Purchase of Hawaiian isle fits with mogul’s persona

Purchase of Hawaiian isle fits with mogul’s persona
Updated 24 June 2012
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Purchase of Hawaiian isle fits with mogul’s persona

Purchase of Hawaiian isle fits with mogul’s persona

Buying an inhabited Hawaiian island may sound extreme, even for a guy known for flaunting his fortune, like driving fancy cars, wooing beautiful women, flying his own jet and spending $200 million to build a Japanese-themed compound in California’s Silicon Valley.
Larry Ellison won an America’s Cup sailing in 2010, and then wrestled with San Francisco city leaders over his big plans for two waterfront piers. He owns a mansion atop a San Francisco hill with a sweeping view of the Golden Gate Bridge to the left and Alcatraz to the right. He has spent a fortune snapping up some of Southern California’s most prized beachfront property in Malibu.
For Oracle CEO Ellison an island in the middle of the Pacific is right up his alley. He built Oracle Corp. with $1,200 in 1977 and is the world’s sixth richest billionaire. He inked a deal announced this week by the governor to buy 98 percent of the island’s 141 square miles.
While detailed plans for the island have yet to be revealed, he’s likely to do something “epic and grand,” said Mike Wilson, who wrote the first biography of Ellison, “The Difference Between God and Larry Ellison: God Doesn’t Think He’s Larry Ellison.”
“He could build the world’s largest rare butterfly sanctuary, a medical research facility to help him live forever or a really cool go-cart track,” Wilson said Thursday — but only half-jokingly, because those are the kinds of outlandish interests Ellison has.
As a man who feels cheated by a limited life-span, he’s like a kid who never grew up but yet is a great visionary, Wilson said.
Wilson said the high-tech maverick won’t be concerned with how his lifestyle will jibe with a laid-back island where longtime residents are grappling with the loss of their pineapple fields to make way for luxury development: “I don’t think his primary concern is fitting in with what Hawaiians want.”
Yet, Ellison isn’t planning any radical changes for the island he has agreed to buy, a Hawaii state lawmaker said.
State Sen. J. Kalani English told The Associated Press he got a call from the billionaire’s personal representatives, and they said Ellison sees Lanai as “much more than an asset.”
Ellison’s reps expressed sensitivity to the “culture and conservation stewardship of the island,” which is home to 3,200 residents, said English, a Democrat whose district includes Lanai.
They also assured English that union contracts will be honored and Ellison has no plans for a wind farm, even though the land’s current owner, billionaire David Murdock, is retaining the right to build one. The contentious project would deliver power to Oahu through an undersea cable.
Meanwhile, Murdock’s Castle & Cooke Inc. delivered letters to Lanai employees, informing them of the sale and that they’ll all be retained by Ellison, with all contracts being transferred, English said.
That’s comforting to English and Lanaians who wonder what the ostentatious and eclectic software magnate has in store for the island and its tourism-driven economy.
“I’m getting a nice feeling that they’re coming into it with sensitivity,” English said. “It’s much more than just an investment.”
But in end, what truly matters is how Lanai will be able to sustain itself under Ellison.
“Hopefully Mr. Ellison is a little more sensitive to the needs of Lanai and maintaining the lifestyle of the people,” said Dennis Hokama, who was born and raised on the island. “But the bottom line will always be economic sustainability.”