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Courtesy: Friends of Haiku Stairs

About the Author

Vernon Ansdell

Vernon Ansdell is a semi-retired physician and president of the nonprofit Friends of Haiku Stairs. He first climbed Haiku Stairs in 1983.


For several decades supporters of the Haiku Stairs have been on a rollercoaster ride anticipating the reopening of their beloved Stairway to Heaven to the general public.

The high point was in 2002 when the city spent almost $1 million repairing the stairs with a goal of reopening them and developing a cultural and recreational park in Haiku Valley.

Unfortunately, that plan did not come to fruition because of unanticipated access issues and the that raised concerns about liability on Hawaii鈥檚 hiking trails.

There was little progress over the next few years, and illegal trespassing in the neighborhood increased significantly, creating an unacceptable situation for residents impacted by trespassers.

An attempt to solve the access issues by securing a land swap between the city and the Department of Hawaiian Homelands, which owns most of the land in Haiku Valley, stalled despite being an ideal, win-win solution.

The Honolulu Board of Water Supply, which owned the property containing the Haiku Stairs, tried unsuccessfully to transfer the responsibility to a more appropriate government agency. Finally, in frustration, it commissioned an Environmental Impact Statement looking at removal of the stairs.

In 2017, the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board voted unanimously on a resolution to reopen the stairs under a controlled and managed access plan that respects the privacy rights of the Haiku neighborhood.

Stairway to Heaven: The ascent of Haiku Stairs. Courtesy: Friends of Haiku Stairs

The final EIS was released in early 2020. In this extensive report, there is an important table that ranks four options for Haiku Stairs: 1) reopening under managed access, 2) partial removal of the stairs; 3) complete removal of the stairs; and 4) doing nothing.

The preferred option was number one, reopening the stairs under managed access.

In April, 2020 the BWS voted to transfer ownership of the land under Haiku Stairs to the Department of Parks and Recreation. They received almost 4,500 pieces of written testimony and there were many hours of oral testimony. An overwhelming 90% were in favor of reopening the stairs under managed access and only 10% were in favor of removal.

After taking ownership of Haiku Stairs, the city administration looked at the EIS, the resolution from the Kaneohe Neighborhood Board and the聽general public’s overwhelming support for reopening. It sent out a Request For Interest, and 14 organizations interested in managing the stairs responded with proposals. Unfortunately, time ran out and there was a change in the city administration.

Fast forward to early 2021 when out of the blue, a resolution came before the Honolulu City Council to spend $1 million to聽 remove the stairs.

This 180-degree turn defies logic. Friends of Haiku Stairs, a nonprofit organization formed in 1987 with a mission to reopen the historic stairs, has developed a that outlines the way to reopen the stairs successfully under managed access. It addresses all the valid concerns that have been raised including security, trespassing, safety, liability and access.

The plan has evolved over decades with input from experts from all walks of life including engineers, hikers, teachers, botanists, medical experts and historians.

It proposes that the Haiku Stairs can be reopened and operated at zero cost to Hawaii taxpayers and would leave the city and state governments $2.14 million better off than the proposal to remove them. Visitors would be charged to climb the stairs, and this would cover the costs of security, insurance, maintenance, staffing and educational programs.

View From the Top: The reward for climbing Haiku Stairs’ 3,922 steps. Courtesy: Friends of Haiku Stairs

Highlights of the managed access plan include security cameras with night vision capability, effective fencing, off-duty police to issue trespassing citations and a security planning group composed of neighbors, the Honolulu Police Department, private security, the operator and Friends of Haiku Stairs. This planning group would meet on a regular basis and address any concerns regarding security issues as they arise.

Haiku Stairs is very safe. In fact, it’s probably one of the safest hiking trails in Hawaii. There’s never been a serious injury or death because of an accident on the stairs.

Reports of injuries and rescues on Haiku Stairs are almost always from hikers who get lost or injured on the notoriously steep, muddy and hazardous Moanalua Valley or 鈥渂ackside鈥 trail. Removal of the stairs will lead to many more hikers attempting this alternative to reach the top of the ridge and result in significantly more injuries and rescues.

We urge Mayor Rick Blangiardi and his administration to listen to the people of Hawaii, and send out another RFI to confirm the obvious interest in reopening Haiku Stairs under managed access.

Political will can solve the access issues. This will be the fastest way to resolve this mess, satisfy the large number of Hawaii residents who want the stairs reopened and help the residents of Haiku Valley who are struggling to deal with the current situation.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Author

Vernon Ansdell

Vernon Ansdell is a semi-retired physician and president of the nonprofit Friends of Haiku Stairs. He first climbed Haiku Stairs in 1983.


Latest Comments (0)

I just hope I get to do this hike once in my life before my knees go bad

drivewithbrains · 3 years ago

Friends of Haiku Stairs (FSH) solicits supporters locally, worldwide to submit save the stairs testimony to local agencies, Kaneohe Neighborhood Board, elected officials, City Council. Over the years, thousands of pieces of save stairs testimony submitted by non-residents stack the deck against Kaneohe residents who want the Stairs dismantled for neighborhood safety, security, public health reasons.Resolution 21-154 to remove Haiku Stairs introduced by District 3 Council Member (CM) Kiaaina responding to her constituents芒聙聶 concerns. CMs are elected to represent voters, taxpayers to ensure safe, secure Oahu communities. Kaneohe residents living in working family neighborhoods are no match for FSH funding, marketing to influence politicians. Honolulu City Council, July 2021, 1000+ testimony to save stairs submitted originated from foreign countries, continental USA. Most submitting testimony to save stairs admit to trespassing to climb Haiku Stairs. Many Oahu stairs supporters are real estate agents, owners of thousands of illegal vacation rentals who benefit from mass tourism. Privatizing, monetizing access to Haiku Stairs benefits FSH, owners of illegal vacations rentals, tourists.

RiYue · 3 years ago

This lays out the case for managed access very well.Applying a little leadership to complete what the City envisioned in 2002 is long overdue.聽 Get it done.Managed access would preserve the stairs芒聙聶 recreational, historical, educational, and cultural potential, which is supported by over 90% of Hawaii residents who have testified.Managed access by a City contractor who knows that eliminating trespassing is a core requirement to be viable will eliminate all of the problems the neighborhood has suffered because of the City's neglect over the years.

KailuaBill · 3 years ago

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