Cultural Monitors Help Assure Lahaina Fire Cleanup Is Done With Respect
Federal agencies are relying on West Maui locals to identify cultural and archeological artifacts in the ruins of August’s deadly wildfires.
Federal agencies are relying on West Maui locals to identify cultural and archeological artifacts in the ruins of August’s deadly wildfires.
The workday began at 7 a.m. Saturday with a safety briefing and pule, or prayer, in Lahaina鈥檚 Safeway parking lot.
Safety vests and steel-toed shoes adorned the workers. Some wore blue shirts emblazoned with Environmental Protection Agency logos. Others were clad in red, the color of Lahaina. The workers formed a circle and clapped as Ikaika Kapu led a pule in olelo Hawaii, the Indigenous language of Hawaii.
Afterwards, Kapu explained the significance of the morning ritual.
鈥淭he pule is to keep us safe. It鈥檚 to protect everyone who is working their butts off,鈥 Kapu said.
Kapu is one of more than 20 cultural monitors from ., a cultural nonprofit whose Front Street location was destroyed in the Aug. 8 wildfire, one of over 2,200 structures that succumbed to flames.
At day鈥檚 end, Kapu offered a closing pule so that workers could leave behind any bad feelings or negative energy they may have absorbed during their work.
鈥淗ere in Hawaii, we are very spiritual,鈥 he said.
The souls of the 99 people who died in the fire linger over the ruins, and chanting pule is a way to respectfully separate before workers return to their ohanas, he explained.
Presevering Culture
Na Aikane o Maui is a subcontractor to , an environmental consulting firm . With of nearly $4 billion in 2022, is considered a disadvantaged business because of its Native ownership, giving it preferential treatment in government contracting.
The EPA has awarded EQM a to handle various aspects of Lahaina’s recovery. The work includes ensuring that the town’s rich cultural history is preserved as much as possible during cleanup.
As of Saturday, the EPA was 80% done with removing hazardous household material from Lahaina鈥檚 burned parcels. This includes items like batteries, paints, solvents, electronics, pesticides and plastics.
When the EPA鈥檚 work ends, the will take over, starting phase two of the cleanup. Heavy equipment crews will haul away an estimated 700,000 tons of rubble and ash. Some will go to the mainland and some will stay in Maui landfills, according to the Corps.
Having to ensure that crews 鈥減erform their work for the people of Maui with confidence that items of cultural importance are going to be protected,鈥 said Col. Jess Curry, Recovery Field Office commander, in a .
Last week, the corps awarded a $19 million contract to , a woman-owned, Honolulu-based firm, for cultural monitoring of the cleanup.
The subcontractors include Na Aikane o Maui, Aina Archeology, and . Their work will focus on wildfire damage evaluation, assessment of historic and cultural properties and carrying out an archeological treatment plan under guidance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
The archeological plan requires having traditional practitioners with specialized knowledge on the ground to monitor debris removal. Their duties include performing cultural protocols and providing oversight to prevent damage to cultural resources, Edward Rivera, a Corps spokesman, said by email.
Having local people who are cultural practitioners on site during debris removal should lend some comfort to families who lost their homes and belongings in the fire, said disaster restoration expert Aaron Poentis.
鈥淚t鈥檚 such an emotionally charged situation,鈥 said Poentis, who works for , which has offices on Oahu and Maui.
If it was your property and government contractors were sorting through your belongings, it might make you feel uncomfortable too, he said.
The cultural monitors ensure that sensitivity is brought to a heartbreaking and emotionally fraught situation, Poentis said.
Namea Hoshino agreed.
鈥淭his place was desecrated by the fire. We have to protect our sacred land,鈥 said Hoshino, a Lahaina native who is working as a cultural monitor.
The cultural monitors receive hazardous material health and safety training. They work six days a week, often 12-hour days, identifying items of cultural or archeological significance and making sure the cleanup is done respectfully. It鈥檚 not uncommon for them to also find human remains, EPA officials said.
Although cultural monitors may lack archeological or other formal training, they have important generational knowledge, Hoshino said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 doing the right thing. If we鈥檙e not there, who else? Who else is going to make those kind of corrections, those kind of protections?鈥 he said.
The EPA鈥檚 incident commander for the cleanup said Saturday it was clear from the beginning that the federal response to the West Maui disaster needed to be handled much differently than other wildfire incidents.
鈥淲e knew we needed to do this in a very culturally sensitive way,鈥 Chris Myers said. 鈥淎ll the protocols needed to be respected.鈥
Extra-Special Care Required
Once the capital of the Hawaiian Kingdom and home to high-ranking alii, Lahaina holds special significance for Kanaka Maoli, Hawaii鈥檚 Indigenous people.
Although known more recently as a party spot for mai tai-sipping tourists, Lahaina once served as the spiritual and political home of Maui鈥檚 chiefs. The Kamehameha dynasty based itself in Lahaina for over 50 years until 1845, when the seat of government shifted to Honolulu.
Over the decades, the scenic town morphed into a cultural melting pot with the arrival of commercial whaling, sugar plantations and later, industrial-scale tourism. The town became home to multigenerational families of Filipino, Japanese, Chinese, Pacific Islander, Latino and other ethnic origins.
Given its complex history and the vast human scale of the tragedy 鈥 the worst U.S. wildfire in more than a century — Lahaina鈥檚 cleanup has required extra-special care from culturally trained eyes.
Lahaina has a high density of ohana burials on kuleana parcels as well as known cemeteries and lesser-known old burial complexes, said Fay McFarlane, a technical worker with Na Aikane o Maui.
Because of that, the EPA is making every effort to approach the hazardous material removal 鈥渨ith the utmost respect and reverence,鈥 the federal agency said in a and in interviews.
The work of scouring burned parcels often brings surprises.
The agency has trained the cultural monitors to look out for potentially explosive items and to call for expert help when needed. On Friday, for example, EPA crews entered a burned parcel and discovered more than 40,000 rounds of ammunition.
It came up during Saturday’s safety briefing.
鈥淚f the casings are empty, you can treat it as scrap metal,鈥 said Rick Mehl, operations lead for Weston Solutions Inc., an EPA contractor.
Otherwise, EPA has unexploded ordnance technicians on hand who will check things out and determine if it鈥檚 live or spent ammunition, he said.
Lithium ion batteries and Tesla that store energy are another big hazard that cultural monitors are trained to look out for. A large number of electric vehicles, lithium batteries and powerwalls are showing up in the Lahaina cleanup, Myers said.
EPA crews always enter a property first to scout out the hazards before cultural monitors are allowed in, he said.
“We go in first to make sure there’s nothing flammable.”
Civil Beat’s coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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