Local government Honolulu County is administered under a
mayor–council system of governance overseeing municipal services: civil defense, emergency medical, fire, parks and recreation, police, sanitation, transportation, and water, among others. For 2013, the county has an annual operating budget of
US$2.16 billion. The government of Honolulu County has three major divisions of municipal power: • The
mayor of Honolulu is the principal executor of
administrative authority. The mayor is elected on a non-partisan basis to a four-year term. • The
Honolulu City Council is the unicameral legislative body. Its elected members are responsible for drafting and passing laws, as well as budgets for various departments. The council is independent of the mayor. The nine council members each represent an administrative district (listed below) and are elected on a non-partisan basis to staggered four-year terms. • The
Prosecuting Attorney of Honolulu is charged with prosecuting criminal offenses committed within the county. The prosecuting attorney is elected on a non-partisan basis to a four-year term. The office is not charged with providing legal counsel to the other branches; that duty is a responsibility of the Department of Corporation Counsel, under mayoral jurisdiction. Honolulu County is divided into 36 neighborhood boards. The office of neighborhood board member is an advisory position for public policy and civil investment. Members are elected to two-year terms. The
U.S. Census Bureau lists this government as a municipal government and not as a county government.
County districts is the county seat, home of the County mayor and council. Honolulu County has nine districts, each of which elects a member of the city-county council. The boundaries of each district are
revised every ten years in conjunction with the
U.S. census. •
District I: Portions of
ʻEwa Beach,
Kapolei, Ho‘opili,
Makakilo,
Kalaeloa, Honokai Hale,
Ko ‘Olina,
Nānākuli,
Mā‘ili,
Wai‘anae,
Mākaha, Kea‘au, and
Mākua •
District II:
Waikele,
Village Park,
Royal Kunia,
Wahiawā,
Mokulē‘ia,
Waialua,
Hale‘iwa,
Pūpūkea,
Sunset Beach,
Kahuku,
Lā‘ie,
Hau‘ula,
Punalu‘u, Kahana,
Ka‘a‘awa, Kualoa, Waiāhole, and
Kahalu‘u •
District III: ‘
Āhuimanu,
He‘eia, Ha‘ikū,
Kāne‘ohe,
Maunawili,
Kailua, Olomana, Enchanted Lake, and
Waimānalo •
District IV:
Hawai‘i Kai, Kuli‘ou‘ou, Niu Valley,
‘Āina Haina, Wailupe, Wai‘alae Iki, Kalani Valley,
Kāhala, Wilhemina Rise,
Kaimukī, Kapahulu,
Diamond Head, and
Waikīkī •
District V:
Palolo Valley,
St. Louis Heights,
Mānoa,
Mōʻiliʻili,
McCully,
Ala Moana,
Makiki, and portions of
Kakaʻako •
District VI: Portions of
Kakaʻako,
Downtown Honolulu, Punchbowl, Papakolea,
Pauoa Valley, Nu‘uanu, Iwilei, Liliha,
‘Ālewa Heights,
Kalihi and
Kalihi Valley •
District VII:
Kalihi Kai, Māpunapuna, Fort Shafter,
Moanalua,
Salt Lake,
Airport,
Hickam,
Āliamanu,
Foster Village, Pearl Harbor,
Hālawa,
‘Aiea,
Pearlridge, Mokuʻumeʻume, and
Sand Island •
District VIII: Portions of
‘Aiea,
Waimalu,
Newtown,
Pearl City, Seaview,
Crestview,
Waipi‘o Gentry,
Koa Ridge,
Mililani Town, and
Mililani Mauka •
District IX:
Waipahū,
Iroquois Point,
West Loch,
ʻEwa Villages and portions of
ʻEwa Beach Civic center The
civic center is coextensive with what is known as the
Capitol District in
downtown Honolulu. The official seat of governance for the Honolulu County is located within the district at
Honolulu Hale, established in the 1920s as a city hall structure and houses the chambers of the mayor of Honolulu and the Honolulu City Council. In the 1960s and 1970s,
Mayor Frank Fasi developed the modern civic center as it is known today. He took controversial and aggressive measures to reclaim property, demolish massive concrete structures in the area, construct underground parking facilities and open a green campus above ground with manicured lawns and specially commissioned sculpted artwork. He also oversaw the construction of new government buildings, to house the departments that fell within mayoral jurisdiction. The most prominent of those new buildings were the Honolulu Municipal Building and Hale Makai, the headquarters of the Honolulu Police Department. Civic centers were also constructed off the Capitol District campus, including the
Kapiolani Bandstand,
Neal S. Blaisdell Center, and the
Waikīkī Shell.
Municipal services The Honolulu County collects various forms of
taxes, including a
property tax. Revenue from those taxes is used to provide several services for the residents. Services include: •
Honolulu Board of Water Supply •
Honolulu Fire Department •
Honolulu Emergency Medical Services •
TheBus •
Honolulu Police Department • The
Liquor Commission regulates intoxicating
liquors.
Services The
Hawaii Department of Public Safety operates three prisons, including the
Halawa Correctional Facility, the
Waiawa Correctional Facility, and the
Women's Community Correctional Center, on the island of Oʻahu in the City and County of Honolulu. In addition the Oʻahu Community Correctional Center, the jail on Oʻahu, is in the county. The
United States Postal Service operates post offices in Honolulu County. The main one is located by the
Honolulu International Airport at 3600 Aolele Street.
Federal Detention Center, Honolulu, operated by the
Federal Bureau of Prisons, is in the CDP. The
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Honolulu
field office is in
Kapolei. The
Kunia Regional SIGINT Operations Center of the
National Security Agency (NSA) and the
Wheeler Army Airfield are in Honolulu County.
Politics Honolulu County, like the rest of Hawaii, is a stronghold of the
Democratic Party. Despite this, it has tended to be the most
Republican-leaning county in the state, with the exception of the 2024 election, when
Kauaʻi County claimed this distinction. The urban center of Honolulu itself, and the whole southeastern portion of Oahu, including Kaneohe and Kailua, is where most of the Democratic strength in the county lies. Republican majorities can be found around the southwest and western shores, and also the far north shore. ==Diplomatic missions==