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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/14/us/politics/14hawaii.html?hp
Whatever else I might think about state's rights in general, I'm glad that Hawaii is exercising its right to handle requests and access to birth records.
The sad thing is that the "birthers" will just see this as a conspiracy, despite the fact that *if* the actual birth certificate was ever shown, the birthers will just dismiss the document because "it shows he's born in the US, therefore it's a forgery!"
Hawaii Limits Requests on Obama File
By MICHAEL COOPER
Published: May 13, 2010
HONOLULU The conspiracy theorists who cling to the false belief that President Obama was born outside the United States outrage many Democrats and embarrass many Republicans. But to a group of state workers who toil away in a long building across from the Capitol, they represent something else: a headache and a waste of time.
The theorists, known as birthers, have deluged the state Health Department here with so many demands for information about the presidents birth in Hawaii that Gov. Linda Lingle, a Republican, signed a law this week allowing state agencies to ignore repeated requests from people who have had a request answered in the last year.
It comes none too soon for Health Department workers, who have been inundated with so many requests for the presidents birth records that a printout of the e-mail messages they have received on the topic through March stands some 13 inches high. Each one required a response, and many required consultations with state lawyers.
It became really, really a burden, said Janice Okubo, a spokeswoman for the department, who said that handling the hundreds of requests took up huge amounts of the departments time as it was trying to respond to an H1N1 flu outbreak. Many requests, she said, came from the same handful of people.
By Hawaiian law, birth records can only be released to people with a direct and tangible interest in them a person born in the state, say, or certain relatives or their estates. So when questions about Mr. Obamas birth first surfaced during the 2008 presidential election, his campaign posted a copy of his certification of live birth on a Web site; it states that Barack Hussein Obama II was born in Honolulu on Aug. 4, 1961, at 7:24 p.m.
When questions continued to pour in, the states health director, Dr. Chiyome Fukino, announced that she had seen the original records and that they showed that Mr. Obama was born in Hawaii and is a natural born American citizen.
When the questions persisted, the department created a Web page titled Frequently Asked Questions About Vital Records of President Barack Hussein Obama II. It did little to assuage the doubters.
Some of the e-mail messages were vulgar, others hostile. Health department workers found themselves vilified on blogs. Your name will be synonymous with Benedict Arnold by the time this is done, reads one that is signed, an American natural-born citizen. State Senator Will Espero, a Democrat who has a picture in his office of Mr. Obama and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. standing in front of a Hawaiian flag, said that he was dismayed by the persistent questions about the presidents birth. He noted that in 1961, newspapers in Honolulu printed birth announcements, including Mr. Obamas.
Unless somebody had a great conspiracy going back 40-something years, involving the newspapers and the hospitals, I dont think there is any doubt, Mr. Espero said.
He originally introduced a bill that would allow the state to release birth certificates, but ran into privacy concerns. Then the Health Department asked for help. So he introduced a bill allowing them to ignore duplicative requests that have been answered within the last year. Objections were raised that such a bill could give the government leeway to ignore legitimate requests, so Mr. Espero said the final bill was amended to try to address those concerns.
Unfortunately, I dont think it will end of the controversy, Mr. Espero said. But in terms of our own Department of Health, and their staff and the hours they are putting into this issue hopefully it will give them a measure of relief, and allow them to work on some other issues besides just this birther issue.
Whatever else I might think about state's rights in general, I'm glad that Hawaii is exercising its right to handle requests and access to birth records.
The sad thing is that the "birthers" will just see this as a conspiracy, despite the fact that *if* the actual birth certificate was ever shown, the birthers will just dismiss the document because "it shows he's born in the US, therefore it's a forgery!"