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Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat/2023

About the Author

Catherine Toth Fox

Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.

We don鈥檛 need more multimillion-dollar homes and resorts at the expense of the natural and cultural resources that make Hawaii special.

The news that Hawaii will soon get its 51st state park on Oahu may not have soared to the top of your news feed this week. Or maybe it did and you scrolled past.

Maybe you鈥檙e not one of the hundreds of people who descend on the Kaiwi Coast Scenic Shoreline every day, hiking the popular trail to the historic Makapuu Lighthouse or fishing off Alan Davis Beach.

Maybe you don鈥檛 drive along Kalanianaole Highway through this rugged area, enjoying unobstructed ocean views, maybe seeing a whale breaching offshore during the winter. Maybe you don鈥檛 live in Hawaii Kai or Kalama Valley.

So maybe you don鈥檛 think this affects you. But this new designation is actually precedent-setting 鈥 and it will undoubtedly affect the way this and potentially other open spaces in Hawaii are managed and protected in the future.

Once the Board of Land and Natural Resources approves , now Act 235, about 340 acres within the Kaiwi Coast will become a state park, falling under the jurisdiction of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources鈥 Division of State Parks.

This will allow the state to secure more resources and manage this area with the same rules and enforcement as it does other state parks. It will also help the state steward the natural resources along the coastline, which is home to the native ilima shrub and naio (false sandalwood) tree and the endangered and endemic shrub puukaa.

The designation would also allow the state to implement a day-use reservation system like Hanauma Bay Nature Preserve and Diamond Head State Monument to help manage visitor impact, maintain facilities and hire staff. (That鈥檚 not in the plans right now, but this change allows for the possibility.)

Really, not much changes, at least not to us, not right now. So what鈥檚 the big deal?

makapuu lighthouse trail kaiwi coast
Makapuu Point Lighthouse Trail is among the public attractions on Kaiwi Coast. (Catherine Toth Fox/Civil Beat/2023)

There鈥檚 a sentence in the bill that reads: 鈥淟and in the Kaiwi coast state park shall be preserved in perpetuity primarily in its wild and natural state.鈥

That means, moving forward, this land will remain 鈥渨ild and natural,鈥 something that has never been applied to any state park, said Sen. Chris Lee, who introduced the bill.

鈥淭his was something the community was really pushing for because there鈥檚 been a lot of distrust over the years with the state government,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hile DLNR has been great about managing this area the way they have, you could have a new governor, a new DLNR director and all that could change in a heartbeat. There鈥檚 no guarantees for anything. But having this language in the law now guarantees this whole area will be protected in its wild and natural state in perpetuity. That鈥檚 precedent-setting.鈥

In addition, the law makes it easier for adjacent lands to be added to the state park.

Right now there are a handful of groups that own land here, from Kamehameha Schools to the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. In 2017 the conveyed two parcels totalling 182 acres of this coastline to the community through the nonprofit , which now owns and stewards the land, stopping the area from being developed into a resort, luxury residential subdivision or vacation cabin rentals.

Instead of going through the arduous process of rezoning or getting conservation easements, Lee said,
the law essentially makes it easier for the transfer of adjacent lands to the state and receive the same protections under this law.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not only setting this up for today but for the years to come,鈥 he explained. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 a much faster and easier process to preserve this whole chunk of the island in perpetuity.鈥

Panorama of Kalanianaole Highway as seen from Kaiwi State Scenic Shoreline trail on August 22, 2014
This panorama shows Kalanianaole Highway as seen from Kaiwi State Scenic Shoreline trail. (PF Bentley/Civil Beat/2014)

This win was a long time coming for community activists and environmental groups who have been pushing for decades to save this coastline from development. Grassroots efforts on the part of Save Sandy Beach and the Ka Iwi Coalition helped save hundreds of acres from development starting in the late 1980s.

More recently, in 2021, community members, along with the Oahu chapters of the Sierra Club and Surfrider Foundation, got the city and state to install boulders to block illegal off-roaders at Wawamalu Beach 鈥 between Sandy and Kaloko beaches 鈥 to protect the marine habitat and endangered Hawaiian monk seals that often rest there.

鈥淭his is a really good thing,鈥 said Reese Liggett, a retired Air Force pilot and commercial real estate agent who has been fighting to preserve this area for 20 years.

As a life member of the Sierra Club, he leads conservation projects at Wawamalu Beach, where volunteers remove koa haole and restore native vegetation.

鈥淚t鈥檚 wild and it鈥檚 natural,” he said, adding that he’s “really hopeful” it will stay that way.

There鈥檚 really no big money in conservation, not compared to selling the land to a developer with plans to build a luxe resort or gated subdivision along this wild coastline.

It鈥檚 a difficult argument to win 鈥 just ask the folks at the Trust for Public Land whose job is to convince landowners to sell their property at a cheaper, albeit fair-market price just to conserve it, often for the general public to enjoy it for free.

We all need access to more green and open spaces. Even the state knows this.

In 2014 the state launched the , a public-private project that identified priority goals, which included measuring square feet of state park per capita through 2030. , 鈥渁ccess to and distribution of open, public spaces can contribute to community well-being, connection, and resident satisfaction.鈥

Maybe this designation 鈥 to keep Kaiwi 鈥減reserved in perpetuity primarily in its wild and natural state鈥 鈥 can be applied to other wild and natural areas in Hawaii, places heavily impacted by visitors, places sacred to Native Hawaiians, places that are important habitats for native plants and animals, places with just enough ocean views for a lucrative development project.

Because what we don鈥檛 need are more luxury resorts or multimillion-dollar homes at the expense of the natural and cultural resources that make Hawaii so special.


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About the Author

Catherine Toth Fox

Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.


Latest Comments (0)

We were young surfers from Sandy芒聙聶s waving signs on the highway and also at city hall around 88-89. Wild and natural? So what, don芒聙聶t trim, cultivate and improve? Oh, no芒聙娄 don芒聙聶t make walking paths or improve parking or add benches or whatever the community feels is best. The homeless will take over. DLNR do your job. Good grief. No vision. Travel to some great places in the world and get a clue as to what is possible.

KeolaRichard · 1 year ago

Here's my proposal: 1. Fence off the property along Kalanianaole Highway.2. Use the existing parking area on the Sandy Beach side of the property east of the beach area called "Irma's" from the lunch wagon that used to live there. You don't have to pave it, leave it natural.3. Charge parking and entrance fees at the lighthouse trail above and at the Kaiwi Shoreline Trail below.4. Limit the number of people allowed into the Kaiwi Natural Shoreline State Park (I just named it for you, you're welcome) to whatever is determined to be optimal.5. Leave the area completely natural with no improvements. 6. Put signs up that say this is a wild natural area with no water and hot unshaded sunny conditions. Bring your own food, water and shade. Do not litter. Pack it in pack it out.7. Have a great time!To the DLNR/ Hawaii State Parks: You're welcome, I just did your job for you and provided a cheap and effective solution for free.

Honopue · 1 year ago

This is a good start

Swimmerjean · 1 year ago

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