Thursday, August 28th, 2025

By Paul Hanley
Members of a Junior Youth Empowerment Program, ages 11-14, wanted to find ways to serve the community. They started with a trash pick-up at the wharf a few weeks ago and then decided they wanted to thank firefighters on Molokai for their service.
On Friday, Aug. 15, the kids had a holiday from school, so they met to bake cookies and then packed them up to take them to each of the fire departments on the island at Hoʻolehua, Kaunakakai and Pukoʻo. At each station, they met some of the firefighters, learned how they do their work and how they live while on duty.…
Thursday, August 28th, 2025

Evelyn Yokomizo Shinsato, 95, born on February 14, 1930, died on July 16, 2025 in Waipahu. She was born in Pahala to Hisaji and Ineyo Fukumoto. After graduating from Mid-Pacific Institute, she studied dressmaking and design in Honolulu. Evelyn was preceded in death by her first husband Tsutomu “Durham” Yokomizo (d. 1980) with whom she raised a family on Molokai, and her second husband Kenzo Shinsato (Molokai High ’48) (d. 2022). Each marriage lasted for some 30 years. While living on Molokai, Evelyn was the organist at Guzeiji Soto Mission on Hotel Lane and sometimes played at other churches on the island.…
Thursday, August 28th, 2025
DAGS News Release
What did Hawaiʻi look like during the monarchy? What did it look like shortly after the Great Māhele — the Hawaiian land distribution system — took effect?
Those are questions the state’s Land Survey Division (Land Survey), a division of the State Department of Accounting and General Services (DAGS), can answer from a cartography perspective. Now, it is planning to provide that information online.
This decades-long project started just after the turn of this century with Land Survey digitizing all the maps it has, some which go back to 1871 — the year the division opened. That’s about 90,000 maps reflecting all main Hawaiian Islands.…
Thursday, August 28th, 2025

MAC News Release
The Molokai Arts Center’s Hawaiian Arts (HĀ) Program presents its second Kukui workshop on Saturday, Aug. 30, 10 a.m.-12 noon at Hoʻolehua Homestead Makeke, at 2240 Lihi Pali Ave. behind Molokai High School, just east of Purdy’s Mac Nut Farm.
Participants in the first August workshop learned the haku, or braiding style of lei kukui. The next workshop will feature the hipuʻu or knot style of lei kukui, taught by cultural practitioner Leimana Ritte-Camara.
Leimana, born and raised on Molokai, is a graduate of one of Molokai’s first Hawaiian Language Immersion classes. A generational lei maker, she is honored to raise her family here to continue her family’s traditional practices.…
Thursday, August 21st, 2025

By Léo Azambuja
An upcoming clinic in Kaunakakai will help residents who use a wheelchair to get around to figure out the best equipment to improve their mobility and quality of life. Spoiler alert: it doesn’t have to be the costliest wheelchair.
“It’s not necessarily the most expensive (wheelchair), it’s just finding what works right for that patient and their needs at that moment,” said Dr. Brianne Childs, the only professional with a doctorate in physical therapy serving Molokai.
On Aug. 27, the Wheelchair Seating Clinic hosted by Wellness in Motion and Cade Medical will do an in-depth assessment and fitting for patients who may need or already use a wheelchair.…