East Hawaii News – Big Island Now https://bigislandnow.com Big Island News, Weather, Entertainment & More Mon, 21 Jul 2025 13:25:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 UPDATE: Police recover bodies of 2 women from within downed banyan tree in Hilo https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/21/update-police-recover-bodies-of-2-women-from-within-downed-banyan-tree-in-hilo/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/21/update-police-recover-bodies-of-2-women-from-within-downed-banyan-tree-in-hilo/#comments Mon, 21 Jul 2025 13:12:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404872 Update at 3:12 a.m. July 21, 2025: Hawai‘i Island police on Sunday afternoon recovered the bodies of two women from within a massive iconic banyan tree that uprooted and crashed down a week ago across Kilauea Avenue and onto a portion of nearby Calvary Chapel Hilo on the west banks of the Wailoa State Recreation Area lagoon.

A couple walks by the fallen banyan tree on Kīlauea Avenue on Tuesday, July 15. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

Personnel with Hawai‘i Police Department Area I Criminal Investigation Section, Hawai‘i Fire Department and a body removal service extricated the bodies from deep within the tangled debris of downed banyan tree, which fell July 12.

Preliminary observations indicate the women were likely struck by falling tree limbs. Both were pronounced dead at 4:28 p.m. Sunday.

Autopsies will be conducted later this week to determine their exact cause of death. Police do not suspect foul play at this time.

The identities of the victims have not been released, pending positive identification and notification of next of kin.

Police responded to the scene at 9:41 a.m. after reports of possible human remains being located deep within the fallen banyan tree — just up the street from Chiefess Kapi‘olani Elementary, not too far from Cafe 100, and across the street from Roxy’s Salon, right behind Just Cruisin Coffee, a short walk from the Hilo Burger Joint.

Hawai‘i Fire Department personnel confirmed the presence of human remains, but were unable to extricate them because of safety concerns.

Crews from Hawai‘i County Department of Public Works, a county-contracted tree trimming company and Hawai‘i Fire Department spent several hours cutting away large branches to gain access to the victims.

Kīlauea Avenue, between Mohouli Street and Pauahi Street, was closed for several hours while debris was removed and officials conducted search and recovery efforts.

Hawai‘i Fire Department and Hawai‘i Police Department personnel responded to the scene of the downed banyan tree — the first unit arrived at 3:46 p.m., just 6 minutes after the surprise uprooting — July 12 to find its branches laying across all lanes of Kīlauea Avenue and on top of a portion of Calvary Chapel Hilo.

One vehicle was also found under the fallen tree’s branches on the roadway. The occupants were able to get out of the vehicle and from under the banyon’s felled canopy prior to the arrival of first responders.

Video from a surveillance camera at Roxy’s Salon looking makai across the street captured the moment mere seconds before 3:40 p.m., when the giant banyan tree begins to topple.

About 10 seconds — less time than everyone inside the salon can react — is all it takes for the huge Ficus to fall.

Several power and utility poles are violently yanked from the adjacent cement sidewalk when the cascading canopy catches one, hooks lines connecting others and they fall like dominoes — at least one snapping like a twig — eventually leaving power lines snaking across both sides of the street blocked by the buckled banyan.

The banyan tree that uprooted July 12, 2025, across Kīlauea Avenue and on top of a portion of Calvary Chapel Hilo in Hilo. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i Fire Department)

A total of 24 Hawai‘i Fire Department personnel responded along with 13 various emergency and other units, including two engines, three Fire Department medic units, the on-duty battalion chief, one ladder truck, one rescue unit, one heavy rescue unit, one investigation unit, two additional specialized units and one American Medical Rescue ambulance unit.

The discovery of the two women within the banyan tree debris came as a sorrowful revelation to many as they learned and read about it Sunday across social media.

Especially after the community’s resounding relief when it seemed no one was seriously injured — or worse — in the estimated by many 100-plus-year-old tree’s uprooting.

Hawai‘i Fire Department reported the day the banyan fell that the surrounding area was searched and evacuated.

Calvary Chapel Hilo, which was damaged by the tree falling on part of its building, was searched and cleared. Bystander videos of the banyan toppling over were even reported to have been reviewed to account for pedestrians or other vehicles that might have been caught under the tree.

A Hawai‘i Fire Department drone was used to obtain an aerial survey of the incident area.

Fire Department personnel were at the scene for nearly 2 hours before turning it over to Hawai‘i Police Department, Hawaiian Electric, Hawai‘i Department of Public Works and Hawaiian Telcom, with the department’s last unit back in quarters by 5:53 p.m.

The recovery of the two women’s bodies also came 2 days after Hawai‘i County Mayor Kimo Alameda spoke briefly about the banyan tree situation in his weekly update on social media.

He continued to express the community’s sense of relief, giving thanks that no one go hurt, before speaking about the efforts of crews to get Kīlauea Avenue open again and utilities and communications reconnected after the tree fell without knowing anything about the tragedy that would unfold this past weekend within the now twisted branches of its collapsed canopy.

“I just want you to know, that’s not the county’s banyan tree. That’s the state and maybe even Kamehameha Schools,” Alameda said in his July 18 update. “But because of public safety, our crew, along with Hawaiian Tel and HECO were down there, restoring electricity and communication lines. And what I thought would take 3 days before the road could open took 1 day. Unbelievable.”

Kīlauea Avenue was closed between Mohouli Street and Hōkū Street from shortly after the banyan tree fell just before 4 p.m. July 12 until Hawai‘i Police Department reported at 6:36 a.m. July 14 that both lanes of traffic were again open.

“I CANNOT BELIEVE that a more thorough assessment/investigation of the situation and area was not done at the time the tree fell. And we all been driving by like nothing,” replied Tiffany Kahumoku to a KHON2 post on Facebook about the human remains being found Sunday under the banyan tree. “Condolences to the family.”

A view from the south side of where the fallen banyan tree originally stood on the makai side of Kīlauea Avenue, looking north the afternoon of July 12, 2025. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i Fire Department)

Kristie-Lee Oshiro explained in a reply to the same post that her first thought when the banyan toppled over was that first responders would search for people among the tree’s fallen branches “because we all know homeless sleep under these big trees.”

She just assumed they’d automatically check that: “I guess not.”

Many commenters were confused why ownership of the property where the banyan tree fell or the tree itself mattered for police or first responders to have the authority to search for human remains, bodies, victims or survivors during an incident such as this.

“Church property or not, it needed to be checked,” Liz Myhre replied to the KHON2 post, adding she hopes the two women “passed quickly” and weren’t stuck alive under there for awhile.

“I hope they passed quickly as well,” wrote Mary Urbanski in reply to Myhre. “Sickens me to think otherwise.”

Anyone with information related to this investigation is urged to contact Detective Sybastian Keltner with Hawai‘i Police Department Area I Criminal Investigation Section at 808-961-2378 or via email at sybastian.keltner@hawaiicounty.gov.

Those who prefer to remain anonymous can call Crime Stoppers at 808-961-8300.

News reporter Nathan Christophel contributed to this story.

Original post at 12:25 p.m. July 20, 2025: The Hawaiʻi Police Department advises motorists to avoid Kīlauea Avenue between Mohouli Street and Pauahi Street near the fallen banyan tree.

Police are currently investigating reports of human remains found in the area while road crews are working to clear portions of the tree for the next six hours.

Anyone with information relative to this investigation is encouraged to call the Hawai’i Police Department’s non-emergency number at 808-935-3311.

Story will be updated with any changes to information available.

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Man on probation for ATV, trailer thefts last year from Puna shools charged in two new separate incidents https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/20/man-on-probation-for-atv-trailer-thefts-last-year-from-puna-shools-charged-in-two-new-separate-incidents/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/20/man-on-probation-for-atv-trailer-thefts-last-year-from-puna-shools-charged-in-two-new-separate-incidents/#comments Sun, 20 Jul 2025 13:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404791 A 28-year-old Puna man on probation for stealing an all-terrain vehicle from one Puna high school and then about 3 months later thieving a trailer from a Puna charter school has been arrested and charged in connection with two new separate incidents.

This time it’s Puna incidents involving alleged vehicle theft as well as robbery and assault.

Ha‘aheo Chan

Hawai‘i County prosecutor’s office reports Ha‘aheo Chan of Mountain View is charged with:

  • Second-degree robbery.
  • First-degree theft (theft of a motor vehicle).
  • First-degree unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle.
  • First-degree unauthorized entry into a motor vehicle.
  • Third-degree assault.

Second-degree robbery and first-degree theft — the most serious offenses with which Chan is charged — are Class B felonies, each punishable by a maximum 10 years in prison if convicted.

Chan made his initial appearance July 17 in Hilo District Court.

The court denied his request for supervised release and maintained his bail at $143,000. Chan was ordered to return at 2 p.m. July 21 to Hilo District Court for a preliminary hearing in the case.

Prosecutors notified the court they intend to seek a mandatory prison term, with no eligibility for probation, if Chan is found guilty as charged.

This is not the first time the 28-year-old Mountain View man has been accused, arrested, charged and/or pleaded in connection with incidents involving similar charges.

Chan was arrested and charged in August 2024 for stealing a John Deere all-terrain vehicle from Kea‘au High School.

He was out on supervised release after stealing the Kea‘au High ATV when he was arrested and charged in November 2024 for making off with a trailer Oct. 2, 2024, from Hawaiʻi Academy of Arts and Science Public Charter School campus in Pāhoa.

During the execution of a search warrant in a bedroom thought to be Chan’s at a Sandalwood Drive home in Pāhoa where the trailer was found Oct. 30, 2024, Hawai‘i Police Department officers also recovered a .22-caliber Jennings pistol, .22-caliber ammunition, 10-plus grams of methamphetamine and a glass smoking pipe, leading to additional drug and theft charges.

Online court documents show Chan pleaded no contest — a plea in which a defendant does not admit guilt but does not contest the charge — to all charges in those two incidents last year as part of plea deals with prosecutors in exchange for 4 years probation and paying restitution.

He was supposed to appear Aug. 22 in Hilo Circuit Court for a proof of compliance and restitution hearing.

Instead, as the prosecutor’s office reports, Chan was arrested and charged most recently — while on probation — in connection with two separate incidents July 13 in Puna.

One involved the alleged theft of a Jeep Wrangler Rubicon reported stolen from the parking lot of Sundari Gardens in Pāhoa.

The same day, the second incident involved the alleged robbery and unauthorized entry into a motor vehicle as well as a reported assault taking place on the shoulder of 37th Avenue in Orchidland Estates.

Hawai‘i Police Department Area I Crime Reduction Unit officers found and arrested Chan on July 16 at a Mountain View home.

A motion to revoke his probation and proposed motion for the revocation of his probation and resentence along with an application for an arrest warrant in connection with the cases from August and November last year were filed July 18 in Hilo Circuit Court by Hawai‘i County prosecutors.

Hawai‘i Police Department Puna Patrol Officer Dallas Arce initiated the most recent Puna robbery investigation while the July 13 motor vehicle theft investigation was initiated by Officer Jason Lin with Puna Patrol.

Hawai‘i Police Department Area I Criminal Investigation Section Detective Michael Matsumura led the July 13 felony investigation.

Deputy Hawai‘i County Prosecuting Attorneys Woodrow Pengelly and Patrick Muñoz are prosecuting the new case.

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Tsunami watch issued for Hawai‘i, canceled less than an hour later after large quake off Russian coast https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/20/tsunami-watch-issued-for-hawaii-canceled-less-than-an-hour-later-after-large-quake-off-russian-coast/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/20/tsunami-watch-issued-for-hawaii-canceled-less-than-an-hour-later-after-large-quake-off-russian-coast/#comments Sun, 20 Jul 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404823 Hawai’i was briefly under the threat of a possible tsunami — based on available data being investigated by forecasters in Honolulu at the time — on July 19, with a tsunami watch issued just after 9 p.m. following a large earthquake that struck off the eastern coast of Russia in the northern Pacific Ocean.

But within less than an hour, the National Weather Service Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no threat and canceled the watch.

This screenshot of a map from U.S. Geological Survey shows the immediate area of where the magnitude-7.4 earthquake struck 89.5 miles east of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia, at 8:49 p.m. July 19, 2025, triggering a tsunami watch to be issued at about 9 p.m. for Hawai‘i that was subsequently canceled less than an hour later.

The warning center in Honolulu issued the tsunami watch for Hawai‘i following what at first was recorded as a 7.5-magnitude earthquake reported at 8:49 p.m. located 89.5 miles east of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia.

Forecasters issued the watch because available data at the time indicated there might be the threat of a possible destructive tsunami generated by the quake off the east coast of Kamchatka, Russia, that could impact coastal areas even far away from its epicenter.

Further updates were planned for every hour — or as conditions warranted — until the threat passed.

If one of the terrible series of large ocean waves was heading toward Hawai‘i, the earliest estimated time of arrival would have been about 5 hours and 40 minutes after the watch was issued, at 2:43 a.m. July 20.

It took forecasters less than an hour, however, to pour over the data and determine whether there was a tsunami threat to the islands.

Pacific Tsunami Warning Center sent out a new notification at 9:42 p.m. declaring the tsunami watch canceled and with a slightly downgraded magnitude for the earthquake of 7.4.

“Based on all available data, there is no tsunami threat to the state of Hawai‘i,” the agency said in its later notification. “This will be the final message issued for this event unless additional data are received.”

After people began to realize there no longer was a threat, a giant sigh of relief washed over social media, with many thanking God or “the Lord” and saying amen for the good news. There was at least one “Hallelujah.”

“[Watch] has been cancelled,” replied Judy Kelley to her own post in the Everything Kaua‘i group on Facebook. “Relax. Enjoy your Mai Tai.”

This screenshot of a map from U.S. Geological Survey shows a regional view the Pacific Ocean that shows where Hawai‘i is located in relationship with Kamchatka, Russia, where the magnitude-7.4 earthquake struck 89.5 miles east of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia, at 8:49 p.m. July 19, 2025, triggering a tsunami watch to be issued at about 9 p.m. for Hawai‘i that was subsequently canceled less than an hour later.

U.S. Geological Survey explained that the 7.4-magnitude quake occurred as the result of reverse faulting at a depth of about 12 miles.

At the location of this earthquake, the Pacific plate is moving west-northwest with respect to the North America plate at about 3 inches per year.

Note: The North America plate extends westward beyond the North American continent. The earthquake’s location and sense of motion is consistent with the faulting on the subduction zone plate interface of the Kuril-Kamchatka Arc.

While commonly plotted as points on maps, earthquakes of this size are more appropriately described as slips over a larger fault area.

The Kuril-Kamchatka arc has frequent moderate to large earthquakes and has hosted 29 additional 6.5-magnitude or above events within about 155 miles of the July 19 earthquake throughout the preceding century.

A magnitude-9 Kamchatka earthquake in November 1952 resulted in a destructive Pacific-wide tsunami that reached the shores of Hawai‘i, causing damage on the Big Island and elsewhere.

Information from University of Washington College of the Environment Department of Earth and Space Sciences shows tsunami waves destroyed boats, knocked down telephone lines, destroyed piers, scoured beaches and flooded lawns in 1952.

A small bridge connecting Cocoanut Island to the shore at Hilo Bay was destroyed by a wave when it was lifted off its foundation and smashed down when water swept in with a runup of 12 feet.

Elsewhere around Hilo Bay — which recorded the highest levels of runup from the 1952 tsunami generated by the magnitude-9 Kamchatka quake — water levels could have gotten as high as 11.5 feet. The water level rose to 11 feet at Reed’s Bay.

The July 19 temblor struck roughly 45 miles northeast from the 1952 quake’s epicenter.

  • Wailoa River in Hilo recedes in November 1952 because of a tsunami generated by a magnitude-9 earthquake that happened east of Kamchatka, Russia, that left boats stranded. (Photo Courtesy: Pacific Tsunami Museum/Fujii Collection)
  • Wailoa River in Hilo recedes in November 1952 because of a tsunami generated by a magnitude-9 earthquake that happened east of Kamchatka, Russia, that left boats stranded. (Photo Courtesy: Pacific Tsunami Museum/Fujii Collection)

Some on social media said it’s still important to be vigilant regardless if there is no longer a threat of tsunami waves striking Hawai‘i shores.

“Just FYI,” replied Rob Jr. See to a Facebook post by Dane DuPont in the Hawai‘i Tracker group letting people know the tsunami watch was canceled. “I’ve been through a lot of watches and warnings. The surge still exists. I’ve seen many pulled out to sea because of this. Stay vigilant. Don’t be stupid and think you’re invincible while picking ʻopihi or diving during this time.”

A member of a private Hawaiian Paradise Park group on Facebook informed people the watch was canceled, but encouraged everyone to “feel free to sleep with surfboard tonite for extra precaution.”

The U.S. Geological Survey showed at least an additional nine earthquakes, aftershocks, of magnitude-5 or above — one magnitude-6.6 and another magnitude 6.7 — had followed the 7.4-magnitude monster that caused the tsunami excitement.

Adding in quakes of magnitude-4 or above, there were 15 more strong shakers before this story was published.

Visit the National Weather Service Honolulu forecast office website or call the automated weather line at 808-245-6001 for weather updates

Visit the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center website for additional tsunami information.

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‘Our goal is simple — stop wildfires before they become disasters’ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/our-goal-is-simple-stop-wildfires-before-they-become-disasters/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/our-goal-is-simple-stop-wildfires-before-they-become-disasters/#comments Sat, 19 Jul 2025 18:10:31 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404690 Hawai‘i Gov. Josh Green on July 18 signed an emergency proclamation, activating the Hawai‘i National Guard for Operation Hoʻopauahi to be ready when first responders need help battling wildfires anywhere in the state.

Tinder-dry conditions contributed to the spread of this June 2012 wildfire in the Pāhala area of Kaʻū. (Photo File: Hawaiʻi Fire Department)

It’s timing is not a coincidence. Much of the state is more than parched, including the Big Island, where nearly 90% of the island is abnormally dry or experiencing some level of drought. 

That trend is expected to persist and even worsen for some areas of the islands during the next few months, especially the hottest — and possibly driest — months of summer August and September, increasing ignition risk for wildfires.

“Our goal is simple — stop wildfires before they become disasters,” Hawai‘i National Guard Commander-in-Chief Green said in an announcement for his emergency proclamation, calling the move a proactive step that will “help save lives, protect property and strengthen our state’s overall emergency response.”

Operation Hoʻopauahi — which means “to extinguish fire” in Hawaiian — will initially keep a Hawaiʻi Army National Guard CH-47F Chinook helicopter crew mobilized to respond as soon as the point of wildfire ignition.

The copter and its crew will be immediately dispatched to provide aerial firefighting support in any of the state’s counties, increasing capacity to contain and extinguish a fire in its early stage.

“This authorization and Operation Hoʻopauahi also will allow us to quickly and effectively activate other Hawaiʻi National Guard resources such as evacuation teams, traffic control and security missions,” added Hawaiʻi Adjutant General Brig. Gen. Stephen F. Logan in the governor’s announcement. “This is an opportunity where the Guard can help to enable a safe, secure and thriving state.”

The Hawaiʻi Emergency Management Agency and Hawaiʻi National Guard are consistently in communication with county emergency managers and stand ready to offer support when needed.

Green’s latest emergency proclamation comes on the heels of multiple wildfires that ignited during the first half of July throughout Hawaiʻi, including two on O’ahu that required evacuations; one of which also resulted in the death of a 94-year-old woman, who suffered smoke inhalation and second-degree burns.

It’s also a pre-emptive strike to make sure the state is ready to respond, especially since weather outlooks for the next few months agree there is significant danger of wildfire in much of the state, especially Oʻahu, Maui and the Big Island.

Graphic Courtesy: National Interagency Coordination Center

The National Interagency Coordination Center monthly/seasonal outlook issued July 1 for the months of July through October — compiled using data and information from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Weather Service and Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park — projects above normal significant fire potential, especially in leeward areas of the state, from Oʻahu south through the Big Island.

Average temperatures during the next few months should also generally be above normally, which falls in line with typical Hawaiʻi summer weather as August and September tend to be the hottest months of the season.

Precipitation, on the other hand, looks to be more hit and miss, the outlook says, as impacts from tropical cyclones are expected to be below normal for the next few months, meaning much of the state likely will be drier.

Some modeling, however, does suggest a slightly wetter signal in the northern tier of the islands, such as Kauaʻi.

The National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center concurs, forecasting an increased chance of below normal precipitation through October in already parched parts of the state, but less of a dry signal for Oʻahu and Kauaʻi.

“As of July 15, 2025, the U.S. Drought Monitor shows that approximately 53% of the state is experiencing moderate, severe or extreme drought conditions,” Green’s emergency proclamation says. “An additional 33% of the state is experiencing abnormally dry conditions.”

About 87% of the Big Island is experiencing abnormally dry conditions or some level of drought as of July 15, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, with 56% under moderate to extreme drought.

There’s about 3% of the island in the South Kohala/Hāmākua area that’s most parched, experiencing extreme drought that has persisted for at least a couple of weeks now.

In comparison, about 41% of Kauaʻi is seeing abnormally dry conditions or some level of drought as of this week, with the about 9% of drought-stricken area under moderate drought.

Map Courtesy: National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center

The Climate Prediction Center forecast through October calls for drought to persist in those areas already suffering, with other already abnormally dry places on the Big Island, Maui, Lānaʻi and Molokaʻi worsening into drought conditions.

As the state dries out more and drought expands, so, too, will the amount of fuel available to consume for any wildfire that sparks.

More moisture-deprived vegetation and plants that couldn’t take the stress of drought or dry conditions dying — both drying out even more — will become easy pray for any flames looking for a snack.

“Dry brush is widepread throughout the state,” Green’s proclamation states.

All of those factors together, as well as increasing temperatures during at least the next couple of months bringing more heat to the state — and less rain in the forecast — will only benefit wildfires, turning much of the state into a tinderbox that could go up in flames at any moment.

“Even small wildfires may quickly intensify and expand to threaten entire communities, requiring widespread evacuations and government response,” the emergency proclamation says.

The catastrophic wildfire that destroyed Lahaina 2 years ago in August 2023, killing more than 100 people and causing $5.5 billion in property damages, is one of the deadliest wildfires in U.S. history.

It’s also a powerful reminder about how wildfires are “high-risk threats to the people of Hawaiʻi.”

Wildfire in downtown Lahaina, Maui, viewed from offshore Aug. 8, 2023. (Photo File: Annalise Johnson)

“Drought and other conditions exist which contribute to an increased risk of severe wildfires, and which constitutes an imminent danger threat of an emergency or disaster throughout the state” Greeen’s proclamation states.

As seen already with the fires earlier this month on Oʻahu and elsewhere in the state, considerable government resources will likely be “required to mitigate these risks and to contain such wildfires as they ignite to protect the life, health and safety of the public.”

Green’s emergency proclamation is in place through Sept. 16.

You can read the full text of the proclamation online.

News reporter Nathan Christophel contributed to this story.

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Scheduled Hawai‘i Island lane closures on state roadways for July 19-25 https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/scheduled-hawaii-island-lane-closures-on-state-roadways-for-july-19-25/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/scheduled-hawaii-island-lane-closures-on-state-roadways-for-july-19-25/#comments Sat, 19 Jul 2025 13:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404741 Hawai‘i Department of Transportation announces the following lane closures and road work projects for state roadways on the Big Island during the week of July 19-25.

Cars are stalled in traffic because of tree trimming closing a lane on Highway 11 near Hilo. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

KANOELEHUA AVENUE (HIGHWAY 11)

HILO

  • Single lane closure on Kanoelehua Avenue (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 2.8 to 3.0, in the vicinity of East Palai Street, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. for maintenance on the pocket lane markings and crosswalk.

MAMALAHOA HIGHWAY (HIGHWAY 11)

PAHALA

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 49 to 50, in the vicinity of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

NAALEHU

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 68 to 69.5, in the vicinity of 68 Mile Road and Red Cinder Road, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

OCEAN VIEW

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 70 and 76, vicinity of Easement Road, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.

PAPA

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 84 and 86, vicinity of Old Mamalahoa Highway, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.
  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 89 and 93.5, vicinity of Papalani Place, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.

CAPTAIN COOK

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 106 to 107, in the vicinity of Honaunau School and Rabbit Hill Road, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 107 to 109, in the vicinity of Rabbit Hill Road and Koa Road, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass and shoulder work.

VOLCANO ROAD (HIGHWAY 11)

MOUNTAIN VIEW

  • Single lane closure on Volcano Road (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 19, in the vicinity of Lehuanani Street, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mowing and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure on Volcano Road (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 19, in the vicinity of Lehuanani Street, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mowing and shoulder work.

VOLCANO

  • Roving lane closure on Volcano Road (Route 11) possible in either direction between mile post 28 to 29, in the vicinity of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. for HELCO installation of new pole and wires.

HAWAII BELT ROAD (ROUTE 19)

PAPAIKOU

  • Single lane closure on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) possible in either direction in the vicinity of mile post 8, near Indian Tree Road, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for bridge maintenance.

NINOLE TO OOKALA

  • Single lane closure on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 29, in the vicinity of Moonlight Road, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.
  • Single lane closure on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 29, in the vicinity of Moonlight Road, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

OOKALA TO PAAUILO

  • Single lane closure on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) possible in either direction between mile post 30 to 35, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mulching, tree trimming, and shoulder work.

HONOKAA

  • Single lane closure on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) possible in either direction between mile post 42 to 44, on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mulching, tree trimming, and shoulder work.

MAMALAHOA HIGHWAY (HIGHWAY 190)

WAIMEA

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 190) possible in either direction between mile post 0 to 1, in the vicinity of Lindsey Road and Lalamilo Farm Road, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for striping.

SOUTH KOHALA

  • Single lane closure on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 190) possible in either direction between mile post 12.2 to 16.4, in the vicinity of Saddle Road on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for striping.

KOHALA MOUNTAIN ROAD (HIGHWAY 250)

KAPAAU

  • Single lane closure on Kohala Mountain Road (Route 250) possible in either direction between mile post 8.5 to 11, in the vicinity of Kohala Ranch Road on Saturday, July 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for tree trimming and shoulder work.

HAWI ROAD (HIGHWAY 250)

HAWI

  • Single lane closure on Hawi Road (Route 250) possible in either direction at mile post 19, in the vicinity of Akoni Pule Highway on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for tree trimming and shoulder work.

PUAINAKO STREET (HIGHWAY 2000)

HILO

  • Single lane closure on Puainako Street (Route 2000) possible in either direction between mile post 0.5 to 2.2, in the vicinity of Kanoelehua Avenue and Komohana Street, on Monday, July 21 to Friday, July 25 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for striping and installing new raised pavement markers.

Lane closure schedules can change at any time without notice. All projects are weather permitting.

A map of lane closures can be found online.

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With still more than 4 months of 2025 to go, DUI arrests at 52% of 2024 annual total https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/with-still-more-than-4-months-of-2025-to-go-dui-arrests-at-52-of-2024-annual-total/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/19/with-still-more-than-4-months-of-2025-to-go-dui-arrests-at-52-of-2024-annual-total/#comments Sat, 19 Jul 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404616 Hawai‘i Island police have made just shy of 500 arrests so far this year for driving under the influence of an intoxicant, booking 497 motorists for the offense through the week ending July 13.

The number is a nearly 5% decrease (4.97%) from the 523 total DUI arrests police made by this time in 2024; however, it is more than half, 52%, of the total 964 DUI arrests during all of last year.

And there’s still more than 4 months left in 2025.

Hawai‘i Island police man a DUI checkpoint in 2015. (Photo File: Big Island Now)

Hawai‘i Police Department data reveals the majority of those arrests seemingly happening consistently the most in Kona, Hilo and Puna, and in that order, respectively. However, the top two occasionally shift.

The past 2 weeks are good examples.

During the week of July 7-13, a total of 13 motorists were arrested for DUI on roadways around the island, four of whom were involved in traffic crashes.

Five of those arrests were made in Kona, with 4 reported in Hilo and 2 in Puna.

Big Island police arrested a total of 24 motorists for DUI during the week of 4th of July, from June 30 to July 6, with Hilo more than dominating the numbers.

The East Hawai‘i district accounted for 13 of the DUI arrests that week, more than half of the weekly total and the same amount of DUI arrests made the entire next week.

Kona was second on the list during the holiday week with 5 DUI arrests and Puna had 3.

The West Hawai‘i district still has a slight edge in total DUI arrests so far this year, however.

Police in Kona have booked 180 motorists for the offense up to this point in 2025, which is 52% of the total 347 DUI arrests made — or 167 less — in the aread throughout all of 2024.

Hilo follows in close second with 169 total DUI arrests so far in 2025, just 11 fewer than Kona but at nearly 60% of its total 297 made — or 128 less — during all of last year.

Puna remains the consistent third, with a total 93 DUI arrests so far this year, 47% of the total 196 DUI arrests made — or 103 less — throughout all of 2024 in the East Hawai‘i district.

DUI ARRESTS BY DISTRICT FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 7-13

Graph Courtesy: Hawai‘i Police Department

Hawai‘i Police Department Traffic Services Section also reviewed its updated crash records and found 558 major crashes so far this year. That marks a nearly 5% increase (4.89%) compared with the 532 major crashes recorded by the same time in 2024.

That also represents 57% of the total 987 major crashes on Big Island roadways throughout all of last year. There’s a difference of 429 between last year’s annual total and where the stats stand now.

Major crashes already increased 17.1% in 2024 from the 843 recorded in 2023.

Fatal traffic crashes and fatalities have seen a much welcomed decrease so far in 2025.

There have been 13 fatal crashes so far this year on Big Island roadways, a decrease of 23.53% compared with 17 that happened by this point last year. Those crashes resulted in 14 fatalities, a 26.32% decrease from the 19 fatalities resulting from those 17 fatal crashes.

Last year was brutal and deadly on Big Island roadways.

There were a total of 26 fatal crashes and 29 fatalities because of them. Compared to 2023, with 14 fatal crashes and 15 resulting fatalities, the island saw its numbers of fatal crashes and fatalities skyrocket by 85.7% and 93.3% in 2024.

Fatal crash and fatality numbers are right now at essentially half of what they were for all of last year — and essentially even with 2023, but with one less in each category.

Hawai‘i Police Department says DUI roadblocks and patrols will continue islandwide.

News reporter Nathan Christophel contributed to this story.

One man died in this two-vehicle crash that involved a 2002 Mazda pickup truck crossing the center line and colliding head-on 2015 Kenworth fuel tanker pulling a fuel tank trailer April 18, 2018, on Highway 19 near the 25-mile marker in Laupāhoehoe. Fatal crashes and fatalities on Big Island roadways so far this year, fortunately, have decreased compared with 2024.(Photo File)
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Hilo man receives 10-year prison sentence nearly 2 years after police find more than half a pound of meth in his vehicle https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/hilo-man-receives-10-year-prison-sentence-nearly-2-years-after-police-find-more-than-half-a-pound-of-meth-in-his-vehicle/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/hilo-man-receives-10-year-prison-sentence-nearly-2-years-after-police-find-more-than-half-a-pound-of-meth-in-his-vehicle/#comments Sat, 19 Jul 2025 02:47:30 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404663 A 37-year-old Hilo man was sentenced earlier this week to 10 years in prison after a search warrant executed on his vehicle in September 2023 turned up more than half a pound of methamphetamine and paraphernalia associated with distributing it.

Aysa Kalei Delos Santos

Hawai‘i County prosecutor’s office reports that Aysa Kalei Delos Santos appeared July 17 in Hilo Circuit Court for sentencing in the case.

Delos Santos on May 15 pleaded no contest to second-degree promoting a dangerous drug, second-degree attempted promoting a dangerous drug and operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant.

After hearing arguments from the parties, the court on July 17 sentenced Delos Santos to 10 years in prison for the second-degree promoting a dangerous drug and the second-degree attempted promoting a dangerous drug charges.

He also received 30 days in jail for operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant.

If the sentences were ordered to be served consecutively, Delos Santos would have faced a little more than 20 years behind bars. However, the court ordered them to be served concurrently, or at the same time, so the sentence is essentially cut in half to 10 years.

Second-degree promoting a dangerous drug and second-degree attempted promoting a dangerous drug are Class B felonies punishable by a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

The charges stem from a Sept. 17, 2023, incident when Hawai‘i Police Department officers contacted Delos Santos after receiving a report of a reckless driver near Ice Ponds on Kalanianaʻole Street in Hilo.

Officers with the Police Department’s VICE East Section responded to the scene and executed a narcotics search warrant on Delos Santos’ vehicle.

They recovered more than half a pound of methamphetamine, syringes, more than 50 zip packets, a digital scale and $4,439 cash.

The traffic stop and arrest were made by Hawai‘i Police Department South Hilo Patrol Officer Kristopher Palea. The felony drug investigation was handled by Lt. Kelly Moniz with the Police Department’s VICE East Section.

Deputy Hawai‘i County Prosecuting Attorney Elyssa Correia Keltner prosecuted the case.

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Police looking for 16-year-old girl reported as runaway https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/police-looking-for-16-year-old-girl-reported-as-runaway/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/police-looking-for-16-year-old-girl-reported-as-runaway/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2025 15:40:55 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404610
Erlyen Sangau

Hawai‘i Island police are once again asking the public for help with locating a missing teen reported as a runaway.

Authorities report that 16-year-old Erlyen Sangau was last seen at 3 p.m. July 16 on Leila Road in Volcano, wearing a pink T-shirt and black skirt with floral designs.

She is 5-foot-7, 90 pounds, with a tan complexion, black braided shoulder-length hair, brown eyes and thin build.

Anyone with information about Sangau’s whereabouts is urged to call Hawai‘i Police Department’s non-emergency line at 808-935-3311.

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Big Island nonprofit helps females deal with domestic violence, homelessness, substance abuse https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/big-island-nonprofit-helps-females-deal-with-domestic-violence-homelessness-substance-abuse/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/big-island-nonprofit-helps-females-deal-with-domestic-violence-homelessness-substance-abuse/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2025 15:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404378 Since February 2022, the Big Island nonprofit He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna has been offering a culturally responsive program, Haumana Kukākūkā, that is aimed at supporting female and female-identifying survivors of domestic violence, substance use disorders, homelessness and sexual trauma.

Renee Rivera, co-director of He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna, smiles at some of the women who are part of Haumana Kukākūkā during a lunch together on July 12, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

The first three years of the monthly support groups were funded privately by Cockrell Electric, with about 20 people helped through referral from HOPE Services Hawaiʻi.

In January, the Women’s Fund of Hawaiʻi awarded a $10,000 grant to He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna to help expand its program and allow self-referrals from women in need.

With that funding, Rivera has been able to better reach women in remote areas of Hawaiʻi Island, develop a mentorship initiative for past participants, and enhance community outreach efforts.

He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna also was awarded in January a Peer 2 Peer Grant for $75,000 by the National Center for Victims of Crime. This funding has allowed the organization to expand trauma-informed peer mentoring programs for survivors of crime, including domestic violence and sexual assault.

Members of Haumana Kukākūkā smile together while they listen to Renee Rivera talk about the program during a lunch at Kolekole Beack Park on July 12, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

The main program creates a puʻuhonua (safe and culturally affirming space) that encourages kukākūkā (courageous conversations) to promote deep healing and resilience. Participants engage in group and one-on-one mentoring sessions to address intergenerational trauma and work toward individual and community healing.

“Healing is a ladder that we are climbing one step at a time,” said Renee Rivera, the program’s co-director and lead mentor. “Sometimes it feels like I’m starting over all the way at the bottom myself. There is no perfect mother, child, sister, friend. There is no perfect woman, but it’s okay, because there are other women we can lean on and learn from.”

Participants commit to regular kukākūkā sessions and complete required assignments, looking for solutions that lie within ancestral roots, including huakaʻi to wahi pana (trips to sacred or culturally significant spaces).

A 2024 study by the Hawaiʻi State Coalition Against Domestic Violence found that domestic violence is a prevalent problem in the state, with 18% of adult residents saying they have experienced physical violence or intimidation from an intimate partner and that the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the violence and isolation for some.

The study also found that Native Hawaiians and Filipinos experienced the highest rates of domestic violence in Hawaiʻi at 30% and 24%, respectively

Members of Haumana Kukākūkā participate in a sign waving for the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women crisis this year. (Courtesy of Michelle Kobayashi)

“Many Native Hawaiians have either lost touch or have never had access to their own culture, which we need in order to heal from past trauma and change the future for ourselves,” Rivera said. “Before anyone can rebuild their life, they have to be given the space to heal, and sometimes all they need is just one person to support her, teach her, and love her no matter what she’s experienced in life.”

Rivera brings lived experience as a Native Hawaiian survivor of homelessness, sexual assault, domestic violence and substance addiction. She hosts group sessions and has created a community of supportive wāhine who are able to heal, embrace Native Hawaiian culture even if they are not Native Hawaiian, and nourish themselves through food, outdoor activities and kukākūkā.

Jerry, who did not wish to provide her last name, said she has been in the Haumana Kukākūkā program for about a year and has experienced a transformation.

“I can’t pinpoint when it started, but it is a direct result from being part of this,” she said. “We are not with each other all the time, but the connections we make with each other are so strong and real that we are always connected. It is healing.”

Kodie, who also did not give her last name, joined Haumana Kukākūkā in October after experiencing a domestic incident that left her without a support system for emotional and mental strength.

“When you have people to lean on, it makes a big difference,” Kodie said. “We all have different stories, but our culture is what ties us all together, even for those who aren’t Hawaiian. Renee always tells us to keep showing up as you are. She reminds us that even if we aren’t flawless, we still matter.”

Jerry added: “We have hope and faith in one another, and we stand up with each other for a greater purpose. We’re always thinking of the next sister, and the next and the next that we can bring in to heal.”

Women participating in Haumana Kukākūkā from He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna had a Galentine’s Day dinner together in Hilo on February 7, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

Rivera said she six women who have been in the program now attending college for the first time. She also has place a woman into housing after 16 years living on the street. And, a member of the support group a couple of years ago now is an intern with the program.

“I’m so proud of them and what we have been able to do together,” Rivera said. “We have been able to set a foundation for them, and I wish I could reach even more people.”

One of the first women to participate in the program said Rivera’s mentorship has completely changed her life at 56 years old.

“Renee has supported me through everything I have done,” said the woman who wished to remain anonymous. “She has pushed me to have higher expectations for myself and be a better version of me.

“I never thought my life would change, but now I have a sponsor, I’m on the drug court committee, and I went to college at 54. She helped me through it all.”

Photos from past events and activities are on display during a luncheon celebrating He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna on July 12, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

After facilitators, like Rivera and peer mentors, understand a person’s unique needs, they work with various local agencies to find housing, health care services, and mental and behavioral health services, as well as other programs or services that individual participants require.

“I’m so thankful that we have funders and community partners who believe in our vision,” said Jessica Ipina, director and founder of He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna. “We are creating pathways for women to heal, rebuild, and thrive.”

According to Ipina, the nonprofit will continue offering these important programs with the long-term goal of fostering individual and community-wide multigenerational healing.

“This was my way of giving back to my hānai family and the women who saved my life and changed its direction,” Ipina said. “I wouldn’t be here without them, and I feel just as committed to fostering this supportive environment that I see is making a difference.”

More information on Haumana Kukākūkā and the Peer to Peer mentoring can be found on the He Hoʻomaka Hou Ana O Puna website.

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Volcano Watch: Remembering a destructive Mauna Loa eruption 75 years ago https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/volcano-watch-remembering-a-destructive-mauna-loa-eruption-75-years-ago/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/18/volcano-watch-remembering-a-destructive-mauna-loa-eruption-75-years-ago/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404577 “Volcano Watch” is a weekly article and activity update written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates.

Lava fountains at the summit of Kīlauea have been shining a spotlight on Hawai’i’s most active volcano, but let’s not forget the larger one looming in Kīlauea’s background.

Mauna Loa is now quiet, so it’s a good opportunity to remember the 1950 Southwest Rift Zone eruption — the volcano’s most recent eruption to cause significant damage — 75 years ago.

This photo was taken by a Hawaiian Volcano Observatory monitoring webcam just before 6 a.m. July 9, 2025, during Episode 28 of the ongoing Kīlauea summit eruption. Mauna Loa looms in the background, illuminated by the morning sun. (Photo Courtesy: U.S. Geological Survey)

Mauna Loa erupted frequently prior to 1950. Consistent written records of Mauna Loa eruptions begin in 1843. Between then and 1950, there were 30, meaning that before 1950, Mauna Loa erupted on average every 3 to 4 years.

Fast forward to 2025 and there have been only three eruptions during the past 75 years since: 1975, 1984 and 2022.

While the frequency of eruptions has decreased since 1950 compared to the century before, Mauna Loa remains an active volcano that will erupt again someday.

Eruptions of Mauna Loa generally start high in the summit region, above 12,000 feet in elevation. From there, eruptions can migrate into one of the two rift zones — the Northeast Rift Zone or Southwest Rift Zone — or, less commonly, radial vents on the volcano’s northwest flank.

Mauna Loa inflation because of magma accumulating beneath the surface was evident on monitoring stations during the spring of 1950 at the summit of Kīlauea.

Seismic activity under Mauna Loa increased in May of that year, with the largest earthquake — a magnitude-6.4 temblor — happening May 29.

A swarm of earthquakes shook the volcano June 1, and the night sky was illuminated at 9:25 p.m. with red glow as a fissure system 2.5 miles long opened high on the southwest flank of Mauna Loa’s summit region.

Activity at the initial fissure system lasted just a few hours, and lava flows stalled at about 9,000 feet in elevation. Soon after, two other sets of fissure vents opened lower on the Southwest Rift Zone, between 10,500 and 8,500 feet and 8,200 and 7,810 feet in elevation.

Lava fountains nearly 200 feet high fed a system of complex braided lava flows moving nearly 5 miles per hour down Mauna Loa’s steep west flanks.

About 3 hours after those lower fissures opened, the first lava flow crossed Highway 11 and entered the ocean, destroying a gas station, post office and several homes along the way.

Fourteen and a half hours after the eruption began, another lava flow crossed Highway 11. This second flow destroyed several homes and entered the ocean about 1.2 miles south of the first flow.

Activity at both lava flows and their ocean entries ceased within about a day.

Yet another set of fissure vents opened even lower on the volcano later the night of June 1, between 8,200 and 7,810 feet in elevation. A lava flow from this fissure entered the ocean by the afternoon of June 2, farther south than the two earlier flows.

Lava would drain from Mauna Loa for the next 3 weeks via this channelized lava flow into the ocean.

Before the eruption ended June 23, Hoʻokena village was destroyed, including a post office, church, gas station, cemetery and at least 5 homes.

Structures of the Magoon Ranch, ʻŌhiʻa Lodge and several other vacation/fishing cottages were also destroyed. Lava flows crossed Highway 11 in three locations.

One man — who was looking after cattle on a ranch — was trapped between two lava flows for 28 hours before being rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard.

Thirty-five homestead lots were later opened in Kona for people whose property had been covered by lava in 1950.

The 1950 eruption was the largest-volume eruption of Mauna Loa’s Southwest Rift Zone since written records began; lava flows moved quickly down steep slopes in the region to enter the ocean within hours of the eruption onset.

Mauna Loa has been quiet since the 2022 Northeast Rift Zone eruption, but monitoring data indicates magma is slowly accumulating within the volcano.

As communities on the flanks of Mauna Loa continue to grow, Hawaiʻi Island residents should not forget these past eruptions.

While 75 years is a long time to humans, it goes by in the blink of an eye for an active volcano.

Volcano Activity Updates

Kīlauea has been erupting episodically within its summit caldera since Dec. 23, 2024. Its U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Alert Level Remains at Watch.

Episode 28 of the ongoing eruption happened July 9, with about 9 hours of fountaining from the north vent. Summit region inflation since the end of Episode 28, along with persistent tremor, suggests another episode is possible.

Current inflation data indicate Episode 29 is likely to start between July 17 and 18.

Sulfur dioxide emission rates are elevated in the summit region during active eruption episodes. No unusual activity has been noted along Kīlauea’s East Rift Zone or Southwest Rift Zone.

Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Alert Level remains at Normal.

One earthquake was reported felt in the Hawaiian Islands during the past week:

  • MAGNITUDE-3 located 3 miles south-southwest of Pāhala at a depth of 19 miles at 6:14 p.m. July 15.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory continues to closely monitor Kīlauea and Mauna Loa.

Visit the volcano observatory website for past “Volcano Watch” articles, Kīlauea and Mauna Loa updates, volcano photos, maps, recent earthquake information and more. Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.

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Pāhoa man sentenced to 15 years in prison for breaking into ex-girlfriend’s home, stabbing her several times in July 2021 https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/pahoa-man-sentenced-to-15-years-in-prison-for-breaking-into-ex-girlfriends-home-stabbing-her-several-times-in-july-2021/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/pahoa-man-sentenced-to-15-years-in-prison-for-breaking-into-ex-girlfriends-home-stabbing-her-several-times-in-july-2021/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2025 04:23:41 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404524 A 43-year-old Puna man was sentenced this week to 15 years in prison for breaking into his ex-girlfriend’s Hawaiian Beaches home 4 years ago and stabbing her several times in the chest, back and left arm.

Frank William Funes

Hawai‘i County prosecutor’s office reports that Frank William Funes of Pāhoa appeared July 16 in Hilo Circuit Court for sentencing.

A Hilo jury in September 2024 found Funes guilty as charged of first-degree burglary, a Class B felony, and the included offense of second-degree assault, a Class C felony. He was originally charged with second-degree attempted murder for the attack on his ex-girlfriend.

Funes received the the maximum penalties for both offenses, which the court ordered to be served consecutively.

First-degree burglary is punishable by either 10 years in prison or 4 years probation and up to 18 months in jail. Second-degree assault carries a penalty of either 5 years in prison or 5 years probation and up to a year in jail.

Funes on July 8, 2021, broke into his ex-girlfriend’s home in Hawaiian Beaches and proceeded to stab her with a large folding lockback knife, like a Buck Knife, in the left and right sides of her chest and left back side of her chest, left armpit and left arm.

The woman also sustained a collapsed lung in the assault.

The felony investigation was handled by Detective Gavin Kagimoto with the Hawai‘i Police Department Office of Professional Standards/Criminal Intelligence Unit and formerly a member of the Area I Juvenile Aid Section.

Deputy Hawai‘i County Prosecuting Attorneys Heipua Ahloy and Ha‘aheo Kaho‘ohalahala prosecuted the case.

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U.S. Postal Service hiring rural carriers to fill positions in several Big Island communities https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/u-s-postal-service-hiring-rural-carriers-to-fill-positions-in-several-big-island-communities/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/u-s-postal-service-hiring-rural-carriers-to-fill-positions-in-several-big-island-communities/#comments Fri, 18 Jul 2025 02:14:42 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404499
Photo Courtesy: U.S. Postal Service

Have you ever thought about being the person who brings a smile to someone’s face no mattter “rain nor heat nor gloom of night” when you deliver the ONE package they waited days to receive or put THE letter from a loved one they haven’t heard from in years into their excited hands?

The U.S. Postal Service is looking for good men and women like you to fill rural carrier positions in several Big Island communities.

Job fairs are scheduled July 18-19 at five post offices around the island during the 2-day period. Positions are available in Hilo, Kailua-Kona, Waimea and other areas.

Meet postal employees who will provide information about the assistant rural carrier and rural carrier associate positions available in those areas and help candidates apply on-site during the job fairs.

Times, dates and locations for Big Island hiring events:

  • WHEN: 10 to 11 a.m. July 18
    WHERE: Kealakekua Post Office, 81-990 Halekiʻi St., Kealakekua
  • WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m. July 18
    WHERE: Hōlualoa Post Office, 76-5921 Māmalahoa Highway, Hōlualoa
  • WHEN: 2 to 3 p.m. July 18
    WHERE: Kailua Post Office, 74-5577 Palani Road, Kailua-Kona
  • WHEN: 9 to 10 a.m. July 19
    WHERE: Kamuela Post Office, 67-1197 Māmalahoa Highway, Waimea
  • WHEN: 1 to 2 p.m. July 19
    WHERE: Hilo Post Office, 1299 Kekuanaoa St., Hilo

Assistant rural carrier and rural carrier associate salaries start at $20.38 per hour.

They also receive the Territorial Cost-of-Living Allowance, which is an additional payment to compensate postal employees who work in facilities outside the continental United States — such as Hawai‘i, Alaska and Guam — because of higher costs of living in those areas.

Driving is required for these positions.

Applicants must have a valid state driver’s license, safe driving record and at least 2 years unsupervised experience driving passenger cars or larger.

Join a diverse team with a variety of positions, training and advancement opportunities to maximize your skills and interests.

Applications are also accepted at the U.S. Postal Service website. Job postings, with requirements, are updated weekly, so check back frequently for additional opportunities.

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Top 10 things to do on Big Island for July 18-24: ‘Cabaret,’ Drag In July, Relay For Life, Pokémon Day, jazz, plus more https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/top-10-things-to-do-on-big-island-for-july-18-24-cabaret-drag-in-july-relay-for-life-pokemon-day-jazz-plus-more/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/top-10-things-to-do-on-big-island-for-july-18-24-cabaret-drag-in-july-relay-for-life-pokemon-day-jazz-plus-more/#comments Thu, 17 Jul 2025 18:58:29 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404478 Sorry we’re late getting the top 10 out to you, our amazing readers, on this fine Thursday morning of the third week of July.

There’s a ton of stuff happening this weekend and heading into the end of the month that we had to sift through so we could bring you some of the best.

For example, if you’re looking for a place to leave your worries behind, shed off those troubles and chuck your responsibilities, Hilo Education Arts Repertory Theatre has a place where you can lose yourself opening at a familiar spot in Downtown Hilo.

The theatre troupe’s production of “Cabaret” premieres this weekend for a 3-week run at the historic Palace Theater.

Hilo Education Arts Repertory Theatre’s production of “Cabaret” will dazzle and seduce audiences with its 1930s Berlin drama and scandals. The show opens this weekend at the Palace Theater in Downtown Hilo. (Photo Courtesy)

Audiences will experience the seedy, dazzling and decadent world of 1930s Berlin along with all the drama of the Kit Kat Club. Once you’re seduced by the scandals and the oh-so-sexy comedy, darlin’, you won’t want to leave.

Tickets are $25 for general admission.

Maybe a more chill vibe is your style? Don’t want to get too worked up? Downtown Hilo’s newest coffee spot might have event more in your lane.

Coffee Notes is your new home away from home — where coffee, culture and community blend perfectly. It’s hosting one of its first events, featuring Hilo jazz musicians Bradley Leighton and Bub Pratt, on Friday night.

The event is free, too, unless you bring your own beverages. Then there’s a $2 corkage fee.

If it’s a different kind of thrill and seduction you seek though — perhaps of a 4-wheeled variety — head to Hilo Drag Strip on Ho‘olaulima Road, past the Hilo transfer station and Hawai‘i County Mass Transit headquarters, for Big Island Auto Club’s Drag In July event this weekend.

Crowds will be treated to 2 days of drag racing, rumbling engines, lightning quick bikes and motorcycles and more during a Summer Showdown. It’s the Jardine ‘ohana memorial race as well, honoring and remembering the life of Lawrence “Turtle” Jardine.

Relay For Life of the Big Island also returns this weekend to Francis Wong Stadium in Hilo, shiking a bright light of hope on a future without cancer as teams and community members gather to and raise funds in support of the American Cancer Society.

Everyone on the island is invited — and encouraged — to come out and participate.

There are plenty of activities planned from the survivors and caregivers laps, lighting of the luminaries, family fun, food trucks, games, tons of items for sale, line dancing, of course Zumba and a lot more.

Cancer survivors walk by the main stage Saturday, July 16, 2022, taking the first lap of the night for Relay For Life of the Big Island 2022 at Francis Wong Stadium in Hilo. This year’s annual fundraiser event for the American Cancer Society and fight against cancer is July 19. (Photo File: Nathan Christophel/Big Island Now)

So don’t just sit there Saturday night. Get up, get out and get to Relay and make a difference.

There’s one more event we’ll mention before you peruse on your own, and it’s because you need your keiki to become a trainer to attend.

They’ll probably want to have a desire to at least catch all of the pocket monsters, anyway.

Gam3Escape in Hilo is hosting its July Pokémon Day this weekend, with Professor Jim returning to teach prospective Pokémon trainers how to play the Pokémon Trading Card Game.

Crowd-favorite Pokémon Bingo will return and a Pokémon Trading Card Game League Challenge tournament will be offered for anyone who wants to participate.

No opportunity will be missed to help everyone catch as many Pokémon as possible that day.

So, see, we told you there was a lot to go through — and there’s even more to do.

Here’s our top 10 things to do on the Big Island for July 18-24.

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Courtesy Photo

No. 1 — “Cabaret” (Hilo, July 18-21, 25-27 and Aug. 1-3)

When: 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays; doors, box office and concessions open 1 hour prior to performance time

Location: Hilo Palace Theater, 38 Haili St.

Leave all your worries at the door. Shed off those responsibilities. Hilo Education Arts Repertory Theatre invites you to a place where life is beautiful, the girls are gorgeous and the music never stops! Experience the dazzling, decadent world of the seedy Kit Kat Club of 1930s Berlin interpreted by a live orchestra, 35 of Hilo’s most dynamic performers and unforgettable songs such as “Don’t Tell Mama” and the title classic “Cabaret.” Trust us, darlin’, you’ll get one taste of the music, dance and drama with the seductive, scandalous and oh-so-sexy musical comedy, you won’t want to leave. Tickets are $20 for students, $25 general admission and $30 for priority orchestra seating.

More info/tickets: Visit the Palace Theater website.

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Cropped image from larger event flyer courtesy of Coffee Notes

No. 2 — Jazz Event (Hilo, July 18)

When: 8:30 p.m.

Location: Coffee Notes, 116 Keawe St.

Your new cozy neighborhood spot, where coffee, culture and community blend perfectly, is hosting one of its first events. More than just a café, Coffee Notes is your home away from home, and this Friday, it’s bringing Hilo jazz musicians Bradley Leighton and Bub Pratt right into your living room. So come out and catch some cool vibes at Downtown’s newest spot. Free to attend, but there is a $2 corkage fee if you bring your own beverage.

More info: Call Coffee Notes at 808-767-8887 or click here.

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Image cropped from larger image from Facebook

No. 3 — Drag In July (Hilo, July 19-20)

When: Gates open at 8 a.m. both days

Location: Hilo Drag Strip, 2295 Ho‘olaulima Road

Presented by Big Island Auto Club, expect 2 days of fast cars, rumbling engines, lightning quick bikes and motorcycles and more during this Summer Showdown event that will include time trials, junior dragsters, bracket racing, bikes and motorcyles. The weekend also serves as the Jardine ‘ohana memorial race, honoring and remembering Lawrence “Turtle” Jardine. Admission is $10 for adults. Keiki 12 years old and younger are free. All programs are subject to change based on participation/racers.

More info: Contact Big Island Auto Club at biachawaii@gmail.com or follow the club @biac808 on Facebook and Instagram.

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Photo Courtesy: National Park Service

No. 4 — Stewardship at the Summit: Rain Forest Restoration (Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, July 19)

When: 8:45 a.m.

Location: Meet project leaders Paul and Jane Field at Kīlauea Visitor Center parking lot

Volunteer to help remove invasive, non-native plant species that prevent native plants from growing in the national park. Wear sturdy hiking shoes and long pants. Bring a hat, rain gear, day pack, snacks and water. Gloves and tools are provided. Parents or guardians must accompany participants younger than 18 years old. 

More info: Visit the Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park website.

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Image Courtesy: Kahilu Theatre website

No. 5 — “A Little Night Music” (Waimea, July 19-20)

When: 3 p.m. both days

Location: Kahilu Theatre, 67-1186 Lindsey Road

This elegant and bittersweet musical — presented by Hawai‘i Performing Arts Festival featuring a full orchestra — waltzes through the follies of love and longing under the glow of the midsummer night. It blends sharp wit, heartbreak and sumptuous melodies — including the iconic “Send in the Clowns” — to tell a tale of intertwined romances and second chances. Tickets start at $40. Improve your experience for free by adding on a pre-performance conversation with the artistic team behind “A Little Night Music,” exploring the vision, challenges and creative journey behind bringing the musical to the Kahilu stage.

More info/tickets: Visit the Kahilu Theatre website.

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Cropped image from Facebook

No. 6 — July Pokémon Day (Hilo, July 19)

When: 3 p.m.

Location: Gam3Escape, 57 Shipman St.

Does your child like Pokémon? Do they have to catch them all? Professor Jim returns to Gam3Escape this month to teach participating trainers how to play the Pokémon Trading Card Game. The afternoon and evening will also include crowd-favorite Pokémon Bingo and a Pokémon Trading Card Game League Challege (deck lists are required; players will be divided into age divisions when possible). Keiki younger than 13 years old must be accompanied by an adult. Each participant will receive a starter deck, booster pack and a promo pack. Entry fees are $10 for learn to play and Pokémon Bingo and $10 for tournament.

More info: Contact Gam3Escape at 808-498-4095 or via email at g3ecustomerservice@gmail.com.

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Cropped image from Relay For Life of the Big Island page on the American Cancer Society website.

No. 7 — Relay For Life of the Big Island 2025 (Hilo, July 19)

When: 5 to 10 p.m.

Location: Francis Wong Stadium, 323 Manono St.

The Big Island community is invited — and encouraged — to come out and participate in this annual event that supports the American Cancer Society, raising funds for and awareness about the fight against cancer. Walk or run a lap — or 10. Decorate a luminary for a loved one who survived their battle with cancer or another who lost theirs. Cheer on cancer survivors as they walk triumphantly in their lap. There also will be lots of family fun with a dunk tank, horsehoes, cornhole, a “human slot machine” and more, plus food trucks, team contests, free entertainment, line dancing and great items for sale, among other activities, all with the goal of making sure hope is not lost but instead the light that guides the path to a future without cancer.

More info: Click here, follow Relay For Life of the Big Island on Facebook or email Kittrin Cade at kittrin.cade@cancer.org.

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Image Courtesy: Zeffy

No. 8 — Improv Comedy Night (Hilo, July 19)

When: 7 to 8:30 p.m.; doors open half an hour before the show

Location: The Keawe Theater, 280 Keawe St.

Get ready for an unforgettable evening of side-splitting laughter, quick-witted improv fueled by audience-driven antics and endless creativity during this hilarious show presented by Hilo Community Players and Big Island Comedy Theater. Parental discretion is advised as the show could contain mature content. General admission is $10. Tickets are $5 more at the door.

More info/tickets: Click here.

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Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i Keiki Museum

No. 9 — 3D Printing Fun (Waikōloa, July 21-25)

When: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day

Location: Hawai‘i Keiki Museum, 69-250 Waikōloa Beach Drive

Kids ages 8 to 15 years old will explore the world of computer-aided design by learning to use TinkerCAD to design and then printing their own toys. The 5-day workshop will include discussions about their toy design, sharing their design with other participants, exploring the exhibits at the musuem, working with TinkerCAD and then finally printing their 3D computer-aided designed toy and showing it to everyone to share what they learned. Cost is $250 per child.

More info/register: Visit the Hawai‘i Keiki Museum website.

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Photo Courtesy: Ku‘ikahi Mediation Center

No. 10 — Hilo Orchid Show Gala Preview Party (Hilo, July 24)

When: 6 to 9 p.m.

Location: Edith Kanaka‘ole Multi-Purpose Stadium, 350 Kalanikoa St.

Where’s the best place in Hilo to get wine, beer and food while you have fun with friends, fellow community members and neighbors plus get to bask in the sweet smell of orchids on display? It’s this party, silly, the “fun”-raiser that kicks off the annual Hilo Orchid Show and Sale while also raising funds for peace and agriculture. The evening gala features hard and soft beverages, catered food, live music plus orchid viewing and pre-sales. Tickets are $100 and can be purchased at The Most Irresistible Shop and Ku’ikahi Mediation Center in Hilo or online.

More info/tickets: Visit the Ku‘ikahi Mediation Center website. You can also contact Carol at 808-935-7844, ext. 8, or via email at carol@hawaiimediation.org.

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Compiled Image: Created by Big Island Now

Check for yourself to see what’s happening around the Big Island

We admit. We can’t fit everything going on each week in our top 10. So here are websites for some popular Big Island venues that you can peruse to discover other events, activities, shows, festivals or workshops that pique your interest.

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Mountain View man charged with reported theft of SUV, 2 incidents of refusing to stop https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/mountain-view-man-charged-with-reported-theft-of-suv-2-incidents-of-refusing-to-stop/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/17/mountain-view-man-charged-with-reported-theft-of-suv-2-incidents-of-refusing-to-stop/#comments Thu, 17 Jul 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404412 A 30-year-old Puna man faces several charges in connection with the reported theft of an SUV at the end of June and two separate incidents earlier this month when he refused orders by Big Island police to stop while he was driving.

Justin Yamauchi

The Hawai‘i County prosecutor’s office reports Justin Yamauchi of Mountain View is charged with:

  • First-degree theft (theft of a motor vehicle).
  • First-degree unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle.
  • Habitual property crime.
  • Driving without a license.
  • Two counts of second-degree resisting an order to stop a motor vehicle.

Yamauchi made his initial court appearance July 16 in Hilo District Court, where his bail was maintained at $135,000. He was also ordered to appear July 18 for a preliminary hearing.

The most serious offense, first-degree theft, is a Class B felony punishable by either 10 years in prison or 4 years probation and up to 18 months in jail.

Yamauchi was arrested and charged with the alleged theft of a Subaru Outback reported stolen June 29 from a Kino‘ole Street home in Hilo, as well as two separate incidents July 7 and 14 when police ordered him to stop and he is reported to have resisted.

Police reports say Hawai‘i Police Department Crime Reduction Unit officers arrested Yamauchi on July 15 at the Kurtistown 7-Eleven after he was seen driving the stolen Subaru.

The 30-year-old Mountain View man was also arrested at the same time on two unrelated outstanding arrest warrants.

Hawai‘i Police Department South Hilo Patrol investigated the reported SUV theft and Puna Patrol initiated the resisting an order to stop investigations.

The Police Department’s Area I Criminal Investigation Section Crime Reduction Unit Officers Edward Petrie and Sean-Tyler Kepoo led the felony investigation.

Deputy Hawai‘i County Prosecuting Attorney Woodrow Pengelly is prosecuting the case.

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Update: Police report previously missing endangered runaway girl has been found https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/16/update-police-report-previously-missing-endangered-runaway-girl-has-been-found/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/16/update-police-report-previously-missing-endangered-runaway-girl-has-been-found/#comments Thu, 17 Jul 2025 05:38:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404406
Navaeh-Marie Serrano

Update at 7:38 p.m. July 16, 2025: Hawai‘i Island police report that 11-year-old Navaeh-Marie Serrano, who was previously reported as an endangered runaway, was located in at 7 p.m. July 16 in good health.

Original story posted at 6:58 p.m. July 16, 2025: Hawai‘i Island police are asking the public for help with finding an endangered 11-year-old girl who was reported as a runway.

Navaeh-Marie Serrano is 5-foot-6, 180 pounds, with a medium complexion, brown hair and brown eyes.

She was last seen at 2:30 p.m. July 16 on Mokihana Street in Mountain View, wearing a purple shirt and beige pants.

Navaeh-Marie is considered endangered because of her age.

Anyone who has information that can help safely locate Navaeh-Marie is urged to call 9-1-1 or the Hawai‘i Police Department non-emergency line at 808-935-3311 immediately.

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36th annual Richardson Roughwater Swim set for end of August in Hilo https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/16/36th-annual-richardson-roughwater-swim-set-for-end-of-august-in-hilo/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/16/36th-annual-richardson-roughwater-swim-set-for-end-of-august-in-hilo/#comments Thu, 17 Jul 2025 01:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404385 Registration is open for the 36th annual Richardson Roughwater Swim.

Hawai‘i County Department of Parks and Recreation is host the open ocean swimming race Aug. 30 at Richardson Ocean Park in Hilo. It begins at 9:30 a.m.

Swimmers participate in a previous Richardson Roughwater Swim at Richardson Ocean Park. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)

This 1-mile swim is designed for strong swimmers with strong swimming skills who can handle the sometimes rough course conditions, including currents and waves.

There are rocks and could be waves breaking over an outside the reef near the channel entrance. There also could be ocean swells with a strong current along the coastline.

Racers can swim with or without fins; any swimmer wanting to use a snorkel must also register in the “FINS” category. Those using fins or snorkels must indicate that on their entry form.

No flotation devices, wet suits or hand gloves/paddles are allowed.

Registration information

  • Entry fee: $30 (includes entry, registration, timing service and swag for swimmers).
  • Payment method: All payments must be paid in cash, money order or check ONLY (payable to Hawai‘i County Director of Finance).
  • Mail entry forms and fee to: 2025 Roughwater Swim, 799 Pi‘ilani St., Hilo, HI 96720.
  • Deadline: All registration forms and fees must be mailed in and postmarked no later than Aug. 13. Mail-in registration only. No registrations accepted day of the event.
  • Towels: Participants will receive a race towel, while supplies last. (Towels are limited in quantity.)

Entry forms and event information are available on the Parks and Recreation website.

Crop of a screenshot of a flyer courtesy of Hawai‘i County.

“FINLESS” age group categories

  • 10 to 14 years old (Keiki).
  • 15 to 19 years old.
  • 20 to 34 years old.
  • 35 to 49 years old.
  • 50 to 64 years old (Masters).
  • 65+ years old (Seniors).
  • 80+ years old (Kūpuna).

Awards will be given for first place in the “FINLESS” categories only.

Email the Parks and Recreation Aquatics Section at aquatics@hawaiicounty.gov for additional information.

A swimmer reaches shore after completing a previous Richardson Roughwater Swim at Richardson Ocean Park. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)
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8 new adult corrections officers graduate, now working at Big Island facilities https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/8-new-adult-corrections-officers-graduate-now-working-at-big-island-facilities/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/8-new-adult-corrections-officers-graduate-now-working-at-big-island-facilities/#comments Wed, 16 Jul 2025 01:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404325 Eight new adult corrections officers are now part of the teams at two state corrections facilities on the Big Island after graduating from basic corrections recruit training.

Graduates of Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Basic Corrections Recruit Class 25-03B salute while the national anthem is sung during their graduation ceremony Monday, July 14, 2025, at Island of Hawaiʻi YMCA in Hilo. (Screen grab from video courtesy of Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation)

The new officers were assigned to the following jails and prisons in East Hawaiʻi:

A graduation ceremony was conducted July 14 at Island of Hawaiʻi YMCA in Hilo.

Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Director Tommy Johnson was guoted congratulating the graduates in a state release: “All of these graduates have worked hard to this point and effectively demonstrated humility and teamwork.”

Johnson said they will face situations throughout their careers that will test their character, integrity, commitment, faith and courage of conviction. The challenge is to do what is right.

“In doing so, they will have the greatest impact on public safety and gain the respect and admiration of their peers, supervisors and the public they serve,” the release quotes the director. “I sincerely thank each of the graduates for their service. I thank their [families] and loved ones for their steadfast support.

Keynote speaker Hilo Circuit Court Judge Peter K. Kubota also applauded the graduates.

“You guys are great young men,” Kubota was quoted in the release. “A lot of training, a lot of commitment, a lot of hard work and sacrifices from yourselves and your family members to get you there. All from our beautiful community of Hilo.”

It’s a challenging and “very rewarding career that you’re embarking on,” Kubota added, noting that the new corrections officers join a team throughout the islands that forms the foundation of the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

There are 1,140 adult corrections officer positions filled in the state. Another about 380 are vacant.

  • Photo Courtesy: Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
  • Photo Courtesy: Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
  • Photo Courtesy: Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation

Graduates of Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Basic Corrections Recruit Class 25-03B completed 8 weeks of rigorous training comprised of more than 300 hours of classroom instruction and physical training.

A variety of subjects are taught, including standards of conduct, ethics and professionalism, report writing, interpersonal communications, maintaining security, crisis intervention, security threat groups (gangs), mental health, first aid, use of firearms and self-defense tactics.

All incoming corrections officers also receive field training during their final weeks of training.

Recruits go into facilities to begin their jobs with guidance from training sergeants.

New officer Valuvalu Leiato said he wanted to become a corrections officer to make a positive impact on those in custody and under the care of the Hawaiʻi Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

“You can never judge a book by its cover,” Leiato was quoted in the release. “Like what the judge said, a simple shaka, a simple aloha. That makes a big difference.”

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UPDATE: Missing endangered 30-year-old man located https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/hawai%ca%bbi-island-police-seek-help-finding-30-year-old-missing-man/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/hawai%ca%bbi-island-police-seek-help-finding-30-year-old-missing-man/#comments Tue, 15 Jul 2025 21:21:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404217 Update at 11:21 a.m. July 15, 2025: Hawai’i Police Department reports that 30-year-old Brian McGowan, who was previously reported as an endangered missing person, was located July 14 in Hilo in good health. 

Original post from 3:37 p.m. July 14, 2025: Hawaiʻi Island police are asking for the public’s assistance in locating 30-year-old Brian McGowan, who has been reported missing.

Brian McGowan

He was last seen in the area of the 300 block of Waiānuenue Avenue in Hilo on the afternoon of Thursday, July 10.

McGowan is described as having a light complexion, 6 feet tall, weighing approximately 165 pounds, with brown hair and hazel eyes. He was last seen wearing a red shirt and red pants.

McGowan may need medical assistance.

Police ask anyone with information about McGowan’s whereabouts to call the Police Department’s non-emergency number at 808-935-3311.

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Rotary club gives back to veterans with free tickets to the 71st Hilo Orchid Society Show https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/rotary-club-to-provide-veterans-with-free-tickets-to-the-2025-orchid-show/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/15/rotary-club-to-provide-veterans-with-free-tickets-to-the-2025-orchid-show/#comments Tue, 15 Jul 2025 13:44:20 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404246 The Rotary Club of Hilo and the Hilo Orchid Society have partnered to give back to veterans and first responders for the second year ahead of the Hilo Orchid Show at the end of the month.

Kathy Gollaher, right, Chair of the Hilo Orchid Show, and the Rotary Club of Hilo presented free show tickets to Jeno Enocencio, second from the right, at the Yukio Okutsu State Veterans Home in Hilo. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

The Rotary Club of Hilo is supporting veterans, service members, and first responders, especially their families, with free tickets to the renowned Hilo Orchid Society Show, a three-day event featuring orchids grown across the island at the Edith Kanakaʻole Multi-Purpose Stadium from Friday, July 25 to Sunday, July 27.

Veteran Honor Guard Commander Jeno Enocencio accepted the tickets on behalf of veterans and current service members living on Hawaiʻi Island. He and other members of the Veteran Honor Guard have been distributing them across the island’s communities.

“We did this last year and it was a great way to bring us together with the Hilo Orchid Society to give back to a deserving part of our population,” said John Regan, member of the Rotary Club and the Orchid Society. “It’s going to be a wonderful event for everyone who attends.”

A vendor sells plant starts during the Hilo Orchid Society Show in 2024. (File photo: Kelsey Walling)

The show will feature displays from 17 orchid vendors and two amateur growers, including the Hilo Orchid Society. Members will present an accurate layout of orchids, which will be placed where they best grow, across a map of the Big Island.

“We wanted to lean into the educational side of this event, because there is so much to learn at all ages,” said Kathy Gollaher, this year’s show chairperson. “Last year, we initiated the Keiki and ʻOhana Orchid World and we plan to bring that back as well.”

Nineteen arts and crafts vendors will offer orchid-focused items, along with food available outside the venue but inside the gates.

Orchid displays and vendors will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on July 25, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on July 26, and from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on July 27.

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Nearing its 100-year anniversary, the Hilo Palace Theater raises funds for an interior revitalization https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/13/nearing-its-100-year-anniversary-the-hilo-palace-theater-raises-funds-for-an-interior-revitalization/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/13/nearing-its-100-year-anniversary-the-hilo-palace-theater-raises-funds-for-an-interior-revitalization/#comments Sun, 13 Jul 2025 15:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404070 After 100 years of withstanding physical threats of tsunamis, hurricanes and volcano eruptions — as well as economic hardships from ownership changes and a pandemic — the Palace Theater in Hilo is undergoing a centennial refresh.

Hilo Palace Theater during its facade renovation in 2020. (File photo: Kelsey Walling)

On Oct. 26, 1925, the Palace Theater opened its doors under the ownership of Adam C. Baker, a well-known native Hawaiian showman. The Palace showed silent films accompanied live by the Palace Pipe Organ.

Today, the theater serves as a gathering place for Hilo, with a goal to entertain, educate and inspire those who step inside.

For the past 25 years, the nonprofit, Friends of the Palace Theater, has been working toward a clear mission: revitalizing, restoring and sustaining the Palace Theater as the iconic landmark that it is for the Big Island.

After more than 10 years of capital improvements — from the installation of air conditioning to the expansion of a solar array — Friends of the Palace Theater is now turning its efforts to the auditorium’s interior, which desperately is in need of care.

The Palace Theater Executive Director Phillips Payson is photographed in 2023. (File photo: Kelsey Walling)

“I have had my eyes on the centennial since I started at the Palace in 2018,” Executive Director Phillips Payson said. “It is an honor to be shepherding her through this momentous occasion.”

Payson said the Palace has gone through a transformation in the past seven years.

“We’ve done so much,” he said, ticking off the projects: facade renovation during COVID, air condition installation in the auditorium, addition of two fans in the auditorium and upgrade of the tech booth.

And after this yearʻs interior restoration, Payson said: “The Palace will look the best it has ever looked since the 1920s or ’30s.”

The Palace was designed to take advantage of its limited property size and the stadium seating arrangement allowed for unobstructed sight lines, while giving the Palace a very spacious lobby. Decades before electronic sound amplification, the Palace was configured to produce excellent natural acoustics for live musical groups and drama.

Originally, the Palace sat more than 800 people, but seating was taken out of the back portion of the auditorium to allow for more room for the ever changing technology required to put on live performances. The theater now seats 485, including 82 seats available in the priority orchestra seating section and a newly expanded ADA section that can accommodate up to 15 guests.

The Palace Theater auditorium is seen on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

To complete a majority of the interior by the centennial, the Palace is actively recruiting volunteers for volunteer days filled with painting and cleaning while also hiring professionals for projects like carpeting and restoring wood features.

Volunteers and skilled contractors will work on manageable projects such as removing carpet, stripping and repainting bannisters, and unifying and color matching wall panels.

The auditorium has a mix wood elements and light colors that look peach pink and mint green to match the hand-painted portions of the walls.

“Bins and shelves will be purchased to keep our backstage storage areas organized. Contractors will be hired to continue patching holes in the ceiling.”

According to Payson, the next volunteer day will be in August after the closing of the summer musical, “Cabaret.” Volunteer duties will include:

  • Painting the colors around the original hand-painted art
  • Replicating the same color on all the wooden panels
  • Consolidating tech equipment
  • Redoing the wooden bannisters along the stairs

The nonprofit is asking for donations in the form of supplies — paint, brushes, scrapers, sandpaper, paint thinner, bins, shelves and more — and lunches for volunteers, which could be purchased from locally owned businesses.

They are also seeking donations to hire contractors for the carpet installation and to patch the holes in ceiling in the auditorium, which could cost more than $25,000 for the large one over the stage.

One of the holes is seen in the lobby of the Palace Theater in Hilo on July 10, 2025. (Kelsey Walling/Big Island Now)

“We have an active community fundraiser for fixing the holes in the ceiling, which requires a lot because we have to come at them from below,” Payson said. “It will require scaffolding and weʻll have to go dark for multiple days.”

On Wednesday, the Palace Theater announced the cast list for “The Wizard of Oz,” which will be the centennial fall musical production. Under the direction of Jackie Pualani Johnson, the timeless tale will be family-friendly and will run for three weekends, from Oct. 3 to 19.

The following weekend will be the four-day centennial celebration, including a red carpet and gala event on Oct. 23, a live music masquerade dance from 7 p.m. to midnight on Oct. 24, a music festival from 5 to 10 p.m. on Oct. 25, culminating on the centennial date, Oct. 26, with a silent movie showing of “Phantom of the Opera” with live music from organist Walter Greenwood.

“On the anniversary date, we want to honor the legacy of the Palace with a program that showcases the Palace as it was 100 years ago,” Payson said. “The entire weekend will honor every facet of how we exist out here and engage with every pocket of Hilo that comes through.”

To volunteer or to donate materials, labor or food as a business owner, email development@hilopalace.com, or call the box office at 808-934-7010.

To learn more about donating to the interior restoration campaign, visit the Palace Theater website.

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‘Beyond just commerce’: 2025 Hawaiʻi Business Mākeke features community in practice https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/12/beyond-just-commerce-2025-hawai%ca%bbi-business-makeke-features-community-in-practice/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/12/beyond-just-commerce-2025-hawai%ca%bbi-business-makeke-features-community-in-practice/#comments Sat, 12 Jul 2025 21:03:25 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404079 Come shop, eat and connect — this mākeke is about community in practice.

Hawaiʻi County Department of Research and Development presents the 2025 Hawaiʻi Business Mākeke until 3 p.m. today (July 12) at Prince Kūhiō Plaza, located at 111 E. Pūʻainakō St., in Hilo.

The event features a lineup of 60 vendors who actively give back to the community.

Image Courtesy: Hawaiʻi County Department of Research and Development Business and Industry Development Program Instagram page/cropped

“This event was shaped by feedback from Hawaiʻi Island entrepreneurs, small business owners, community groups and residents who called for spaces that go beyond just commerce,” said Hawaiʻi County Mayor Kimo Alameda in an announcement about the event. “They wanted opportunities to support people who mentor others, share knowledge, care for ʻāina and help their communities thrive. This mākeke is built to celebrate those efforts, whether it’s passing on cultural practices, growing food or investing in future generations.”

Community organizations, cultural practitioners and grassroots initiatives are also part of the lineup, standing alongside the makers and entrepreneurs they often collaborate with behind the scenes.

“This isn’t just a place to shop,” said Hawaiʻi County Research and Development Director Benson Medina in the release. “It’s a space to reconnect, discover something new and support businesses that are rooted in purpose,”

From handmade jewelry, fashion and wellness goods to cold-pressed juices, sweets, shave ice, plate lunches and pantry staples — there’s something for everyone.

Every business and organization participating in the 2025 Hawaiʻi Business Mākeke brings something more, says an Instagram post promoting the event by Hawaiʻi County Department of Research and Development’s Business and Industry Development Program.

“They’re contributing to Hawaiʻi Island’s future through how they show up and who they support,” the post says.

Image Courtesy: Hawaiʻi County Department of Research and Development Business and Industry Development Program Instagram page/cropped

Follow @hawaiicountybusiness on Instagram for additional information about the 2025 Hawaiʻi Business Mākeke and other initiatives.

You can also visit the Hawaiʻi County Department of Research and Development website to learn more about what the department does, what is has going on, future events and get additional general information.

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Scheduled Hawai‘i Island lane closures on state roadways for July 12-18 https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/12/scheduled-hawaii-island-lane-closures-on-state-roadways-for-july-12-18/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/12/scheduled-hawaii-island-lane-closures-on-state-roadways-for-july-12-18/#comments Sat, 12 Jul 2025 13:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=404064 Hawai‘i Department of Transportation announces the following lane closures and road work projects for state roadways on the Big Island during the week of July 12-18.

Image File

KANOELEHUA AVENUE (HIGHWAY 11)

HILO

  • Pocket closure possible in either direction between mile post 2.8 to 3, in the vicinity of East Palai Street, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. for maintaining pocket lane markings.
  • Left pocket closure in the southbound direction between mile post 3.6 to 3.7, in the vicinity of Hale Manu Drive, on Monday, July 14 to Thursday, July 17 from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. for maintaining pocket lane markings.

MAMALAHOA HIGHWAY (HIGHWAY 11)

PAHALA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 50 to 52, in the vicinity of Maile Street, on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

NAALEHU

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 68 to 69.5, in the vicinity of 68 Mile Road and Red Cinder Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

OCEAN VIEW

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 70 and 76, vicinity of Easement Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.

PAPA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 84 and 86, vicinity of Old Mamalahoa Highway, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.
  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 89 and 93.5, vicinity of Papalani Place, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for removal of existing striping, striping, installation of centerline, rumble strip and pavement markers.

HONAUNAU

  • Roving lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 83.5 and 94.5, vicinity of Halepiula Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for installation of turn pockets, medians, rumble strips, and raise pavement markers.

CAPTAIN COOK

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 107 to 109, in the vicinity of Rabbit Hill Road and Koa Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 107 to 109.5, in the vicinity of Rabbit Hill Road and Greenwell Park, on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass and shoulder work.

VOLCANO ROAD (HIGHWAY 11)

MOUNTAIN VIEW

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 19, in the vicinity of Lehuanani Street, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mowing and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 19 to 20, in the vicinity of North Glenwood Road, on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mowing and shoulder work.

VOLCANO

  • Roving lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 27.3 to 30.9, in the vicinity of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park and Mauna Loa Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. for HELCO installing new pole and wire.

HAWAII BELT ROAD (HIGHWAY 19)

PAPAIKOU

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction in the vicinity of mile post 8, near Indian Tree Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for bridge maintenance.

NINOLE TO OOKALA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 17 to 29, in the vicinity of Moonlight Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

HONOKAA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 42 to 44, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mulching, tree trimming, and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 43 to 44, on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mulching and shoulder work.

MAMALAHOA HIGHWAY (HIGHWAY 190)

WAIMEA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 0 to 1, in the vicinity of Lindsey Road and Lalamilo Farm Road, on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for striping.

SOUTH KOHALA

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 12.2 to 16.4, in the vicinity of Saddle Road on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for striping.

KOHALA MOUNTAIN ROAD (HIGHWAY 250)

KAPAAU

  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 8 to 9.5, in the vicinity of Foot Path Road on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for tree trimming and shoulder work.
  • Single lane closure possible in either direction between mile post 8.5 to 11, in the vicinity of Kohala Ranch Road on Monday, July 14 to Friday, July 18 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for tree trimming and shoulder work.

HAWI ROAD (HIGHWAY 250)

HAWI

  • Single lane closure in either direction at mile post 19.2, in the vicinity of Old Millstack Road on Saturday, July 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for cutting grass.

Lane closure schedules can change at any time without notice. All projects are weather permitting.

A map of lane closures can be found online.

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State reaffirms commitment to future without traffic fatalities, serious injuries, https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/state-reaffirms-commitment-to-future-without-traffic-fatalities-serious-injuries/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/state-reaffirms-commitment-to-future-without-traffic-fatalities-serious-injuries/#comments Fri, 11 Jul 2025 21:50:20 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=403999
Image Courtesy: Hawaiʻi Island Vision Zero Action Plan

Imagine a Hawaiʻi where traffic deaths and serious injuries are no longer part of the news cycle; where instead of being so often connected to tragedy, roadways become places of safe, active, healthy and active lifestyles no matter what mode of transportation people choose.

Can you Vision Zero?

Hawaiʻi is committed to a future when all traffic deaths and serious injuries on island roadways no longer exist.

Hawaiʻi Department of Health — working with national, state and county traffic safety partners — developed and launched the Vision Zero Hawaiʻi initiative to assert that commitment to the public and raise awareness about how residents with a shared vision can help.

Public service announcements will air on TV, radio and digital platforms as well as appear in print media and at malls statewide through August.

Vision Zero is a response to the devastating impacts of the average 100 tragic traffic fatalities that happen each year in the Aloha State.

Traffic deaths on Hawaiʻi roads are up by more than 50% already this year. Nearly 70 fatalities have been reported so far in 2025 compared with just less than 50 by the same time in 2024.

Creating streets where people can move safely — whether walking, biking, rolling or driving — is a key to how Vision Zero aims to save lives.

Designing roads that protect all users helps residents feel safe choosing active ways to get around.

“Lower speed limits, protected bike lanes and improved crossings make it easier and safer for residents to choose walking or biking for short trips,” said O‘ahu Metropolitan Planning Organization Executive Director Mark Garrity in a state release about the initiative.

Image Courtesy: Vision Zero Hawaiʻi website

Staying active is an important part of a healthy lifestyle. Yet, most adults and youth in the islands don’t meet federal physical activity guidelines.

“Physical inactivity is a major contributor to chronic disease,” said state Department of Health Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Division Administrator Lola Irvin in the release. “Walking, biking and rolling are ways to promote daily movement — especially for keiki and kūpuna.”

Irvin added that creating safe, convenient and connected routes so people can get to where they need to go everyday — grocery stores, schools, parks — will help and encourage Hawaiʻi residents stay physically active.

The public can support Vision Zero and help Hawaiʻi get to zero traffic fatalities and serious injuries by:

  • SUPPORTING safer street designs.
  • BEING responsible and attentive road users.
  • PARTICIPATING IN planning meetings that promote safer roads.
  • FOLLOWING and HELPING pass laws that prioritize walking and biking safety.

Each of Hawaiʻi’s counties already has or is developing its own Vision Zero Action Plan. Click here to read Hawaiʻi County’s Vision Zero Action Plan, released in September 2020.

“For too long, we’ve considered traffic deaths and severe injuries to be inevitable side effects of modern life,” says Hawaiʻi County’s action plan. “While often referred to as ‘accidents,’ the reality is that we can prevent these tragedies by taking a proactive, preventative approach that prioritizes traffic safety as a public health issue.”

The significant loss of life experienced on Big Island roadways each year takes a tragic toll, extends beyond the tragic personal loss to take a deep toll on the community.

It includes economic hardship and emotional trauma for those directly suffering and significant taxpayer spending on emergency response and long-term health care costs.

Plus, because so many fear for their safety on the island’s street and roadways, there is no true freedom of mobility.

“As a result, we compromise our public health with increasing rates of sedentary diseases and higher carbon emission,” the county’s Vision Zero plan says.

Map Courtesy: Hawaiʻi County Vision Zero website

The plan establishes a transportation philosophy prioritizing preservation of human life instead of the convenience of quick travel.

“While the changes won’t always be easy, we are guided by the determination to save lives and reduce injuries for all Hawaiʻi Island residents and families,” it says.

You can learn more about Hawaiʻi County’s Vision Zero efforts by visiting the county website.

Community members can learn about local strategies, progress and opportunities to get involved by visiting the Vision Zero Hawaiʻi website.

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Revitalize Puna returns this weekend for free 12th activation community event https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/revitalize-puna-returns-this-weekend-for-free-12th-activation-community-event/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/revitalize-puna-returns-this-weekend-for-free-12th-activation-community-event/#comments Fri, 11 Jul 2025 13:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=403958
Image from a past Revitalize Puna activation in Pāhoa. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)

Puna community members are invited this weekend to the next activation of Revitalize Puna — a community-driven initiative to support long-term recovery and resilience in Puna following the 2018 lower East Rift Zone eruption of Kīlauea volcano.

The 12th activation of Revitalize Puna will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. July 12 at William “Billy” Kenoi District Park Gym, located at 15-3022 Kauhale St., in Pāhoa.

This free event is hosted in collaboration between Hawai‘i County Civil Defense, Hawai‘i County Council District 4 and Hawai‘i County Disaster Recovery Division. It will feature:

  • Disaster preparedness resources and demonstrations from community organizations and Hawai‘i County Civil Defense.
  • Updates on recovery infrastructure projects, including roads, waterlines and Pohoiki boat ramp restoration.
  • Family activities, plant giveaways and meals for the community.

“Revitalize Puna reflects our commitment to engage with the community through transparent and open communication with aloha,” said Hawai‘i County Mayor Kimo Alameda in the county’s announcement about the upcoming activation. “By bringing Civil Defense, our Kīlauea Recovery team and local partners into the same space, we’re giving residents tools to be prepared and informed as we move forward together.”

Attendees will have the opportunity to hear from Alameda, Hawai‘i County District 4 Councilwoman Ashley Kierkiewicz and other county officials, all of whom will be available to offer updates about progress on recovery efforts and listen to resident concerns.

“Revitalize Puna is about partnership, empowerment and action,” said Kierkiewicz in the announcement. “We’re showing up where the community is — to talk about the real issues, share updates and make sure Puna’s recovery reflects the needs and voices of our people.”

Community members are invited to register in advance online.

Revitalize Puna since its launch in 2021 has brought together thousands of residents to build community connections and shape recovery from the ground up.

Highlights from past activations include distribution of more than 4,000 free plants and seeds, serving more than 1,900 meals from local vendors and facilitating direct engagement with county leaders through resilience-building workshops and listening sessions.

Learn more about the Revitalize Puna program and past activations at the Hawai‘i County Kilauea Eruption Recovery website.

  • Image from a past Revitalize Puna activation in Pāhoa. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)
  • Image from a past Revitalize Puna activation in Pāhoa. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)
  • Revitalize Puna 12th activation flyer. The event is July 12, 2025, in Pāhoa. (Photo Courtesy: Hawai‘i County)
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Volcano Watch: Snowshoeing on Kīlauea? High fountain episodes pose new challenges to volcano monitoring https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/volcano-watch-snowshoeing-on-kilauea-high-fountain-episodes-pose-new-challenges-to-volcano-monitoring/ https://bigislandnow.com/2025/07/11/volcano-watch-snowshoeing-on-kilauea-high-fountain-episodes-pose-new-challenges-to-volcano-monitoring/#comments Fri, 11 Jul 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://bigislandnow.com/?p=403938 “Volcano Watch” is a weekly article and volcano activity update written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates.

U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory maintains a network of nearly 150 monitoring instruments — that track activity above and below the surface — on Hawaiʻi Island’s Kīlauea volcano.

The high lava fountain episodes of the ongoing episodic eruption in Halemaʻumaʻu Crater within Kaluapele, the volcano’s summit caldera, that started Dec. 23, 2024, present new challenges to maintaining parts of the Kīlauea summit monitoring network near and immediately downwind of the two eruptive vents.

Episode 28 — the most recent in the sequence so far — fired off geysers of molten rock rock for about 9 continuous hours July 9, with 8 of them being high fountaining, reaching a maximum height of about 1,200 feet.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory field engineers on July 10, 2025, visited monitoring stations downwind of the Kīlauea summit eruptive vents. They wore snowshoes, as the large footprint keeps the field engineers walking on top of the frothy pumice everywhere instead of sinking through it. (Photo Courtesy: U.S. Geological Survey/M.Warren)

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory field engineers the next day, on July 10, strapped on snowshoes as they prepared to work in the closed area of Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park, southwest of the eruptive vents.

With each step, the ground crunched and their feet sunk a little.

Large footprints of snowshoes kept the field engineers on top of the frothy pumice everywhere rather than stepping through. A soft sound of clinking could be heard as tiny pieces of volcanic glass floated through air, shimmering in the sunlight.

Engineers wore full-face respirators for protection from these particles — known as tephra.

Tephra is any volcanic material erupted that travels through the air before landing on the ground. It includes very small particles such as volcanic ash, light and frothy rocks full of holes called reticulite, more robust rocks such as scoria, larger pieces called bombs and ever-present Pele’s hair.

Lava fountains of the ongoing episodic eruption have created a growing tephra blanket downwind of the eruptive vents.

On the crater rim closest to the vents, the tephra is as thick as 80 feet deep.

Lava flows fed by the 28 fountaining episodes of the ongoing eruption have covered nearly 850 acres of the Halemaʻumaʻu Crater floor — up to 236 feet thick in some areas.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory staff have moved several monitoring stations that were too close to lava flows or buried by falling tephra.

The instruments themselves remained functional, and most — including the F1 thermal camera, KWcam, B1cam and continuous laser rangefinder — have been redeployed near the V1 streaming camera in an area less likely to be impacted by the eruption.

Solar panels that power U.S. Geological Survey volcano monitoring equipment at the Kīlauea summit can be covered with tephra during eruptive episodes of the ongoing eruption. These tephra particles can range in size from fine ash to the size of tennis balls and larger. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory field engineers visit these stations after eruptive episodes to clean them off and restore power to the stations. (Photo Courtesy: U.S. Geological Survey/M.Warren)

The B2cam on the crater floor underwent a full melt down, but its solar power supply survived and was airlifted to the south rim to power the new V3 livestream camera.

Several other monitoring stations are located farther away from the vents but still impacted by the eruption.

The instruments at these stations — many of which measure volcanic gas — are positioned southwest of the summit because that direction is usually downwind of summit eruptions during common trade wind conditions.

Being downwind of the ongoing eruption means, in addition to the gas they are designed to measure, the stations are subjected to tephra fall.

Infrastructure at monitoring stations in this area can be covered by tephra depending on wind direction during an eruptive episode. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory staff have visited these sites following eruptive episodes to dig them out and remove tephra from solar panels, restoring power to the station.

Sulfur dioxide emission rates, which the observatory measures to help track eruptive activity, are not possible when this part of the network is down.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists are exploring other methods for obtaining sulfur dioxide emission rates. In the meantime, numerous measurements during past pauses and eruptive episodes allow us to generally estimate emission rates during different types of activity.

Sulfur dioxide emission rates during past pauses between fountaining episodes were measured at about 1,200 to 1,500 tonnes per day. Those during eruptive episodes were measured up to 75,000 tonnes per day.

It’s likely sulfur dioxide emission rates have been even higher during recent eruptive episodes; although, measurements have not been possible.

High lava fountains can also temporarily block radio telemetry, preventing data flow from monitoring stations.

Following Episode 27 on June 29, 2025, of Kīlauea’s ongoing episodic summit eruption, Hawaiian Volcano Observatory field engineers visited several sites July 1, 2025, southwest of Halemaʻumaʻu Crater to remove tephra that accumulated on solar panels and station infrastructure. (Photos Courtesy: U.S. Geological Survey/M.Warren)

Most telemetry paths have been re-routed to avoid this issue, but several instruments — including the Sandhill tiltmeter, Cone Peak global positioning system and several seismic stations — might continue to be affected during high fountaining episodes.

The area southwest of eruptive vents can be difficult to access.

Depending on wind direction during fountaining episodes, more tephra can blanket the landscape — and access road — to the southwest.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory staff assess the feasibility of visiting monitoring sites after each eruptive episode, with staff safety being the primary priority.

A small portion of the Kīlauea monitoring network is being impacted by the ongoing summit eruption, but the observatory is still able to adequately monitor the volcano.

Maintaining the instrument network during eruptions is one of the challenges that comes with monitoring one of the most active volcanoes on Earth.

Volcano Activity Updates

Kīlauea has been erupting episodically within its summit caldera since Dec. 23, 2024. Its U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Alert Level remains at Watch.

Episode 28 of the summit eruption in Halemaʻumaʻu Crater happened July 9, with about 9 hours of fountaining from the north vent. The south vent did not activate and was completely covered by new volcanic deposits.

Summit region inflation since the end of Episode 28, along with persistent tremor, suggests another eruptive episode is possible, though more time — and data — are needed before a forecast can be made.

Sulfur dioxide emission rates are elevated in the summit region during active eruption episodes.

No unusual activity has been noted along Kīlauea’s East Rift Zone or Southwest Rift Zone.

A fan-shaped lava fountain erupts at about 6:30 a.m. July 9, 2025, during Episode 28 of the ongoing episodic summit eruption of Kīlauea volcano on the Big Island. The high fountaining was visible from near Kīlauea Overlook within Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park. (Photo Courtesy: U.S. Geological Survey/K.Mulliken)

Mauna Loa is not erupting. Its U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Alert Level remains at Normal.

One earthquake was reported felt in the Hawaiian Islands during the past week:

  • MAGNITUDE-2.9 located 6 miles south of Volcano at a depth of 3 miles at 5:04 a.m. July 6.

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory continues to closely monitor Kīlauea and Mauna Loa.

Visit the observatory website for past “Volcano Watch” articles, Kīlauea and Mauna Loa updates, volcano photos, maps, recent earthquake information and more. Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.

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