Residents want more details on why the agency keeps rejecting that approach. The public has until Monday to comment.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is moving ahead with its reboot of the Ala Wai flood control project, an effort to help shield urban Honolulu from strong and fast-moving storm waters, after scrapping the amid rising costs and controversy.

But the federal agency’s latest effort is already facing community pushback similar to the prior proposal, which abruptly ended in 2021.聽

That鈥檚 largely because the corp has rejected using ecosystem restoration as part of its new plan, even though residents in Manoa, Palolo, Makiki and other parts of the vital watershed have been asking for years for the agency to seriously consider a nature-based approach to the area鈥檚 flood control.

Heavy rains flow from the Koolau mountains down through the Ala Wai watershed, spilling into Waikiki. The U.S. Army Corps has rebooted its flood control efforts for the area but has already ruled out a nature-based approach despite community calls for the agency to consider it. (Marcel Honore/Civil Beat/2019)

Instead, the corps is pursuing a plan that鈥檚 centered on erecting 6-foot-high flood walls around the Ala Wai Canal and using the Ala Wai Golf Course as a flood detention basin.

鈥淚鈥檓 just so pissed about that,鈥 said David Kimo Frankel, an attorney who represented during the group鈥檚 attempt to alter the corps鈥 first flood-control plan before it was halted.聽

鈥淭hey say they鈥檙e coming in with an open mind but then swiftly exclude nature-based (approaches) because it鈥檚 not going to be effective enough. Tell us what the criteria is 鈥 the data and the assumptions in their model,鈥 Frankel said last week.

On Wednesday, corps project leaders said their latest analysis shows methods such as replacing the invasive albizia trees in the Ala Wai watershed鈥檚 upper reaches and restoring natural stream beds would generate hardly any flood-control benefits during a heavy storm for the 200,000 or so residents who live there, as well as Hawaii鈥檚 economically critical tourism hub of Waikiki just downstream.

The U.S. Army Corp wants to erect 6-foot-high walls as part of its Ala Wai flood mitigation project. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2023)

Any changes to how the storm water flows down through the steep watershed thanks to those natural restoration efforts would barely be noticeable, said Eric Merriam, project manager for the corps鈥 Ala Wai Flood Risk Management Reevaluation Study.

鈥淚t does not mean they鈥檙e not important and don鈥檛 have benefits beyond flood risk management,鈥 Merriam added. 鈥淥ur study and our recommendation is only one piece of the puzzle for the Ala Wai watershed.鈥

Still, local proponents for a nature-based approach are pressing for the corps to release the methodology and data that they used to reach that conclusion. A group of state lawmakers that represent the watershed asked the corps last month to disclose the underlying data.

Sen. Carol Fukunaga, House Speaker Scott Saiki and seven other area state lawmakers sent Shawna Herleth King, an environmental resource specialist with the corps, a letter April 12 that says the corps 鈥渉as repeatedly stated that management of the forest would not sufficiently reduce runoff from larger storm events.

鈥淗owever, the agency has not revealed (a) how much runoff could be reduced through better management of the forest and (b) the assumptions and data that USACE has relied upon to reach its conclusion,鈥 the letter says.

On Wednesday, Merriam said those details will be available for public review between early June and mid-July when the corps releases its draft report 

Didn’t Make The Cut

In July, the corps to the Ala Wai watershed鈥檚 new flood control plan, and an informal poll taken at that meeting found the nature-based approach to be the most popular among the public. 

Nonetheless, it failed to make the cut of the corps鈥 final five approaches, which were announced in December. The preferred, 鈥減rospective鈥 approach relying mostly on flood walls and the golf course basin was then announced last month.

The nature-based approach was dismissed even though the agency has had more flexibility this time around to consider new ways to guard against the fast-moving storm waters flowing down the watershed鈥檚 steep, upper slopes.

Albizia Trees in Manoa above homes.
A canopy of albizia trees hovers over homes in the Manoa Valley. The fast-growing, invasive tree species has spread across the area and its branches comprise much of the debris in heavy flooding. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2019)

Specifically, the corps is no longer required to design flood control against a so-called 鈥100-year flood,鈥 or a severe storm that has about a 1% chance each year of occurring. Instead, it can consider a project that would address weaker storms.

Still, ecosystem restoration failed to make the cut. It also failed to be incorporated into any of the other main approaches being considered, as a complimentary feature.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 justify a feature if it鈥檚 not meeting the goals,鈥 Merriam said Wednesday.

鈥淥ur mission is flood risk management, and we can only add features that are effective and incrementally justified. It鈥檚 essentially saying that you can鈥檛 go out and build things because it seems like it鈥檚 a good idea.鈥

Reforestation鈥檚 ability to protect the communities downhill against fast-moving storm waters is 鈥渇airly minimal鈥 because the Ala Wai watershed is so remarkably steep, he said. 鈥淭hose events are extremely intense.鈥

Watershed restoration was actually part of the project鈥檚 original scope going back to 2001. However, that element was later scrapped in 2012 because the corps didn鈥檛 find sufficient benefits on a national level for the costs involved.聽聽

The removal surprised Ala Wai community groups and activists, one of whom called the corps鈥 subsequent flood-control effort 鈥渉alf a project.鈥

Still, Fukunaga said she hopes some of the Ala Wai鈥檚 various restoration efforts, such as the ongoing 鈥淕enki Ball Project,鈥 in which bacteria spheres are tossed into the Ala Wai Canal to help digest sludge, will find funding to thrive 鈥渆ven if not all of them are tied to the flood mitigation scope itself.鈥

鈥淲e should see where we can generate support,鈥 she said this week.

The public can comment on the corps鈥 preliminary approach through Monday by visiting the The next public meeting on the project is scheduled for May 15.

Read the state lawmakers鈥 concerns with the corps鈥 new approach below.

Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of climate change is supported by the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation, Marisla Fund of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.聽

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