State transportation leaders have reversed plans to cancel their lease at the Dillingham Airfield, a reprieve that spares the general aviation businesses there from having to close or relocate by the end of the year.
In , Hawaii Department of Transportation Director Jade Butay told the military, which owns the airfield, that his agency now plans to keep the lease there through July 2024.聽
Previously, the state agency announced it would leave the airfield for good in December, after having leased it for private use over the past six decades or so.聽
鈥淓verybody that鈥檚 at the airport and associated with it is just ecstatic with the news,鈥 North Shore-based parachute mechanic Ben Devine said Thursday. He leads the legal defense organization , which formed after the DOT announced in January 2020 its plans to leave.
The tenants there understand, however, that the issues that prompted the state initially to pull out of the airfield still need to be resolved, Devine added.聽
In looking to leave, HDOT had expressed concerns that its most recent five-year lease there was too short to secure federal grant dollars for improvements. It further stated that it was spending about $1 million a year to subsidize operations at a property that it doesn鈥檛 own.
鈥淒OT notes that, at this time, there has been some progress on 鈥 a long-term lease,鈥 Butay wrote in his letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers鈥 Real Estate Division. 鈥淚n light of the progress, DOT is hereby revoking its notice of termination.鈥
The agency reserves the right to cancel if the issues don鈥檛 get resolved, however, Butay鈥檚 letter added.聽
Specifically, the parties still have to determine who will supply water to the airport in place of DOT. Sen. Gil Riviere said in a statement Thursday that they鈥檙e looking to create a local cooperative to manage the water system.
Descendants of the Hawaiian families who previously lived at Kawaihapai, the site of the airfield, commended state and federal leaders on Thursday for acknowledging their cultural claims to the area, which includes burial sites for iwi kupuna, or ancestral remains.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a rich deep Hawiian culture and legacy on that aina,鈥 said Mokuleia resident Thomas Shirai, who said his family lived at Kawaihapai until the military took the land for the airfield in the 1940s.
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.
About the Author
-
Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org