IN 1995, THE ELP LAUNCHED
THE FIRST PROJECT in its Community OutReach and Education
(CORE) program. With a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency and in cooperation with the Native Hawaiian Advisory Council
(NHAC), ELP faculty and students published two handbooks on selected
Hawai‘i environmental and natural resource laws and administrative processes.
In 1995 and 1997, the ELP and NHAC used these books as teaching tools
in a series of community based workshops around the islands. With support
from the Hawai‘i Community Foundation, in 2002, ELP Professor Casey
Jarman produced a videotape and workbook on lawyering skills to assist
community groups in preparing for adjudicatory hearings in front of
Hawai‘i’s state and county land use, natural resource, and environmental
agencies. The materials were presented at workshops throughout the state
and are available on the ELP website. This project represents a collaborative
effort of ELP faculty, students, and local attorneys.
Three years ago, ELP Director Professor Denise Antolini
launched a web project called ‘OHELO, Our Hawai‘i Environmental Law
On-Line. (The ‘ohelo is a small native plant whose berries are a favorite
of Hawai‘i’s state bird, the endangered Nene.) An ongoing student-staffed
project, ‘OHELO brings together for the first time in one easily accessible
site Hawai‘i’s environmental laws, including state, federal, and agency
decisions, as well as research links and recent developments.
As part of their 60-hour pro bono graduation requirement,
ELP students have donated thousands of hours to community projects supervised
by environmental attorneys. Students also participate in our Environmental
Law Clinic. This non-litigation clinic gives students “live” training
in counseling clients that include, for example, environmental and natural
resource agencies seeking advice on developing regulations, private
entities seeking permits, and community groups needing assistance to
participate in administrative agency hearings. ELP’s Colloquia Series
also reaches out to the community by bringing to the School of Law attorneys
and scholars to lecture on “hot topics” in environmental, land use,
and ocean law. This lecture series is well attended by students, faculty,
staff, local attorneys,
campus colleagues, and community advocates, and summaries of the lectures
are posted on the ELP web site for broader public access.
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