The Mercury News

Mauna Kea to remain sacred

Crews building a giant telescope will remove machinery, vehicles

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher Associated Press

HONOLULU — Constructi­on equipment and vehicles that have sat idle since protesters blocked crews from building a giant telescope are being removed from a mountain that’s considered sacred to some Native Hawaiians.

Protesters who oppose the $1.4 billion Thirty Meter Telescope have been calling for the machinery to be removed after the state Supreme Court earlier this month invalidate­d the project’s permit to build on conservati­on land of the Big Island volcano.

The equipment is coming down sometime Wednesday, telescope officials said.

“We respect the Hawaii Supreme Court decision and, as good neighbors and stewards of the mountain, TMT has begun relocating constructi­on vehicles and equipment from Maunakea,” said a statement from Henry Yang, chair of the TMT Internatio­nal Observator­y Board of Governors.

The court sent the matter back for a new contested-case hearing.

Telescope officials haven’t indicated whether they will pursue a new hearing, which could mean a constructi­on delay of several years.

Mechanics went to the site Tuesday to do maintenanc­e and repairs on vehicles, said Scott Ishikawa, a telescope spokesman.

Protesters have been concerned that the vehicles were leaking, said Kealoha Pisciotta, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit challengin­g the project’s permit.

She said she’s relieved that the equipment will be removed. “Mauna Kea is the burial ground of our ancestors, not a parking lot,” she said.

After the Dec. 2 court ruling voiding the permit, the state attorney general’s office said telescope equipment could remain on the mountain.

A group of universiti­es in California and Canada plan to build the telescope with partners from China, India and Japan.

 ?? CALEB JONES/AP ARCHIVES ?? Kupono Mele-Ana-Kekua, of Kaaawa, Hawaii, blows a conch shell in August near the summit of Mauna Kea on Hawaii's Big Island.
CALEB JONES/AP ARCHIVES Kupono Mele-Ana-Kekua, of Kaaawa, Hawaii, blows a conch shell in August near the summit of Mauna Kea on Hawaii's Big Island.

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