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Still Shining

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Still Shining

This year marks the Kalaupapa lighthouse’s 100th year.

Photo by Richard Miller.

By Richard Miller

The Moloka’i Light Station, much better known locally as the Kalaupapa Lighthouse, is one century old.  The light was first lit on September 1, 1909, after a surprisingly short construction time of one year.  Considering the time of history, the location, and the small workforce (fewer than twenty workers), building of the lighthouse was a remarkable feat.

The present lighthouse replaced a small fixed red lens lantern light which had been mounted on a mast.  This lantern rose sixty four feet above the water, and while the visible range was short, installation of the lantern was a major step towards safer navigation between Molokai and Oahu. The focal plane of the Moloka’i Light Station is 213 feet above sea level, and at its best, the Light shone to a visible range of over twenty nautical miles.

The shell of the Lighthouse tower is reinforced concrete.  The concrete tower rises 112 feet above grade.  Thousands of tons of concrete were mixed on site and hauled up onto scaffold and poured into wooden forms.  The walls of the tower are four feet thick at the base and fifteen inches thick at the top.  Designed to house the enormous Fresnel lens and to withstand the pounding of the winds on Molokai’s north shore, the Light is an engineering marvel.  The Fresnel lens alone weighed over three tons, and the apparatus on which the lens rotated weighed tons more. The entire assembly floated in a trough of mercury.   The rotation device was a weight operated system much like a clock mechanism.  A light keeper’s assistant would wind the weight to the top and its descent turned a gearbox which rotated the massive light.

For the first years in service, the Light was fueled with kerosene, but in 1934, two electric generators were installed to provide the power to light the Light electrically.   With the kerosene lamp, the Light’s output was over 600,000 candlepower, while the first electric lamp produced 2,500,000 candlepower, making the Moloka’i Light Station the most powerful in the Hawaiian Islands.  In 1956, an improved lighting system was installed, boosting the output to 12,000,000 candlepower.

From the beginning, the Molokai Light Station was a manned operation, but in August of 1966, the Light was converted to full automation; its rotation no longer would be controlled by the weight operated system.  In 1986, the Fresnel lens was replaced by the Coast Guard and transported to Lahaina, Maui, but was returned to the Kalaupapa Peninsula in 1994.

In 1976, the Molokai Light Station was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  The lighthouse in currently owned and protected by the National Park Service.

All facts were derived from The Moloka’i Light Station Historic Resources Report, November, 2001, by William Chapman.

Richard Miller works for the National Park Service in Kalaupapa, specializing in Cultural Resources and Historic Preservation.

Burned area tops 8,000 acres

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Burned area tops 8,000 acres

Brushfire Update -- Wednesday 9 a.m.

 

The isolated columns of smoke dotting the mountains behind Kaunakakai are becoming less and less visible. 

Today the National Guard sent to Chinook helicopters to the island to help stamp out any remaining hot spots that have been flaring up. The Chinooks refuel on Oahu and are monitoring the area near Kawela Three. 

Fire fighters say that the blaze in now firmly under control and almost pau. Their main job now is to mop up hot spots and embers that have the potential to start again. 

At last report - late Tuesday night - roughly 8,000 acres of land have been scarred by the fire. Hawaii's Lieutenant Governor Duke Aiona and Major General Robert Lee got a first hand look at the scorched terrain when they toured the island on helicopter Tuesday afternoon.

All schools opened once again Tuesday morning and the fire continues to move further away from any houses. 

 Below is a video of one the chinooks, operated by the National Guard, that were on Molokai helping to fight the fire on Wednesday. 

 

 

Hundreds Stand for Water

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

?” he wondered out loud.

Santiago’s mother, Loretta, has been paying Molokai Ranch for water since they arrived on the island. She said there have never been any jumps in price like the proposed rates. Last summer, she was paying less than $30 a month for water. If the PUC approves of the new increase, she will be paying over $100 a month. For Santiago, and many other seniors, those increases will seriously affect the fixed budget she lives on.

Many others across the island were also pulling for PUC to step up and deny the increase.

“The PUC should not cave in again to the Ranch,” said Kaluakoi resident Bill Vogt. “All of this is punitive because of La’au point not going through.”

He said he would like to eventually see another company purchase the water company. Vogt’s rates could climb as high as $480 a month if the rates are approved.

Many residents who don’t pay the Ranch’s water rates also showed up Saturday to protest, showing support for their fellow community members.

“I would just like to see the Ranch do what is right for the residents of Molokai. If they can’t afford to do that, then just give it to the county,” said Perry Buchaltar, a Maunaloa resident who entertained his fellow protestors with a harmonica.

Hundreds Stand for Water

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Residents protest Ranch’s proposed rates increases

By Dan Murphy and Catherine Cluett

It was tough to travel anywhere on the island last Saturday morning without driving past enthusiastic groups of protesters in light blue T-shirts. From Kilohana to Maunaloa, rate-payers and supporters held signs and cheered at passing vehicles to raise awareness of Molokai Ranch’s skyrocketing water rate increases. A public hearing will be held on Molokai on Thursday, Sept. 3 at the Mitchell Pauole Center at 5 p.m.

“We are already paying the highest rates in the nation and they want to increase it four to fives times – it’s insulting,” said Molokai Planning Commission Chairman Joseph Kalipi and Maunaloa resident. “The quality is so poor we can’t even drink the water. We would like to see county water rates.”

At the end of May last year, Molokai Ranch threatened to shut down their water utilities Molokai Public Utilities (MPU) and Wai`ola O Molokai (Wai`ola), citing financial hardship. In an unprecedented move, the PUC approved temporary rate increases that have been described as outrageous.

Molokai Dispatch 2009 Survey

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Sproat is No Ka Oi

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Molokai Boys represent Island well in MMA fights

By Dan Murphy


Molokai has a new champion.

Sale Sproat claimed the Amateur Middleweight MMA Belt after defeating Oahu’s John Ferrel on Aug. 22 on Maui. It took less than a minute and a half to end the fight with a vicious uppercut to Ferrel’s jaw. Sproat’s big punch sent his opponent to the canvas and the referee stopped the fight.

“He came in, tried to take me down and I just caught him with the uppercut,” Sproat said. The Molokai native, who weighed in at 185 pounds, is now 6-0 in his MMA career.

The new champion was one of three Molokai fighters who stepped into the ring in front of a packed house at Maui’s War Memorial Gymnasium. Keoni Farm and Jake Noble also represented the Friendly Island well.

Schools closed today

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Brushfire Update – Monday Morning 8:00

All Molokai schools with the exception of Kilohana Elementary and Maunaloa Elementary are closed today. The Fire Department has decided to keep sections of Kamehemeha V Highway closed to through traffic because of the risk of the fire jumping across the road. Schools were forced to close because buses and other students would not be able to get through the roads and arrive at school.

“Still not out of the woods”

Monday, August 31st, 2009

“Still not out of the woods”


Brushfire Update - Sunday Night 9:00

By Dan Murphy

After a long day of battling flames many homes and neighborhoods have been spared, but the fight is far from over. Molokai Fire Chief Val Martin estimated that the fire has already covered over 6,000 acres - or almost 10 square miles - and is still spreading.

"We're still not out of the woods yet," Martin said. "This fire is not under control or contained a this point."

The most dangerous arm of the conflagration is on its western edge at this point. The highway is closed off to all traffic at Coconut Grove for the night. The Fire Department decided to keep the road closed in case the fire gets close enough to cross the road. The flames are currently about a mile west of Coconut Grove near the Plumeria Farm. 

Mitchell Pauole Center and Molokai High School have been opened as shelters for those who cannot return to their homes tonight. 

Crews have been focusing on this area since it started, but are still keeping an eye on the other side of the fire near Kawela and Kamehameha V Highway towards the east.

The 70-man team has been working around the clock and has successfully extinguished all flames near Kawela and the highway.However, the ground near those areas is still covered in hot spots that could spark at any moment. Martin said that 35 personnel will remain to work through the night. 

The five helicopters that spent the day circling the island and dropping water are down for the night. The choppers can not fly in the dark and will resume their dawn-to-dusk schedule tomorrow morning. 

Molokai's Fire Department received helped from a wide variety of groups throughout the day including Dept. of Public Works,  Goodfellows, State Highway, Dept. of Forestry and many others. There have been no further reports of structural damage since an outdoor garage burned at the Visario residence early Sunday morning. 

Check back with the Dispatch tomorrow morning for continuous updates. 

 

Brushfire Update — Sunday Afternoon 1:30 p.m.

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Brushfire Update — Sunday Afternoon 1:30 p.m.

State Layoffs Hit Molokai Hard

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

By Dan Murphy

The understaffed Molokai Welfare Office is already struggling to keep up with the demand from newly unemployed citizens, but their job is about to get a lot harder.

Earlier this month, the state of Hawaii notified 1,194 employees that they would be laid off in November. Workers on Molokai will be hit hard by the reduction in force.

After trimming $2 billion, Governor Linda Lingle and her office are still $786 million away from balancing the state’s budget. Lingle chose to reduce labor costs, which currently make up 70 percent of the budget, to make up for that gap.  The governor said the layoffs were a final resort.

“Outer islands, especially places like Molokai and Lanai, are going to suffer the most on this. We can’t afford the cuts. We don’t have the resources,” Molokai Welfare Office Supervisor Donna Mursberg said.

Mursberg said her office currently has more work to process than they have ever had during her 22 year career. According to the Hawaii Business Research Library, Molokai’s unemployment rate reached 16.3 percent in July, nearly 10 points higher than the state average of seven percent.