Hawaii Revised Statutes
10. Office of Hawaiian Affairs
10-12 Assistant; staff.

§10-12 Assistant; staff. The administrator may employ and retain such officers and employees as may be necessary to carry out the functions of the office. Such officers and employees may be hired without regard to chapter 76, and shall serve at the pleasure of the administrator. Officers and employees of the office of Hawaiian affairs shall be included in any benefit program generally applicable to officers and employees of the State. [L 1979, c 196, pt of §2; am L 1990, c 231, §1; am L 2000, c 253, §150]
Case Notes
Where plaintiff, terminated OHA chief financial officer, claimed that defendants, OHA administrator and trustee, in individual capacities, unlawfully deprived plaintiff of plaintiff's property and liberty without due process of law, in violation of 42 U.S.C. §1983, defendants' motion for summary judgment granted with prejudice as to these claims. 120 F. Supp. 2d 1244.

Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes

Hawaii Revised Statutes

Title 1. General Provisions

10. Office of Hawaiian Affairs

10-1 Declaration of purpose.

10-2 Definitions.

10-3 Purpose of the office.

10-4 Office of Hawaiian affairs; established; general powers.

10-4.5 Authority over disbursements

10-5 Board of trustees; powers and duties.

10-6 General duties of the board.

10-7 Board of trustees.

10-8 Organization; quorum; meeting.

10-9 Salaries; benefit; expenses.

10-9.5 Salary commission; established.

10-10 Administrator; appointment, tenure, removal.

10-11 Salary of the administrator.

10-12 Assistant; staff.

10-13 Appropriations; accounts; reports.

10-13.3 Interim revenue. Notwithstanding the definition of revenue contained in this chapter and the provisions of section 10-13.5, and notwithstanding any claimed invalidity of Act 304, Session Laws of Hawaii 1990, the income and proceeds from the p...

10-13.5 Use of public land trust proceeds.

10-13.6 Public land trust conveyed for the development of housing projects. (a) This section applies to the revenue derived from land of the public land trust as designated in subsection (e) that is conveyed by the department of land and natural reso...

10-14 REPEALED.

10-14.5 Budget preparation and submission; auditing. (a) The budget, six-year program and financial plan, and the variance report of the office of Hawaiian affairs shall be submitted by the board to the legislature and to each member thereof in accor...

10-14.55 Audit and report.

10-14.6 Legislative review. The legislature shall consider the board's proposed program and financial plan; evaluate alternatives to the board's recommendations; and appropriate any general fund portion of the budget and any matching special fund app...

10-15 Annual report.

10-15.5 REPEALED.

10-16 Suits.

10-17 Grants; conditions and qualifications.

10-18 Hui `Imi advisory council.

10-19 Hawaiian registry.

10-20 Taro security; funding.

10-21 Definitions.

10-22 Powers of the board.

10-23 Authorization of office projects and loan programs; issuance of revenue bonds.

10-24 Revenue bond anticipation notes.

10-25 Revenue bonds.

10-25.1 Federal tax-exempt status; preference; protection.

10-25.5 Support facility for variable rate revenue bonds. If revenue bonds issued pursuant to this chapter are issued bearing interest at a rate or rates that vary from time to time or with a right of holders to tender the revenue bonds for purchase,...

10-26 CUSIP numbers.

10-27 Covenants in resolution authorizing revenue bonds.

10-28 Validity of bonds.

10-29 Bonds.

10-30 Payment and security of revenue bonds; revenue bonds not a debt of the State.

10-31 Office of Hawaiian affairs projects and loan programs to be self-supporting.

10-32 Office of Hawaiian affairs projects, loan programs, and bonds exempt from taxation.

10-33 Powers herein, additional to other powers.

10-34 Funding and refunding bonds; authorization and purpose.

10-35 Funding and refunding bonds; principal amount.

10-36 Limitation of authority.

10-41 Training; applicability.

10-42 Training relating to native Hawaiian and Hawaiian traditional and customary rights, natural resources and access rights, and the public trust.