
Hawaiian homestead development plans questioned amid funding request
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Signage and fencing are posted outside a plot of land owned by the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in Kapolei. DHHL broke ground in July 2023 on infrastructure for homestead lots in the II-C increment of Ka 'uluokaha 'i East Kapolei II master-planned community.
1 /3 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Signage and fencing are posted outside a plot of land owned by the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in Kapolei. DHHL broke ground in July 2023 on infrastructure for homestead lots in the II-C increment of Ka 'uluokaha 'i East Kapolei II master-planned community.
COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS State Department of Hawaiian Home Lands beneficiaries were awarded 655 leases for future lots at two homestead projects in Kapolei on Oahu during a ceremony in March. Some lots at one of the projects, Ka 'uluokaha 'i, are being funded by $600 million appropriated by the Legislature in 2022, but others are dependent on additional funding.
2 /3 COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS State Department of Hawaiian Home Lands beneficiaries were awarded 655 leases for future lots at two homestead projects in Kapolei on Oahu during a ceremony in March. Some lots at one of the projects, Ka 'uluokaha 'i, are being funded by $600 million appropriated by the Legislature in 2022, but others are dependent on additional funding.
COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS The 161-lot Pu 'uhona homestead project on Maui was made possible by $600 million appropriated to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in 2022. On Saturday, DHHL awarded 91 leases to beneficiaries after making 52 lease awards in June for Pu 'uhona, where completion is expected next year.
3 /3 COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS The 161-lot Pu 'uhona homestead project on Maui was made possible by $600 million appropriated to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in 2022. On Saturday, DHHL awarded 91 leases to beneficiaries after making 52 lease awards in June for Pu 'uhona, where completion is expected next year.
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @STARADVERTISER.COM Signage and fencing are posted outside a plot of land owned by the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in Kapolei. DHHL broke ground in July 2023 on infrastructure for homestead lots in the II-C increment of Ka 'uluokaha 'i East Kapolei II master-planned community.
COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS State Department of Hawaiian Home Lands beneficiaries were awarded 655 leases for future lots at two homestead projects in Kapolei on Oahu during a ceremony in March. Some lots at one of the projects, Ka 'uluokaha 'i, are being funded by $600 million appropriated by the Legislature in 2022, but others are dependent on additional funding.
COURTESY DEPARTMENT OF HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS The 161-lot Pu 'uhona homestead project on Maui was made possible by $600 million appropriated to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands in 2022. On Saturday, DHHL awarded 91 leases to beneficiaries after making 52 lease awards in June for Pu 'uhona, where completion is expected next year.
On July 11, 2022, a historic bill to reduce the number of Native Hawaiians waiting for homesteads became law, but nearly three years later it can be hard to grasp how many homesteads will be produced from the $600 million Waitlist Reduction Act.
A somewhat nebulous picture of homestead production by the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands using the appropriation may be jeopardizing an effort by the agency to obtain another $600 million from the Legislature this year despite heavy backing in the House of Representatives.
'You are asking us to just blindly trust the department, ' Sen. Samantha DeCorte (R, Nanakuli-Waianae-Makaha ) told DHHL leaders during a March 11 hearing on House Bill 606, intended to make the additional $600 million appropriation. 'I need proof on what you guys have already done.'
After the hearing, Senate committees on Hawaiian Affairs and Housing recommended that an additional appropriation be $50 million instead of $600 million.
On Thursday, the Senate Ways and Means Committee amended the bill to provide DHHL with $25 million for 'mercantile ' projects including retail stores, and $25 million for repair and maintenance.
Part of DHHL's difficulty showing how many beneficiaries will come off its waitlist due to the 2022 funding, which Gov. Josh Green signed into law as Act 279, is that much of the money is being spent on backbone utility and road infrastructure supporting homestead lot construction dependent on additional funding.
Don 't miss out on what 's happening !
Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It 's FREE !
Email 28141 Sign Up By clicking to sign up, you agree to Star-Advertiser 's and Google 's and. This form is protected by reCAPTCHA.
Other portions of Act 279 funding have gone to buy land for lot development also subject to more funding, while some of the current funding is being used to produce lots at existing DHHL homestead projects.
'The 279 funding does more than just put people on the land, ' DHHL Director Kali Watson said in an interview. 'It's a long process. It's not something that happens overnight.'
Watson said some of the $600 million is being invested in real estate because it will lead to less-costly lot development that should help deliver more homesteads to beneficiaries in the long run compared with pursuing more costly near-term projects serving fewer beneficiaries.
Big goals Over the next 10 years, the agency expects to move about 6, 000 beneficiaries off its waitlist by providing homestead leases.
But DHHL leaders haven't always presented clear information at legislative meetings when describing planned lot production at specific projects funded by Act 279.
DHHL spending plans have been hard to follow in part because the agency has repeatedly shifted gears over the last three years, adding some new projects and putting off others after the Hawaiian Homes Commission approved an original strategic plan in 2022.
Watson, who led DHHL from 1995 to 1998 and later headed a nonprofit affordable-housing development company, said he has tried to take advantage of new opportunities to expand DHHL's lot development pipeline.
'As a developer, I think I know what I'm doing, ' he said. 'I'm always pivoting depending on the situation. It's not like we're spending money inappropriately. … I want to use (Act 279 funding ) in the most effective way.'
At a March 25 rally at the state Capitol, Watson said DHHL is working on 29 projects involving more than 3, 000 homesteads. A list of projects provided by the agency since then projects delivering 2, 283 lots using Act 279 funding.
DHHL received the 2022 appropriation to mainly help reduce its list of nearly 30, 000 beneficiaries waiting for homesteads. Initially, the agency estimated it could produce 2, 727 lots largely in already planned or partially developed subdivisions using most of the $600 million under its strategic plan.
Act 279 provided DHHL wide spending latitude without legislative control, though the agency was required to return any portion of the appropriation not encumbered, or obligated for use, within three years. This deadline was later extended by a year to June 30, 2026.
Moving targets DHHL leaders have briefed lawmakers on Act 279 spending plans several times over the last three years but haven't always been clear about what the money will produce.
During an August presentation to a House working group established in 2023 to monitor implementation of Act 279, DHHL officials couldn't clearly answer a question about what $39 million from the agency's Act 279 budget was going to be used for at an existing multi-phased project on Hawaii island called Villages of La 'i 'Opua.
In printed materials, the agency suggested the $39 million was for 635 La 'i 'Opua lots. But when asked by one working group member what exactly the $39 million was for, Watson didn't give a precise answer.
More recently, DHHL has estimated the cost to produce 580 lots at La 'i 'Opua at $120 million to $150 million, while $39 million from Act 279 would fund a portion of that.
Another project where spending plans have been difficult to follow is Waiehu Mauka on Maui, where DHHL used $12 million in Act 279 funding to buy land and said in early 2024 that it expected to spend another $82 million to produce 161 lots, followed by a 150-lot second phase subject to additional funding.
DHHL later indicated that all 311 Waiehu Mauka lots would be produced with the $82 million.
More recently, DHHL reallocated $59 million from the Waiehu Mauka project to buy land in Kunia positioned for faster lot development if additional funding can be obtained.
Sen. Troy Hashimoto (D, Wailuku-Kahului-Waihee ) criticized DHHL leaders for the funding shift during the March 11 hearing on HB 606.
'I know you guys are trying to play around with the money, ' Hashimoto said. 'If there's a strategic plan, we should be following the strategic plan.'
Watson said in an interview that developing the 311 Waiehu Mauka lots was expected to take 10 years because of heavy infrastructure needs, and that development there shouldn't slow if DHHL can obtain additional funding.
A significant amount of Act 279 funding under Watson's leadership has been used to buy land for developing homestead lots with future funding. This includes $2 million for a 168-lot project site on Hawaii island, $2 million for a 108-lot project site on Oahu, $8.8 million for a 296-lot project site on Hawaii island, $12.3 million for a 207-lot project site on Maui and $20.7 million for a 1, 100-lot project site on Kauai.
The Kauai project, according to Watson, is far off because a sewage treatment plant needs relocation. But he said the site is great because it borders urban parts of Lihue. DHHL anticipates being able to develop an initial 250 lots there with $120 million in additional funding.
'Paper lease' awards Although many lots in DHHL's development pipeline are subject to future funding, the agency has begun to award leases to beneficiaries for some of those sites.
Such leases give beneficiaries an 'undivided interest ' in land that has yet to be subdivided into lots.
On March 22, the agency held a ceremony to award 665 such 'paper leases 'for two projects on Oahu at least partially funded by Act 279.
At one of the projects, Ka 'uluokaha 'i in Kapolei, slated for 700 lots, DHHL intends to use $143 million of Act 279 funding to produce 500 lots between 2026 and 2031, while another 200 lots are subject to $60 million in additional funding. At the ceremony, 605 paper leases for Ka 'uluokaha 'i were awarded.
Herman Mahelona, 80, received one of those leases. But his son, Dave, who accompanied his father to the event, said no one explained when an actual lot might be ready.
Diamond Badajos, a DHHL spokesperson, said this depends on how many lease recipients who have been on the waitlist longer than Mahelona opt to receive one of the 500 initial lots. Some paper lease recipients may not be ready to accept a lot lease, which costs $1 a year but requires that a beneficiary pay for or build their own home.
Dave Mahelona said his father typically doesn't show much emotion but was grateful.
'I seen his smile, ' he said. 'Yeah, he finally get one place to call home. He was really, really happy.'
The homestead program was established in 1921 by Congress to return Hawaiians to their ancestral lands after the U.S. annexed the islands. The program, administered by the state since 1959, offers residential, agricultural or pastoral land leases to DHHL beneficiaries, who must be at least 50 % Hawaiian.
Over the past century, about 10, 000 homesteads have been created, or 100 per year on average, largely due to meager funding and a large land base not well-suited for residential development.
One reason why DHHL has begun to issue paper leases is so that a recipient can pass a paper lease to a successor who is at least 25 % Hawaiian. A beneficiary who dies on the waitlist cannot have a successor take their place unless the successor is at least 50 % Hawaiian.
At least 2, 100 DHHL beneficiaries have died while on the agency's waitlist, which recently reached 29, 543 applicants.
Watson said his goal is to award a minimum of 7, 500 paper leases, which promise a lot lease at specified projects and remove a recipient from the waitlist.
DHHL also has awarded some lot leases for homesteads nearing completion under Act 279.
In June, the agency made 52 lease awards for a 161-lot project called Pu 'uhona on Maui where 137 of the lots will have homes sold to beneficiaries. On Saturday, DHHL awarded 91 more leases for Pu 'uhona, the agency's first project delivered with Act 279 funding.
DHHL used $5.5 million from Act 279 to buy the Pu 'uhona site and is spending $17 million more to create the subdivision. A developer is building the homes using private financing. Several of the homes are close to being finished, and completion of Pu 'uhona is expected next year.
Sen. Tim Richards, chair of the Senate Hawaiian Affairs Committee, said he has confidence in DHHL leadership and would like to see the agency receive another $600 million for homestead development. But Richards (D, North Hilo-Waimea-North Kona ) also said the uncertain financial outlook for the state this year makes such an appropriation difficult.
Rep. Luke Evslin, who helped introduce HB 606, acknowledged that the agency's plans can be confusing. But he said DHHL is doing a good job balancing near-and long-term homestead production for an overwhelming need.
'Any way that you dice the numbers, I think to me the general takeaway is that the need is so great, and essentially we need to figure out a way to get them as much money as possible, ' said Evslin (D, Wailua-Lihue ). 'I don't judge them on the way that they have tried to straddle investing in the future … at the same time as investing in infrastructure necessary to hand over (lots ) to beneficiaries.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
31-05-2025
- Yahoo
Mapunapuna FBI raid ends with state eviction notice for tenant
HONOLULU (KHON2) — Several Mapunapuna businesses are breathing a sigh of relief after the Federal Bureau of Investigation raided a warehouse on Kilihau Street on May 29. The businesses said the warehouse was a hub for illegal activity for years, and the state had been trying to evict the tenant for months. Report: Two Hawaii beaches among most polluted in the country The FBI, Honolulu Police, Humane Society and other agencies were all seen outside the warehouse early on the morning of May 29, prompting road closures in the area. But on May 30, businesses were happy to see the area looking cleaner than normal. 'It's been a long time coming,' said one nearby business owner Chris Waidzunas. 'It just needed to happen, the homeless thing was really bad for quite a few years.' Businesses said they've dealt with break-ins, dog attacks, thefts, fires and cleaning up feces for years.'A lot of it was coming from the dive shop which was the catalyst and center for drugs,' said another business owner. 'People were buying and selling stolen items 24-hours a day, people were dropping off stolen items.' The man didn't want to go on camera and fears for his safety. 'People have died in the last six months over here, and it's all connected with dive shop and that group of people,' the business owner continued. The businesses have leases with the Department of Hawaiian Homelands, which put up an eviction notice overnight for the former dive shop. Download the free KHON2 app for iOS or Android to stay informed on the latest news KHON2 asked HPD how many times they had received calls for illegal activities at the warehouse but they referred us to the lead agency which was the FBI. KHON2 then asked DHHL if they knew about the illegal activities taking place, but they also referred us to the FBI. But court documents show DHHL started efforts to evict the tenant in October 2024 for not paying rent. The following month, HPD told DHHL they suspected an illegal gambling room on the property, and in February 2025 the fire department requested the property be secured as people were tapping into the power lines. In March 2025, DHHL enforcement officers posted a cease and desist on the door but court documents say the tenant and others continued to access the property. Kaiser purchases Maui News building, newspaper to move out 'It's not a safe environment for us where we have bodies showing up, crazy people yelling, abusing our workers, throw things at vehicles, people throwing bricks at people the other day,' the business owner added. According to HPD crime mapping, there have been 15 crimes reported on this corner in the last four months including stolen cars, theft, burglary, weapons, aggravated assault and property damage. The FBI confirmed they conducted court authorized activity but could not provide details. Businesses hope the tenants will be gone for good soon. 'Now, hopefully its done, it gets cleaned up and this neighborhood gets restored to what its supposed to be — an industrial area,' Waidzunas concluded. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
17-05-2025
- Yahoo
Federal funding for Hawaiian Home Lands on chopping block
The state agency helping Native Hawaiians with housing needs is at risk again of a federal funding cutoff. President Donald Trump is proposing to eliminate the Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant program as part of a rough budget plan for the next federal fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 In a May 2 letter from Trump's Office of Management and Budget to the chair of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, OMB Director Russell Vought indicated that the federal grant funding for the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands should be cut off in part because DHHL has an accumulation of unspent proceeds from prior years. 'The program has large balances and only one grantee, which would be more appropriately funded by the State of Hawaii, ' the letter said. Annual funding from the program in each of the last three years has been about $22 million. However, such funding at times has been much lower, and got zeroed out during the Democratic administration of President Barack Obama in 2016 because DHHL had amassed a pile of unspent funding that drew the ire of some state leaders and DHHL beneficiaries. U.S. Rep. Jill Tokuda (D-Hawaii ) disagrees with the proposed move by the Republican president, but also believes DHHL needs to be spending more of its past federal grant awards. 'Sadly these carryover balances, and these high annual re-appropriations that they have, kind of made it low-hanging fruit for the Trump Administration, ' Tokuda said. 'I know for beneficiaries it's extremely frustrating because there's so much need.' Under the program, which is part of the 1996 Native American Housing Assistance and Self Determination Act also known as NAHASDA, DHHL has helped beneficiaries in ways that include homestead development, rent subsidies for low-income seniors, home loans, affordable-housing construction, land acquisition, emergency rent and utility payments, and financial literacy training. Homestead development is the agency's main mission and costliest endeavor. There are close to 30, 000 DHHL beneficiaries waiting for homestead leases that cost $1 a year but require recipients to buy or build their own homes. The homestead program was established in 1921 by Congress to return Hawaiians to their ancestral lands after the U.S. annexed the islands. The program, administered by the state since 1959, offers residential, agricultural or pastoral land leases to DHHL beneficiaries, who must be at least 50 % Hawaiian. DHHL Director Kali Watson said in a statement that the agency fully supports Hawaii's congressional delegation in efforts to educate and convince the current federal administration of the grant program's value and importance. 'We are very appreciative of the recent increased funding over the last three years and are hopeful we can continue to receive the same level of funding, ' Watson said. Tokuda said DHHL has a $53.6 million unspent grant funding balance from prior years, not including a $22.3 million appropriation for the current fiscal year. According to DHHL's most recent annual performance report for the federal program produced in September 2024, the agency's fund balance at that time was $66.6 million, of which $36.8 million was encumbered by contracts for spending and $29.8 million was unencumbered. The agency reported spending $12 million in the 2024 fiscal year, which included $3.2 million for capital improvement projects, $1.9 million for home loans, $1.8 million to assist seniors with rent, $1.5 million for planning and administration, $1.2 million for general homeowner assistance and $875, 000 for emergency rent and utility assistance. DHHL's stockpile of federal funding coincides with an effort by the agency to encumber $600 million appropriated by Hawaii lawmakers in 2022 before a June 30, 2026 deadline. Watson has said that the agency has pretty much done so, and earlier this year asked the Legislature for another $600 million that he said could roughly double homestead deliveries. The Legislature did not approve the additional funding. Tokuda is hard-pressed to understand why DHHL, which is using the state funding to produce more than 3, 000 homesteads at 29 projects and used much of the $600 million to buy land for longer-term homestead development, has not spent more of its federal funding. 'This was something that literally generations of members of Congress have fought for and protected, ' she said, 'and now it's going to be very difficult to defend why we need this money when they're not spending it.' Tokuda vows to fight the proposed cutoff, in part because she said DHHL has committed to spend most of its federal funding from past years by the end of June. She also said eliminating NAHASDA funding for DHHL disregards the federal trust responsibility to Hawaiians, and unfairly shifts the duty solely to the state, thus ignoring generations of legal, historical and moral obligations. 'DHHL must step up and the federal government must not walk away, ' Tokuda said. Previously, DHHL has been able to ramp up spending of federal funds after drawing fire from federal and state leaders for amassing an even bigger stash of cash from the U.S. government. In 2012, DHHL was holding $75 million received under NAHASDA, which led to complaints that the agency was making poor use of the federal appropriations that had been around $10 million a year during the preceding decade. In 2016, during the last year of the Obama Administration, DHHL got no federal funding. And then from 2017 to 2021, which included Trump's first term and one year with Democratic President Joe Biden in office, funding for DHHL was $2 million a year. During a state budget briefing in 2016 for the administration of then-Gov. David Ige, members of Hawaii's Legislature including Tokuda and Sylvia Luke, who then was chair of the House Finance Committee and is now lieutenant governor, chastised DHHL for the hoard of unspent federal funds. 'NAHASDA money was no strings attached … ' Luke said during the briefing. 'All that the federal government wanted us to do was was to spend the money. But what does DHHL do ? They don't spend the money.' DHHL was at that time working to level-up spending federal dollars. From 2015 to 2018, the agency more than doubled such spending to around $15 million per year during those four years. Spending subsided from 2019 to 2021 as federal appropriations stayed low, but then didn't rebound much in tandem with the big appropriation increases under President Biden from 2022 to 2024. According to the most recent annual report from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which oversees NAHASDA funding for DHHL, $155 million of such funding has been spent by DHHL over 22 years through the 2023 fiscal year largely to help develop 693 homestead lots and to build, acquire or rehabilitate 765 affordable homes. Some of the spending also was used to rehabilitate three community centers and provide 4, 098 families with housing services that included financial literacy and home ownership education, self-help home repair training and rental assistance, the HUD report said. Watson, in his statement, said continued federal funding is critical and needed to sustain a similar variety of help for beneficiaries. 'We will continue to be diligent and very active in the use of these funds, which have been instrumental in increasing our rental and homeownership housing opportunities for our DHHL beneficiaries, ' he said.

Yahoo
29-04-2025
- Yahoo
Hawaii borrowers in default are among millions nationwide affected by end of payment pause
JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Current and former students in default of their federal loans will soon start getting billed by the U.S. government as the Trump administration ends a COVID-19-era loan payment pause. At top, people made their way along the McCarthy Mall at the University of Hawaii at Manoa on Friday. 1 /3 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Current and former students in default of their federal loans will soon start getting billed by the U.S. government as the Trump administration ends a COVID-19-era loan payment pause. At top, people made their way along the McCarthy Mall at the University of Hawaii at Manoa on Friday. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ A woman walked out of the Student Services Building at UH Manoa on Friday. 2 /3 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ A woman walked out of the Student Services Building at UH Manoa on Friday. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Above is the Financial Aid Services office. 3 /3 JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Above is the Financial Aid Services office. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Current and former students in default of their federal loans will soon start getting billed by the U.S. government as the Trump administration ends a COVID-19-era loan payment pause. At top, people made their way along the McCarthy Mall at the University of Hawaii at Manoa on Friday. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ A woman walked out of the Student Services Building at UH Manoa on Friday. JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO @ Above is the Financial Aid Services office. A pandemic-era pause for federal loan borrowers in default is set to end Monday, and millions of former and current students nationwide are bracing for renewed loan collections. The U.S. Department of Education's decision to resume collections is a significant step in winding down COVID-19 relief efforts that have been in place since March 2020. The pending change is causing anxiety for Hawaii residents not only in default on their student loans, but also those who are relying on them now for their education. Monthly loan payments and interest resumed in October 2023 for most federal student loan borrowers. But those in default—meaning they had already missed payments for an extended period—were given more time before aggressive collection measures restarted. That protection is now ending, and borrowers who have not taken action to address delinquencies could face wage garnishments, tax refund seizures and other enforcement actions. The change means that residents in Hawaii and throughout the nation who relied on federal loans to fund their education no longer have the safety net of the collection pause. During the 2024 academic year, 6, 382 undergraduate students across the University of Hawaii System alone received federal student loans, with the majority—3, 988 students—enrolled at UH Manoa. The average loan amount for UH Manoa undergraduates was $6, 404. Additionally, 1, 707 graduate students were awarded federal loans, averaging $19, 143 per borrower. The end of the loan pause is a deep source of anxiety for Jen Kim, a Makiki resident and single mother of three. Her eldest son graduated from UH Manoa for his undergraduate studies, then completed dental school at the University of Washington. He is finishing his dental residency in Nevada. Don 't miss out on what 's happening ! Stay in touch with breaking news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It 's FREE ! Email 28141 Sign Up By clicking to sign up, you agree to Star-Advertiser 's and Google 's and. This form is protected by reCAPTCHA. Between his undergraduate and dental school loans, Kim said her son still owes nearly $200, 000 in federal student debt and has paid back about $12, 000. With interest on those loans resuming at a rate of 6.5 %, she worries that the balance will balloon. 'He's done everything right. He went to school here, got into dental school, and now he's training to serve our people back home, ' Kim said. 'But the interest is brutal. For every payment he makes, it feels like the total barely changes.' Nationally, dental school graduates carry some of the highest student loan debt in the country. The American Dental Education Association estimates that the average debt for the class of 2024 was about $312, 700. While Kim's son's balance is technically below the national average, it still feels staggering to the Kim family—especially with the high cost of living in Hawaii and limited affordable housing options. 'We've already helped him cover basic costs like groceries and rent, ' she said. 'Now we're helping with interest, too, and I'm pulling from my own savings. I just keep thinking : He wants to be a dentist in Hawaii, not in Vegas, but the system makes it hard for him to come home.' The family had hoped the federal payment pause would last until he finished residency, but with the pause ending in 2023 and defaulted loan collections now restarting in May, the pressure is back. 'It's not just the money. It's the stress, the sense that no matter how hard he works, he'll always be behind, ' she said. For Harvey Tagalicud, 23, a junior at UH Manoa's Shidler College of Business, the financial pressure of loans has been a constant companion throughout his academic journey. Tagalicud, a first-generation college student, said his total debt could land anywhere between $18, 000 and $35, 000, depending on how much financial hardship arises during emergencies. His experience with loans has included federal PLUS loans, a short-term 'shell loan ' for emergencies. Taga licud said he has carefully avoided unsubsidized loans thanks to financial literacy support from programs like Upward Bound. 'Loans might be the most valuable way for me to, in the short term, jump through my final semesters in college, ' he said. 'It's kind of a necessary evil—and I believe that's a sentiment for a lot of us in academia right now.' He said choosing the right loan type was just one part of a steep learning curve. 'We're making one of the biggest financial decisions, the first big financial decision in our lives, and something that we can't even comprehend sometimes, Tagalicud said. The psychological toll, he added, is just as real as the financial one. 'We learn in consumer psychology that if scarcity exists for a person, that becomes an overarching thing that always limits in the back of your head, ' Taga licud said. He emphasized that students are not trying to avoid responsibility, and said the current system discourages genuine learning. 'We're not trying to dodge loan repayments. We're trying to learn with genuine passion and curiosity, without being burdened by the financial weight that becomes one of the biggest decisions in our lives, ' he said. 'It's important we create policies that encourage us to become lifelong learners, not just lifelong debt payers.' For Ava Song, a third-year medical student from New York who plans to transfer to UH Manoa's John A. Burns School of Medicine, managing her education means juggling three part-time jobs while taking on more than $180, 000 in student loan debt. Song, who plans to return to Hawaii to serve the community and take advantage of in-state tuition, hopes that JABSOM's unique opportunities and financial aid packages will ease her financial burdens. In New York she's worked as a high school tutor, a clinic assistant sterilizing instruments and a weekend bartender—often logging 14-hour days split between work, classes and clinic rotations. 'It's exhausting, but I don't have much of a choice, ' Song said. 'Every dollar I earn is a dollar I don't have to borrow and a dollar that doesn't rack up interest later.' Alicia Malia, a 37-year-old physical therapist who graduated from UH Hilo in 2011, pointed out that student loan debt does not always end with graduation or even after establishing a career. 'The system told us to get a good education so we could get good jobs and live a good life, ' Malia said 'But the reality is that to get that education, most of us had to borrow a ton of money. We worked our asses off during school just to afford living, and then we graduate into jobs where we still have to work just as hard—not just to live, but to pay back what we borrowed.' Malia said she still owes around $28, 000 in student loans, despite working full time in her field for over a decade. The pandemic-era pause in payments, she said, helped her finally get ahead on other bills and build up some savings. 'That break gave me room to breathe. I could help my parents, fix my car, even take a short trip for the first time in years, ' she said. But now, with payments resumed and collections restarting for those in default, Malia said she's deeply worried about younger generations—including her niece, who just started at UH Manoa. 'They say it's the American dream, but it's just a dream—it's so hard to attain, ' she said. 'We're all chasing this version of success that's tied to college, but the truth is, we were set up. If you don't go to college, it's hard to make a living. If you do, you're buried in debt. By the time we finally pay everything off, our lives have already passed us by.' Students and graduates who are unsure of their loan status can check their accounts at