Isle Army recruitment trend mirrors nationwide upswing

http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20100314_Isle_Army_recruitment_trend_mirrors_nationwide_upswing.html

Isle Army recruitment trend mirrors nationwide upswing

The poor economy is downplayed as a factor for enlistment gains

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Mar 14, 2010

For Army recruiters the numbers are up.

“Last year was a banner year for us,” says Maj. Gen. Donald Campbell, head of the U.S. Army Recruiting Command, headquartered at Fort Knox, Ky.

In signing up 93,729 soldiers, Army recruiters recorded 107.1 percent of their goal of 87,500.

In Hawaii the numbers were equally high.

Maj. Brian Blitch, who commands the Honolulu recruiting company, said the 51 active Army and Army Reserve recruiters working out of the federal building surpassed their goal of 658 soldiers by enlisting 675.

Of that number, 481 were signed up for the active Army, while 194 chose the Army Reserve.

So far this year, Army recruiters here are 133 percent ahead of their assigned mission of enlisting 237 new soldiers this quarter.

Campbell, who is completing a two-week tour of the Asia-Pacific area after assuming command 10 months ago, told reporters last week while high unemployment contributes to recruiting, he would rather credit his soldiers and their families for exceeding recruitment goals.

“I don’t like to give the economy a lot of the credit like some of the experts do,” Campbell added. “I give the credit to the noncommissioned officers who are recruiters for us, our Army civilians, contractors and families who tell the Army story and help us recruit.”

Blitch’s company of recruiters in Hawaii ranks sixth out of 244 companies in the Army’s recruiting system.

Besides the economy and the efforts of the recruiters here, Campbell said the “large military presence” in the islands contributes to the success.

“Service to country resonates with young men and women today, and that’s what we are seeing,” he said.

Lt. Col. Rodney Laszlo, professor of military science at the University of Hawaii’s Army ROTC program, said that for the first time in a decade, this year’s commissioning ceremony of 30 new second lieutenants will take place at the Waikiki Shell because the graduating class is so large. The ceremony is May 17. There are actually 40 senior Army ROTC cadets, but some have already been commissioned, he added.

Maui peace activists honored by the ACLU

Congratulations to Mele Stokeberry and Charles Carletta, two leaders in Maui Peace Action, for receiving the Pila Witmarsh Aloha Award!

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http://www.mauinews.com/page/content.detail/id/529100.html?nav=10

Maui activists win ACLU accolades

By LEE IMADA, News

March 1, 2010

Two longtime Maui activists who were honored by the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawai’i this month believe peace in the world may happen “someday.”

“Peace is possible, but it won’t be brought about by military means,” said Charles “Chuck” Carletta. “It will require nonviolent opposition to those who promote war.”

His wife and co-award winner, Mele Stokesberry, doesn’t believe peace is possible in her lifetime, “but we still need to always do everything that may be possible to work for peace,” she said. “Someday, people will be able to see clearly what presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich said, that ‘war is obsolete.’ ”

The husband-and-wife duo, whose activism stretches back to the Vietnam War era, accepted the Pila Whitmarsh Aloha Award “for exceptional volunteers” at the Hawaii ACLU’s Grassroots Celebration luncheon Feb. 20 at the Neal S. Blaisdell Center on Oahu. The award, one of four presented at the event, was established in 1974 and was renamed in 2001 in memory of Whitmarsh, who was popular with volunteers because of his “exceptional kindness and passion for justice,” a news release about the award said.

The Hawaii ACLU, an organization that aims to protect constitutional freedoms, honored Carletta, an assistant professor of business technology at the University of Hawaii Maui College, and Stokesberry, a retired Baldwin High School teacher, for their “meritorious service to the ACLU mission.”

Both are active in the local peace movement with Carletta forming and currently advising the UH-Maui Peace Club and with Stokesberry serving as president of Maui Peace Action. Together, they founded the Maui Peace Education Foundation with its Careers in Peacemaking program, which provides information to high school students about career and college-funding alternatives to military enlistment.

This “peace couple” have been anti-war and social activists for decades.

Stokesberry, who also is involved with The Friends of Haleakala National Park, Maui Ki-Aikido and Somos Amigos Nicaragua, said her activist nature began surfacing in 1980 when as a Spanish teacher she taught a section on the oppression of the poor in Central America. That led to her joining a sanctuary group in California that offered protection for Central American refugees fleeing civil wars in their countries.

She later taught English in Nicaragua, witnessing the Contra war, and traveled to Guatemala, El Salvador, Mexico and Cuba to observe firsthand the effects of American policy.

Her husband’s activism began in 1965 as a student at Sacramento State College in California. Carletta and his friends organized an underground newspaper, “The Student,” that printed views of the Vietnam War – including those in opposition to the war – not found in the school newspaper. During that time in his life, he helped organize a “teach-in,” where three professors spoke out against the war and picketed the downtown Sacramento post office where war draftees boarded buses to the Oakland Induction Terminal.

Like his wife, Carletta also was involved in the sanctuary movement and other protests of U.S. involvement in Guatemala and El Salvador.

He believes that activism brings awareness that the wars “are morally wrong and that U.S. military intervention . . . does not bring peace or democracy but is intended to control people and resources.”

“I believe that these wars will only come to an end when people in our country finally wake up and demand that we stop supporting war and the military-industrial complex,” he said.

In recent years, Carletta and Stokesberry have focused their activism on the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. They got involved in Maui Peace Action and have joined marches, listened to speakers, including Kucinich and the family of Lt. Ehren Watada, who faced a court-martial for declining to deploy to Iraq; and attended films and workshops. The MCC Peace Club was formed during the buildup to the Iraq War and currently has about 40 members, though only about a dozen are active, said Carletta.

“I believe the protest movement in the ’60s and ’70s was effective in bringing an end to the Vietnam War,” he said. “I think this could happen again with Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Stokesberry wanted to make clear that “the peace movement is not anti-soldier” and is concerned about the serious injuries and illnesses with which the nation’s warriors come home.

“We want the troops home and safe,” she said.

For many in the community, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are far away. They focus instead on the day-to-day happenings and problems of their families and have no time for peace activism, Stokesberry said.

“There is nothing to be gained by being frustrated at people who are too busy or stressed by their own lives to be able to look at the bigger picture,” she said. “Most of us begin to be more aware when the grandchild generation becomes a reality in our lives.”

* Lee Imada can be reached at leeimada@mauinews.com.

Soldier on trial for luring child for sex

http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/Global/story.asp?S=12009156

Trial opens for National Guard member accused of trying to lure child for sex

Posted: Feb 18, 2010 2:54 PM Updated: Feb 18, 2010 9:02 PM

By Minna Sugimoto

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Trial is underway for a Hawaii Air National Guard member accused of using the Internet to solicit a child for sex.

Matthew Lewis, 34, is charged with electronic enticement. If convicted, he faces a mandatory 10-year prison term.

It’s been rare for Hawaii jurors to hear this type of case. In the past, many electronic enticement suspects pleaded guilty. But after the legislature created a stiffer punishment for the crime, more and more cases are going to trial.

Detective Sandi Fujitani’s job is to take down child predators on the Internet. She says she was posing as a 14-year-old girl online, and met Matthew Lewis who was using the screen name ML808.

According to the transcripts in evidence:

ML808: “What kind of underwear would you be wearing?”

Undercover officer: “You want me to wear a thong? I have one.”

ML808: “Ok, what color?”

With the help of a representative from the Attorney General’s office, Fujitani read transcripts of the online conversations she says she had with Lewis. The Hawaii Air National Guard member is accused of soliciting sex from the child.

Undercover officer: “Can we go slowly?”

ML808: “Up to you.”

Undercover officer: “Yeah, I guess I’m kind of scared, nervous.”

Undercover officer: “How do I know you’re not going to hurt me?”

ML808: “I won’t. I just want to have fun.”

Prosecutors say the undercover officer repeatedly told Lewis that she was 14 years old.

ML808: “For a 14-year-old, your typing and grammar are good.”

Undercover officer: “Hello? LOL. What you think, private school.”

Officers arrested the suspect at his mother’s karate school at the Chinatown Cultural Plaza in October 2008. Several days earlier, they say he drove from his Waipahu home to the Zippy’s Restaurant in McCully to meet the girl in person.

“At the time of this meeting, had you ever seen ML808’s face during any of the chats?” Albert Cook, deputy attorney general, asked.

“No, I didn’t,” Fujitani replied.

The defense argues that Lewis never intended to hook up with an underage person for sex. Attorney Harrison Kiehm says his client drove into the Zippy’s parking lot, but quickly left without ever getting out of his car.

“Circled the whole lot, to the rear of Zippy’s, back up the side, went towards the front again, slowly drove past the front of Zippy’s, and then exited,” Fujitani described.

The 34-year-old is expected to testify in his own defense on Friday.

U.S. soldier ‘waterboarded’ his own 4 year old daughter

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1249191/Soldier-father-accused-waterboarding-daughter-4-recite-alphabet.html

U.S. soldier ‘waterboarded his own daughter, 4, because she couldn’t recite alphabet’

By Mail Foreign Service

Last updated at 7:12 AM on 08th February 2010

A soldier waterboarded his four-year-old daughter because she was unable to recite her alphabet.

Joshua Tabor admitted to police he had used the CIA torture technique because he was so angry.

As his daughter ‘squirmed’ to get away, Tabor said he submerged her face three or four times until the water was lapping around her forehead and jawline.

Tabor, 27, who had won custody of his daughter only four weeks earlier, admitted choosing the punishment because the girl was terrified of water.

Human rights activists demonstrate waterboarding in front of the Justice Department. A soldier father stands accused of waterboarding his daughter because she couldn't recite the alphabet

Human rights activists demonstrate waterboarding in front of the Justice Department. A soldier father stands accused of waterboarding his daughter because she couldn’t recite the alphabet

The practice of waterboarding was used by the CIA to break Al Qaeda suspects at Guantanamo Bay. Detainees had water poured over their face until they feared they would drown. President Barack Obama has since outlawed the practice.

Tabor, a soldier at the Lewis-McChord base in Tacoma, Washington, was arrested after being seen walking around his neighbourhood wearing a Kevlar military helmet and threatening to break windows.

Police discovered the alleged waterboarding when they went to his home in the Tacoma suburb of Yelm and spoke to his girlfriend.

She told them about the alleged torture and the terrified girl was found hiding in a closet, with bruising on her back and scratch marks on her neck and throat.

Asked how she got the bruises, the girl is said to have replied: ‘Daddy did it.’

During a police interview Tabor allegedly admitted grabbing his daughter, placing her on the kitchen counter and submerging her face into a bowl of water.

Sergeant Rob Carlson said the punishment was carried out because the girl would not recite the alphabet.

Police have not revealed Tabor’s military service, but his base is home to units that have served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Tabor has been charged with assault and ordered to remain on his base and have no contact with his daughter or girlfriend, who has not been named. He is due to appear in court this week.

The girl has been taken into care. Her natural mother lives in Kansas but Tabor had been granted custody by a court.

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http://www.thenewstribune.com/partners/theolympian/story/1054799.html

Anger over alphabet ends in arrest

Charged: Man accused of dunking 4-year-old

JEREMY PAWLOSKI; Staff writer

Published: 02/03/1010:02 am | Updated: 02/05/10 7:49 am

A man is accused of holding his 4-year-old daughter’s head under the water in the kitchen sink at their Yelm home Sunday night because she would not recite the alphabet, according to police and court papers.

The Thurston County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office filed a charge of second-degree assault of a child against Joshua Ryan Tabor, 27, on Tuesday. His arraignment is scheduled for Feb. 16.

According to court records:

Yelm police responded to a disturbance Sunday night after Tabor’s girlfriend reported that Tabor, a Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier, “was irate, intoxicated and walking around the neighborhood with his Kevlar helmet threatening to break windows.”

Tabor’s girlfriend told Yelm police that Tabor beats his 4-year-old daughter and that the child’s back was covered in bruises. The girlfriend reported that the 4-year-old had locked herself in a closet because she was afraid of her father.

The girlfriend also reported that when the child wets herself, Tabor “makes her sit in the urine-soaked clothes” until he gives her permission to change.

The girl spoke to a Yelm officer, and he observed that she “had severe bruising on her entire back,” along with scratch marks and bruising on her neck, throat, chin, arms, legs and buttocks.

She “was asked how she got the bruises and she replied ‘Daddy did it.’”

Asked how or why it happened, the child would not reply, then said, “I don’t know why he did it.”

Tabor spoke to a Yelm police officer and said that he and his girlfriend had “held her down on the counter and submerged her head into the water three or four times until the water came around her forehead and jawline.” He said that she was face-up when her head was in the water. He added that they gave this punishment for the 4-year-old “refusing to say her letters.”

Tabor told police that his daughter is afraid of water “and was squirming around trying to get away from the water. Joshua did not act as though he felt there was anything wrong with this form of punishment.”

Yelm Police Sgt. Rob Carlson confirmed Tuesday that the alleged abuse occurred because the child would not recite her ABCs, according to police reports.

The police investigation has revealed that Tabor has had “serious anger issues in the past” and “has taken anger management classes.”

Tabor was released Monday from the Thurston County Jail after posting $10,000 bail. He is restricted to base at Lewis-McChord as a condition of his release.

He also cannot have contact with his girlfriend or children.

The child has been taken into custody by Child Protective Services, according to a police report.

Carlson said the child’s biological mother lives in Kansas. Yelm police have referred a potential criminal charge against Tabor’s girlfriend to the Thurston County prosecuting attorney, but she was not arrested Sunday night, Carlson said.

Jeremy Pawloski: 360-754-5465

jpawloski@theolympian.com


Exorcising war’s demons, in poetry and prose

http://www.starbulletin.com/news/nyt/20100208_exorcising_wars_demons_in_poetry_and_prose.html

Exorcising war’s demons, in poetry and prose

By Elisabeth Bumiller / New York Times

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Feb 08, 2010

WASHINGTON — Brian Turner was focused on staying alive, not poetry, when he served as an infantry team leader in Iraq. But he quickly saw that his experience — “a year of complete boredom punctuated by these very intense moments” — lent itself to the tautness of verse.

The result was a collection called “Here, Bullet,” with a title poem inspired by Turner’s realization during combat patrols that he was bait to lure the enemy.

If a body is what you want,

then here is bone and gristle and flesh,

1/2hellip 3/4 because here, Bullet,

here is where the world ends, every time.

“Poetry was the perfect vehicle,” said Turner, who had a master’s in fine arts from the University of Oregon before joining the Army. “The page was the place where I could think about what had happened.”

Turner is a literal foot soldier in what might be called the well-written war: a recent outpouring of memoirs, fiction, poetry, blogs and even some readable military reports by combatants in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Soldier-writers have long produced American literature, from Ulysses S. Grant’s memoirs about the Civil War to Norman Mailer’s World War II novel, “The Naked and the Dead,” to Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried,” about Vietnam.

The current group is different. As part of a modern all-volunteer force, they explore the timeless theme of the futility of war — but wars that they for the most part support. The books, many written as rites of passage by members of a highly educated young officer corps, are filled with gore, inept commanders and anguish over men lost in combat, but not questions about the conflicts themselves. “They look at war as an aspect of glory, of finding honor,” said O’Brien, who was drafted for Vietnam in 1968 out of Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn. “It’s almost an old-fashioned, Victorian way of looking at war.”

The writers say one goal is to explain the complexities of the wars — Afghan and Iraqi politics, technology, the counterinsurgency doctrine of protecting local populations rather than just killing bad guys — to a wider audience. Their efforts, embraced by top commanders, have even bled into military reports that stand out for their accessible prose.

“The importance of good official writing is so critical in reaching a broader audience to get people to understand what we’re trying to do,” said Capt. Matt Pottinger, a Marine and former reporter for The Wall Street Journal who is a co-author of the report “Fixing Intel,” an indictment of American intelligence-gathering efforts in Afghanistan released last month. “Even formal military doctrine is well served by a colloquial style of writing.”

The report, overseen by the top military intelligence officer in Afghanistan, Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, is an anecdote-rich argument against intelligence officers who pursue secrets about insurgents but ignore data for winning the war right in front of them — local economics, village politics and tribal power brokers. The report compares the American war in Afghanistan to a political campaign, “albeit a violent one,” and observes, “To paraphrase former Speaker of the House Thomas P. ‘Tip’ O’Neill’s famous quote, ‘all counterinsurgency is local.”‘

Another report, an unreleased Army history about the battle of Wanat in July 2008 — the “Black Hawk Down” of Afghanistan — unfolds in stiffer prose but builds a strong narrative. Written by Douglas R. Cubbison, a military historian at the Army’s Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., the draft report lays bare the failures of an American unit to engage the local population in a village in eastern Afghanistan — “these people, they disgust me,” one soldier is quoted as saying — and graphically tells the story of the firefight that killed nine Americans.

Most of the writing by combatants has been memoirs that bear witness to battles of their own. Craig M. Mullaney, a former Ranger and Army captain, writes in “The Unforgiving Minute” of a 2003 ambush on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border that killed one of his men, Evan W. O’Neill.

“Small-caliber rounds dented the Humvees around me, but it was strangely silent, as if someone had pressed the mute button. … All I could remember were those eyes, glacial-blue, like my brother’s. There’s no way O’Neill’s dead. This wasn’t a game or an exercise or a movie; these were real soldiers with real blood and real families waiting back home. What had I done wrong?”

Mullaney, who has left the Army and is now a Pentagon official handling policy for Central Asia, said he wrote his book in part as catharsis, and as a way of telling Pvt. 1st Class O’Neill’s parents what had happened to their son. “I had a lot of ghosts I was still wrestling with,” he said. “I thought by writing I could make some sense of this jumble of experiences and memories and doubts and fears.”

Nathaniel C. Fick, a former Marine officer who wrote of taking heavy fire during the 2003 invasion of Iraq in “One Bullet Away,” had his own troubles coming home. Fick, now the chief executive of the Center for a New American Security, a military research group in Washington, also appears in Evan Wright’s book (and the HBO miniseries) “Generation Kill,” based on Wright’s experience as a Rolling Stone reporter embedded with Fick’s platoon.

Fick, a Dartmouth graduate who applied to graduate school after leaving the Marines, describes getting a call from an admissions officer.

“‘Mr. Fick, we read your application and liked it very much. But a member of our committee read Evan Wright’s story about your platoon in Rolling Stone. You’re quoted as saying, “The bad news is, we won’t get much sleep tonight; the good news is, we get to kill people.”‘ She paused, as if waiting for me to disavow the quote. I was silent, and she went on …. ‘Could you please explain your quote for me?’ …

‘You mean, will I climb your clock tower and pick people off with a hunting rifle?’

It was her turn to be silent.

‘No, I will not. Do I feel compelled to explain myself to you? I don’t.”‘

Other books started as soldier blogs, at least before commanders shut them, among them “My War” by Colby Buzzell, a former machine gunner in Iraq. Another soldier’s blog, shut by the Army in 2008 but to be published as a book in April, is “Kaboom: Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War,” by Matt Gallagher, a former Army officer in Iraq.

There are far fewer books by women, but one of them, “Love My Rifle More than You” by Kayla Williams, an Arabic-speaking former sergeant in a military intelligence company, is particularly critical of the military. (Williams writes of how she was instructed to verbally humiliate a naked Iraqi prisoner in Mosul.)

So far there are relatively few novels, although “The Mullah’s Storm” by Tom Young, a flight engineer in the Air National Guard, is to be published in the fall. The story is about a soldier shot down in Afghanistan.

O’Brien, whose own memoir, “If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home” was published in 1973, said that the dearth of novels did not surprise him. His first war novel, “Going After Cacciato” was not published until 1978. “The Things They Carried” was published in 1990. Soldiers need more time to explore “what happened inside,” O’Brien said — suggesting that the flow of their war books will not stop anytime soon.

UPDATED: Rise Up! Roots of Liberation – Youth Camp for Justice and Peace

UPDATE:  Thanks to a special gift from the Hawai’i Peoples Fund, we able to offer a $150 stipend to participants who successfully complete the program.

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MARCH 1st, 2010

logo copy

youth camp for justice and peace

March 15 – 19, 2010

Camp Kokokahi, Kane’ohe

Who:             Youth ages 15 – 19 with a passion for peace, justice and aloha ‘aina.

What:             Be Real:  Liberate the power of our histories, cultures and identities.

Be the Change: Gain knowledge and skills to help grow our movement for peace & justice.

Connect: Meet other youth who also care about making Hawai’i and the world a better place.

Download the application forms here.

Program eligibility

  • Youth the ages of 15-19 years old.
  • Must be self-motivated and able to work well in a team towards a common goal.
  • Must have the desire to work for justice and peace, protect the environment.

How to apply

1) Complete the application form. Download the application forms here. Have a teacher/adviser complete the recommendation form.  Applicants under 18 years of age must also fill out and return a signed parent permission form .

2)  Mail, fax or email your completed application packet to:

  • Mail:  American Friends Service Committee -Hawai’i Area Program

Rise Up! Roots of Liberation – Youth for Justice and Peace

Attn: Kyle Kajihiro

2426 O’ahu Avenue

Honolulu, HI 96822

  • Fax:      808-988-4876
  • Email: kkajihiro@afsc.org

OR

  • Video:  Send us an online video of your response to the application form.  You must still submit signed teacher/adviser recommendation form and if you are under 18 years of age, a parent/legal guardian permission form.

3) DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS EXTENDED: MARCH 1, 2010

This program is FREE.   Spaces are limited.  Applicants will be selected based on your application packets.  We may also call to interview finalists.   Applicants will be notified by March 5, 2010 whether they are admitted to the program.

Thanks to a special gift from the Hawai’i Peoples Fund, we are able to offer a $150 stipend to youth participants who successfully complete the program.

For more information:             Call 808-988-6266.  Email: kkajihiro@afsc.org

Military spending $1.5M to study military attitudes toward Hawai’i public schools

Military families have complained about the quality of Hawai’i schools.  The furlough fridays have cut even more instructional days from the public school calendar.  Military personnel do not pay the same taxes that fund public education in Hawai’i.  A few years ago, the impact aid paid by the federal government to the state to compensate for this was only about a tenth of the actual cost per pupil cost to educate a student in the Hawai’i public schools system.    Let’s tell the military to cash in a F-22, Stryker or even better one of the new nuclear subs to pay for education in Hawai’i.

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http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20100202_Furloughs_further_dim_militarys_view_of_schools.html

Furloughs further dim military’s view of schools

A study will examine if educational concerns cause service members to avoid duty here

By Audrey McAvoy / Associated Press

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Feb 02, 2010

The third- to fifth-graders ran up to their instructor clutching a list of words using the letters B, D and E.

Split into boys and girls teams, the students offered the teacher “bed” and “bead.” The boys spelled more words, beating the girls 18-15.

It’s a Friday but these students aren’t in school. They’re at a youth center where the Army is keeping soldiers’ children engaged and learning on the 17 Fridays this school year that the state has closed public schools to narrow a budget deficit.

The state’s decision in October to shrink the school year by 10 percent, giving it the fewest number of instructional days in the nation at 163, is adding to the already dismal reputation Hawaii’s public schools have among servicemen and women.

Col. Mike Davino, the director of manpower, personnel and administration for the U.S. Pacific Command, said the truncated school year is yet another concern for officials who have long heard about servicemen and women avoiding Hawaii assignments because of the public education system.

“We’ve gotten a lot of anecdotal information,” Davino said. “For example, one of my neighbors just this week said she wasn’t going to extend in Hawaii because of the education.”

Commanders are so concerned about the overall health of isle schools that the military is paying researchers from Johns Hopkins University $1.5 million to study military attitudes toward Hawaii public education over a three-year period to see whether there is any concrete data to support the unhappy anecdotes.

The study, now in its first year, will track families who have received assignments to Hawaii, those who are here and those who have left the islands. It will examine whether the education their children received in Hawaii put them at a disadvantage or prepared them well for their next school.

“Hawaii doesn’t have the strongest education system as it is. So then to compromise by taking more hours away?” said Master Sgt. Tamatha R. Perkins, whose 6-year-old son, John, is in first grade at an Oahu school. “If they’re in the bottom tier, they don’t need to be cutting out days of education. They’re going the wrong way.”

The study will also document how many troops choose public schools and how many choose alternatives like home-schooling, private schools or even leaving their children with family on the mainland.

Military statistics indicate there should be about 23,000 school-age dependents in the islands, home to several major installations including Pearl Harbor. But there are only 13,000 to 14,000 military dependents enrolled in public schools, indicating thousands of parents are choosing to educate their children elsewhere.

Hawaii’s school system was struggling even before the state shrank the school year.

Last year a record number of schools, almost two-thirds, failed to meet progress goals under the federal No Child Left Behind law.

Heather Miles, a graduate student in education at the University of Hawaii whose soldier husband is deployed to Iraq for a year, had been a defender of Hawaii schools. She noted some were better than others, just like in other states, and parents needed to be selective about where they enrolled their children.

But the Friday furloughs have darkened her view.

“I was not displeased with it — until now,” Miles said.

She said one of her two sons started acting out after the furlough days began in late October.

“Going to school every day is something that he needs,” Miles said. “With his dad deployed and everything else, he needs that constant.”

The sixth-grader had gotten top grades during the first quarter of the school year. His A’s in science are now C’s.

Miles’ husband will not return from a deployment to Iraq until September, though he is due to come home for a short break in March. The school situation has added to the stress of his absence, Miles said.

Michelle Meador expects to have to arrange tutoring for her three children to compensate for the learning they have lost in Hawaii when her family moves to its next posting, which will probably be in about a year.

The Navy officer’s wife thought about getting extra help now but realized it would be difficult to fill the gaps when it is not yet clear where her children might be lagging.

“It’s too hard to play catch-up when you don’t know what it is exactly that you’re missing,” Meador said.

The military is doing what it can to make up for the shortfall in instructional time.

More than 300 children are enrolled in Army child youth services programs that focus on learning each Furlough Friday. Children work in the computer lab, do homework and have been on excursions. Other services have similar programs.

John Penebacker, a state Board of Education member and a retired Army colonel, said the furloughs have been a setback to efforts to improve the military community’s perceptions about public schools, but Hawaii students are still getting a good education. “You get to the question of quality versus quantity. The results are not in yet, but I would guess that the quality is still there even though the days may have been decreased,” he said.

Penebacker pointed out other school systems have laid off teachers and increased average class size — something Hawaii chose not to do. “We’re not alone in this battle,” he said. “This is a national situation where funding is a challenge.”

Sweet 16 with an M-16: “I love the thrill of shooting”

Talk about mixed messages.  As a society, we tell youth that violence is bad.  We make it a serious offense to bring weapons to school.  Yet we train youth to use military weapons and encourage, even compel them to join the JROTC.  How militarized are we?

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http://www.starbulletin.com/sports/20100131_sure_shot.html

Sure shot

Arlene Estabillo’s ability with an M-16 has wowed military and veteran shooters

By Dave Swann

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jan 31, 2010

A teen novice is amazing local marksmen with her prowess with an M-16 rifle, holding her own in competition with experienced military and law-enforcement snipers.

After only a year of training, Arlene Estabillo, 16, a Kapolei High School junior, has her sights set on a national title.

Retired Marine Master Gunnery Sgt. Ken Roxabough, who works for Remington Arms Co., calls her “one of the first naturals I have ever seen in terms of learning the basics of marksmanship and applying them in a practical manner.”

Another retired Marine, Darrell Poland, a veteran with combat tours in Vietnam, Lebanon, Desert Storm and Somalia, said that she is the only person he has ever agreed to coach for free.

“My goal is for her to be a junior national champion or a female national champion,” says Poland. “Her ability is phenomenal.”

Estabillo is tearing through the competition in matches in Hawaii and on the mainland.

She tried shooting for the first time “just for fun” with her father at the Koko Head Range in late 2008.

Of her first 50 shots with a .22-caliber pistol, 45 hit the bull’s-eye at 25 yards.

Sensing that her daughter possessed a natural talent, Rogelio Estabillo, an Army reservist and guard at the Halawa Correctional Facility, began letting her shoot more often.

For two or three months, the girl went with her father to the range almost every weekend and practiced with a borrowed .22 caliber rifle.

“It just wasn’t enough fun because I didn’t know if I had fired it since the rifle had no kick,” says Arlene with a laugh.

So Rogelio bought her an M-16A3 in 5.56 millimeter, the civilian version of the U.S. military’s main battle rifle. It has a heavy barrel for a higher degree of accuracy.

After only two to three months of practice, Arlene last year entered her first match and placed 12th out of 19 shooters — all of them Army, Marine and law enforcement marksmen or snipers with five to 10 years of experience. Two of the shooters who placed behind Arlene dropped out of the match circuit out of embarrassment, Poland said.

Estabillo’s next competitive event was the Creedmore Match in Phoenix in October.

By that time, she was ranked fourth in Hawaii in the junior category, and was one of only three females in the match. One of the other two was Sherri Gallagher, the highest-ranking woman shooter in the Army.

Estabillo placed first in the junior category with a score of 718 out of 800. That put her ahead of 16 former and current Marines, including R. Lee Ermey, the veteran and actor who starred in the 1987 movie “Full Metal Jacket.”

“Ermey was so taken with her easygoing nature that he constantly checked her status during the rest of the match,” recalls Poland.

The teen now practices at least once a week, firing 200 to 300 rounds during each session.

Her father keeps costs down by rearming her shells by hand.

“I can reload the ammo she needs far cheaper than if we had to buy it in a store,” Rogelio says with a shrug. “I do what I can to help my daughter any way possible.”

Rogelio marvels at how she is able to concentrate on competitive shooting while maintaining a 3.5 grade-point average.

Arlene says that her mother and father provide the economic and emotional support that she needs to excel.

“They are always there for me, and it helps me so much,” she says proudly. “I love the thrill of shooting. The sport has helped me gain so much confidence in myself.”

The Estabillos have endured their share of hard times. Rogelio and Arlene immigrated to Hawaii from the Philippines 14 years ago, and had to leave her mother until she could qualify to come to the U.S.

Hard work, discipline and a tight family bond has kept them close, and now Arlene has high hopes for the future. Estabillo would like to go to the Air Force Academy after she graduates next year, and hopes one day to be a national champion in her division or even compete at the Olympics.

“I love the thrill of shooting,” she says.

HOW TO HELP

Anyone interested in sponsoring Arlene Estabillo, contact Darrell Poland at budygun@hawaii.rr.com.

Guam says “No Deal!” to the U.S. Military Buildup

The U.S. military currently is conducting public hearings on its draft environmental impact statement for its military buildup in Guam and the Northern Marianas islands.   At the first hearing, residents overwhelmingly opposed the plan.   Here is a powerful testimony by prophet-poet Melvin Won Pat-Borja, a former mentor with YouthSpeaks Hawai’i who now teaches in Guam.

Description from the YouTube page:

Melvin Won Pat-Borja, representing the community organization “We Are Guahan” presents his official testimony against the U.S. Military’s plans to transfer thousands of marines from Okinawa to Guam. The Department of Defense has published a draft of the Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) detailing their plans. The DEIS is about 11,000 pages long, and the public only has until February 17, 2010 to submit comments on the document.

“We Are Guahan” is a group of community members dedicated to reading and disseminating information in the DEIS to the public, including details of the devastating effects of the military buildup on the island’s culture, water sources, coral reefs and marine habitats, family lands, historical and archeological sites, and social environment. Furthermore, despite common belief that the buildup will benefit Guam’s economy, the DEIS reveals that majority of new jobs and contracts will be given to off-island workers and companies.

Most importantly, the U.S. military’s decision is a blatant violation of human rights for Guam’s residents, who have not been allowed to participate in any aspect of the buildup plans. “We Are Guahan” encourages everyone, in and outside of Guam, to stay informed about the military buildup! Read the EIS and make your voice heard! You can submit comments online, by mail, or in person at public hearings.

For more information, please visit www.WeAreGuahan.com.

Conversion of Kulani Prison to military school delayed

Governor Lingle suddenly and unexpectedly closed Kulani Prison, one of the most successful offender treatment programs in Hawai’i.  Why?  She said it was to save money.  She then said that the facility would be turned over to the Hawaii National Guard to convert it into a Youth Challenge military school.  However, this article reports that the National Guard has neither the funds nor the plan to implement this convesion.  So what’s the real reason for the transfer to the military?   Prison reform, environmental, Hawaiian sovereignty and peace activists now suspect that the land transfer may have more to do with the military gaining access to 8000 acres of Waiakea forest for training purposes.   Stay tuned…

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091228/NEWS0101/912280329/Prison+won+t+be+converted+into+teen+camp+until+2011

Posted on: Monday, December 28, 2009

Prison won’t be converted into teen camp until 2011

Advertiser Staff

The state’s plan to convert Kulani prison into an academic and military training camp for teenagers is being delayed a year, according to a report in the Hawaii Tribune-Herald.

The Hawaii National Guard in July announced plans to open a Youth Challenge Academy next month at the former site of Kulani prison.

But then officials realized program employees must receive a full year of training before they begin working with students.

They also needed to wait for federal funding to be approved for the new camp.

The Guard now aims to welcome its first class of 100 students at Kulani in early 2011. It expects to enroll two classes each year.

The state shut down Kulani prison in October as part of broader government-wide spending cuts to cope with declining tax revenues.