The Gary Galiher Law Hour: Episode 16 w/ Coach Vince Goo!

We are proud to present part one our two-part episode with the University of Hawai‘i’s Wahine Basketball team’s legendary head coach, Vince Goo.

During his tenure in that role, the Wahine won 334 games, gained 10 post-season bids, and earned the most wins by any basketball coach in school history. Coach Goo has also had the distinction of coaching the team with the highest graduation rate among any collegiate women’s basketball team in the US, and every player who finished her playing eligibility on one of his squads at UH earned a degree.

In a wide-ranging conversation, Coach Goo joins our hosts Gary Galiher and Mike Buck to discuss the vital subject of concussions in sports.

“Risking the health and welfare of a player is not worth one more victory,” says the coach. He had to be vigilant about these concerns due to the surprisingly high rate of concussion in women’s basketball.

Coach Goo exemplifies the best approach to athletic safety: “I had our team doctor and our trainer make all the calls when it came to the health and safety of our players, and I would not second-guess them: they say they play or they don’t play. At the same time, I say you do your job, don’t tell me what offense and what defense to play. (Laughs.) You do your job, I do my job.”

The coach has certainly noticed the changes in the understanding of concussion issues. “Growing up playing basketball, whether in a league or at the playground, if you fell and your head hit the floor, okay, then you start to worry. Other than that, you’re not going to have a concussion. But little did we know that a forearm or an elbow can cause all of those things.”

Yet, he recognizes that the understanding has a ways to go: “When we look at football [now], the big hits with the head: we see concussion. But what about all those little contacts that you’ve had along the way,” wonders Coach Goo.

Only in the last few years has it become apparent that in football, full-blown concussions are just the tip of the iceberg. The helmet itself enabled a false sense of the security that the brain would be protected, when it did anything but that.

If you look at the small print the manufacturer puts on the helmets, it tells you this will only prevent skull fracture. With respect to concussion, it won’t protect you. When it comes to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which comes from the repeated blows to the head, it masks that and doesn’t help that at all.

The science is showing us—and science should be our guide—that if you take the helmets off, concussions go down. It’s counterintuitive, but that’s the fact.

“I’m looking forward to that day we have more money, and hopefully HCAMP’s research at UH can go forward,” says Gary. “We’d like to see it get more sophisticated, from the standpoint they’ve done wonders keeping kids out of play after concussions, before they can come back in.”

“There’s no simple-simon answer to this,” he continued. “We’ve just got to be honest about the research that’s out there, and we get more feedback and feel our way along intelligently so we’re not just letting our kids play bloodsport out there.

“I mean, I’m a pretty liberal guy, I’d let people do what they want with their adult brains, as nuts as it might be. On the other hand, when it comes to our kids, we have a higher duty than that. When your whole brain, your sense of self, your life, your way to find success is in-between your ears, and we’re kicking around for bloodsport, I don’t think so. The parents can really see that, yeah, it’s going to take a little fun out of the sport, but what a compromise! Pop Warner, everybody wants to see it, but the kids shouldn’t be playing with helmets. If a kid gets injured with a helmet, I’d go after the helmet company.”

Tune in for a lively talk with one of Hawai‘i’s most respected and important figures in sports.

Check Us Out at the Good Life Expo!

Greetings,

Our firm will be participating in the 32nd Annual Hawai‘i Seniors’ Fair~The Good Life Expo, Friday, September 23, through Sunday, September 25. We’ll be there at the Neal Blaisdell Center for all three days, from 8:30 am – 4:30 pm. Admission is free to the public.

We are giving away copies of our Stop Elder Abuse in Hawai‘i guidebook, and promoting the good cause of harm reduction for elderly people throughout the islands. The issues of elder neglect, abuse, and exploitation concern us greatly, and we have written about them extensively here on the site. If you’re interested, we invite you to peruse our Elder Care Knowledge Center for a variety of news articles and publications on the topic.

There will be hundreds of organizations presenting information and offering products and services for local seniors. Have a look at the list below to see who’s going to be there. (You can click it to view a larger version.) And please do drop by our table and visit us if you find yourself there. We would love to see you!

The Gary Galiher Law Hour — Episode 15: Obama, Hapa w/ Kamea Hadar

Above: Progression of the painting of the Hapa mural. At this point, Kamea Hadar had written out a portion of Obama’s 2008 Race Speech at the Constitution Center, to underlay the portrait.

Honolulu-based muralist Kamea Hadar joins us for this week’s episode. At the time of the recording, he was the proud father of a one-and-a-half week-old baby, halfway through the process of painting Hapa, a mural commissioned for the Gary Galiher Law Building on Ward Avenue in Honolulu.

Tune in for a lively conversation about the mural’s subject, President Barack Obama; the making of large-scale works of art; and the value of art in Hawai‘i. Some highlights follow:

Gary Galiher: “I’ve admired a particular artist’s work for a long time. He does really elegant work, whether it’s on the side of a building, or on the interior wall of a barbershop, downtown in Chinatown, I kept coming back to the same person. And then I talked to Clarisse Kobashigawa in my office, and said Clarisse, we’ve got to track down this artist. The next thing I know, Clarisse has connected with him and we’ve got a conversation going.”

Kamea Hadar: “My profession is painting large-scale murals, and I also do canvas paintings, but, you know, President Obama has always been an inspiration. It’s an honor to paint him, and I’m just happy that Gary gave me the canvas to paint. Unlike my studio work, I can’t just go out and buy these canvases. I need someone who owns a building to let me paint on it.”

GG: “I love Hawai‘i, love all the different ethnic groups, and we have been so fortunate and honored to represent great groups like the naval workers at Pearl Harbor Shipyard, hard-working local people… I really do love the ethnic richness that we have here, and those values really come through. It’s a real island community. The idea that someone came from Hawai‘i of mixed ancestry from around the world. He was raised here and went off and became stellar in what he entered into, in school and work, and became president of the United States. That just makes me so proud. I think so many people identify with that.”

KH: “My background is very, very mixed. My mom is actually Japanese-Korean: my grandma is full Korean and my grandfather is full Japanese, and that’s already a weird mix, back in their generation. My Korean great-grandmother had some issues with them getting together. My grandfather was a war hero. He fought in the 442nd, which is the Japanese-American battalion. Then my Mom, while backpacking across Europe, met my Dad, who’s from Israel, you know, a haole guy, and my grandparents on that side are holocaust survivors. [Hadar] is a Hebrew name. Our family name was Satrinas, from Poland, and when my grandparents went to Israel from Poland, which is the same meaning but the Hebrew kind of version, I guess you could say.”

Mike Buck: “I’m thinking, down the road, this thing’s gonna be a landmark. People are gonna say, ‘it’s right by the Obama picture.’ And you know this is gonna be a big deal… Pretty soon, it doesn’t matter what the name of the street is, does it. You just go by the Obama picture and turn left.”

KH: “All these modern tools help quite a bit, but at the end of the day I’m still up there with a paintbrush. So the way that I start usually is with a pencil sketch. Then, you know, you asked me about proportion, and a lot of that is just experience. When you’re up there, you know, the pupil is huge. And you’re like, well okay I’m just going to trust in my gut that the pupil is going to be this big, and you’ve got to trust your sketch.

“So after the sketch goes up—and the way I use the sketch is, I use references, so you use bricks in the wall, you use pipes, doors, to make sure there’s space in the piece and make sure it’s proportional, so that you don’t get a crooked face, or a lazy eye, or that it just doesn’t look like the person—once the sketch goes up, I start painting, and I always start with the eyes. The eyes are, as they say, the windows to the soul, and the eyes are the most important part of the piece. So without the eyes, all is lost. If they don’t turn out, then I’ll redo them, but that has to be in place before I do anything [else]. It’s a confidence thing, so if I can do the eyes, then it’s a snowball thing and the rest is easy.”

7 Things You Should Know About Asbestos

health-problems

1. Breathing high levels of asbestos fibers causes serious health problems.

Asbestos is set of six fibrous, naturally occurring minerals, which have been mined from the Earth for several thousand years. Inhalation of asbestos fibers can cause serious illness such as lung cancer; mesothelioma, a cancer of the lining of the chest and the abdominal cavity; and asbestosis, in which the lungs become scarred with fibrous tissue.

 

legal

2. Asbestos is still legal in the United States.

In 1989, after a comprehensive 10-year study of the effects of asbestos, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ordered a phase-out of asbestos and a ban on many products containing it. The asbestos industry took the EPA to court and in 1991, won a ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit throwing out most of EPA’s rule. Ever since, EPA has been hamstrung in its efforts to ban not only asbestos but also other dangerous materials. Today, more than 50 other nations have banned the substance, but the U.S. continues to allow industry to expose the public to asbestos.

 

asbestos_mortality

3. Asbestos kills more people than skin cancer.

Asbestos-related disease kills as many as 15,000 Americans a year, according to EWG Action Fund’s analysis of data complied by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

exposure

4. No safe level exists for asbestos exposure.

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration warns employers and workers that there is “no ‘safe’ level of asbestos exposure for any asbestos fiber.” Even a single brief asbestos exposure can cause mesothelioma or other major illness.

 

everywhere

5. Asbestos is all around you.

While we are all exposed to trace amounts of asbestos in the air, far more asbestos has been used in man-made environments than is necessary. An EWG Action Fund analysis of federal trade records shows that more than 8.2 million pounds of raw asbestos and hundreds of pounds of asbestos waste and products containing asbestos arrived in U.S. ports between 2006 and last year. More asbestos arrived overland from Canada and Mexico.

 

time

6. Symptoms may not become apparent until long after exposure.

Asbestos-related illnesses often take 20 or 30 years to present symptoms. If you have any of the following symptoms, you should consult your doctor:

  • Shortness of breath.
  • A cough or a change in cough pattern.
  • Blood in the fluid coughed up.
  • Pain in the chest or abdomen.
  • Difficulty in swallowing or prolonged hoarseness.
  • Significant weight loss.

 

dont-touch

7. The best thing to do is to leave asbestos-containing material that is in good condition alone.

If you find asbestos-containing material, don’t disturb it. Removing it requires gear that protects against hazardous materials, and should be done by qualified professionals. It’s very often safer just to leave the material in place, if it does not present a likely risk of exposure.

Sources: The Environmental Protection Agency, AsbestosNation/Environmental Working Group