Naka Nathaniel: What Happens When the Movers Are Priced Out Of Paradise?
Every box they unpack brings them a step closer to leaving themselves.
June 14, 2023 · 5 min read
About the Author
Naka Nathaniel was an Editor-at-Large at Civil Beat from January to September 2024. Naka returned to regular journalism after being the primary parent for his son. In those 13 years, his child has only been to the ER five times (three due to animal attacks.)
Before parenting, Naka was known as an innovative journalist. He was part of the team that launched NYTimes.com in 1996 and he led a multimedia team that pioneered many new approaches to storytelling.
On 9/11, he filmed the second plane hitting the South Tower. His footage aired on the television networks and a sequence was the dominant image on NYTimes.com.
While based in Paris for The New York Times, he developed a style of mobile journalism that gave him the ability to report from anywhere on the planet. He covered the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and was detained while working in Iran, Sudan, Gaza and China. He is one of a handful of Americans who has been in North Korea, but not South Korea. He worked in 60 countries and made The Times鈥檚 audience care about sex trafficking, climate change and the plight of women and children in the developing world.
Besides conflict, The Times also had Naka covering fashion shows, car shows and Olympics. He did all three of those events in the same week (Paris, Geneva and Turin) before going to Darfur to continue reporting on the genocide (it was the fifth of sixth trips to the region.)
Naka lives in Waimea on the Big Island.
Every box they unpack brings them a step closer to leaving themselves.
Zoomers and Boomers, remote workers and retirees, rely on movers like Mana Lolo to schlep furniture and household goods from containers into dream homes along the Kona Coast.
Lolo and his coworkers at Kona Trans handle big household moves. They鈥檙e often moving in people who have 鈥渕ade it鈥 elsewhere and are ready to claim their reward: a place in paradise.
Lolo is on the frontline of the struggle over the cost of living in Hawaii.
鈥淵ou can’t fault people that work hard to make their money and they just want to live their best life,鈥 he said.
鈥淔or instance, there’s a couple from California and we have moved them in at Honaunau Bay. Nice, nice place, nice area. I guess they came here on vacation in 2016, saw the piece of land, fell in love with it, and bought it. They built their dream home right over Honaunau Bay. That’s the kind of people that we see moving in.鈥
However, every box he unpacks for a newcomer brings him closer to packing his own family鈥檚 belongings and leaving.
Lolo, 40, has been saving to move his family to Oregon for two years. His wife grew up on Hawaii island and they raised their two sons here. Now that his older son, Semisi, has graduated from Kealakehe High School, he鈥檚 planning on leaving Hawaii.
鈥淢y sons know that the mainland has a lot more to offer, but they also know they’ll miss this place because this is where they grew up.鈥
鈥淚t’s just sad that after 20 years living here that we are actually going to leave this place,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he cost of living is just too expensive. The pay, it’s just not much. People with money are moving over to Hawaii and building their dream homes and affecting the prices of homes and stuff out here and I just feel like, what can we do about that? Man, there’s nothing.鈥
Lolo knows that leaving Hawaii could be hard for his boys, just like it was for him when, at 13, his family moved to California for better economic opportunities.
鈥淚t was a culture shock for me to move from the little island to the mainland,鈥 he said 鈥淓verything was just a shock. I managed to finish high school, but really I was a lost kid.鈥
He returned to island life soon after finishing school in California.
鈥淲hen I moved back over here, I completely felt at home,鈥 Lolo said. 鈥淛ust everything, the people, the food, the lifestyle.鈥
Leaving Hawaii can be tough emotionally and financially. For most families, they have to save up to make the move away. It isn鈥檛 a matter of suddenly deciding to leave and then you鈥檙e gone. It can be a struggle to keep afloat while scraping up savings.
鈥淚’m thinking of picking up a second job just to have a little bit more cash,鈥 said Lolo. 鈥淢ost people are here working two, three jobs. That’s normal for local people.鈥
And Lolo considers himself fortunate because of his housing situation: 鈥淚 used to rent, but right now I’m staying at a place that my mom-in-law bought. So I’m just paying HOA fees right now and saving up money for the move that we have to do next year. So yeah, I just feel lucky.鈥
Lolo and locals don鈥檛 hire moving companies like his to ship their goods from Hawaii. They take suitcases, not containers.
When I asked him if he thought he鈥檇 move back to Hawaii again one day, I was hopeful for a 鈥測es.鈥
鈥淚 don’t think so, but my wife believes we will, she’s pretty much a Big Island girl,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he believes that we’re coming back here once the kids are settled on the mainland. But I don’t know, I think it’s going to be hard.鈥
Lolo said he was surprised to learn that there are now more Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders living outside of Hawaii than in Hawaii.
It鈥檚 the reason why the .
鈥淚 think we got to look at the politicians, people who’re running the state,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel like they’re looking out for the tourists and the rich people more than they’re looking out for the actual local people out here.鈥
So what happens when movers like Lolo are forced to move away from Hawaii because they鈥檝e been 鈥減riced out of paradise鈥 because of the people they helped move in? I hate to use the word 鈥渋rony,鈥 but it鈥檚 the word I can鈥檛 get out of my head.
So what鈥檚 to be done? Does he have a solution to the situation?
鈥淚 just feel like a lot of people 鈥 I just accept it as is and just try to move on,鈥 he said. “If you just sit around and be salty about it, it’s just not going to help. Hawaii is special. It鈥檚 such a destination that everybody else wants to move out here. People with money are just living their best life, but the local people are struggling.”
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ContributeAbout the Author
Naka Nathaniel was an Editor-at-Large at Civil Beat from January to September 2024. Naka returned to regular journalism after being the primary parent for his son. In those 13 years, his child has only been to the ER five times (three due to animal attacks.)
Before parenting, Naka was known as an innovative journalist. He was part of the team that launched NYTimes.com in 1996 and he led a multimedia team that pioneered many new approaches to storytelling.
On 9/11, he filmed the second plane hitting the South Tower. His footage aired on the television networks and a sequence was the dominant image on NYTimes.com.
While based in Paris for The New York Times, he developed a style of mobile journalism that gave him the ability to report from anywhere on the planet. He covered the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan and was detained while working in Iran, Sudan, Gaza and China. He is one of a handful of Americans who has been in North Korea, but not South Korea. He worked in 60 countries and made The Times鈥檚 audience care about sex trafficking, climate change and the plight of women and children in the developing world.
Besides conflict, The Times also had Naka covering fashion shows, car shows and Olympics. He did all three of those events in the same week (Paris, Geneva and Turin) before going to Darfur to continue reporting on the genocide (it was the fifth of sixth trips to the region.)
Naka lives in Waimea on the Big Island.
Latest Comments (0)
It doesn't help when Hawaii keeps building high-end condos and houses which cater to the rich buying up property and driving up prices. While people are free (and have the right) to move and live where they desire, the state can do a lot more for the locals by building more affordable workforce homes. These homes will not only provide housing security, which retains our people, it will also serve as a stepping stone for the younger generation as they build up wealth to upgrade to bigger homes later. This issue is not unique to Hawaii. Other countries have successfully built affordable homes along side expensive rich homes so that both the rich and the working families have a place to live. In Tokyo, there are government subsidized homes right in the middle of a rich neighborhood. Imagine that. Will the folks in our "nice" neighborhoods ever allow that? The issue is not just government...
Mnemosyne · 1 year ago
Hi everyone,I have lived in Hawaii for 50 years. In my opinion there is no reason we should not be thriving. I have watched over and over again as our legislatures fine, close, harass, overregulate everything creative, from small family businesses to successful things already running, even retroactively going back and closing them (like the Superferry who apparently "forgot" to do a test and must close immediately). Even the senior citizen who is renting out a room in their own house in which they live is now considered a criminal if it is less than thirty days. In my case i do small van tours, respectfully feeding back to the community and empowering local people and businesses throughout our day. But new laws make it a crime to show our visitors a beach starting at Makapuu, all of Waimanalo, all of Kailua, the entire north shore coastline, even though these places are uncrowded on weekdays. Who will come on my tour if I am not allowed to show them anything? Now in my sixties, is my job done too? The oppression here is caused by an entrenched buerocracy who listen to the most hateful voices and make unreasonable laws not based on truth. Praying芒聙娄.
Gregory_A · 1 year ago
It's not one thing that got us to to where we are today. It takes money to subsidize the housing market so that the middle and working class can afford homes. It doesn't help that the same people that shrank government services at the Federal level, are the same people that want to take an axe at government here. It takes money! We used to get all sorts of block grants from HUD in the 60's and 70's to help stabilize housing, we built Mililani, we built Hawaii Kai...those things no longer exist. So what does that mean? That means the State has to do what the Feds once provided. Unfortunately to do nothing, constrains the housing market and forces prices upwards. It's not the land that is the issue, we have boatloads of land all along the rail route that was imminent domained. Along the King Street corridor. More then enough to provide enough housing. In Hilo there is enough land in Hawaiian Acres, in Kona between Costco and Waikaloa, to build suburban housing communities, and that's just off the top of my head. What is lacking is the political will, the funding, and to go after construction fraud so that the people are getting the best value for their dollar.
TheMotherShip · 1 year ago
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