The Maui News

Leaks in HI-5 bottle bill program not being fixed

- TOM YAMACHIKA Tom Yamachika is president of the Tax Foundation of Hawaii.

Just three months ago, the Hawaii

State Auditor released the latest in a series of reports over the years on the Hawaii Deposit

Beverage Container

Program, known as

HI-5. That report, No.

19-08, basically said,

“Look, we’ve issued four audit reports on the program, every two years beginning with 2013. In each of the reports, we rely on the distributo­rs and redemption centers to be honest and police themselves. There is no verificati­on or enforcemen­t. You might think people are honest, but in three out of the four reports we found discrepanc­ies, meaning either that distributo­rs paid the fee on fewer bottles than they distribute­d, or redemption centers asked for and received more money from the state than they were entitled to.”

To illustrate the point, the 2019 report detailed the story of one staff worker who worked for the accounting firm contracted to help with the report. He went to a redemption center, dropped off some glass

bottles, and was paid 61 cents. The redemption center altered the receipt log and received a little more than 69 dollars instead. A few days later, he went to the same redemption center with 3 pounds of plastic containers and was paid $3.95. That receipt log was also altered, with the state paying out 15 bucks.

“The Department of Health has been aware of this flawed payment system since 2006,” the report summary says, “but has done little to address it either with changes to the program or through enforcemen­t inspection­s.”

When the auditor’s report came out, it received attention not only from the local press but also national media. And the Legislatur­e was in session at the time. Wasn’t it a great time to ask the Legislatur­e to give the Department of Health some resources to put financial controls on the program and perhaps throw in the hoosegow some of the bad actors who had been stealing taxpayer money?

When you read the budget summaries from our legislativ­e folks, however, such as blog posts from the House majority on House Bill 2 and on the remaining executive budget, there is no mention about fixing the leaks in our bottle bill program.

And, when perusing the news releases from the Department of Health, the department doesn’t seem to mind publicizin­g red-placard closures of food establishm­ents as examples of its robust inspection­s and enforcemen­t on the Big Island and Molokai, but no mention whatsoever is made of the redemption fraud, even though the auditor gave DOH evidence on a silver platter.

Does DOH just not care about millions of taxpayer dollars possibly being stolen from under their noses? “Fraud is a serious and real risk for this program,” Director of Health Dr. Bruce Anderson stated in a Feb. 21 letter attached to the audit report. Yet we have heard nothing at all about changes to the program or about wrongdoers getting punished.

Maybe this apathy is breeding distrust of the program.

Perhaps if we can clean up this program, we can help to restore confidence in government’s ability to handle money. And bottles.

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