HANA, Maui 鈥 With initial shock about a spike in rat lungworm disease on Maui shifting to political debate over who will pay to contain it, a do-it-yourself effort is underway by a 聽group unwilling to wait for help that may not come soon enough.

, a construction skills program based at Hana School since 2002, is guiding teachers, administrators and staff members to safely rid their campus of rat hosts and slug and snail carriers of the lethal disease.

The nonprofit鈥檚 Hawaiian name translates 鈥渋n working, one learns.鈥 It is also known as HanaBuilds. Working to contain rat lungworm germs is a learning experience for everyone involved, said Rick Paul, principal of the pre-school-through-12th-grade public school.

Hana School principal Rick Paul, left, and Rick Rutiz, head of a construction skills program at the school, helped craft a plan to contain rat lungworm on the campus. Tad Bartimus/Civil Beat

When Dr. Lorrin Pang, the state鈥檚 chief Maui health officer, brought his invasive species team to search school gardens and taro patches on April 14 they found semi-slugs, the disease鈥檚 most dangerous carrier because 80 percent are infected with the lethal parasites.

Paul and Rick Rutiz, a former building contractor who started Ma Ka Hana Ka 鈥業ke in 2002 as a training program in the school鈥檚 carpentry class, decided to be proactive to protect the campus and its 鈥榦hana.

The school鈥檚 agricultural areas are now off limits to all students through the rest of the academic year. Custodians are continuing to push back a tangled jungle perimeter harboring hundreds, perhaps thousands of rats at the rear of the 15-acre campus.

Rutiz is working with his program directors, Mikala Minn, head of the nonprofit鈥檚 Mahele Farm and its community garden, and Viliami Tukvatu, who oversees its education program to expand Native Hawaiian cultural practices, to craft an action plan to rid Hana School of as many dangerous pests as possible.

They have compiled a 180-page notebook covering all aspects of rat lungworm to help educate their staff, volunteers and school community. The information covers rat hosts and slug and snail carriers; safe ways to catch, kill and dispose of them; containment techniques; protocols to harvest and wash fruits and vegetables so they are safe to eat, how to protect a water catchment system from contamination, and safe weed cutting and disposal.

鈥淲e put in everything we could find, anything that would help us make it safer for folks to work on the campus, and keep it clear,鈥 said Rutiz.

Principal Paul, Rutiz and his team are setting a proactive example of how to try and get in front of a health threat before it reaches an out-of-control tipping point.

The gardens, taro patch and banana fields at Hana School are closed to students because of the threat of rat lungworm disease. Tad Bartimus/Civil Beat/2017

鈥淲hat鈥檚 happening here is putting our core mission at risk,鈥 said Tukvatu. 鈥淲orking as a team, we are going to do what we have to do to create a buffer zone on campus.

鈥淲e need to be part of the solution with our own labor and research. No place should be a more important focus than this campus. We live close to the aina (land), that鈥檚 what makes Hana so special. Now this (rat lungworm) parasite is trying to severe our relationship with the aina.鈥

Minn, a 2003 Hana High graduate and president of the ,聽is frustrated at the lack of physical resources currently available on Maui.

鈥淩ats are very hard to kill,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need at least 100 traps to clear a 200-yard radius around the growing areas. I couldn鈥檛 find any traps when I went looking in Kahului, they were all sold out. Same with slug bait.

Takako Nakaaki, a state epidemiological specialist on Maui, collecting slug samples in a taro patch at Hana School. Tad Bartimus/Civil Beat

鈥淚 have trouble peeling the tough skin on an eggplant, but semi-slugs carve their way in and eat it right off. They climb 20-foot papaya trees, eat the fruit and kill the trees. Farmers are the first line of defense against the spread of this. If you really want to get resources out to people to fight this thing, send them in bulk to Hana.鈥

Ma Ka Hana Ka 鈥業ke is committing emergency funding to buy, when they arrive on Maui, lots of rat traps, slug bait, slug jugs, nitrile gloves, tongs, disposable chopsticks, and other basic equipment necessary to trap and kill rats and slugs.

Since January, 10 cases of debilitating illness carried by rats and transmitted by snails and slugs have been reported on the island. Victims include three Hana residents and a California couple who honeymooned there.

Dr. Lorrin Pang, Hawaii’s chief health officer for Maui, searches for semi-slugs, considered among the most dangerous carriers of rat lungworm disease. Tad Bartimus/Civil Beat

Maui Sen. Kalani English has asked a conference committee considering a聽 to pay for more research of rat lung disease on Hawaii Island to add $300,000 to the bill for emergency funding for Maui.

English also is racing the legislative clock to get Pang鈥檚 $355,000 request to the Department of Health to pay for semi-slug research on Maui.

鈥淭he issue is, are we going to try and keep it from spreading from Hana to the rest of Maui?鈥 Pang said. 鈥淲e need money to survey where the slugs are, pay overtime for vector control and MISC, educate growers and people who work in restaurants where most tourists eat, as well as school kids and the public. We don鈥檛 know who will provide it.

鈥淓veryone agrees this and more should be done quickly,鈥 Pang said. 鈥淢y job is finding out what we need. It鈥檚 up to others to figure out (how much money) they will pay. 聽But if we don鈥檛 get it soon, we could have a bad problem here.鈥

Read about how the state is responding to the growing number of rat lungworm cases.

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