All posts by Genevive Bjorn

Former Maui Chef Tops Taco Tournament

Rand Packer, former Maui boy and long-time chef at Roy’s Restaurants (both Kahana, Hawaii Kai and Tampa) opened his own taco stand, Mekenita’s Mexican Grille, in Tampa, Florida. His take on Mexican adds a little aloha style to traditional Oaxacan traditions. Now his taco joint has been voted into the #1 in the area’s Tournament of Tacos.

Packer’s Citrus Grilled Pacific Wahoo Tacos come heaped with charred corn, homemade roasted chili salsa and enough flavor to make you start yor own Mariachi band to sing his praises. His wife, Tiffani, helps him run the joint, named after their oldest daughter, Mekena, as in the famous beach in South Maui.

Natural teeth whitener removes bathtub stains, spares reefs

My dental hygienist kindly offered me this tip at my last cleaning: to keep teeth whiter between visits, brush once a month with a mixture of baking soda (tsp) and hydrogen peroxide (1 cap full). These compounds when mixed together remove coffee and tea stains from teeth naturally. Turns out baking soda comes from a mixture of calcium carbonate (shells or limestone) and sodium chloride (good ‘ole table salt). So I’ve been following her advice, and it works. My teeth are whiter for pennies. (Disclaimer: this is not medical advice.)

Happy with my whiter teeth, I wanted to take a nice hot bath after a long day of moving into a new house, but the bathtub was severely stained. It looked like about five years of thick yellowish soap scum. Gross. When I leaned in close to see how bad it was, I noticed some scratch marks on the fiberglass surround from where previous tenants had scrubbed ineffectively, possibly with a Brillo pad, and gave up. I wondered if the baking soda hydrogen peroxide mix would clean these stains, like it had cleaned my teeth.

With nothing to lose but yucky scum, I mixed up a bowl full of the mix and spread it on thick. After letting the mix stand and work for half an hour, I came back with a regular kitchen sponge to investigate the results. It took a little elbow scrubbing power, particularly in the corners, but all those gross stains came off. The tub surround was about 10 shades lighter, even better than the results on my teeth.

Best part is that I didn’t wash any toxic chemicals down the drain. Here in Hawaii, a lot of what goes down the drain eventually finds its way to the ocean and kills fish. Even though I wanted a hot bath in a clean tub, I didn’t want to kill a living reef to do it. A bonus suprise was that my hands and nails were fine afterward, no rashes or burns like with standard store cleaners.

Aloha Federal Stimulus Money

How does the 2009 Stimulus package passed by Congress impact Hawaii? I decided to follow the money.

Over one billion dollars will flow from the Federal coffers to Hawaii, according to Hawaii Congresswomen Mazie Hirono’s official website. On the site, Hirono points out that “There are no earmarks in this bill.” Well, that’s a relief. Adding little earmarks to a giant earmark package would be downright insulting.

The spending breakdown by program follows, as explained by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. I’ve highlighted the recipients in Hawaii garnering the largest chunks–those receiving nine digit figures. If you’re math challenged, this means upwards of hundreds of millions of dollars each.

Program

Total

Highway Infrastructure Investment
125,746,380
Transit Capital Grants
43,837,375
Fixed Guideway Modernization
254,793
Clean Water State Revolving Fund
30,823,600
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund
19,651,000
State Fiscal Stabilization Fund
194,647,000
Title I Grants
44,549,091
IDEA Part B State Grants
39,925,000
IDEA Part C for Hawaii
1,764,000
Child Care Development Block Grants
6,448,716
Education Technology (ESEA, Title II-D)
3,145,000
Head Start
2,098,853
Dept. of Education Vocational Rehabilitation
1,908,253
National School Lunch Program Equipment
337,053
McKinney-Vento Act Grants for Homeless Students
115,000
Dept. of Labor State Employment Service Grants
1,452,568
Dept. of Labor Dislocated Workers State Grants
2,126,080
Dept. of Labor Adult State Grants
1,246,875
Dept. of Labor Youth State Grants
2,947,500
Medicaid Assistance
360,000,000
Prevention and Wellness Fund
1,000,000
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
105,978,167
Homelessness Prevention Fund
6,214,095
Senior Meals Programs
500,000
Emergency Food Assistance Program
305,717
Emergency Food and Shelter Program
163,399
Community Services Block Grants
5,035,955
Community Development Block Grants
4,141,025
Public Housing Capital Fund
16,327,493
HOME Program (HUD)
9,553,589
State Energy Program
25,868,000
Weatherization Assistance
4,416,289
Byrne Justice Assistance Grants
10,759,137
Violence against Women Grants
1,195,789
Internet Crimes against Children Grants
1,113,360
Crime Victims Compensation and Assistance
269,221

Total

$1,075,865,373