (5) Appropriate funds.
8668
8769 SECTION 2. Chapter 201, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new part to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
8870
8971 "Part . OFFICE OF TOURISM AND DESTINATION MANAGEMENT
9072
9173 §201-A Definitions. As used in this part:
9274
75+ "Administrator" means the administrator of tourism and destination management.
76+
9377 "Agency" means any agency, department, authority, board, commission, the University of Hawaii, or any other unit of the State or its political subdivisions.
9478
9579 "Best practice destination management" means a holistic process that ensures that tourism adds value to the economy, social fabric, and ecology of communities.
9680
9781 "Convention center facility" or "convention center" means the Hawaii Convention Center.
9882
99- "Executive director" means the executive director of tourism and destination management.
83+ "Director" means the director of business, economic development, and tourism.
10084
10185 "Hawaii brand" means the programs that collectively differentiate the Hawaii experience from other destinations.
10286
10387 "Office" means the office of tourism and destination management established under section 201-B.
10488
105- "Regenerative tourism" means a Hawaiian cultural heritage business model that is community-based with cultural development strategies and implements an innovative economic development plan to link consumers and a Hawaiian sense of place through holistic efforts to:
89+ "Regenerative tourism" means tourism that focuses on reducing the harm associated with tourism, and restoring the natural environment from the harm already done by tourism, through collective holistic efforts to:
10690
10791 (1) Make net positive contributions;
10892
10993 (2) Create conditions that allow communities to flourish; and
11094
11195 (3) Improve destinations for current and future generations for the well-being of the environment, residents, indigenous communities, and visitors.
11296
113- §201-B Office of tourism and destination management; establishment; responsibilities. (a) There is established within the department of business, economic development, and tourism for administrative purposes the office of tourism and destination management to:
97+ §201-B Office of tourism and destination management; establishment; responsibilities. (a) There is established within the department an office of tourism and destination management to:
11498
11599 (1) Create, design, and implement a long-range strategic plan for tourism in Hawaii;
116100
117101 (2) Grow and enhance the tourism industry in the State; provided that the office's initiatives shall follow best practice destination management practices and integrate regenerative tourism;
118102
119103 (3) Conduct strategic research through contractual services with the University of Hawaii or any qualified agency or persons that target social, economic, cultural, and environmental aspects of tourism development in the State;
120104
121105 (4) Provide technical or other assistance to agencies and private industry upon request;
122106
123107 (5) Focus on perpetuating the uniqueness of the Native Hawaiian culture and community, and their significance to the quality of the visitor experience, by ensuring that:
124108
125109 (A) The Hawaiian culture is accurately portrayed by Hawaii's visitor industry;
126110
127111 (B) Hawaiian language is supported and normalized as an official language of the State as well as the foundation of the host culture that attracts visitors to Hawaii;
128112
129113 (C) Hawaiian cultural practitioners and cultural sites that give value to Hawaii's heritage are supported, nurtured, and engaged in sustaining the visitor industry; and
130114
131115 (D) A Native Hawaiian cultural education and training program is provided for the members of the visitor industry workforce who have direct contact with visitors; and
132116
133117 (6) Review annually the expenditure of public funds by any visitor industry organization that contracts with the office to implement tourism promotion, development, and management and make recommendations necessary to ensure the effective use of the funds for the development and management of tourism.
134118
135119 (b) There is established within the office of tourism and destination management:
136120
137- (1) A tourism and marketing branch that shall implement integrated marketing efforts that positively portray Hawaii with a focus on its people and culture;
121+ (1) A tourism and marketing branch to carry out the duties and functions of the office relating to tourism and marketing;
138122
139123 (2) A convention center branch to manage the convention center and administer the convention center enterprise special fund; and
140124
141- (3) A destination management branch that shall develop and implement a plan that is inclusive of all islands and promotes a dignified and healthy relationship with the State's natural resources and Hawaiian culture.
125+ (3) A destination management branch to deliver and administer programs that support best practice destination management in the State.
142126
143- (c) The office shall be headed by a board of directors that shall consist of nine members to be appointed by the governor as provided in section 26-34; provided that:
144-
145- (1) One member shall reside in the county of Hawaii;
146-
147- (2) One member shall reside in the county of Maui;
148-
149- (3) One member shall reside in county of Kauai;
150-
151- (4) One member shall reside in city and county of Honolulu;
152-
153- (5) One member shall represent the hospitality industry;
154-
155- (6) One member shall represent the airline industry;
156-
157- (7) One member shall represent the retail industry;
158-
159- (8) One member shall have a background in Hawaiian culture; and
160-
161- (9) One member shall have with a background in agriculture.
162-
163-The board of directors shall elect a chairperson from among the members. The members shall serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for expenses, including traveling expenses, necessary for the performance of their duties.
164-
165- (d) There shall be an executive director of tourism and destination management who shall:
166-
167- (1) Be appointed and may be removed by the board of directors;
168-
169- (2) Report to the board of directors;
170-
171- (3) Have knowledge, experience, and expertise in the areas of accommodations, transportation, retail, entertainment, Hawaiian culture, and agricultural lands;
172-
173- (4) Be responsible for the day-to-day operations of the office; and
174-
175- (5) Not be subject to chapter 76.
127+ (c) There shall be an administrator of tourism and destination management, who shall be appointed, and may be removed by the director, and who shall have knowledge, experience, and expertise in the area of accommodations, transportation, retail, entertainment, or attractions. The administrator shall be responsible for the day-to-day operations of the office. The administrator shall report to the director. The administrator shall, in the absence of the director, have all the duties and responsibilities of the director, and shall report directly to the governor. The administrator shall not be subject to chapter 76.
176128
177129 §201-C Powers and functions, generally. (a) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office may:
178130
179131 (1) Sue and be sued;
180132
181133 (2) Make and alter bylaws for its organization and internal management;
182134
183135 (3) Procure insurance against any loss in connection with its property and other assets and operations in amounts and from insurers as it deems desirable;
184136
185137 (4) Contract for or accept revenues, compensation, proceeds, and gifts or grants in any form from any public agency or any other source;
186138
187139 (5) Design, coordinate, and implement state policies and directions for tourism and related activities taking into account the economic, social, cultural, and physical impacts of tourism on the State, Hawaii's natural environment, areas frequented by visitors, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism;
188140
189141 (6) Have a permanent and strong focus on Hawaii brand management;
190142
191143 (7) Coordinate all agencies and engage the private sector in the development of tourism-related activities and resources;
192144
193145 (8) Work to eliminate or reduce barriers to travel by providing a positive and competitive business environment, including coordination with the department of transportation on issues affecting airlines and air route development;
194146
195147 (9) Market and promote sports-related and entertainment-related activities and events;
196148
197149 (10) Coordinate the development of new products with the counties and other persons in the public sector and private sector, including the development of sports, cultural, health and wellness, education, technology, agriculture, and environmental tourism;
198150
199151 (11) Establish:
200152
201153 (A) A public information and educational program to inform the public of tourism and tourism-related problems; and
202154
203155 (B) A program to monitor, investigate, and respond to complaints about problems resulting directly or indirectly from the tourism industry and taking appropriate action as necessary;
204156
205157 (12) Encourage and engage in the development of tourism education, training, and career counseling programs;
206158
207159 (13) Develop and implement emergency measures to respond to any adverse effects on the tourism industry, pursuant to section 201-I;
208160
209161 (14) Set and collect rents, fees, charges, or other payments for the lease, use, occupancy, or disposition of the convention center facility without regard to chapter 91;
210162
211163 (15) Notwithstanding chapter 171, acquire, lease as lessee or lessor, own, rent, hold, and dispose of the convention center facility in the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties under this part;
212164
213165 (16) Acquire by purchase, lease, or otherwise, and develop, construct, operate, own, manage, repair, reconstruct, enlarge, or otherwise effectuate, either directly or through developers, a convention center facility; and
214166
215167 (17) Adopt rules in accordance with chapter 91 with respect to its projects, operations, properties, and facilities.
216168
217- (b) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office, through the executive director may:
169+ (b) Except as otherwise limited by this part, the office
170+
171+may, through the director:
218172
219173 (1) Make and execute contracts and all other instruments necessary or convenient for the exercise of its powers and functions under this part; provided that the office may enter into contracts and agreements for a period of up to five years, subject to the availability of funds; provided further that the office may enter into agreements for the use of the convention center facility for a period of up to ten years;
220174
221175 (2) Represent the office in communications with the governor and the legislature;
222176
223- (3) Provide for the appointment of officers, agents, a sports coordinator, and employees, prescribing their duties and qualifications, and fixing their salaries, without regard to chapters 76 and 78, if funds have been appropriated by the legislature and allotted as provided by law;
177+ (3) Provide for the appointment of an administrator, officers, agents, a sports coordinator, and employees, prescribing their duties and qualifications, and fixing their salaries, without regard to chapters 76 and 78, if funds have been appropriated by the legislature and allotted as provided by law;
224178
225179 (4) Purchase supplies, equipment, or furniture;
226180
227181 (5) Allocate the space or spaces that are to be occupied by the office and appropriate staff;
228182
229183 (6) Engage the services of qualified persons to implement the State's strategic tourism management plan or portions thereof as determined by the office; and
230184
231185 (7) Engage the services of consultants on a contractual basis for rendering professional and technical assistance and advice.
232186
233187 (c) The office may enter into contracts and agreements that include the following:
234188
235189 (1) Tourism promotion, development, and management;
236190
237191 (2) Product development and diversification issues focused on visitors;
238192
239- (3) Promotion, development, and coordination of sportsrelated and entertainment-related activities and events;
193+ (3) Promotion, development, and coordination of sports-related and entertainment-related activities and events;
240194
241195 (4) Promotion of Hawaii, through a coordinated statewide effort, as a place to do business, including high technology business, and as a business destination;
242196
243197 (5) Reduction of barriers to travel;
244198
245199 (6) Marketing, management, use, operation, or maintenance of the convention center facility, including the purchase or sale of goods or services, logo items, concessions, sponsorships, and license agreements, or any use of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise; provided that contracts issued pursuant to this paragraph for the marketing of all uses of the convention center facility may be issued separately from the management, use, operation, or maintenance of the facility;
246200
247201 (7) Tourism research, market development-related research, and statistics to:
248202
249203 (A) Measure and analyze tourism trends;
250204
251205 (B) Provide information and research to assist in the development and implementation of state tourism policy; and
252206
253207 (C) Provide tourism information on:
254208
255209 (i) Visitor arrivals, visitor characteristics, and expenditures;
256210
257211 (ii) The number of transient accommodation units available, occupancy rates, and room rates;
258212
259213 (iii) Airline-related data, including seat capacity and number of flights;
260214
261215 (iv) The economic, social, and physical impacts of tourism on the State; and
262216
263217 (v) The effects of the office's strategic tourism management plan on the measures of effectiveness developed pursuant to section 201-D; and
264218
265219 (8) Any and all other activities necessary to carry out the intent of this part.
266220
267221 (d) The office may delegate to staff the responsibility for soliciting, awarding, and executing contracts and for monitoring and facilitating any and all contracts and agreements developed in accordance with subsection (c).
268222
269223 (e) Where public disclosure of information gathered or developed by the office may place a business at a competitive disadvantage or may impair or frustrate the office's ability to either compete as a visitor destination or obtain or utilize information for a legitimate government function, the office may withhold from public disclosure competitively sensitive information, including:
270224
271225 (1) Completed survey forms and questionnaire forms;
272226
273227 (2) Coding sheets; and
274228
275229 (3) Database records of the information.
276230
277231 (f) The office shall do any and all things necessary to carry out its purposes, to exercise the powers and responsibilities given in this part, and to perform other functions required or authorized by law.
278232
279233 (g) The powers and functions granted to and exercised by the office under this part are declared to be public and governmental functions, exercised for a public purpose, and matters of public necessity.
280234
281- §201-D Strategic tourism management plan; measures of effectiveness. (a) The office shall develop a strategic tourism management plan that promotes tourism marketing, complies with best practice destination management, and promotes regenerative tourism. The plan shall be a single, comprehensive document that shall be updated annually and include the following:
235+ §201-D Strategic tourism management plan; measures of effectiveness. (a) The office shall be responsible for developing a strategic tourism management plan that promotes tourism marketing, complies with best practice destination management, and promotes regenerative tourism. The plan shall be a single, comprehensive document that shall be updated annually and include the following:
282236
283237 (1) Statewide Hawaii brand management efforts and programs;
284238
285239 (2) Targeted markets;
286240
287241 (3) Efforts to enter into Hawaii brand management projects that make effective use of cooperative programs;
288242
289243 (4) Program performance goals and targets that can be monitored as market gauges and used as attributes to evaluate the office's programs; and
290244
291245 (5) The office's guidance and direction for the development and coordination of promotional and marketing programs that build and promote the Hawaii brand, which shall be implemented through county contracts and agreements with destination marketing organizations or other qualified organizations, including:
292246
293247 (A) Target markets and the results being sought;
294248
295249 (B) Key performance indicators; and
296250
297251 (C) Private sector collaborative or cooperative efforts that may be required.
298252
299253 (b) In accordance with subsection (a), the office shall develop measures of effectiveness to assess the overall benefits and effectiveness of the strategic tourism management plan and include documentation of the progress of the strategic tourism management plan toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals.
300254
301255 §201-E Destination management action plan; objectives; county destination management action plans. To meet the destination management objectives for each county, the office shall perform the actions specified in each of the following three-year plans:
302256
303257 (1) Oahu destination management action plan;
304258
305259 (2) Maui Nui destination management action plan;
306260
307261 (3) Hawaii island destination management action plan; and
308262
309263 (4) Kauai destination management action plan,
310264
311265 during the specified phases.
312266
313267 §201-F Assistance by state and county agencies; advisory group. (a) Any state or county agency may render services upon request of the office.
314268
315- (b) The office may establish an advisory group that may meet monthly or as often as the office deems necessary and may include the executive director, director of transportation, chairperson of the board of land and natural resources, chairperson of the board of trustees of the office of Hawaiian affairs, executive director of the state foundation on culture and the arts, and chair of the travel industry management advisory council of the University of Hawaii to advise the office on matters relating to their respective departments or agency in the preparation and execution of suggested:
269+ (b) The office may establish an advisory group that may meet monthly or as the office deems necessary and may include the director, director of transportation, chair of the board of land and natural resources, chairperson of the board of trustees of the office of Hawaiian affairs, executive director of the state foundation on culture and the arts, and chair of the school of travel industry management of the University of Hawaii to advise the office on matters relating to their respective departments or agency in the preparation and execution of suggested:
316270
317271 (1) Measures to respond to tourism emergencies pursuant to section 201-I;
318272
319273 (2) Programs for the management, improvement, and protection of Hawaii's natural environment and other areas frequented by visitors and residents;
320274
321275 (3) Measures to address issues affecting airlines, air routes, and barriers to travel to Hawaii;
322276
323277 (4) Programs to perpetuate the culture of Hawaii and engage local communities to sustain and preserve the Native Hawaiian culture; and
324278
325279 (5) Programs that include tourism marketing, best practice destination management, and regenerative tourism as part of an overall strategic tourism management plan.
326280
327281 §201-G Applicability of Hawaii public procurement code; convention center contractor; construction contracts. The construction contracts for the maintenance of the convention center facility by the private contractor that operates the convention center, by its direct or indirect receipt of, and its expenditure of, public funds from the department or the office, or both, shall be subject to part III of chapter 103D.
328282
329283 §201-H Convention center enterprise special fund. (a) There is established in the state treasury the convention center enterprise special fund, into which shall be deposited:
330284
331285 (1) A portion of the revenues from the transient accommodations tax, as provided by section 237D-6.5;
332286
333287 (2) All revenues or moneys derived from the operations of the convention center to include all revenues from the food and beverage service, all revenues from the parking facilities or from any concession, and all revenues from the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or any other items offered for purchase at the convention center;
334288
335289 (3) Private contributions, interest, compensation, gross or net revenues, proceeds, or other moneys derived from any source or for any purpose arising from the use of the convention center facility; and
336290
337- (4) Appropriations by the legislature for marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(6).
291+ (4) Appropriations by the legislature for marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(7).
338292
339293 (b) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund shall be used by the office for:
340294
341295 (1) The payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility;
342296
343297 (2) The sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items;
344298
345299 (3) Any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and
346300
347- (4) Marketing the facility pursuant to section 201C(c)(6).
301+ (4) Marketing the facility pursuant to section 201-C(c)(7).
348302
349303 (c) Moneys in the convention center enterprise special fund may be:
350304
351305 (1) Placed in interest-bearing accounts; provided that the depository in which the money is deposited furnishes security as provided in section 38-3; or
352306
353- (2) Otherwise invested by the office until the time the moneys may be needed; provided that the office shall limit its investments to those listed in section 3621.
307+ (2) Otherwise invested by the office until the time the moneys may be needed; provided that the office shall limit its investments to those listed in section 36-21.
354308
355309 All interest accruing from investment of the moneys shall be credited to the convention center enterprise special fund.
356310
357- §201-I Tourism emergency. (a) If the executive director determines that the occurrence of a world conflict, terrorist threat, national or global economic crisis, natural disaster, outbreak of disease, or other catastrophic event adversely affects Hawaii's tourism industry by resulting in a substantial interruption in the commerce of the State and adversely affecting the welfare of its people, the executive director shall submit a request to the governor to declare that a tourism emergency exists.
311+ §201-I Tourism emergency. (a) If the director determines that the occurrence of a world conflict, terrorist threat, national or global economic crisis, natural disaster, outbreak of disease, or other catastrophic event adversely affects Hawaii's tourism industry by resulting in a substantial interruption in the commerce of the State and adversely affecting the welfare of its people, the director shall submit a request to the governor to declare that a tourism emergency exists.
358312
359313 (b) Upon declaration by the governor that a tourism emergency exists pursuant to subsection (a), the office shall develop and implement measures to respond to the tourism emergency, including providing assistance to visitors during the emergency; provided that any tourism emergency response measure implemented pursuant to this subsection shall not include any provision that would adversely affect the organized labor force in tourism-related industries. With respect to a national or global economic crisis only, in addition to the governor's declaration of the existence of a tourism emergency, no action in response to the tourism emergency declaration may be taken by the office without the governor's express approval.
360314
361- §201-J Tourism emergency special fund. (a) There is established outside the state treasury a tourism emergency special fund to be administered by the executive director, into which shall be deposited the revenues prescribed by section 237D‑6.5(b) and all investment earnings credited to the assets of the fund.
315+ §201-J Tourism emergency special fund. (a) There is established outside the state treasury a tourism emergency special fund to be administered by the director, into which shall be deposited the revenues prescribed by section 237D‑6.5(b) and all investment earnings credited to the assets of the fund.
362316
363317 (b) Moneys in the special fund shall be used exclusively to provide for the development and implementation of emergency measures to respond to any tourism emergency pursuant to section 201-I, including providing emergency assistance to visitors during the tourism emergency.
364318
365- (c) Use of the special fund, consistent with subsection (b), shall be provided for in articles, bylaws, resolutions, or other instruments executed by the executive director.
319+ (c) Use of the special fund, consistent with subsection (b), shall be provided for in articles, bylaws, resolutions, or other instruments executed by the director as administrator for the special fund.
366320
367321 §201-K Exemption from taxation. All revenues and receipts derived by the office from any project or a project agreement or other agreement pertaining thereto shall be exempt from all state taxation. Any right, title, and interest of the office in any project shall also be exempt from all state taxation. Except as otherwise provided by law, the interest of a qualified person or other user of a project or a project agreement or other agreements related to a project shall not be exempt from taxation to a greater extent than it would be if the costs of the project were directly financed by the qualified person or user.
368322
369- §201-L Private attorneys. (a) The executive director may appoint or retain by contract one or more attorneys who are independent of the attorney general to provide legal services for the office solely in cases of contract negotiations in which the attorney general lacks sufficient expertise; provided that the independent attorney shall consult and work in conjunction with the designated deputy attorney general assigned to the office.
323+ §201-L Private attorneys. (a) The director may appoint or retain by contract one or more attorneys who are independent of the attorney general to provide legal services for the office solely in cases of contract negotiations in which the attorney general lacks sufficient expertise; provided that the independent attorney shall consult and work in conjunction with the designated deputy attorney general assigned to the office.
370324
371- (b) The executive director may fix the compensation of the attorneys appointed or retained pursuant to this section. Attorneys appointed or retained by contract shall be exempt from chapters 76, 78, and 88.
325+ (b) The director may fix the compensation of the attorneys appointed or retained pursuant to this section. Attorneys appointed or retained by contract shall be exempt from chapters 76, 78, and 88.
372326
373327 §201-M Court proceedings; preferences; venue. (a) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be a party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part, shall be preferred over all other civil cases, except election cases, in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, and shall be heard and determined in preference to all other civil cases pending therein except election cases, irrespective of position on the calendar.
374328
375329 (b) Upon application of counsel to the office, the same preference shall be granted in any action or proceeding questioning the validity of this part in which the office may be allowed to intervene.
376330
377331 (c) Any action or proceeding to which the office, the State, or the county may be party, in which any question arises as to the validity of this part or any portion of this part, or any action of the office may be filed in the circuit court of the circuit where the case or controversy arises, which court is hereby vested with original jurisdiction over the action.
378332
379333 (d) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, declaratory relief from the circuit court may be obtained for any action.
380334
381335 (e) Any party aggrieved by the decision of the circuit court may appeal in accordance with part I of chapter 641 and the appeal shall be given priority.
382336
383- §201-N Annual report. The office shall submit a complete and detailed report of its activities, expenditures, and results, including the progress of the strategic tourism management plan, developed pursuant to section 201-D, toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals, to the governor and the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. The annual report shall include the descriptions and evaluations of programs funded, any contracts and agreements entered into by the office during the preceding calendar year, and any recommendations the office may make."
337+ §201-N Annual report. The office shall submit a complete and detailed report of its activities, expenditures, and results, including the progress of the strategic tourism management plan, developed pursuant to section 201-D, toward achieving the office's strategic plan goals, to the governor and the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session. The annual report shall include the descriptions and evaluations of programs funded, any contracts and agreements entered into by the office during the calendar year, and any recommendations the office may make."
384338
385339 SECTION 3. Section 28-8.3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
386340
387341 1. By amending subsection (a) to read:
388342
389343 "(a) No department of the State other than the attorney general may employ or retain any attorney, by contract or otherwise, for the purpose of representing the State or the department in any litigation, rendering legal counsel to the department, or drafting legal documents for the department; provided that the foregoing provision shall not apply to the employment or retention of attorneys:
390344
391345 (1) By the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, and the Hawaii labor relations board;
392346
393347 (2) By any court or judicial or legislative office of the State; provided that if the attorney general is requested to provide representation to a court or judicial office by the chief justice or the chief justice's designee, or to a legislative office by the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate jointly, and the attorney general declines to provide such representation on the grounds of conflict of interest, the attorney general shall retain an attorney for the court, judicial, or legislative office, subject to approval by the court, judicial, or legislative office;
394348
395349 (3) By the legislative reference bureau;
396350
397351 (4) By any compilation commission that may be constituted from time to time;
398352
399353 (5) By the real estate commission for any action involving the real estate recovery fund;
400354
401355 (6) By the contractors license board for any action involving the contractors recovery fund;
402356
403357 (7) By the office of Hawaiian affairs;
404358
405359 (8) By the department of commerce and consumer affairs for the enforcement of violations of chapters 480 and 485A;
406360
407361 (9) As grand jury counsel;
408362
409363 (10) By the Hawaii health systems corporation, or its regional system boards, or any of their facilities;
410364
411365 (11) By the auditor;
412366
413367 (12) By the office of ombudsman;
414368
415369 (13) By the insurance division;
416370
417371 (14) By the University of Hawaii;
418372
419373 (15) By the Kahoolawe island reserve commission;
420374
421375 (16) By the division of consumer advocacy;
422376
423377 (17) By the office of elections;
424378
425379 (18) By the campaign spending commission;
426380
427381 (19) By the [Hawaii tourism authority, as provided in section 201B-2.5;] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L;
428382
429383 (20) By the division of financial institutions;
430384
431385 (21) By the office of information practices;
432386
433387 (22) By the school facilities authority;
434388
435389 (23) By the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority; or
436390
437391 (24) By a department, if the attorney general, for reasons deemed by the attorney general to be good and sufficient, declines to employ or retain an attorney for a department; provided that the governor waives the provision of this section."
438392
439393 2. By amending subsection (c) to read:
440394
441- "(c) Every attorney employed by any department on a fulltime basis, except an attorney employed by the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, the Hawaii labor relations board, the office of Hawaiian affairs, the Hawaii health systems corporation or its regional system boards, the department of commerce and consumer affairs in prosecution of consumer complaints, insurance division, the division of consumer advocacy, the University of Hawaii, [the Hawaii tourism authority as provided in section 201B-2.5,] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L, the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority, the office of information practices, or as grand jury counsel, shall be a deputy attorney general."
395+ "(c) Every attorney employed by any department on a full-time basis, except an attorney employed by the public utilities commission, the labor and industrial relations appeals board, the Hawaii labor relations board, the office of Hawaiian affairs, the Hawaii health systems corporation or its regional system boards, the department of commerce and consumer affairs in prosecution of consumer complaints, insurance division, the division of consumer advocacy, the University of Hawaii, [the Hawaii tourism authority as provided in section 201B-2.5,] office of tourism and destination management, as provided in section 201-L, the Mauna Kea stewardship and oversight authority, the office of information practices, or as grand jury counsel, shall be a deputy attorney general."
442396
443397 SECTION 4. Section 36-27, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
444398
445399 "(a) Except as provided in this section, and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, from time to time, the director of finance, for the purpose of defraying the prorated estimate of central service expenses of government in relation to all special funds, except the:
446400
447401 (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310;
448402
449403 (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education;
450404
451405 (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii;
452406
453407 (4) Convention center enterprise special fund under section [201B-8;] 201-H;
454408
455409 (5) Special funds established by section 206E-6;
456410
457411 (6) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17;
458412
459413 (7) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109;
460414
461415 (8) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P;
462416
463417 (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards;
464418
465- (10) Universal service fund established under section 26942;
419+ (10) Universal service fund established under section 269-42;
466420
467- (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L3;
421+ (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3;
468422
469423 (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130;
470424
471425 (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5;
472426
473427 (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4;
474428
475429 (15) Glass advance disposal fee established by section 342G-82;
476430
477- (16) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A2163;
431+ (16) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163;
478432
479433 (17) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5;
480434
481435 (18) Solicitation of funds for charitable purposes special fund established by section 467B-15;
482436
483437 (19) Land conservation fund established by section 173A-5;
484438
485439 (20) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5;
486440
487441 (21) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5;
488442
489443 (22) Hawaii cancer research special fund;
490444
491445 (23) Community health centers special fund;
492446
493447 (24) Emergency medical services special fund;
494448
495449 (25) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6;
496450
497451 (26) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43;
498452
499453 (27) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136;
500454
501455 (28) Deposit beverage container deposit special fund under section 342G-104;
502456
503457 (29) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4;
504458
505459 (30) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund under section 346F-4;
506460
507461 (31) Hawaii 3R's school improvement fund under section 302A-1502.4;
508462
509463 (32) After-school plus program revolving fund under section 302A-1149.5;
510464
511- (33) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 32130.2; and
465+ (33) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 321-30.2; and
512466
513- [[](34)[]] Stadium development special fund under section 1093.5,
467+[[](34)[]]Stadium development special fund under section 109-3.5,
514468
515469 shall deduct five per cent of all receipts of all other special funds, which deduction shall be transferred to the general fund of the State and become general realizations of the State. All officers of the State and other persons having power to allocate or disburse any special funds shall cooperate with the director in effecting these transfers. To determine the proper revenue base upon which the central service assessment is to be calculated, the director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 for the purpose of suspending or limiting the application of the central service assessment of any fund. No later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session of the legislature, the director shall report all central service assessments made during the preceding fiscal year."
516470
517471 SECTION 5. Section 36-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
518472
519473 "(a) Each special fund, except the:
520474
521475 (1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310;
522476
523477 (2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education;
524478
525479 (3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii;
526480
527481 (4) Special funds established by section 206E-6;
528482
529483 (5) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17;
530484
531485 (6) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109;
532486
533487 (7) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P;
534488
535489 (8) Convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H;
536490
537491 (9) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards;
538492
539- (10) Universal service fund established under section 26942;
493+ (10) Universal service fund established under section 269-42;
540494
541- (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L3;
495+ (11) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3;
542496
543497 (12) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130;
544498
545499 (13) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5;
546500
547501 (14) Neurotrauma special fund under section 321H-4;
548502
549- (15) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A2163;
503+ (15) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163;
550504
551505 (16) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5;
552506
553507 (17) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5;
554508
555509 (18) Trauma system special fund under section 321-22.5;
556510
557511 (19) Hawaii cancer research special fund;
558512
559513 (20) Community health centers special fund;
560514
561515 (21) Emergency medical services special fund;
562516
563517 (22) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6;
564518
565519 (23) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43;
566520
567521 (24) Nursing facility sustainability program special fund established pursuant to section 346F-4;
568522
569523 (25) Automated victim information and notification system special fund established under section 353-136;
570524
571525 (26) Hospital sustainability program special fund under section 346G-4;
572526
573- (27) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 32130.2; and
527+ (27) Civil monetary penalty special fund under section 321-30.2; and
574528
575- [[](28)[]] Stadium development special fund under section 1093.5,
529+[[](28)[]]Stadium development special fund under section 109-3.5,
576530
577531 shall be responsible for its pro rata share of the administrative expenses incurred by the department responsible for the operations supported by the special fund concerned."
578532
579533 SECTION 6. Section 84-18, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (e) to read as follows:
580534
581535 "(e) Subject to the restrictions imposed in subsections (a) through (d), the following individuals shall not represent any person or business for a fee or other consideration regarding any legislative action or administrative action, as defined in section 97-1, for twelve months after termination from their respective positions:
582536
583537 (1) The governor;
584538
585539 (2) The lieutenant governor;
586540
587541 (3) The administrative director of the State;
588542
589543 (4) The attorney general;
590544
591545 (5) The comptroller;
592546
593547 (6) The chairperson of the board of agriculture;
594548
595549 (7) The director of corrections and rehabilitation;
596550
597551 (8) The director of finance;
598552
599553 (9) The director of business, economic development, and tourism;
600554
601555 (10) The director of commerce and consumer affairs;
602556
603557 (11) The adjutant general;
604558
605559 (12) The superintendent of education;
606560
607561 (13) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission;
608562
609563 (14) The director of health;
610564
611565 (15) The director of human resources development;
612566
613567 (16) The director of human services;
614568
615569 (17) The director of labor and industrial relations;
616570
617571 (18) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources;
618572
619573 (19) The director of law enforcement;
620574
621575 (20) The director of taxation;
622576
623577 (21) The director of transportation;
624578
625579 (22) The president of the University of Hawaii;
626580
627581 (23) The executive administrator of the board of regents of the University of Hawaii;
628582
629583 (24) The administrator of the office of Hawaiian affairs;
630584
631585 (25) The chief information officer;
632586
633587 (26) The executive director of the agribusiness development corporation;
634588
635589 (27) The executive director of the campaign spending commission;
636590
637591 (28) The executive director of the Hawaii community development authority;
638592
639593 (29) The executive director of the Hawaii housing finance and development corporation;
640594
641- (30) The [president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority;] executive director of the office of tourism and destination management;
595+ [(30) The president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority;
642596
643- (31) The executive officer of the public utilities commission;
597+ (31)] (30) The executive officer of the public utilities commission;
644598
645- (32) The state auditor;
599+ [(32)] (31) The state auditor;
646600
647- (33) The director of the legislative reference bureau;
601+ [(33)] (32) The director of the legislative reference bureau;
648602
649- (34) The ombudsman;
603+ [(34)] (33) The ombudsman;
650604
651- (35) The permanent employees of the legislature, other than persons employed in clerical, secretarial, or similar positions;
605+ [(35)] (34) The permanent employees of the legislature, other than persons employed in clerical, secretarial, or similar positions;
652606
653- (36) The administrative director of the courts;
607+ [(36)] (35) The administrative director of the courts;
654608
655- (37) The executive director of the state ethics commission;
609+ [(37)] (36) The executive director of the state ethics commission;
656610
657- (38) The executive officer of the state land use commission;
611+ [(38)] (37) The executive officer of the state land use commission;
658612
659- (39) The executive director of the natural energy laboratory of Hawaii authority;
613+ [(39)] (38) The executive director of the natural energy laboratory of Hawaii authority;
660614
661- (40) The executive director of the Hawaii public housing authority; and
615+ [(40)] (39) The executive director of the Hawaii public housing authority; and
662616
663- (41) The first deputy to the chairperson of the commission on water resource management;
617+ [(41)] (40) The first deputy to the chairperson of the commission on water resource management;
664618
665619 provided that this subsection shall not apply to any person who has held one of the positions listed above only on an interim or acting basis and for a period of less than one hundred eighty-one days."
666620
667621 SECTION 7. Section 88-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (d) to read as follows:
668622
669623 "(d) A retirant may be employed without reenrollment in the system and suffer no loss or interruption of benefits provided by the system or under chapter 87A if the retirant is employed:
670624
671625 (1) As an elective officer pursuant to section 88-42.6(c) or as a member of the legislature pursuant to section 88-73(d);
672626
673627 (2) As a juror or precinct official;
674628
675- (3) As a part-time or temporary employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-43, as a session employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-54.2, as the [president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 201B-2,] executive director of the office of tourism and destination management excluded from membership in the system, or as any other employee expressly excluded by law from membership in the system; provided that:
629+ (3) As a part-time or temporary employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-43, as a session employee excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 88-54.2[, as the president and chief executive officer of the Hawaii tourism authority excluded from membership in the system pursuant to section 201B-2,] or as any other employee expressly excluded by law from membership in the system; provided that:
676630
677631 (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the six calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment; and
678632
679633 (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement;
680634
681635 (4) In a position identified by the appropriate jurisdiction as a labor shortage or difficult-to-fill position; provided that:
682636
683637 (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment;
684638
685639 (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant, prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and
686640
687641 (C) Each employer shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability; or
688642
689643 (5) As a teacher or an administrator in a teacher shortage area identified by the department of education or in a charter school or as a mentor for new classroom teachers; provided that:
690644
691645 (A) The retirant was not employed by the State or a county during the twelve calendar months prior to the first day of reemployment;
692646
693647 (B) No agreement was entered into between the State or a county and the retirant prior to the retirement of the retirant, for the return to work by the retirant after retirement; and
694648
695649 (C) The department of education or charter school shall contribute to the pension accumulation fund the required percentage of the rehired retirant's compensation to amortize the system's unfunded actuarial accrued liability."
696650
697651 SECTION 8. Section 206E-34, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
698652
699653 "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall:
700654
701655 (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the cultural public market;
702656
703657 (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [and agencies]:
704658
705659 (A) The department of agriculture;
706660
707661 (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism;
708662
709- (C) The department of land and natural resources;
663+ (C) The department of land and natural resources; and
710664
711- (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; and
665+ (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; [and
712666
713- (E) The [Hawaii tourism authority;] office of tourism and destination management;
667+ (E) The Hawaii tourism authority;]
714668
715- (3) Consider and determine the propriety of using publicprivate partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market;
669+ (3) Consider and determine the propriety of using public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market;
716670
717671 (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and
718672
719673 (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market."
720674
721675 SECTION 9. Section 225P-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
722676
723677 "(c) The commission shall include the following members:
724678
725679 (1) The chairs of the standing committees of the legislature with subject matter jurisdiction encompassing environmental protection and land use;
726680
727681 (2) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources or the chairperson's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission;
728682
729683 (3) The director of the office of planning and sustainable development or the director's designee, who shall be the co-chair of the commission;
730684
731685 (4) The director of business, economic development, and tourism or the director's designee;
732686
733- (5) The chairperson of the board of directors of the [Hawaii tourism authority] office of tourism and destination management or the chairperson's designee;
687+ [(5) The chairperson of the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority or the chairperson's designee;
734688
735- (6) The chairperson of the board of agriculture or the chairperson's designee;
689+ (6)] (5) The chairperson of the board of agriculture or the chairperson's designee;
736690
737- (7) The chief executive officer of the office of Hawaiian affairs or the officer's designee;
691+ [(7)] (6) The chief executive officer of the office of Hawaiian affairs or the officer's designee;
738692
739- (8) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission or the chairperson's designee;
693+ [(8)] (7) The chairperson of the Hawaiian homes commission or the chairperson's designee;
740694
741- (9) The director of transportation or the director's designee;
695+ [(9)] (8) The director of transportation or the director's designee;
742696
743- (10) The director of health or the director's designee;
697+ [(10)] (9) The director of health or the director's designee;
744698
745- (11) The adjutant general or the adjutant general's designee;
699+ [(11)] (10) The adjutant general or the adjutant general's designee;
746700
747- (12) The chairperson of the board of education or the chairperson's designee;
701+ [(12)] (11) The chairperson of the board of education or the chairperson's designee;
748702
749- (13) The directors of each of the county planning departments, or the directors' designees; and
703+ [(13)] (12) The directors of each of the county planning departments, or the directors' designees; and
750704
751- (14) The manager of the coastal zone management program."
705+ [(14)] (13) The manager of the coastal zone management program."
752706
753707 SECTION 10. Section 237-24.75, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
754708
755709 "§237-24.75 Additional exemptions. In addition to the amounts exempt under section 237-24, this chapter shall not apply to:
756710
757711 (1) Amounts received as a beverage container deposit collected under chapter 342G, part VIII;
758712
759713 (2) Amounts received by the operator of the Hawaii convention center for reimbursement of costs or advances made pursuant to a contract with the [Hawaii tourism authority under section 201B‑7;] office of tourism and destination management under subsection 201-C(c); and
760714
761715 (3) Amounts received by a professional employer organization that is registered with the department of labor and industrial relations pursuant to chapter 373L, from a client company equal to amounts that are disbursed by the professional employer organization for employee wages, salaries, payroll taxes, insurance premiums, and benefits, including retirement, vacation, sick leave, health benefits, and similar employment benefits with respect to covered employees at a client company; provided that this exemption shall not apply to amounts received by a professional employer organization after:
762716
763717 (A) Notification from the department of labor and industrial relations that the professional employer organization has not fulfilled or maintained the registration requirements under this chapter; or
764718
765719 (B) A determination by the department that the professional employer organization has failed to pay any tax withholding for covered employees or any federal or state taxes for which the professional employer organization is responsible.
766720
767721 As used in this paragraph, "professional employer organization", "client company", and "covered employee" shall have the meanings provided in section 373L-1."
768722
769723 SECTION 11. Section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
770724
771725 "(b) Except for the revenues collected pursuant to section 237D-2(e), revenues collected under this chapter shall be distributed in the following priority, with the excess revenues to be deposited into the general fund:
772726
773727 (1) $1,500,000 shall be allocated to the Turtle Bay conservation easement special fund beginning July 1, 2015, for the reimbursement to the state general fund of debt service on reimbursable general obligation bonds, including ongoing expenses related to the issuance of the bonds, the proceeds of which were used to acquire the conservation easement and other real property interests in Turtle Bay, Oahu, for the protection, preservation, and enhancement of natural resources important to the State, until the bonds are fully amortized;
774728
775729 (2) $11,000,000 shall be allocated to the convention center enterprise special fund established under section [201B-8;] 201-H;
776730
777- (3) An allocation shall be deposited into the tourism emergency special fund, established in section [201B10,] 201-J, in a manner sufficient to maintain a fund balance of $5,000,000 in the tourism emergency special fund; and
731+ (3) An allocation shall be deposited into the tourism emergency special fund, established in section [201B-10,] 201-J, in a manner sufficient to maintain a fund balance of $5,000,000 in the tourism emergency special fund; and
778732
779733 (4) $3,000,000 shall be allocated to the special land and development fund established under section 171-19; provided that the allocation shall be expended in accordance with the Hawaii tourism [authority] authority's 2020-2025 strategic plan for:
780734
781735 (A) The protection, preservation, maintenance, and enhancement of natural resources, including beaches, important to the visitor industry;
782736
783737 (B) Planning, construction, and repair of facilities; and
784738
785739 (C) Operation and maintenance costs of public lands, including beaches, connected with enhancing the visitor experience.
786740
787741 All transient accommodations taxes shall be paid into the state treasury each month within ten days after collection and shall be kept by the state director of finance in special accounts for distribution as provided in this subsection."
788742
789743 SECTION 12. Act 231, Session Laws of Hawaii 2005, section 2, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
790744
791745 "(c) The Hawaii community development authority shall:
792746
793747 (1) Designate and develop the state-owned land for the public market;
794748
795- (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [and agencies:]:
749+ (2) Accept, for consideration, input regarding the establishment of the cultural public market from the following departments [or agencies:]:
796750
797751 (A) The department of agriculture;
798752
799753 (B) The department of business, economic development, and tourism;
800754
801- (C) The department of land and natural resources;
755+ (C) The department of land and natural resources; and
802756
803- (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; and
757+ (D) The department of labor and industrial relations; [and
804758
805- (E) The [Hawaii tourism authority;] office of tourism and destination management;
759+ (E) The Hawaii tourism authority;]
806760
807- (3) Consider and determine the propriety of [utilizing] using public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market;
761+ (3) Consider and determine the propriety of utilizing public-private partnerships in the development and operation of the cultural public market;
808762
809763 (4) Develop, distribute, and accept requests for proposals from private entities for plans to develop and operate the cultural public market; and
810764
811765 (5) Ensure that the Hawaiian culture is the featured culture in the cultural public market."
812766
813767 SECTION 13. Chapter 201B, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
814768
815- SECTION 14. Sections 6E-18, 23-13, 23-76, 46-11, and 171173, Hawaii Revised Statutes, are amended by substituting the term "the office of tourism and destination management", or similar term, wherever the term "Hawaii tourism authority", or similar term, appears, as the context requires.
769+ SECTION 14. Sections 6E-18, 23-13, 23-76, 46-11, and 171-173, Hawaii Revised Statutes, are amended by substituting the term "the office of tourism and destination management", or similar term, wherever the term "Hawaii tourism authority", or similar term, appears, as the context requires.
816770
817- SECTION 15. All rights, powers, functions, and duties of the Hawaii tourism authority are transferred to the office of tourism and destination management.
771+ SECTION 15. All rights, powers, functions, and duties of the Hawaii tourism authority are transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism.
818772
819- SECTION 16. All employees who occupy civil service positions and whose functions are transferred to the office of tourism and destination management by this Act shall retain their civil service status, whether permanent or temporary. Employees shall be transferred without loss of salary, seniority (except as prescribed by applicable collective bargaining agreements), retention points, prior service credit, any vacation and sick leave credits previously earned, and other rights, benefits, and privileges, in accordance with state personnel laws and this Act; provided that the employees possess the minimum qualifications and public employment requirements for the class or position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable civil service and compensation laws.
773+ SECTION 16. All employees who occupy civil service positions and whose functions are transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism by this Act shall retain their civil service status, whether permanent or temporary. Employees shall be transferred without loss of salary, seniority (except as prescribed by applicable collective bargaining agreements), retention points, prior service credit, any vacation and sick leave credits previously earned, and other rights, benefits, and privileges, in accordance with state personnel laws and this Act; provided that the employees possess the minimum qualifications and public employment requirements for the class or position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable civil service and compensation laws.
820774
821- Any employee who, prior to this Act, is exempt from civil service and is transferred as a consequence of this Act may retain the employee's exempt status, but shall not be appointed to a civil service position as a consequence of this Act. An exempt employee who is transferred by this Act shall not suffer any loss of prior service credit, vacation or sick leave credits previously earned, or other employee benefits or privileges as a consequence of this Act; provided that the employees possess legal and public employment requirements for the position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable employment and compensation laws. The executive director of the office of tourism and destination management may prescribe the duties and qualifications of these employees and fix their salaries without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes.
775+ Any employee who, prior to this Act, is exempt from civil service and is transferred as a consequence of this Act may retain the employee's exempt status, but shall not be appointed to a civil service position as a consequence of this Act. An exempt employee who is transferred by this Act shall not suffer any loss of prior service credit, vacation or sick leave credits previously earned, or other employee benefits or privileges as a consequence of this Act; provided that the employees possess legal and public employment requirements for the position to which transferred or appointed, as applicable; provided further that subsequent changes in status may be made pursuant to applicable employment and compensation laws. The director of the department of business, economic development, and tourism may prescribe the duties and qualifications of these employees and fix their salaries without regard to chapter 76, Hawaii Revised Statutes.
822776
823- SECTION 17. All appropriations, records, equipment, machines, files, supplies, contracts, books, papers, documents, maps, and other personal property heretofore made, used, acquired, or held by the Hawaii tourism authority relating to the functions transferred to the office of tourism and destination management shall be transferred with the functions to which they relate.
777+ SECTION 17. All appropriations, records, equipment, machines, files, supplies, contracts, books, papers, documents, maps, and other personal property heretofore made, used, acquired, or held by the Hawaii tourism authority relating to the functions transferred to the department of business, economic development, and tourism shall be transferred with the functions to which they relate.
824778
825779 SECTION 18. All rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material adopted or developed by the Hawaii tourism authority to implement provisions of the Hawaii Revised Statutes that are made applicable to the office of tourism and destination management by this Act, shall remain in full force and effect until amended or repealed by the department of business, economic development, and tourism pursuant to chapter 91, Hawaii Revised Statutes.
826780
827- In the interim, every reference to the Hawaii tourism authority or the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority in those rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material is amended to refer to the office of tourism and destination management and the executive director of the office of tourism and destination management, as appropriate.
781+ In the interim, every reference to the Hawaii tourism authority or the board of directors of the Hawaii tourism authority in those rules, policies, procedures, guidelines, and other material is amended to refer to the office of tourism and destination management and the director of the department of business, economic development, and tourism, as appropriate.
828782
829- SECTION 19. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $50,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for the establishment, administration, operation of the office of tourism and destination management and to fund the positions as provided in section 20.
783+ SECTION 19. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $50,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for the establishment, administration, and operation of the office of tourism and destination management.
830784
831- The sums appropriated shall be expended by the office of tourism and destination management for the purposes of this Act.
785+ The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act.
832786
833- SECTION 20. (a) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the office of tourism and destination management shall be organized as provided in this section for fiscal years 2023‑2024 and 2024-2025.
834-
835- (b) The office of tourism and destination management shall be headed by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) executive director position, who shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) assistant executive director position; provided that the executive director shall be paid a salary not to exceed the salary of the director of business, economic development, and tourism. The assistant executive director shall be paid a salary not to exceed ninety per cent of the executive director's salary. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) management analyst position and one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) executive assistant position, who shall report to the assistant executive director.
836-
837- (c) There shall be one full-time (1.0 FTE) equivalent chief financial officer position, who shall report to the assistant executive director. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) budget and fiscal officer position and one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) procurement manager position, who shall report to the chief financial officer. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position, who shall report to the procurement manager. There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position, who shall report to the budget and fiscal officer.
838-
839- (d) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) chief branding, cultural, and marketing officer position, who shall report to the assistant executive director and show shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position. There is established one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) senior brand manager position and one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) senior cultural manager position, who shall report to the chief branding, cultural, and marketing officer. There shall be established three full-time equivalent (3.0 FTE) brand manager positions, who shall report to the senior branding manager. There shall be established one full‑time equivalent (1.0 FTE) cultural specialist position, who shall report to the senior cultural manager.
840-
841- (e) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) director of destination management position, who shall report to the assistant executive director and who shall be assisted by one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrative assistant position. There is established one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) natural resource manager position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Oahu community specialist position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Kauai community specialist position, one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Maui community specialist position, and one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) Hawaii island community specialist position, who shall report to the director of destination management.
842-
843- (f) There shall be one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) director of the convention center position, who shall report to the assistant executive director.
787+ SECTION 20. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $28,500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to be deposited into the convention center enterprise special fund.
844788
845789 SECTION 21. There is appropriated out of the convention center enterprise special fund the sum of $28,500,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 and the same sum or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 for payment of expenses arising from any and all use, operation, maintenance, alteration, improvement, or any unforeseen or unplanned repairs of the convention center, including without limitation the food and beverage service and parking service provided at the convention center facility; the sale of souvenirs, logo items, or other items; for any future major repair, maintenance, and improvement of the convention center facility as a commercial enterprise or as a world class facility for conventions, entertainment, or public events; and for marketing the convention center facility.
846790
847791 The sums appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act.
848792
849- SECTION 22. In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act.
793+ SECTION 22. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $140,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2024-2025 to fund one full-time equivalent (1.0 FTE) administrator position in the office of tourism and destination management for the day-to-day operations of the office.
850794
851- SECTION 23. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
795+ The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of business, economic development, and tourism for the purposes of this Act.
852796
853- SECTION 24. This Act shall take effect on January 6, 2050; provided that sections 19 through 21 of this Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided further that changes made to section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall not be repealed when that section is repealed and reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 5 of Act 229, Session Laws of Hawaii 2021.
797+ SECTION 23. In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act.
854798
855- Report Title: HTA; Board of Directors; Repeal; DBEDT; Office of Tourism and Destination Management; Establishment; Regenerative Tourism; Destination Management Action Plans; Position; Convention Center Enterprise Special Fund; Appropriation Description: Establishes an Office of Tourism and Destination Management within the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management. Transfers the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii Tourism Authority to the Office of Tourism and Destination Management. Requires the Office of Tourism and Destination Management to implement certain county destination management action plans. Dissolves the Hawaii Tourism Authority and the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Appropriates funds. Takes effect 1/6/2050. (SD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
799+ SECTION 24. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
800+
801+ SECTION 25. This Act shall take effect on January 6, 2050; provided that sections 19 through 21 of this Act shall take effect on July 1, 2023; provided further that changes made to section 237D-6.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall not be repealed when that section is repealed and reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 5 of Act 229, Session Laws of Hawaii 2021.
802+
803+ Report Title: Hawaii Tourism Authority; Board of Directors; Repeal; Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism; Office of Tourism and Destination Management; Establishment; Regenerative Tourism; Destination Management Action Plans; Position; Convention Center Enterprise Special Fund; Appropriation Description: Establishes an Office of Tourism and Destination Management within the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management. Transfers the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii Tourism Authority to the Office of Tourism and Destination Management. Requires the Office of Tourism and Destination Management to implement certain county destination management action plans. Dissolves the Hawaii Tourism Authority and the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Appropriates funds. Takes effect 1/6/2050. (SD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
856804
857805
858806
859807
860808
861809 Report Title:
862810
863-HTA; Board of Directors; Repeal; DBEDT; Office of Tourism and Destination Management; Establishment; Regenerative Tourism; Destination Management Action Plans; Position; Convention Center Enterprise Special Fund; Appropriation
811+Hawaii Tourism Authority; Board of Directors; Repeal; Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism; Office of Tourism and Destination Management; Establishment; Regenerative Tourism; Destination Management Action Plans; Position; Convention Center Enterprise Special Fund; Appropriation
864812
865813
866814
867815 Description:
868816
869-Establishes an Office of Tourism and Destination Management within the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management. Transfers the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii Tourism Authority to the Office of Tourism and Destination Management. Requires the Office of Tourism and Destination Management to implement certain county destination management action plans. Dissolves the Hawaii Tourism Authority and the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Appropriates funds. Takes effect 1/6/2050. (SD2)
817+Establishes an Office of Tourism and Destination Management within the Department of Business, Economic Development, and Tourism that encompasses regenerative tourism and best practice destination management. Transfers the functions, duties, appropriations, and positions of the Hawaii Tourism Authority to the Office of Tourism and Destination Management. Requires the Office of Tourism and Destination Management to implement certain county destination management action plans. Dissolves the Hawaii Tourism Authority and the Board of Directors for the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Appropriates funds. Takes effect 1/6/2050. (SD1)
870818
871819
872820
873821
874822
875823
876824
877825 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.