PAHOA, Hawaii 鈥 As a nation turns its eyes to a rural community on the Big Island that will decide a U.S. Senate race, residents here sometimes struggle to name the candidates vying for their votes.
Part of this has to do with the Aloha State鈥檚 aversion to electoral politics. A majority of residents don鈥檛 vote. And this is Puna, a place where people come to disappear.
Now with U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz and U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa locked in a tight race, every vote counts, although some here can鈥檛 understand why.
Life wasn鈥檛 easy in Puna before Tropical Storm Iselle knocked out power for thousands of residents, making simple necessities such as food, water and hygiene difficult to obtain.
Unemployment is high, and nearly a third of residents live in poverty. The idea of filling out a ballot doesn鈥檛 necessarily take priority.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 people鈥檚 concern right now,鈥 said Mona Borges. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in darkness.鈥
Borges lives in the Hawaiian Beaches community, one of several areas devastated by Iselle last week. Her home, unlike those of some of her neighbors, was spared from falling trees.
鈥淚 can be patient. But they took my vote away from me and I鈥檓 mad.鈥 鈥 Lawretta Blanch, Kalapana resident
She also still has food and water. What she鈥檚 missing is electricity. Every day she gets in her car and drives several miles to a community center in Pahoa where she can charge her cell phone and her radio, two connections to the outside world.
Borges says she wanted to take her two kids and stay with family in Kona, on the other side of the island, but that she doesn鈥檛 want to leave her house. She鈥檚 worried about looters coming to steal her husband鈥檚 tools.
鈥淓very night I wake up and there鈥檚 someone in my driveway,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 leave my house. It鈥檚 kind of scary.鈥
Borges isn鈥檛 registered to vote, so she won鈥檛 be able to participate in Friday鈥檚 special election to decide whether it will be Schatz or Hanabusa who will serve out the remaining two years of the late-U.S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye鈥檚 term.
She admits, however, that there is something special about Puna shaping the country鈥檚 political landscape.
Politics, Chili and Bananas
Both Schatz and Hanabusa have focused their campaigns on Puna after learning there might be enough votes here to sway the election one way or the other for either candidate.
Schatz currently holds a 1,635 vote advantage.聽There are potentially thousands of votes yet to be counted.
On Tuesday, Hanabusa readily acknowledged that people in Puna have far more immediate concerns than voting, but she said it was important to come here after the storm 鈥渢o see what it鈥檚 like.鈥
鈥淲hat we should all expect is that people will be most concerned about their families and their daily needs,鈥 Hanabusa said. 鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 have water and electricity and telephones and food, when you open the fridge what can you expect. This is how people feel. They shouldn鈥檛 have to think about whether they can make it to the polls.鈥
Hanabusa spent her day dolloping chili and handing out bananas at an outdoor gathering place in Paradise Park where the Makuu Farmers Market is held. She was surrounded by supporters, many of whom were dressed in HanabUSA T-shirts.
Asked if she would have come here if there hadn鈥檛 been a last-minute election scramble, she replied: 鈥淚鈥檇 like to think that we would have. It鈥檚 affecting a community I have personal ties with.鈥
Schatz has refused to speak with the media while in Puna. On Monday, he spent the afternoon handing out food, water and ice to residents in the Nanawale Estates neighborhood, which was one of the hardest hit areas by Tropical Storm Iselle. He did the same in the Hawaiian Shores community Tuesday.
‘People Have Access at This Point’
Whether any payoff results from these efforts remains to be seen. Logistics alone can make it difficult for someone in Puna to vote.
The polling place for Friday鈥檚 walk-in election is at Keonepoko Elementary School, north of Puna in the Hawaiian Beaches neighborhood. That polling place is one of two that was shut down Aug. 9 due to Tropical Storm Iselle. The other was at the Hawaiian Paradise Park Community Center.
Some are worried that voters in these two precincts might still be cut off due to downed trees and power lines, although county officials are confident citizens will have a pathway to the polling place.
鈥淲hat we should all expect is that people will be most concerned about their families and their daily needs.” 鈥 U.S. Rep. Colleen Hanabusa
鈥淏oth aerial surveys and ground surveys strongly indicate that people have access at this point,鈥 said Kevin Dayton, executive assistant to Hawaii County Mayor Billy Kenoi. 鈥淚t may not be the road they usually take, but they can get out.鈥
All major access roads in Puna and its subdivisions are passable, but not all side streets are cleared of debris. This includes some areas of Puna that are outside of the two precincts that will vote Friday.
Dayton said the county plans to provide shuttle service Friday to people who want to vote at Keonepoko Elementary, and that more details will be available in the coming days.
But overshadowing the preparations are a potential legal challenge from Hanabusa, who disagrees with the State Elections Office decision to conclude voting Friday in the two Puna precincts that were shut down.
There鈥檚 also concern that voters in other Big Island precincts were kept from the polls due to Tropical Storm Iselle. State Sen. Russell Ruderman, who represents Puna, has been on this matter, as has South Kona-Kau County Councilwoman Brenda Ford.
Lawretta Blanch feels her vote was stolen. The night the storm hit she watched as her roof pulsed from the winds and a tree crashed through her carport.
鈥淲e were trapped,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here was no way to get out.鈥
Blanch missed the Aug. 9 primary, something that hasn鈥檛 happened in more than 40 years. She said she鈥檚 voted every chance she鈥檚 had since she was 21. She鈥檚 63 today.
Frustration filled her eyes with tears as she talked about the importance of going to the polls. She said it鈥檚 a fallacy that Puna is just 鈥渁 bunch of hippies who don鈥檛 give a damn,鈥 and that there are many like her who wanted to have their say in this year鈥檚 primary.
鈥淚 can be patient,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut they took my vote away from me and I鈥檓 mad.鈥
Civil Beat deputy editor Eric Pape contributed to this report.
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About the Author
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Nick Grube is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at nick@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at . You can also reach him by phone at 808-377-0246.