As the early morning sun filtered through the coconut trees lining the roadway, the couple spoke in hushed voices, searching for their belongings in the trunk of their car.
It鈥檚 just after 6:30 a.m., and the homeowners in the neighborhood around them were just waking up. Every so often, a pedestrian or car passes by, on the way to work or to the nearby beach. But Liz Woodall and Rashawn Hunter don鈥檛 wave or say good morning. They don鈥檛 want to draw attention as they go about their morning routine.
That鈥檚 because they live out of two vehicles: a 2015 cargo van, where they sleep, and a 20-year-old Toyota Prius that they use to store their stuff and get around during the day because it鈥檚 better on gas. It鈥檚 illegal to live in cars on public roadways in Hawaii, but the couple has been doing so on Maui for the last three months, trying to blend in with the tourists who rent vans for up to $300 per day to travel the island.
The couple doesn鈥檛 stay there long. Hunter must leave for work by 7:30 a.m. for his construction job. Sitting in the driver鈥檚 seat of the Prius, he pulls on socks and laces up his shoes. Next to him on the passenger鈥檚 side, Woodall brushes her teeth, using a water bottle.
They run through their daily checklist of everything they might need that day: Hunter鈥檚 hard hat and knee pads for work, phone chargers, backup batteries, packed lunches, bottles of water, towels to shower later at the gym, the clothes that they plan to sleep in. They won鈥檛 come back to the van until hours after nightfall, when the world around them won鈥檛 notice they鈥檝e returned.
Securing Shelter
Like so many other young people who came to Maui before them, Woodall and Hunter had a dream to see the world. They wanted to experience the island’s natural beauty, its spirituality and live off its fresh and locally grown food. The big problem: When they came here last fall, they didn鈥檛 know the median sales price for a home was about to soar months later to . Even families with roots that stretch back generations on Maui were increasingly being priced out of their homes.
Usually, it鈥檚 a complicated mix of things that can force people out of housing 鈥 poverty, a lack of access to health care, mental illness, addiction, trauma, low wages, unexpected expenses, job losses, astronomical rent costs. In 2020, Maui outreach workers counted nearly 800 people living on the streets or in shelters, although that number is likely much higher, as that tally only includes people counted on a single day of the year as part of . The county doesn’t track the number of people living in cars, and there’s no way to know how many Maui residents were recently forced to move into them after housing costs soared during the pandemic.
For Woodall and Hunter, the reason they ended up without a place to live was pretty simple. They had thought they鈥檇 found a rental, then it fell through.
Woodall, 30, and Hunter, 24, both grew up in Virginia. They met there three years ago through a mutual friend. At the time, he was working at Barnes & Noble, and she was working as a mobile car detailer.
When Woodall thinks about it now, she laughs, because back then, she said, Hunter 鈥渨as an inside person.鈥 The first day they hung out, they spent hours inside his apartment, talking over herbal tea without realizing that any time had passed.
From that day on, they spent every moment they could together. They planned all sorts of adventures: They wanted to go to Costa Rica, hike the Colorado Trail, live in Hawaii. First, they went to Kauai, and then they ended up on Hawaii island, helping a couple renovate a house in exchange for a place to live. But Woodall has a degenerative eye disease and isn鈥檛 able to drive, which made it hard to get around. So the couple decided to move to Maui last fall, hoping it might be easier for her to navigate bike lanes and the bus system.
They鈥檇 been talking with a property owner in Haiku, who told them they could live in a bus parked on his property for $700 a month. They shipped their old Toyota that they鈥檇 bought on Hawaii island to Maui and booked their flights. But the day they arrived, they found out he wanted to rent to a single person, not a couple.
There鈥檚 a widespread myth in Hawaii that many of the people who end up living on the streets . But in reality, the limited data that exists shows that people experiencing homelessness in Hawaii are often from here, and , who are priced out of their ancestral lands.
It’s not uncommon for Maui’s working poor to shelter in their vehicles when the gap between wages and housing becomes too vast. A small fraction are people who come here from the mainland, like Woodall and Hunter, who end up without a place to live shortly after they arrive, after witnessing firsthand just how high Hawaii’s cost of living is.
That first night they slept in the sedan, which was 鈥渁 nightmare,鈥 Woodall said. It was hot and cramped, but they couldn鈥檛 afford many of the rental homes listed on Craigslist, some as high as $2,500 for a one-bedroom, which meant the upfront moving costs would likely be double that with the deposit. They ended up buying a tent at Walmart and found a secluded place to camp near a beach by the airport. Meanwhile, Hunter started working at a cafe in Paia. They wanted to start saving again.
They were there for almost a month, until someone stole their blankets, pillows and tarp covering their tent while Hunter was at work. Woodall broke down. They couldn鈥檛 live like this anymore. So they desperately began brainstorming ways to secure shelter and came up with an idea: What if, despite their limited income and credit scores, they could find a car dealer willing to sell them a van?
They found only one dealership on Maui that had used vans for sale. After five hours in its office, the salesperson helped them get approved for a loan. The interest was high 鈥 the monthly payment was more than $700. But it was still less than rent.
The Search For A Spot To Park
Once they got the van, the couple faced a new challenge: Finding a safe place to park it. On Maui, campgrounds are scarce and usually come at a cost. And unlike some communities on the mainland, there aren鈥檛 parking lots or places that are , according to the county. There aren鈥檛 large swaths of land owned by the U.S. Forest Service or Bureau of Land Management either, where people are typically allowed to camp for up to two weeks at a time.
A couple months ago, Hunter tried posting an ad on Craigslist: 鈥淟ooking for a spot to park my van sometimes and my car,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淲e鈥檙e quiet, clean, professional.鈥 The couple was willing to pay a few hundred dollars a month and promised to be gone during the day. But no one ever responded.
He did, however, eventually get lucky with Craigslist: He recently found a job working with a renovation crew at a resort in Wailea, a full-time gig that paid at least double what he was making at the cafe. When he goes to work, he usually drops Woodall off at Starbucks in Kahului, which offers free internet and hot water that she can use to make tea and oatmeal.
Since moving to Maui, Woodall says it’s been hard to find a job that she can work with her limited vision 鈥 and the inability to drive there. Growing up, she always needed glasses, but suddenly, when she was in high school, she realized she couldn鈥檛 read the whiteboard at all. A dark spot had appeared in the center of her field of vision. Soon after that, she was diagnosed with Stargardt disease, a rare genetic eye condition that would cause the blackhole to grow larger over time.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like losing somebody you really care about,鈥 she said.
It also makes living outside particularly challenging. It鈥檚 navigating street signs on her bicycle without being able to read the letters, searching for items at the grocery store without seeing their prices and simply existing in the world as a woman. When Hunter is at work, and she鈥檚 alone, she鈥檚 often approached by strangers, some of whom she can鈥檛 see until they鈥檙e quite close. She鈥檚 learned to keep her cellphone out, ready to call for help.
Everything, it seems, is more difficult without a safe place to call home 鈥 and a kitchen, toilet, shower or place to cook food without Maui鈥檚 trade winds blasting their camping stove. Food is more expensive when you can鈥檛 buy in bulk without a fridge to store it in. Then you have to buy bags of ice every couple of days to stock the cooler.
When Hunter worked for the cafe, he earned $13 per hour, plus tips; now he makes $25 an hour doing renovation work. Woodall receives about $800 in Supplemental Security Income, a federal program that supports people who are blind or disabled.
Like other Maui residents who must live in public places when they鈥檙e unable to afford the privacy of a home, their money goes fast: $700 each month for the van鈥檚 payment, $400 for the Toyota, $300 to pay off credit cards they owe from previous years, then there鈥檚 food, gas and the gym membership so they can take hot showers. Each month they splurge on a $10 Spotify subscription and a $50 unlimited membership to a cinema in Kahului 鈥 because the screens are so big, Woodall can make out the shapes in the movies.
鈥淏y the time that we are done paying all of our bills, we could have enough money to pay for housing,鈥 Woodall said. 鈥淏ut there’s no housing.鈥
Not Meant To Be
When Hunter gets off work, the dust from scraping out grout in hotel bathrooms is so saturated into his pants that when he pats his thighs, plumes of white powder rise into the air around them. It鈥檚 hard work being hunched down on his knees every day, but he hopes that the construction job could be their path to financial stability.
With their leftover income each month, the couple hopes to buy materials to build out the van, with a goal to one day sell it at a profit. In recent years, #vanlife exploded across the U.S. and has since spread to Maui, offering the promise of minimalism, a lower cost of living and greater freedom to travel.
Camper van rentals on Maui have become so popular that the 鈥 some of them rent for nearly $300 per night and are fully equipped with toilets and Wifi, advertised as a way visitors can explore the island’s natural wonders and fall asleep with the sound of waves crashing outside their window.
Still, even people with money who rent vans for hundreds of dollars a night can face the same dilemma that Hunter and Woodall do: Finding a place to park where they won鈥檛 be hassled and the neighbors won鈥檛 complain.
Like many of the people who live out of their cars on Maui, by choice or by sheer necessity, Woodall and Hunter ended up using Kanaha Beach Park as a home base. It鈥檚 where, months before their arrival, dozens of people were living in tents and vehicles, until , despite federal government guidance warning against the practice in the middle of the pandemic. Until then, Kanaha served as a last resort for many longtime Maui residents, some of whose families had been here for generations but couldn’t keep up with the rising cost of living.
Woodall and Hunter now go there every evening to cook dinner. They roll into the last entrance, which is usually more secluded, park and begin to pack up everything they need to make dinner and leftovers so they don鈥檛 have to eat out during the day: the camping stove, pots, pans, lighter, Tupperware, gallon jug of water, dish soap, utensils, plus all the food they plan to cook.
By the time they arrive around 5 p.m., there are usually at least a half-dozen other vehicles that appear to serve as mobile homes; more begin to flow into the parking lot after the workday ends. Around them, the setting sun dances through the kiawe trees. On the beach, children screech and giggle, playing in the waves.
They try to savor each evening because they’ve decided that their days on Maui are numbered. Woodall’s vision has dramatically declined in the last month, and she’s finally coming to terms with the fact that it’d be easiest for her to live in a big city, where there’s robust public transit and greater access to social services. Now, they鈥檙e doing all they can do to save money for stable housing elsewhere.
“We were going to try to find a way to make it work, but we’re realizing that we’re probably not meant to be on this island,” Hunter said. “At least not right now.”
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
“Struggling To Get By” is part of our series on 鈥Hawaii鈥檚 Changing Economy鈥 which is supported by a grant from the as part of its CHANGE Framework project.
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