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Great Expectations

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Great Expectations

Here on Molokai, the word tourism spurs images of sprawling resorts and brash tourists that crowd the beaches of Maui and Oahu. With the goal of attracting the right kind of visitor – those who think of themselves as guests, not just tourist – Molokai Visitors Association (MVA) has produced a video in partnership with local filmmaker Matt Yamashita.

"A Visitor’s Guide to Molokai: Hawaiian by Nature" is part marketing tool, part educational film, said MVA Director Julie Bicoy. She called the video, which came out last month, a “crash-course” in life on Molokai.

“The basic concept of it was to spend a day on Molokai and move with the sun,” she said. Featured stops include Halawa Valley, Pu`u O Hoku Ranch, fishponds on the east end, Kalaupapa and the west end beaches.

Along the way, Yamashita recounts ancient Molokai history, interviews local business owners and highlights annual events like Ka Hula Piko and the channel races from Hale O Lono to Oahu. The video’s sweeping landscapes – from the North Shore cliffs to the Kamakou Preserve -- will woo visitors and impress locals alike.

Local musician Lono provides most of the soundtrack and the DVD includes four music features with original songs about Molokai. Lono said he has worked with Yamashita before and was excited to help on this project. “I love Molokai -- that’s where I’m from!”

Yamashita, who wore three hats as writer, director and producer, said the video tries to market the island responsibly and protects what makes Molokai special – the environment, culture and small population.

“We loose any one of those things and the fabric of what makes Molokai Molokai falls apart,” he said.

Yamashita owns the production company Quazifilms and typically makes cultural and education films. “This is the first time I’ve really stepped over to the commercial side,” he said.

MVA approached him last year about making the video. Bicoy said MVA was looking for ways to target “the right market” of visitors. The video is now being distributed to travel agents to show clients what Molokai has to offer.

“It’s not a typical tourist destination -- it’s not a party place or somewhere to come and be pampered,” Yamashita said.

After previewing the video back in March, Yamashita heard from some that it was too “touristy.” In response, he dialed down the sales pitch and made it more of an education in Molokai.

“It was a real challenge because we had to walk that fine line,” he said.

To see a preview or purchase a copy of A Visitor’s Guide to Molokai, go to www.islandlifevideos.com. DVDs are also on sale at local stores including Molokai Drugs, Kalele Bookstore & Divine Expressions and Coffees of Hawaii.

 

Undersea Cable Moving Forward

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Undersea Cable Moving Forward

The state’s goal of laying an interisland undersea cable to carry energy from Molokai and Lanai to Oahu took a big step forward last week with the announcement that a California contractor will soon begin an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the project.

State officials announced Thursday that the EIS will be prepared by Los Angeles-based AECOM Technology Corp. The EIS will study the route, potential environmental impacts and alternatives to the cable.

The EIS will cost $2.9 million, paid for with federal stimulus funds.

“The wind that we have here in Hawaii, and actually the wind that the people of Molokai and the people of Lanai have, is some of the best wind in the world,” said Josh Strickler, the state’s renewable energy facilitator, via KHON2.

The cable would supply about 12 percent of power on Oahu from proposed 400 megawatt wind projects on neighbor islands.  

“By providing a statewide electrical grid and a way to move renewable energy from where it is abundantly available to where it is needed, the interisland cable will help our state achieve a clean energy future,” said Ted Peck, administrator of the Hawaii State Energy Office, in a press release.

The EIS process will examine impacts on cultural resources; historic and archeological resources; coastal aquatic ecology; endangered, threatened and protected species; coral reef ecology; wildlife and fisheries biology; water quality; ecological and human health; visual impacts; and preferred routing alternatives. The EIS will also include public participation and input through outreach on affected islands. 

“The state is very excited to begin work on the EIS for the undersea interisland cable,” Lt. Gov.James “Duke” Aiona said in a press release. “We encourage all of our residents to be a part of the public involvement process, which will help shape a clean energy future for our state.”

The undersea cable would likely run from Kaneohe on Oahu to Ilio Point on Molokai, according to the Ocean Floor Survey Final Report. That report was conducted last year by the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism and the University of Hawaii Manoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology.

From Ilio Point, the cable would run parallel to the west Molokai shore, where it would stay below the reef edge. The cable would then run from the southwestern Molokai shore toward Lanai. Alternatives routes have also been established and will be further explored during the EIS process.

The routes avoid bottom fish refuge areas but cannot avoid some segments within the Humpback Whale Sanctuary. Many questions remain unanswered, such as whether to connect cables to the shore under, over or around coral reefs, and how to lay cables around deep-water obstacles.

In 2008, the state committed to become less dependant on fossil fuels and increase use of clean and renewable energy sources. The Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative, an agreement signed by the state and the U.S. Department of Energy, commits to a goal of 70 percent clean energy by 2030. Currently, Hawaii has the highest oil dependency of any other state with $6 billion annually is spent on imported oil.

75 Years of Education

Friday, June 11th, 2010

75 Years of Education

Nestled in the foothills of Molokai’s east end peaks, Kilohana School has been a community anchor for 75 years. This summer, the community is gathering in celebration of a long and successful education legacy on July 3. The all-day event will feature a ho`olaulea from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and a lu`au from 6 to 9 p.m.

Crafts, games, ono food, produce and entertainment at the ho`olaulea promises fun for the whole ohana, while the lu`au will include dinner and a show, along with a host of other entertainment throughout the evening.

Kilohana 75th Anniversary T-shirts are available for $15, DVDs of Kilohana’s history made by Kilohana students are on sale for $7 and lu`au tickets are $20. All proceeds go to the Kilohana School Community Organization.

Zessica Apiki of the anniversary planning committee said ticket sales are selling quickly. Almost 200 of the 400 tickets available for the lu`au event have already been sold. Tickets will be sold through the ho`olaulea that day, but will not be available at the door for the lu`au.

The VIP guest list for the event includes two alumni who attended the school when it began in 1934, as well as County and Department of Education officials.

“I feel like all of a sudden I’ve become part of this history,” said Richard Stevens, who is concluding his first year as principal of Kilohana and an active member of the event committee. He added that the Kilohana Bazaar held a few weeks ago raised $20,000 for the school and he has high hopes for the anniversary event.

Contact Zess at 553-5446, Edwina at 558-8222, or Moses at 558-8143 to purchase lu`au tickets. Tickets will also be available on select Saturdays in front of Friendly Market Center.

Off to the Races

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Off to the Races

Thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean, the name Molokai has people talking – but not about this island.

A three-year-old race horse named Mr. Molokai has race fans in Australia buzzing – after just four races, he has one win, two third place finishes and one fifth place finish.

Mr. Molokai comes from a long line of horses with Hawaii-inspired names. His mother was No Hula No Dance; he also has close relatives named Never Hula, Hula Chief, Hula Drum, Hawaiian Song, It’s Hula Time, and Hulachine.

“We wanted to keep that connection going and named him Molokai after your island,” Rob McAnulty, Mr. Molokai’s owner, wrote in an email to the Dispatch.

The horse was born in New Zealand and was originally named just Molokai. He was later moved to Australia where there was already a champion race horse named Molokai Prince so he was renamed Mr. Molokai.

“He is a most promising young horse who will hit his top in the next 12 months… and may even run in the richest race in Australia, the Melbourne Cup,” McAnulty wrote.

In With the Wind

Friday, June 11th, 2010

In With the Wind

Molokai has Frank Leary to thank for some of its most iconic symbols. The “Aloha – Slow Down” sign at the airport? Leary’s work of art. The Post A Nut program? That’s Leary’s idea too. Now his latest creation is ready to power up – literally.

stops and then it starts and then it stops,” he said. “This one keeps going.”

The turbine is also omni-directional, which means it doesn’t need to change direction to face into the wind. According to Leary, the design is a major improvement over traditional windmill designs.

Leary’s model is made of carbon fiber. It took him about a month to build and cost $1,000 in materials. It’s two feet tall, 30 inches wide and weighs less than 20 pounds.

Equipped with a standard car alternator, the Easy Rider is designed to charge and maintain 12 volt deep cycle batteries, which are designed to produce steady amounts of power over long periods of time.

The generator will produce five to ten amps – not enough to power a house, which takes about 40 amps, but plenty for a camping trip or power outages.

Leary said he plans to make a larger version of the Easy Rider that will produce more power.

He has tested the turbine on the Kaunakakai pier and said he has seen “fantastic results,” along with a few curious stares while driving around with the generator strapped to the bed of his pickup truck.

“Cars almost come to a dead stop looking at it,” he said.

When it comes to alternative energy, it’s not just a hobby but a lifestyle for Leary – his Ho`olehua home is completely off the grid, powered instead by solar panels and a wind generator he constructed.

Years in the Making
Leary first became interested in wind generators after reading an article about them in Popular Science magazine.

“It was one of the greatest inventions in the world,” he said.

With no formal training, Leary set out to teach himself the inner workings of wind generators. He made his first turbine out of two Styrofoam cups and has since experimented with different materials like plastic, fiberglass and metal.

“Carbon fiber definitely works the best,” he said.

He builds his generators in the carport off his Ho`olehua home alongside his dogs, cats, chickens and goat. His unconventional workshop matches his out-of-the-box designs.

“I see so many things wrong with the big generators -- it takes so long to get them up and they’re not portable,” he said. “This is portable.”

Leary said other generators he has made have lasted five years and even survived the 80 mph winds of Hurricane Iniki in 1992.

Leary’s Legacy
Here on Molokai, Leary’s best known work is probably the “Aloha – Slow Down – This is Molokai” sign he put at the entrance to the airport about 20 years ago.

“I saw a lot of people doing things that they shouldn’t be doing like speeding and tailgating,” said Leary, who previously worked as an ambulance driver and knew the tragic consequences these behaviors can have.

“I think the sign has saved some lives,” he said.

Leary’s creative legacy also includes the Post-A-Nut program, which he started in 1990 with his wife Peggy Keahi-Leary, former postmaster at the Ho`olehua Post Office.

Leary said the idea came to them when they used to watch coconuts being hauled off to the landfill. Over the years, Post A Nut has aided post offices here as profits and funding have declined. Over 50,000 coconuts have been sent from the Ho`olehua Post Office alone since the program began.

Interested in hearing more about wind generators and the Easy Rider? Email Frank Leary at franklyfrank41@hotmail.com.

Molokai Represented at Democratic Convention

Friday, June 11th, 2010

Molokai Represented at Democratic Convention

Every two years, Hawaii Democrats converge in Honolulu where office hopefuls brush elbows with influential party members from around the state. Vying candidates lure the support of constituents through impassioned speeches, free stickers and knick-knacks, and hotel parties with really good food.

On the business side of things, delegates from around the islands put their heads together to adopt specific resolutions that define the party movement. This year, civil unions, renewable energy expansion, death with dignity, and an aquaculture moratorium were just some of the resolutions which were adopted.

Before a resolution is adopted by the Democratic Party, it’s guided through several vigorous discussions which eventually lead to a party-wide vote. Participants can expect anything from long detailed discussions to heated and boisterous debate.

Because many of the proclamations are penned on the grass-roots level in communities around the state, they are closely watched by lawmakers who consider the resolutions to be the voice of the people. Some of the resolutions eventually make their way through the legislature and eventually become law.

With a highly publicized gubernatorial race between Neil Abercrombie and Honolulu Mayor Mafiosa Hanneman, the party’s interests are especially important to constituents this political season.

“Democratic values such as education, social justice, energy independence, economic opportunity, sustainability and the preservation, protection and enhancement of our natural resources are the issues upon which we will elect our next Democratic Governor,” said Lance Holter, Chair of the Democratic Party of Maui.

Molokai’s Democratic Champion

On the second day of the convention, May 29, Holter escorted Molokai Democratic Vice-chair Beverly Pauole-Moore to the stage where she received the Democrat's State Chairperson's Award.

“It was an honor to receive that award. I didn’t expect it,” said Pauole-Moore who has been a staunch Democrat for well over 25 years. She was Molokai’s campaign manager for Ben Cayatano and Pres. Barack Obama (who received the highest percentage victory in the state here on the Friendly Isle).

Pauole-Moore is also a mentor for future Democrats.

 “I look forward to going to the convention every two years and introducing this experience to young Democrats,” she said.

Pauole-Moore was accompanied by Molokai delegates: Rosie Davis, Lynn DeCoite, Annette Pauole-Ahakuelo, Faith Tuipulotu, and Todd Yamashita.

Added Support for Molokai

Molokai brought more to the table than delegates and ho`okupu. When budget cuts threatened to close all but two State Human Services offices, it was a last-second veto over-ride by the legislature in May that kept them open.

With 80% of Molokai receiving some form of service from their local office, the attempted closures created anxiety in the community. In response, Pauole-Moore and Holter crafted a resolution that would reaffirm the party’s commitment to keeping face-to-face services available in rural areas.

“I felt that if the people are behind it, their voice makes a big difference - more than just the legislature because I believe the power is in the people,” said Rep Mele Carroll who co-chaired the Environment and Health and Human Services Committee alongside Holter during the convention. 

The resolution was officially adopted by the Hawaii State Democratic Party on the second day of the convention.

Record Attempt Makes a Slash

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Record Attempt Makes a Slash

Early on Thursday morning, while the rest of Kaunakakai slept peacefully, a lively group at Cooke Memorial Pool was wide awake to represent Molokai in a record-breaking swim lesson.

Lessons were beginning simultaneously at over 175 sites around the world in far-flung places like Zamia, Lebanon, South Korea and Germany. Combined, they comprise what organizers hope will be certified by Guinness World Records as the World’s Largest Swimming Lesson.

Of the 69 participants at Cooke, most were kids who spent the night at the Youth Center next door, waking up not-yet-bright but certainly early for the 4 a.m. start time.

The event was meant to promote water safety. “It’s important to know how to swim – save your own life or save someone else’s life,” said lifeguard Kaleo Crivello, who helped organized the lesson at Cooke.

During the 45 minute lesson, participants practiced pool safety, floating, rhythmic breathing, kicking and the freestyle stroke -- “the basis of swimming,” Crivello said.

The safety lesson made an impact on some kids. “I learned that you can use a plastic bottle to help pull somebody to shore,” said 11-year-old Tadeu Lima.

Others simply enjoyed the time spent in the pool. Kawai Naki, age 12, said his favorite part was the kicking “because everybody was splashing and it looked like a waterfall.”

The number of participants worldwide won’t be known until later this week when organizers at Cooke and other sites send registration forms and video recordings of their lesson to Guinness World Records, which will review the material and establish the record.

But the title was not the primary goal of the event – it was meant to teach kids life-saving skills.

According to event organizers, drowning is the second leading cause of accidental death of children 1-14 years old, and research shows that if a child doesn’t learn to swim by third grade, they will likely never learn.

Crivello said he hopes more kids sign up for lessons as a result of the event. Cooke’s free Learn to Swim summer lessons are June 14 to July 15 for kids three years old and up. Call 553-5819 for more information or to register.

Molokai Surf Shop Burglarized

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Molokai Surf was broken into last Sunday night, losing about $6,000 in merchandise, according to store owner Jerry Leonard.

Minimal structural damage included a broken lock and kicked-in door, which were discovered Monday morning. The store’s alarm system was also disabled during the incident.

The burglars took a rack of large T-shirts, board shorts, large size slippers and some ladies’ tops, according to Leonard. The stolen items all had ink security tags – when ripped open, the tags release ink over the merchandise. If the tags are ripped off, they leave a hole in the fabric.

Murky Waters

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Murky Waters

Ever looked at the muddy water off Molokai’s south shore and wondered what it would take to clean up the reef? That’s the question researchers from the United States Geological Survey (USGS) looked to answer last month with a study on the reef’s turbidity, or murkiness.

The study is part of a larger ongoing study that examines the effects and possible solutions to erosion mauka-side that results in sedimentation of Molokai’s reefs.

“Anyone who lives on Molokai knows how brown the water gets,” said lead researcher Mike Field, a marine geologist with USGS. In 2008, Field co-authored “The Coral Reef of South Molokai, Hawaii: Portrait of a Sediment-Threatened Fringing Reef,” a nearly 200-page full-color report.

is a very real problem.” He added he has also received great cooperation from residents and assisting agencies such as The Nature Conservancy.

Future turbidity studies may be even more high-tech. Field mentioned a “tracer project” he’s planning for next year that will trace individual particles from the Kawela watershed to the reef.

Paddlers Prepares for Re-opening

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Paddlers Prepares for Re-opening

Paddlers Inn Restaurant and Bar’s new owner was on island last week to get to know his latest acquisition and start planning for its future.

Louis Santiago bought Paddlers on May 28. Santiago owns restaurants and bars in Honolulu, Hilo and on Kauai. He arrived on Molokai last Wednesday morning and stayed for a few days to meet with staff and orient himself with the business.

Because of the change in ownership, Paddlers’ staff had to reapply for their jobs. Santiago said he hopes to hire them all back.

The restaurant will open as soon as insurance is “squared away” and the Department of Health inspects the kitchen, Santiago said.  He added last Wednesday that he hopes to have it open this week.

The bar, however, will remain closed until a new liquor license is secured, which can be a lengthy process. Until then, Santiago said he hopes to get clearance from his insurance company for customers to bring their own alcohol.

Santiago said he wants to give the place a stronger sports bar feel and bring in more games. His company, Game Master, already supplies the pool tables and gaming machines to Paddlers.

Santiago said he also wants to fix up the patio, extend the overhang and “maximize the space.”

But all these changes will take time. “I’m not going to change anything right away,” Santiago explained.

One thing has already changed – the menu. Santiago said the new menu scales back on meal offerings and reinforces the sports bar feel. “My other restaurants don’t have that many meals on the menu.”