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After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'
After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'

KULA, Hawaii (AP) — The car tires, propane tanks, gas generators and rusty appliances heaped on the side of a dirt road waiting to be hauled away filled Desiree Graham with relief. 'That means all that stuff is not in people's yards," she said on a blustery July day in Kahikinui, a remote Native Hawaiian homestead community in southeast Maui where wildfire is a top concern. In June, neighbors and volunteers spent four weekends clearing rubbish from their properties in a community-wide effort to create 'defensible space,' or areas around homes free of ignitable vegetation and debris. They purged 12 tons of waste. 'It's ugly, but it's pretty beautiful to me,' said Graham, a member of Kahikinui's Firewise committee, part of a rapidly growing program from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association that helps residents assess their communities' fire risk and create plans to mitigate it. Kahikinui is one of dozens of Hawaii communities seeking ways to protect themselves as decades of climate change, urban development, and detrimental land use policies culminate to cause more destructive fires. The state has 250,000 acres of unmanaged fallow agricultural land, nearly all of its buildings sit within the wildland-urban interface, and two-thirds of communities have only one road in and out. But experts say that even with so many factors out of communities' control, they can vastly improve their resilience — by transforming their own neighborhoods. 'Fire is not like other natural hazards, it can only move where there is fuel, and we have a lot of say in that,' said Nani Barretto, co-executive director of the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization (HWMO), a 25-year-old nonprofit at the forefront of the state's fire-risk mitigation. Neighborhoods all over the United States are wrestling with the same challenge, some in places that never worried about fire before. A recent Headwaters Economics analysis found 1,100 communities in 32 states shared similar risk profiles to places recently devastated by urban wildfires. A 'Firewise' movement HWMO helps communities like Kahikinui become Firewise. In the 10 years preceding the August 2023 Maui fires that destroyed Lahaina, 15 Hawaii communities joined Firewise USA. Since then, the number has more than doubled to 31, with a dozen more in the process of joining. 'Everyone was like, 'My God, what can we do?'' said Shelly Aina, former chair of the Firewise committee for Waikoloa Village, an 8,000-resident community on the west side of the Big Island, recalling the months after the Maui fires. The development — heavily wind exposed, surrounded by dry invasive grasses and with just one main road in and out — had already experienced several close calls in the last two decades. It was first recognized as Firewise in 2016. As HWMO-trained home assessors, Shelly and her husband Dana Aina have done over 60 free assessments for neighbors since 2022, evaluating their properties for ignition vulnerabilities. Volunteers removed kiawe trees last year along a fuel break bordering houses. Residents approved an extra HOA fee for vegetation removal on interior lots. Measures like these can have outsized impact as people in fire-prone states adapt to more extreme wildfires, according to Dr. Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service scientist. 'The solution is in the community, not out there with the fire breaks, because those don't stop the fire in extreme conditions,' said Cohen. Direct flames from a wildfire aren't what typically initiate an urban conflagration, he said. Wind-blown embers can travel miles away from a fire, landing on combustible material like dry vegetation, or accumulating in corners like where a deck meets siding. 'They're urban fires, not wildfires,' said Cohen. The solutions don't always require expensive retrofits like a whole new roof, but targeting the specific places within 100 feet of the house where embers could ignite material. In dense neighborhoods, that requires residents work together, making community-wide efforts like Firewise important. 'The house is only as ignition resistant as its neighbors,' said Cohen. Communities can't transform alone Even with renewed interest in fire resilience, community leaders face challenges in mobilizing their neighbors. Mitigation can take money, time and sacrifice. It's not enough to cut the grass once, for example, vegetation has to be regularly maintained. Complacency sets in. Measures like removing hazardous trees can cost thousands of dollars. 'I don't know how we deal with that, because those who have them can't afford to take them down,' said Shelly Aina. The Ainas try offering low-cost measures, like installing metal screening behind vents and crawl spaces to keep out embers. HWMO helps with costs where it can. It gave Kahikinui a $5,000 grant for a dumpster service to haul out its waste, and helped Waikoloa Village rent a chipper for the trees it removed. It's been hard to keep up with the need, said Barretto, but even just a little bit of financial assistance can have an exponential impact. 'You give them money, they rally,' she said. 'We can give them $1,000 and it turns into 1,000 man hours of doing the clearing.' HWMO was able to expand its grant program after the Maui fires with donations from organizations like the Bezos Earth Fund and the American Red Cross. At a time when federal funding for climate mitigation is uncertain, communities need far more financial support to transform their neighborhoods, said Headwaters Economics' Kimi Barrett, who studies the costs of increasing fire risk. 'If what we're trying to do is save people and communities, then we must significantly invest in people and communities,' said Barrett. Those investments are just a fraction of the billions of dollars in losses sustained after megafires, said Barrett. A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Allstate found that $1 in resilience and preparation investment can save $13 in economic and property losses after a disaster. Another hurdle is asking residents to do work and make sacrifices as they watch others neglect their role. 'The neighbors will ask, 'What about the county land?' There's no routine maintenance,'' said Shelly Aina. Her husband Dana Aina said he reminds people that it is everyone's kuleana, or responsibility, to take care of land and people. 'An island is a canoe, a canoe is an island,' he said, quoting a Hawaiian proverb. 'We all have to paddle together.' Bigger stakeholders are starting to make changes. Among them, Hawaii passed legislation to create a state fire marshal post, and its main utility, Hawaiian Electric, is undergrounding some power lines and installing AI-enabled cameras to detect ignitions earlier. Meanwhile, Firewise communities have found that doing their own mitigation gives them more clout when asking for funding or for others to do their part. After the 66-residence community of Kawaihae Village on Hawaii Island joined Firewise, they were finally able to get a neighboring private landowner and the state to create fuel breaks and clear grasses. 'Without that we wouldn't have been on anyone's radar,' said Brenda DuFresne, committee member of Kawaihae Firewise. 'I think Firewise is a way to show people that you're willing to help yourself.' —— Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'
After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'

The Hill

time25-03-2025

  • General
  • The Hill

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'

KULA, Hawaii (AP) — The car tires, propane tanks, gas generators and rusty appliances heaped on the side of a dirt road waiting to be hauled away filled Desiree Graham with relief. 'That means all that stuff is not in people's yards,' she said on a blustery July day in Kahikinui, a remote Native Hawaiian homestead community in southeast Maui where wildfire is a top concern. In June, neighbors and volunteers spent four weekends clearing rubbish from their properties in a community-wide effort to create 'defensible space,' or areas around homes free of ignitable vegetation and debris. They purged 12 tons of waste. 'It's ugly, but it's pretty beautiful to me,' said Graham, a member of Kahikinui's Firewise committee, part of a rapidly growing program from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association that helps residents assess their communities' fire risk and create plans to mitigate it. Kahikinui is one of dozens of Hawaii communities seeking ways to protect themselves as decades of climate change, urban development, and detrimental land use policies culminate to cause more destructive fires. The state has 250,000 acres of unmanaged fallow agricultural land, nearly all of its buildings sit within the wildland-urban interface, and two-thirds of communities have only one road in and out. But experts say that even with so many factors out of communities' control, they can vastly improve their resilience — by transforming their own neighborhoods. 'Fire is not like other natural hazards, it can only move where there is fuel, and we have a lot of say in that,' said Nani Barretto, co-executive director of the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization (HWMO), a 25-year-old nonprofit at the forefront of the state's fire-risk mitigation. Neighborhoods all over the United States are wrestling with the same challenge, some in places that never worried about fire before. A recent Headwaters Economics analysis found 1,100 communities in 32 states shared similar risk profiles to places recently devastated by urban wildfires. A 'Firewise' movement HWMO helps communities like Kahikinui become Firewise. In the 10 years preceding the August 2023 Maui fires that destroyed Lahaina, 15 Hawaii communities joined Firewise USA. Since then, the number has more than doubled to 31, with a dozen more in the process of joining. 'Everyone was like, 'My God, what can we do?'' said Shelly Aina, former chair of the Firewise committee for Waikoloa Village, an 8,000-resident community on the west side of the Big Island, recalling the months after the Maui fires. The development — heavily wind exposed, surrounded by dry invasive grasses and with just one main road in and out — had already experienced several close calls in the last two decades. It was first recognized as Firewise in 2016. As HWMO-trained home assessors, Shelly and her husband Dana Aina have done over 60 free assessments for neighbors since 2022, evaluating their properties for ignition vulnerabilities. Volunteers removed kiawe trees last year along a fuel break bordering houses. Residents approved an extra HOA fee for vegetation removal on interior lots. Measures like these can have outsized impact as people in fire-prone states adapt to more extreme wildfires, according to Dr. Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service scientist. 'The solution is in the community, not out there with the fire breaks, because those don't stop the fire in extreme conditions,' said Cohen. Direct flames from a wildfire aren't what typically initiate an urban conflagration, he said. Wind-blown embers can travel miles away from a fire, landing on combustible material like dry vegetation, or accumulating in corners like where a deck meets siding. 'They're urban fires, not wildfires,' said Cohen. The solutions don't always require expensive retrofits like a whole new roof, but targeting the specific places within 100 feet of the house where embers could ignite material. In dense neighborhoods, that requires residents work together, making community-wide efforts like Firewise important. 'The house is only as ignition resistant as its neighbors,' said Cohen. Communities can't transform alone Even with renewed interest in fire resilience, community leaders face challenges in mobilizing their neighbors. Mitigation can take money, time and sacrifice. It's not enough to cut the grass once, for example, vegetation has to be regularly maintained. Complacency sets in. Measures like removing hazardous trees can cost thousands of dollars. 'I don't know how we deal with that, because those who have them can't afford to take them down,' said Shelly Aina. The Ainas try offering low-cost measures, like installing metal screening behind vents and crawl spaces to keep out embers. HWMO helps with costs where it can. It gave Kahikinui a $5,000 grant for a dumpster service to haul out its waste, and helped Waikoloa Village rent a chipper for the trees it removed. It's been hard to keep up with the need, said Barretto, but even just a little bit of financial assistance can have an exponential impact. 'You give them money, they rally,' she said. 'We can give them $1,000 and it turns into 1,000 man hours of doing the clearing.' HWMO was able to expand its grant program after the Maui fires with donations from organizations like the Bezos Earth Fund and the American Red Cross. At a time when federal funding for climate mitigation is uncertain, communities need far more financial support to transform their neighborhoods, said Headwaters Economics' Kimi Barrett, who studies the costs of increasing fire risk. 'If what we're trying to do is save people and communities, then we must significantly invest in people and communities,' said Barrett. Those investments are just a fraction of the billions of dollars in losses sustained after megafires, said Barrett. A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Allstate found that $1 in resilience and preparation investment can save $13 in economic and property losses after a disaster. Another hurdle is asking residents to do work and make sacrifices as they watch others neglect their role. 'The neighbors will ask, 'What about the county land?' There's no routine maintenance,'' said Shelly Aina. Her husband Dana Aina said he reminds people that it is everyone's kuleana, or responsibility, to take care of land and people. 'An island is a canoe, a canoe is an island,' he said, quoting a Hawaiian proverb. 'We all have to paddle together.' Bigger stakeholders are starting to make changes. Among them, Hawaii passed legislation to create a state fire marshal post, and its main utility, Hawaiian Electric, is undergrounding some power lines and installing AI-enabled cameras to detect ignitions earlier. Meanwhile, Firewise communities have found that doing their own mitigation gives them more clout when asking for funding or for others to do their part. After the 66-residence community of Kawaihae Village on Hawaii Island joined Firewise, they were finally able to get a neighboring private landowner and the state to create fuel breaks and clear grasses. 'Without that we wouldn't have been on anyone's radar,' said Brenda DuFresne, committee member of Kawaihae Firewise. 'I think Firewise is a way to show people that you're willing to help yourself.' —— Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'
After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'

The Independent

time25-03-2025

  • General
  • The Independent

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming 'Firewise'

The car tires, propane tanks, gas generators and rusty appliances heaped on the side of a dirt road waiting to be hauled away filled Desiree Graham with relief. 'That means all that stuff is not in people's yards," she said on a blustery July day in Kahikinui, a remote Native Hawaiian homestead community in southeast Maui where wildfire is a top concern. In June, neighbors and volunteers spent four weekends clearing rubbish from their properties in a community-wide effort to create 'defensible space,' or areas around homes free of ignitable vegetation and debris. They purged 12 tons of waste. 'It's ugly, but it's pretty beautiful to me,' said Graham, a member of Kahikinui's Firewise committee, part of a rapidly growing program from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association that helps residents assess their communities' fire risk and create plans to mitigate it. Kahikinui is one of dozens of Hawaii communities seeking ways to protect themselves as decades of climate change, urban development, and detrimental land use policies culminate to cause more destructive fires. The state has 250,000 acres of unmanaged fallow agricultural land, nearly all of its buildings sit within the wildland-urban interface, and two-thirds of communities have only one road in and out. But experts say that even with so many factors out of communities' control, they can vastly improve their resilience — by transforming their own neighborhoods. 'Fire is not like other natural hazards, it can only move where there is fuel, and we have a lot of say in that,' said Nani Barretto, co-executive director of the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization (HWMO), a 25-year-old nonprofit at the forefront of the state's fire-risk mitigation. Neighborhoods all over the United States are wrestling with the same challenge, some in places that never worried about fire before. A recent Headwaters Economics analysis found 1,100 communities in 32 states shared similar risk profiles to places recently devastated by urban wildfires. A 'Firewise' movement HWMO helps communities like Kahikinui become Firewise. In the 10 years preceding the August 2023 Maui fires that destroyed Lahaina, 15 Hawaii communities joined Firewise USA. Since then, the number has more than doubled to 31, with a dozen more in the process of joining. 'Everyone was like, 'My God, what can we do?'' said Shelly Aina, former chair of the Firewise committee for Waikoloa Village, an 8,000-resident community on the west side of the Big Island, recalling the months after the Maui fires. The development — heavily wind exposed, surrounded by dry invasive grasses and with just one main road in and out — had already experienced several close calls in the last two decades. It was first recognized as Firewise in 2016. As HWMO-trained home assessors, Shelly and her husband Dana Aina have done over 60 free assessments for neighbors since 2022, evaluating their properties for ignition vulnerabilities. Volunteers removed kiawe trees last year along a fuel break bordering houses. Residents approved an extra HOA fee for vegetation removal on interior lots. Measures like these can have outsized impact as people in fire-prone states adapt to more extreme wildfires, according to Dr. Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service scientist. 'The solution is in the community, not out there with the fire breaks, because those don't stop the fire in extreme conditions,' said Cohen. Direct flames from a wildfire aren't what typically initiate an urban conflagration, he said. Wind-blown embers can travel miles away from a fire, landing on combustible material like dry vegetation, or accumulating in corners like where a deck meets siding. 'They're urban fires, not wildfires,' said Cohen. The solutions don't always require expensive retrofits like a whole new roof, but targeting the specific places within 100 feet of the house where embers could ignite material. In dense neighborhoods, that requires residents work together, making community-wide efforts like Firewise important. 'The house is only as ignition resistant as its neighbors,' said Cohen. Communities can't transform alone Even with renewed interest in fire resilience, community leaders face challenges in mobilizing their neighbors. Mitigation can take money, time and sacrifice. It's not enough to cut the grass once, for example, vegetation has to be regularly maintained. Complacency sets in. Measures like removing hazardous trees can cost thousands of dollars. 'I don't know how we deal with that, because those who have them can't afford to take them down,' said Shelly Aina. The Ainas try offering low-cost measures, like installing metal screening behind vents and crawl spaces to keep out embers. HWMO helps with costs where it can. It gave Kahikinui a $5,000 grant for a dumpster service to haul out its waste, and helped Waikoloa Village rent a chipper for the trees it removed. It's been hard to keep up with the need, said Barretto, but even just a little bit of financial assistance can have an exponential impact. 'You give them money, they rally,' she said. 'We can give them $1,000 and it turns into 1,000 man hours of doing the clearing.' HWMO was able to expand its grant program after the Maui fires with donations from organizations like the Bezos Earth Fund and the American Red Cross. At a time when federal funding for climate mitigation is uncertain, communities need far more financial support to transform their neighborhoods, said Headwaters Economics' Kimi Barrett, who studies the costs of increasing fire risk. 'If what we're trying to do is save people and communities, then we must significantly invest in people and communities,' said Barrett. Those investments are just a fraction of the billions of dollars in losses sustained after megafires, said Barrett. A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Allstate found that $1 in resilience and preparation investment can save $13 in economic and property losses after a disaster. Another hurdle is asking residents to do work and make sacrifices as they watch others neglect their role. 'The neighbors will ask, 'What about the county land?' There's no routine maintenance,'' said Shelly Aina. Her husband Dana Aina said he reminds people that it is everyone's kuleana, or responsibility, to take care of land and people. 'An island is a canoe, a canoe is an island,' he said, quoting a Hawaiian proverb. 'We all have to paddle together.' Bigger stakeholders are starting to make changes. Among them, Hawaii passed legislation to create a state fire marshal post, and its main utility, Hawaiian Electric, is undergrounding some power lines and installing AI-enabled cameras to detect ignitions earlier. Meanwhile, Firewise communities have found that doing their own mitigation gives them more clout when asking for funding or for others to do their part. After the 66-residence community of Kawaihae Village on Hawaii Island joined Firewise, they were finally able to get a neighboring private landowner and the state to create fuel breaks and clear grasses. 'Without that we wouldn't have been on anyone's radar,' said Brenda DuFresne, committee member of Kawaihae Firewise. 'I think Firewise is a way to show people that you're willing to help yourself.' —— Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'
After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'

Associated Press

time25-03-2025

  • General
  • Associated Press

After Lahaina fire, Hawaii residents address their risk by becoming ‘Firewise'

KULA, Hawaii (AP) — The car tires, propane tanks, gas generators and rusty appliances heaped on the side of a dirt road waiting to be hauled away filled Desiree Graham with relief. 'That means all that stuff is not in people's yards,' she said on a blustery July day in Kahikinui, a remote Native Hawaiian homestead community in southeast Maui where wildfire is a top concern. In June, neighbors and volunteers spent four weekends clearing rubbish from their properties in a community-wide effort to create 'defensible space,' or areas around homes free of ignitable vegetation and debris. They purged 12 tons of waste. 'It's ugly, but it's pretty beautiful to me,' said Graham, a member of Kahikinui's Firewise committee, part of a rapidly growing program from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association that helps residents assess their communities' fire risk and create plans to mitigate it. climate change, urban development, and detrimental land use policies culminate to cause more destructive fires. The state has 250,000 acres of unmanaged fallow agricultural land, nearly all of its buildings sit within the wildland-urban interface, and two-thirds of communities have only one road in and out. But experts say that even with so many factors out of communities' control, they can vastly improve their resilience — by transforming their own neighborhoods. 'Fire is not like other natural hazards, it can only move where there is fuel, and we have a lot of say in that,' said Nani Barretto, co-executive director of the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization (HWMO), a 25-year-old nonprofit at the forefront of the state's fire-risk mitigation. Neighborhoods all over the United States are wrestling with the same challenge, some in places that never worried about fire before. A recent Headwaters Economics analysis found 1,100 communities in 32 states shared similar risk profiles to places recently devastated by urban wildfires. A 'Firewise' movement HWMO helps communities like Kahikinui become Firewise. In the 10 years preceding the August 2023 Maui fires that destroyed Lahaina, 15 Hawaii communities joined Firewise USA. Since then, the number has more than doubled to 31, with a dozen more in the process of joining. 'Everyone was like, 'My God, what can we do?'' said Shelly Aina, former chair of the Firewise committee for Waikoloa Village, an 8,000-resident community on the west side of the Big Island, recalling the months after the Maui fires. The development — heavily wind exposed, surrounded by dry invasive grasses and with just one main road in and out — had already experienced several close calls in the last two decades. It was first recognized as Firewise in 2016. As HWMO-trained home assessors, Shelly and her husband Dana Aina have done over 60 free assessments for neighbors since 2022, evaluating their properties for ignition vulnerabilities. Volunteers removed kiawe trees last year along a fuel break bordering houses. Residents approved an extra HOA fee for vegetation removal on interior lots. Measures like these can have outsized impact as people in fire-prone states adapt to more extreme wildfires, according to Dr. Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service scientist. 'The solution is in the community, not out there with the fire breaks, because those don't stop the fire in extreme conditions,' said Cohen. Direct flames from a wildfire aren't what typically initiate an urban conflagration, he said. Wind-blown embers can travel miles away from a fire, landing on combustible material like dry vegetation, or accumulating in corners like where a deck meets siding. 'They're urban fires, not wildfires,' said Cohen. The solutions don't always require expensive retrofits like a whole new roof, but targeting the specific places within 100 feet of the house where embers could ignite material. In dense neighborhoods, that requires residents work together, making community-wide efforts like Firewise important. 'The house is only as ignition resistant as its neighbors,' said Cohen. Communities can't transform alone Even with renewed interest in fire resilience, community leaders face challenges in mobilizing their neighbors. Mitigation can take money, time and sacrifice. It's not enough to cut the grass once, for example, vegetation has to be regularly maintained. Complacency sets in. Measures like removing hazardous trees can cost thousands of dollars. 'I don't know how we deal with that, because those who have them can't afford to take them down,' said Shelly Aina. The Ainas try offering low-cost measures, like installing metal screening behind vents and crawl spaces to keep out embers. HWMO helps with costs where it can. It gave Kahikinui a $5,000 grant for a dumpster service to haul out its waste, and helped Waikoloa Village rent a chipper for the trees it removed. It's been hard to keep up with the need, said Barretto, but even just a little bit of financial assistance can have an exponential impact. 'You give them money, they rally,' she said. 'We can give them $1,000 and it turns into 1,000 man hours of doing the clearing.' HWMO was able to expand its grant program after the Maui fires with donations from organizations like the Bezos Earth Fund and the American Red Cross. At a time when federal funding for climate mitigation is uncertain, communities need far more financial support to transform their neighborhoods, said Headwaters Economics' Kimi Barrett, who studies the costs of increasing fire risk. 'If what we're trying to do is save people and communities, then we must significantly invest in people and communities,' said Barrett. Those investments are just a fraction of the billions of dollars in losses sustained after megafires, said Barrett. A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Allstate found that $1 in resilience and preparation investment can save $13 in economic and property losses after a disaster. Another hurdle is asking residents to do work and make sacrifices as they watch others neglect their role. 'The neighbors will ask, 'What about the county land?' There's no routine maintenance,'' said Shelly Aina. Her husband Dana Aina said he reminds people that it is everyone's kuleana, or responsibility, to take care of land and people. 'An island is a canoe, a canoe is an island,' he said, quoting a Hawaiian proverb. 'We all have to paddle together.' Bigger stakeholders are starting to make changes. Among them, Hawaii passed legislation to create a state fire marshal post, and its main utility, Hawaiian Electric, is undergrounding some power lines and installing AI-enabled cameras to detect ignitions earlier. Meanwhile, Firewise communities have found that doing their own mitigation gives them more clout when asking for funding or for others to do their part. After the 66-residence community of Kawaihae Village on Hawaii Island joined Firewise, they were finally able to get a neighboring private landowner and the state to create fuel breaks and clear grasses. 'Without that we wouldn't have been on anyone's radar,' said Brenda DuFresne, committee member of Kawaihae Firewise. 'I think Firewise is a way to show people that you're willing to help yourself.' ——

Hawaiian Electric commits $260K to local nonprofit combatting wildfires
Hawaiian Electric commits $260K to local nonprofit combatting wildfires

Yahoo

time04-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Hawaiian Electric commits $260K to local nonprofit combatting wildfires

Hawaiian Electric today announced a pact with the nonprofit Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization to help fund coordinators for its Firewise community programs. The company said it recently paid the first $50, 000 of a $260, 000 commitment to HWMO, a Hawaii-based nonprofit leading wildfire preparedness efforts across the state. HWMO locally administers the nationally recognized which helps communities organize, prepare, and take actions to protect their homes against wildfire threats. Currently, HWMO oversees 31 Firewise communities across three counties—from Kamilonui Valley on Oahu to Kula Meadows on Maui and Waikoloa Village on Hawaii island. The funding comes as the nonprofit's federal grants for these programs are ending, according to Nani Barretto, HWMO co-executive director. Since the deadly Maui wildfires occurred in August 2023, interest in the Firewise communities program has grown exponentially. 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. Barretto said within 10 months of the Maui wildfires, another 15 communities were added to the 15 that were already established as nationally recognized sites. Another 13 are in the application process. Firewise program coordinators help communities think through what projects will reduce risk, provide technical assistance and bring neighbors together to share resources, among other responsibilities. Some examples include bringing community groups together to create firebreaks in Kamilo Nui Valley, along with projects to remove invasive, fire-prone fountain grass from common areas at a Mauna Kea Resort community. Hawaiian Electric was also a sponsor of the Hawaii Wildfire Summit in Kona last week, which brought leaders from fire departments, emergency management, forestry, natural resources, utilities, insurance, and more to discuss wildfire preparedness and management in the state. HWMO hosted the summit in partnership with the state Division of Forestry and Wildlife and various fire departments. 'Our support of Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization is a valuable investment in strengthening community resilience across the five islands Hawaiian Electric serves, ' said Kurt Tsue, Hawaiian Electric director of community affairs, in a news release. 'Getting behind HWMO's community-driven wildfire mitigation efforts is critical as we work in parallel to upgrade our infrastructure to reduce the risk of ignition and protect our customers and communities.' 5 Comments By participating in online discussions you acknowledge that you have agreed to the. An insightful discussion of ideas and viewpoints is encouraged, but comments must be civil and in good taste, with no personal attacks. If your comments are inappropriate, you may be banned from posting. Report comments if you believe they do not follow our. Having trouble with comments ? .

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