Maui Fire Victims Jobs Program At Risk After Nonprofit Budget Troubles
The federally funded initiative run by Maui Economic Opportunity employed hundreds and was to last two years. The nonprofit’s CEO announced this month that it would end early.
The federally funded initiative run by Maui Economic Opportunity employed hundreds and was to last two years. The nonprofit’s CEO announced this month that it would end early.
The future of a program employing hundreds of people thrown out of work by the Maui fires is in limbo after the nonprofit that runs it, dogged by budgeting and bookkeeping missteps, shut it down early.
The CEO of Maui Economic Opportunity acknowledged the nonprofit had trouble getting its arms around the federal program, created in the months following the August 2023 fires. She enrolled too many people too rapidly, she said, fell behind in billing the government and failed to make a key budget adjustment.
鈥淚 think we didn鈥檛 really understand because (the grant) was stood up so quickly,鈥 said CEO Debbie Cabebe. 鈥淲e鈥檝e never administered a grant like this ever; we鈥檝e done employment and training grants but not a disaster recovery workforce grant which involves so many people. But you don鈥檛 know what you don鈥檛 know.鈥
Cabebe said she learned Sept. 5 in an email from the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations that funding was to be 鈥渞evised鈥 downward by 22%, from $12.7 million to $9.8 million. But she didn鈥檛 reduce her spending; she said she was waiting for a new budget document from the state.
In an emailed statement, a state official said the revision was part of an ongoing process of reassessing the grant after 70% of it was spent.
鈥淭hese adjustments do not signify a reduction in funding but rather an appropriate reflection of the evolving circumstances,” wrote Maricar Pilotin-Freitas, administrator of the state labor department鈥檚 , which manages the U.S. Department of Labor grant.
Maui Economic Opportunity also fell behind on its billing. When it tried to catch up with a November invoice to the state labor department of more than double the usual amount 鈥 $1.3 million instead of $577,000 鈥 that set off alarm bells.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a humongous increase,鈥 Pilotin-Freitas told Civil Beat. 鈥淲e called the Department of Labor right away.鈥
Pilotin-Freitas, however, expressed continued confidence in Cabebe and Maui Economic Opportunity, saying the billing spike was due to 鈥渂eing optimistic and enrolling more people.鈥
Under terms of the National Dislocated Worker Grant, the program had been set to run from October 2023 to Sept. 30, 2025.
Eighteen days after the $1.3 million invoice was filed, the 58 nonprofits that employed hundreds of workers through the program 鈥 in jobs ranging from feeding fire victims to providing post-fire mental health services that use Indigenous approaches 鈥 learned it would end eight months early, on Jan. 11.
鈥淚t feels like the chair was pulled out from under us,鈥 said Autumn Ness, executive director of Lahaina Community Land Trust and president of , which has three workers in the program and feeds about 70 families impacted by the fires. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just one system fail after another system fail.鈥
The program received a short reprieve after Maui County earlier this month stepped forward with $1.9 million from its Office of Economic Development, which will extend it to March.
According to U.S. Department of Labor spokesperson Monica Vereen, the state was 鈥渃onditionally approved鈥 in 2023 for a $21 million grant to fund the program and has so far received $10.5 million of that award 鈥 $6.8 million of which had been paid out to Cabebe鈥檚 nonprofit through October.
Rep. Jill Tokuda, D-贬补飞补颈驶颈, said Monday the federal funds are still available for the program, but the state and Maui Economic Opportunity need to push forward to request the remainder of the grant.
鈥淲e do not get involved in (Maui Economic Opportunity) doing its job, holding them accountable. We got the pot of money,鈥 said Tokuda. 鈥 It鈥檚 contingent on the agencies to pull this program together and get this disbursement out to the people who need it.鈥
Problems Blamed On Process, Personnel Issues
The Department of Labor鈥檚 National Dislocated Worker Grants have for decades funded post-disaster temporary job programs nationwide. 贬补飞补颈驶颈 previously received in 2018 after the K墨lauea volcano erupted, and the same year in the wake of severe storms that struck O驶ahu and 碍补耻补驶颈.
The latest grant worked like this: The state hired to administer the program. It is one of nonprofits, with $22 million in 2023 revenues, and operates dozens of programs on the island.
Maui Economic Opportunity in turn recruited and screened candidates, then referred them to an employment agency that placed them at other local nonprofits in fire recovery jobs that paid between $20.50 and $27 an hour.
Etina 鈥淓dna鈥 Hingano is one of those workers. She said her job has been critical to her recovery from the trauma of losing her Lahaina home and nearly dying in the fire, during which she in the Pacific Ocean.
Maui Economic Opportunity steered Hingano, 55, to a $23-an-hour job at , where she prepares supplies such as food and furnishings to distribute to fire survivors setting up new homes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a good space to recuperate and to forget myself and what I went through, and to think of other people and what they went through,鈥 she said.
Program participants like Hingano submit time cards to supervisors, who approve and forward them to the employment agency that placed them at the host site. Then, the agency 鈥 Employer Options 鈥 pays the employee and bills Maui Economic Opportunity, which submits a monthly request to the state for reimbursement.
Cabebe blamed the complex payroll and reimbursement process, as well as health issues and turnover among personnel at her organization, for the billing problem that snowballed.
鈥淒ue to the multiple channels that it goes through to get to us, combined with staffing challenges, the processing for reimbursements was delayed,鈥 she said.
Maui Economic Opportunity announced Friday its chief fiscal officer, Monica Takamura, has stepped down for health reasons, but remains as accounting manager. She is being replaced by Julie Strong, most recently finance manager at a logistics company in Pennsylvania.
鈥淥ne of the strengths through MEO鈥檚 six decades has been its Fiscal Department and financial management,鈥 Cabebe said in a press release, saying Strong would continue that tradition.
Leaders of the nonprofits involved say they dread the prospect of laying off fire victims who have found some financial stability and emotional relief in jobs that contribute to the larger community鈥檚 recovery.
鈥淗ow are we as the host organization able to look at our staff in the eyes and tell them we’re not able to hold you because we don’t have the funding because it’s such a short notice,鈥 said Nettie Aquino, executive director of , which operates .
Bad News, Then An Emotional Meeting
Maui Economic Opportunity staff delivered the bad news via calls to host site leaders, and Cabebe followed up with an email that cited 鈥渃hanges in funding levels and the number of participants enrolled.鈥
In an emotional Dec. 8 Zoom follow up meeting, she offered few additional details, based on Civil Beat鈥檚 review of a recording of the meeting. She said the program was meant to be temporary and its status was always subject to change.
鈥淲henever you get a grant from the government, it usually is always based on or subject to funding availability,鈥 she said at the meeting, where she was barraged with frustration and sometimes angry questions. 鈥淪o you can get a grant and a lot of times they鈥檙e revised, sometimes they鈥檙e less, sometimes they鈥檙e more.鈥
That didn鈥檛 satisfy the nonprofit leaders.
鈥淧lease recognize the impact and the harm this is creating and amplifying across disaster recovery on Maui,鈥 Nicole Huguenin, director and founder of Maui Rapid Response 鈥 which employs 12 program participants 鈥 told Cabebe at the meeting.
鈥淧lease own it,鈥 Huguenin added. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the responsibility you take when you take on big grants like that.鈥
Cabebe responded: 鈥淚 do acknowledge that it is an extreme hardship on everybody and that was never an intention. And I can only apologize for that and try to figure out how to make this a better situation, and quite frankly, I don鈥檛 have a definite answer.鈥
Lack Of Funding Clarity
Shifting explanations about how much funding is available have confused the nonprofits that employ workers through the program.
Maui Economic Opportunity$12.7 million for a two-year program and its agreements with participating nonprofits also say the program is 鈥100% federally funded by a Maui Disaster Recovery National Dislocated Worker Grant 鈥 of $12,741,350.鈥
The October 2023 contract between the state and the nonprofit also reflected that, saying Maui Economic Opportunity would be paid $12.7 million for a program that would run until September 2025.
Cabebe herself said she did not know that only $10.5 million had been earmarked for the state until after the crisis developed. She said she also learned only recently from the state that the grant funding was to be reassessed after 70% of it had been spent.
That鈥檚 a typical practice, according to Vereen, with the federal labor department, though 鈥 like Cabebe 鈥 the leaders of the Maui nonprofits where program participants work said they had not been told that previously.
鈥淭he lack of clarity on the numbers for many of us, if not all of us, was confusing because at least in all of our collective experience in working with grants, we generally know exactly what we鈥檙e dealing with,鈥 said Keolamau Tengan, executive director of . Among other activities, 碍补鈥檈丑耻 grows and provides native plant species to support post-fire replanting. The organization employs one program worker but was approved for five more.
鈥淭o have things change, which is I guess what we were hearing in terms of the amount of funds being released, did not make sense to us,鈥 said Tengan. 鈥淲e鈥檙e taking everything as it comes, but my hope is being able to have that clarity so we can better move forward for our community.鈥
The state can request the remainder of the original $21 million grant and has indicated it will, Vereen said.
鈥淏ottom line is this money hasn鈥檛 disappeared,鈥 Tokuda said. 鈥淭he federal money is absolutely there. 鈥ut the state needs to act.鈥
Enrollment Stretched Finances
Exactly how many people have benefited from the program also remains murky.
Maui Economic Opportunity’s December 2023 announcement about the program said it would provide up to 300 jobs. Cabebe last week told Civil Beat the program had placed 鈥渘early 200 participants.鈥 The next day, she emailed to say 399 had been enrolled, more than the 鈥済oal of 323.鈥 In a separate interview, Pilotin-Freitas said 419 people had been enrolled.
Regardless of the precise numbers, Cabebe said, her organization enrolled more participants than originally planned for, speeding the draw down of money.
鈥淏ecause we weren鈥檛 sure if we were going to get additional funding or not, we kept enrolling and in hindsight maybe we should have stopped enrolling a while ago,鈥 Cabebe said at the Dec. 8 meeting. 鈥淏ut because it was federal funds and there were so many unknowns, we kept enrolling. So, you know, I apologize for that.鈥
Whatever the final number, the economic impacts of the closure would be severe, said Chana Makale鈥檃 Dudoit Ane, founder with her late husband, Hoapili Ane, of Living Pono, which employs 12 workers from the program to acquire food from local farmers for fire survivors.
鈥淚t would be devastating if all those workers鈥 families lose their income within the next month or three months,鈥 Ane said. 鈥淎nd they’ve already been traumatized by this horrific experience 鈥 and then having to relive the insecurity of not having a job and the not knowing.鈥
A Struggle To Fill The Gap
Cabebe has cautioned the host site leaders that beyond the March extension, nothing is guaranteed, urging them to prepare to let their dislocated workers go by then.
Pilotin-Freitas, however, said she is assessing the program鈥檚 needs and is hopeful her department will be able to secure federal funding to extend it to its original September conclusion. She said she has received promising feedback from the U.S. labor department.
鈥淭hey’re optimistic that our request will be approved,鈥 she said. “We can鈥檛 guarantee it.鈥
Asked whether Maui Economic Opportunity should continue running the program and whether there would be any safeguards in place if they did, Pilotin-Freitas did not answer directly. Instead, she said that the communication between her office and the nonprofit 鈥渉as been constructive and conducted in good faith鈥 and that it is 鈥渃ommitted to working with MEO to ensure that services continue to be delivered to those impacted by the Maui wildfires.鈥
Some host sites feel they can’t wait. They are currently scrambling to make up the gap as insurance in case the government doesn鈥檛 come through.
Aquino of Na Kia鈥檌 O Maui said she and colleagues intend to lobby foundations and businesses for more funding as well as state, county and federal officials.
鈥淲e need to put a platform together, put a presentation together,鈥 she said, 鈥渟o we see how big of an impact (the program) is and how it’s needed. And we can advocate that way.鈥
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of Maui County is supported in part by a grant from the Nuestro Futuro Foundation.
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