The Maui Fires In Photos: March 2024
The commercial debris cleanup in Lahaina began seven months after the Aug. 8 fires. Survivors worked through challenges in accessing aid and housing. Officials navigated issues with the temporary and permanent landfills for all the fire debris. Mayor Bissen delivered an emotional State of the County address. The state continued hammering out its budget while the mayor proposed his spending plan for the county.
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FEMA interpreter Carolina Davis met with Spanish-speaking immigrant Victoria Silva at the Lahaina Civic Center, March 1. The two became acquainted when Victoria sought assistance through FEMA following the Aug. 8 fires on Maui. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
About a third of Lahaina鈥檚 residents were foreign born and 36% of those ages 5 and older spoke a language other than English at home, according to Pacific Gateway Center, a Honolulu nonprofit that opened a resource center on Maui in November.聽(David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Kalesita Anitema, a bilingual case manager with Pacific Gateway Center鈥檚 Immigration Resource Center on Maui, said she is handling the cases of 37 fire survivors, most of whom are Tongan. She feels many survivors with limited English proficiency fell through the cracks. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Solomone Fifitaniua, whose apartment on Front Street burned down in the wildfires, said he became frustrated while trying to seek aid from FEMA because he could not find a Tongan interpreter. He鈥檚 now working with Tongan bilingual case manager, Kalesita Anitema, of Pacific Gateway Center. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
The state bought the former Maui Sun Hotel in Kihei from the Haggai International Mid-Pacific Center for $38 million in March. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)
Maui fire survivors may start moving into some of the Haggai property鈥檚 175 furnished guest rooms as soon as early May. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)
The largest concentration of the at least 101 people who died in the Aug. 8 Lahaina fire was found along Kahua Street and adjacent roads near the Pioneer Mill smokestack. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Cars were still parked in early March where they were on the day of the fires. All that remains of almost all the homes in the area is ash, cinder and other debris. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
County leaders are striving to strike a balance that can make Lahaina safer and more resilient after the fire without preventing its residents in older, working-class and largely multigenerational neighborhoods from rebuilding and resuming their lives. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Kuhua currently dead-ends to the north, near the Kahoma Stream. To the west, drivers are blocked in by a gated fence. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
The Army Corps of Engineers has been running computer models that gauge how quickly people might have escaped the deadly Aug. 8 wildfire in Lahaina if alternate routes were available. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Property cleanup efforts have begun around Kuhua Street and other parts of Lahaina. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
Col. Jesse Curry was presented with a wood carving in the shape of Maui with an inscription thanking him for his six months commanding the field fire recovery office for the Army Corps of Engineers. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)
More than 3,000 people, including Randy Dadez and his family who lost their home in the fire, are still living in hotels set up as emergency shelters as they work with the state and FEMA to move into longer term housing. (Brittany Lyte/Civil Beat/2024)
Fire survivors have been turning down units at the Harbor Lights housing complex in Kahului, with some saying they鈥檇 rather live in their car than a 鈥渄isgusting鈥 room there. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)
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Fire debris is temporarily going to a landfill in Olowalu while waiting on a permanent site in Central Maui. Photographed here in March. (Nathan Eagle/Civil Beat/2024)