Maui Fire Survivor Picks Up Belongings From Hotel After Being Kicked Out
After nine months living in Maui hotel rooms funded by the federal government, U鈥榠 Kahue-Cabanting no longer has a dedicated place to live. But she and her business partner have a plan.
After nine months living in Maui hotel rooms funded by the federal government, U鈥榠 Kahue-Cabanting no longer has a dedicated place to live. But she and her business partner have a plan.
U鈥榠 Kahue-Cabanting returned to the Royal Lahaina Resort last week wheeling an empty wagon cart.
鈥淭hey still haven鈥檛 told me why I鈥檝e been locked out, why I鈥檓 being kicked out,鈥 U鈥榠 told the hotel staff. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 here to collect my things.鈥
A hotel worker led U鈥榠 into her former hotel room and unlocked the door. U鈥榠 cleared the room of her clothes, toiletries, snacks and supplies for , the native plant and cultural arts company she operates with her business partner Mario Siatris. It was too much to cart down the elevator in her wagon, so a bell hop helped her move her things out of the hotel and into her van.
U鈥榠 had lived since April at the Royal Lahaina Resort, one of several hotels still providing emergency shelter to hundreds of survivors of the Aug. 8 fires. But last month, she got a text message from a Red Cross worker while on a business trip in Oregon saying she had to vacate.
鈥淯pon your return, you will find your hotel room locked,鈥 the text message said. 鈥淵ou will need to meet with hotel security to gain access.鈥
U鈥榠 said she鈥檇 told the Red Cross that she鈥檇 be traveling for work before she left on the trip and arranged to conduct the agency鈥檚 mandatory check-ins remotely by phone during the week she was gone.
Displaced Lahaina wildfire survivors housed by the temporary sheltering program are required to check in twice a week with the , which is managing the program. People housed by the hotel program are also expected to proactively document their own attempts to find stable housing.
Non-compliance with the rules is grounds for being kicked out. But U鈥榠 said she followed the rules diligently.
FEMA spokeswoman Jenny Campora referred questions to the Red Cross. Red Cross spokeswoman Mary Simkins declined to comment specifically on U鈥榠鈥檚 case.
Before she left the resort after picking up her belongings Wednesday, U鈥榠 talked to a Red Cross worker in the lobby. She explained her situation and asked for clarity on why she was abruptly booted from the emergency housing program.
The Red Cross worker couldn鈥檛 give U鈥榠 a clear reason why she鈥檇 been locked out of her hotel room. Neither could a FEMA worker whom the Red Cross suggested she reach out to for answers.
鈥淚鈥檓 beyond frustrated and angry already,鈥 U鈥榠 later explained through tears. 鈥淚鈥檓 just really disappointed. It feels like they intended to do this to me when I was out of town. I would feel differently if they had given me some days notice but it was like 鈥 bam! 鈥 you鈥檙e out.鈥
If she weren’t so busy running her business, U鈥榠 said she’d be devastated about how things ended with the emergency shelter program. Last week she and Mario took on 18 shifts teaching coconut weaving at workshops and demonstrations held at hotels, botanical gardens, parks and festivals across Maui. Her work is a welcome distraction from the low points in her personal wildfire recovery.
The demand for Maui Grown 808’s cultural workshops exceeds what Mario and U鈥榠 can offer with their limited staff. They’re always looking to train more people to weave coconut fronds and help them teach, but the island’s labor pool is limited and the job market is competitive.
Still, Mario and U鈥榠 rarely turn down opportunities to perpetuate this disappearing cultural art. They work long days foraging and prepping plant material, weaving bowls or hats for special orders and teaching classes.
“I didn’t realize how profound this work is until we were doing this one workshop where we had these ladies from Tonga and they were teasing each other 鈥 very competitive with each other 鈥 while making their coconut hats,” U鈥榠 shared with a student group at Maui Nui Botanical Gardens on Saturday. “But by the end of the session they were in tears.”
“They hadn’t done something like this in 40 years since they were last in the village,” she continued. “And so I realized that sharing this cultural art with people from all over the Pacific who are part of the diaspora, living on the mainland or wherever they are, that this is what our kahea and our kuleana is, our calling and our responsibility.”
U鈥榠 has friends and family she can live with temporarily. But she no longer has a home of her own. The belongings she retrieved from the hotel on Wednesday are still stowed in her car because she doesn鈥檛 have anywhere else to put them.
She spent the first four nights after being ousted from the resort couch-surfing with her daughter and grandchildren. But she had to move on because her daughter’s leased Kihei apartment is part of a subsidized workforce housing development with strict rules about overnight guests.
Now she鈥檚 staying with her business partner Mario, who has a government-subsidized room for wildfire survivors at the Aston Kaanapali Shores, where he鈥檚 worked as the chief landscaper for 25 years.
Last week Mario received a notice from the Red Cross that he must be out of his unit by Monday, which is when FEMA鈥檚 emergency housing program is now set to end. So the partners are plotting where to go next.
Both U鈥榠 and Mario have declined assistance from FEMA鈥檚 direct-lease housing program, which provides qualified wildfire survivors with a long-term lease to a home or apartment instead of pricey rooms at hotels. These units are being leased for fire survivors who have nowhere else to go in part due to the island鈥檚 housing crisis.
U鈥榠 and Mario are making their own plans, however. They don鈥檛 want to continue to rely on FEMA assistance as they rebuild their lives. And they want more autonomy.
They also want to return to living on Mario鈥檚 lot as soon as they can, even if that looks like glorified camping. So they’ve ordered a custom 26-foot trailer from a camping outfitter in Oregon.
The business partners plan to live in the rig, which can sleep up to five people, for the next year or two. And they aim to park it on Mario鈥檚 fire-scorched property in the heart of Lahaina where his house stood before the fire obliterated it.
Due to transpacific shipping logistics, the trailer鈥檚 estimated arrival date has been pushed back several times, most recently to the end of July. Now the partners must quickly figure out where they鈥檒l live during the six-week gap between Monday, when FEMA stops reimbursing the state for emergency hotel housing for survivors, and the trailer鈥檚 landing at the Port of Kahului during the week of July 22.
Even when the FEMA program ends, however, the owner of the condo unit where Mario’s been living for the last nine months has assured him he can stay for as long as he needs without charge. This offer has been extended to U鈥榠, too. So U鈥榠 and Mario are following up with the owner to see if they can stay in place until their trailer arrives.
But they’re still working on a Plan B in case they have to vacate the condo next week.
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by grants from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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About the Author
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Brittany Lyte is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can reach her by email at blyte@civilbeat.org