The state’s chief housing officer says her team is identifying land where new housing can be built and assessing needs.
Dozens of people voiced their concerns over Gov. Josh Green’s as it relates to rebuilding Lahaina, the seaside West Maui town devastated by the deadly Aug. 8 wildfire, during a Maui County Council committee hearing Wednesday.
The proclamation, issued July 17, suspends several laws, including historic preservation, environmental review, sunshine and collective bargaining, and replaces them with different rules designed to speed development and ease the state鈥檚 housing crisis where the median cost of a home is $1.1 million.
The morning meeting opened with remarks from Chief Housing Officer Nani Medeiros, whom Green chose in November for a new Cabinet-level position to advise him on how to tackle the state鈥檚 housing crunch.
After expressing condolences over the 115 lives lost in the worst U.S. fire in over a century, Medeiros spoke about a working group, dubbed Build Beyond Barriers, convened under the emergency proclamation. It consists of city, county and state officials and representatives of nonprofits, utilities and the University of Hawaii.
鈥淟ahaina is not on the table. Not until the community is ready,鈥 she said. “If and when they are ready, if the working group can assist or support in any way, we will.”
She said an assessment is underway to identify available government and private land where new homes could be built to house Lahaina fire survivors, as well as infrastructure and human needs. Over the past few weeks, Medeiros said she鈥檚 been meeting with community members, county officials and employees, builders and developers 鈥渢o determine where can we do what.鈥
As of Wednesday, the working group is looking at three to four government-owned parcels in West Maui and two to three privately owned parcels in Central Maui.
鈥淚nfrastructure is the biggest challenge, and as I mentioned earlier, the meetings with the community members, the folks who have actually experienced the displacement are key to any decisions as to what it built and where it鈥檚 put,鈥 Medeiros said.
The group has identified about seven existing housing construction projects that might be nudged along or fast-tracked so that people could move in by January. She said the Attorney General鈥檚 Office is looking into mortgage forbearance options, similar to what happened during the pandemic. And there鈥檚 discussion about using Maui鈥檚 10,000 to 12,000 short-term vacation rental units for long-term use by fire survivors.
鈥淥ne of the single most meaningful things people can do who own a second, third or fourth home is give that to the community right now so someone can live there for the next year or two,鈥 Medeiros said.
After her remarks, council member Tasha Kama, who chairs the Housing and Land Use Committee, opened the floor to public testimony. More than 120 people had signed up and many expressed distrust of the emergency proclamation.
鈥淚t is nothing less than a threat to democracy and it appears to be unconstitutional,鈥 said Kihei resident Robin Knox.
Knox said she fully supports a reduction in bureaucratic red tape and unnecessary zoning requirements. But the solution to Hawaii鈥檚 housing is crisis is 鈥渘ot to set aside environmental, cultural, sunshine laws, procurement laws, collective bargaining, all of those things, and the proclamation, the expedited process, should only be for affordable housing,鈥 Knox said.
Justin Hughey, a teacher at King Kamehameha III school, which the fire destroyed, said the Maui County Council should pass a resolution distancing itself from the governor鈥檚 proclamation.
鈥淭o take down our rights, to take down democracy, you are hurting the teachers, you are hurting the people of Lahaina. Enough is enough. Distance yourself from this as soon as you can,鈥 Hughey said.
Lahaina community activist Leonard 鈥淛unya鈥 Nakoa gave what amounted to an extended tirade against the proclamation, saying it undermines people鈥檚 voices and gives too much power to an unelected official, meaning Medeiros.
By the time he spoke, Medeiros had already left the meeting.
Nakoa went over his allotted time and refused to stop speaking, prompting Kama to call a recess. When the meeting reconvened, Kama said she would postpone any further testimony until her committee holds another session on Sept. 13.
Council member Keani Rawlins-Fernandez expressed concern that many members of the public who signed up to testify would not be allowed to do so unless an extended meeting was held.
Kama agreed to make the Sept. 13 session an all-day meeting.
Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.