Malama Na Keiki
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Bubbles drifted across the clear sky and shouts of excitement echoed through food tents and games booths.
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Bubbles drifted across the clear sky and shouts of excitement echoed through food tents and games booths.
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Students at Kualapu`u School transformed their auditorium into a multi-cultural mecca last Thursday with a school play about Hawaii’s history.
“I wasn’t nervous today,” said La`a Sumarnap, a sixth grader of Kualapu`u School.
Last Thursday’s play portrayed important events from Hawaii’s history, starting with the formation of Hawaii’s archipelago, to the banning of hula, and the migration of Chinese, Japanese and Filipinos who worked on Hawaii’s plantations.
“We made our drums out of tires and tape,” he said.
Kenilyn Nishihiri-Aki, a sixth grader at Kualapu`u , summed up the play.
“We all have aloha for this place where we live. We love the Hawaiian culture,” she said.
Community Contributed
Submitted by Karen Poepoe
The existing `Aha Moku/`Aha Ki`ole bill which calls for an `Aha Ki`ole presence in an advisory capacity within the DLNR continues to struggle to stay alive in legislation, and we support it wholeheartedly. However, we see no reason why we cannot move forward with our own island issues as a whole community and people powered rather than money powered. Our community demographic and conservative lifestyles allow the possibility of an effective `Aha Ki`ole management community collaboration effort.
The winds are changing. First Wind is out, Pattern Energy is in.
Over the past few weeks, officials at wind companies First Wind and Pattern Energy, Hawaiian Electric Co. (HECO) and Molokai Properties Ltd. (MPL) have been scrambling to keep the Molokai portion of the interisland wind project afloat.
The state Public Utilities Commission (PUC) gave HECO a deadline to complete a preliminary agreement with its two wind developers: First Wind for Molokai, and Castle & Cooke on Lanai. Castle & Cooke held up its end of the deal by March 18; First Wind, due to lack of a land agreement on the island, has announced it will not be pursuing a wind project on Molokai.
Something is out of place at many of Molokai’s fishponds – many of their rocks. Large puka along hundred-foot-long newly-restored walls leave fish to swim in and out freely. It’s a stark reminder of nature’s power, and the damage left by the March 11 tsunami.
Caretakers of several fishponds located on the east end reported damaged walls, as well as surrounding structural damage after the tsunami. Residents and advocates on Molokai are preparing to rebuild soon. Merv Dudoit of Ka Honua Momona said they will be donating some of their volunteers once work days are established.
Walter Ritte, director of the Hawaiian Learning Center and Keawanui Fishpond, said although the fishpond was nearly completed after three years of restoration, “[this is] an opportunity for us to do it right.”
“I just take it in stride, you cannot argue with nature,” he said, standing at the edge of the demolished fishpond wall. “It’s easier putting back [the stones] than building – the stones are already there,” he said.
Aloha, While reading the plan to put wind towers on Moloka'i to create energy for the people is very questionable when there are other affordable, less invasive and easier to maintain are all the good reasons not to settle for that lame brain idea just to make money again off of the backs of the people who love Moloka'i. Kick them out...and work with the community to find these options that are really good for the people of Moloka'i. Enough of these speculators who don't have any genealogical, cultural, governmental or economic ties to truly help the people of Moloka'i survive these on coming economic crunches that will affect everyone's way of life. Moloka'i can be the bread basket again, and again and again.
Community Contributed
By Amber (Momi) Afelin and Moriah Jenkins
Two Molokai students participated in this year’s State Science Fair, where both girls won more than $1,000 in prize money and awards for their innovative projects.
Electronic Communication
By Amber (Momi) Afelin and Moriah Jenkins
Two Molokai students participated in this year’s State Science Fair, where both girls won more than $1,000 in prize money and awards for their innovative projects.
Electronic Communication
My project involved using NXT LEGO Mindstorms robots to question if my robot was capable of distinguishing a black ink line from various colors, called Walk the Line. I built my own robot, attached a sensor to it and programmed it to follow a black line. The questions that the judges asked us were much more complicated and intense at the state level of competition. There were many outstanding projects there and a lot of people competing for the various awards that were to be given out the next night.
Opinion by Keith Izawa
Recent coverage in The Molokai Dispatch has touched on the importance of strategic health planning on the island (“Health Center Awaits Funding,” March 16, 2011). Molokai is certainly a medically underserved area, but creating a high-performing health system is more complicated than “more is better.” Unnecessary duplication of services poses serious risks. Furthermore, healthcare workforce trends will pose particular challenges for Molokai. Strategic service design and community-based workforce development will be critical for sustainable, high-quality healthcare services.