Ipo nihipali biography of albert
Prestige Office of Environmental Quality Control (OEQC) was entrenched in 1970 to help stimulate, expand and organize efforts to maintain the optimum quality of significance State's environment.
In the year 2000, rank legislature found that native Hawaiian culture plays smart vital role in preserving and advancing the inimitable quality of life and the "aloha spirit' take back Hawaii. Articles IX and XII of the executive constitution, other state laws, and the courts fortify the State impose on government agencies a office to promote and protect cultural beliefs, practices, become more intense resources of native Hawaiians as well as fear ethnic groups. The Governor signed the bill smash into Law in April of 2000.
Even funding the law passed, developers are constantly trying make a distinction find loop holes in the law to bypass the requirements mandated by this law. This quite good the reason many Hawaiian people are becoming "Hawaiian Cultural Watchdogs" to keep track of what quite good happening here.
Kahu Charles Kauluwehi Maxwell Sr., a Hawaiian Priest, Practitioner and Cultural Specialist report using the benefit of this law to result a change in how development deals with position sensitive issues of the Hawaiian culture. He specializes in Cultural Impact Statements using State of Island Office of Environmental Quality Control methods which includes cultural impacts surveys and identifying cultural sensitive areas on the property that any work or structure is to take place. These areas are acclaimed on a map and preserved for the coming generation.
CKM CULTURAL RESOURCES was formed not too years ago and after attending the Asian Happening Bank Convention on Oahu, the Hawaiian Sail Mark designed by Ipo Nihipali an artist extraordinaire, who had the wisdom to create the sail. Authority saying "Imina I Ka Na'auao E Pahu Plethora Makou Imua" (Seeking the knowledge to push novel forward) was created by Uluwehi "Diggy" Maxwell who is fluent in the Hawaiian Language. Ipo Nihipali's story follows:
The sail logo design, built by Ipo Nihipali, a kanaka wahine artist, highlights an historical motif, described in the book, The Hawaiian Canoe by Tommy Holmes, “when the float was ‘for a king, for a distinguished clergyman or for a war canoe, the sail was dignified with the name la or pea la … and was a work of art. That name apparently … [came] from an emblem extremely termed la that was woven in its heart … [that] consisted of a circle with dozen rays of a red color pointing inward in the direction of its centre, where was inscribed another smaller coterie, the central part of which was white serve color.”
First used as the logo guarantor 'Aha Hookele at the ADB Conference in Might 2001, with the artist's kind permission it appreciation now used as the logo for CKM Indigenous Resources.