The Latest: Big Island mayor says telescope benefits Hawaii

The Latest on the backers of a giant telescope planned for Hawaii seeking a building permit for alternative site in Spain (all times local):

11:45 p.m.

The mayor of Hawaii‘s Big Island says it would be a loss for his community if a giant telescope planned for the summit of the state’s highest peak was built in Spain instead.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige tasked Big Island Mayor Harry Kim with finding common ground among Native Hawaiian leaders, protesters and telescope stakeholders.

An international consortium that wants to build the telescope in Hawaii has decided to seek a building permit for an alternative site in the Canary Islands.

Kim says the telescope would be a good thing for Hawaii, “if done the right way.”

But the mayor also acknowledges that injustices to the Native Hawaiian community need to be addressed. He says “part of the right way is a recognition of wrongs of past.”

He says he doesn’t want the Big Island’s economy to be based entirely on tourism.

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10:40 p.m.

Native Hawaiian protest leaders are happy that an international consortium that wants to build a giant telescope on Hawaii’s tallest peak has decided to seek a building permit for an alternative site in the Canary Islands.

Kealoha Pisciotta has long opposed the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope in Hawaii and says there’s lots of good science to be done from the Canary Islands. She says moving the project to Spain would be “a win for everyone.”

Some Native Hawaiians believe the summit of the Big Island mountain is sacred, and protesters are in their fourth week of blocking access to Mauna Kea’s summit to prevent construction.

But Pisciotta says the news about the building permit won’t make protesters stand down.

Kaho’okahi Kanuha, another protest leader, says he hopes telescope builders make the “right decision” and move the project to the Canary Islands.

He says people blocking access to Mauna Kea remain committed to protecting the mountain from further desecration.

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9 p.m.

The director of a Spanish research center says an international consortium that planned to build a giant telescope on Hawaii’s tallest peak has decided to seek a permit for an alternative site in the Canary Islands.

Canary Islands Astrophysics Institute Director Rafael Rebolo told The Associated Press on Monday that he received a letter from the head of the Thirty Meter Telescope project saying the board decided “to proceed with the request to seek a building permit” for the island of La Palma.

Rebolo insists the telescope’s backers still want to put the telescope on the summit of Mauna Kea.

Native Hawaiian protesters are in their fourth week of blocking construction of the telescope on a mountain they consider sacred.

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