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Royal Pageant

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Royal Pageant

Ashley Ponce crowned Miss Molokai Filipina 2009.  

By Melissa Kelsey

Molokai is a melting pot of world traditions, and the Miss Molokai Filipina 2009 pageant was a chance to celebrate Filipino culture with a local twist. As she danced the hula in graceful, delicate motions, Ashley Ponce charmed the audience at her coronation ceremony held at Home Pumehana Hall last Saturday. After Maui County Council Chairman Danny Mateo placed the silver crown on her head, three of her cousins presented her with gifts of flowers.

“I will try my very best to represent Molokai at the Hawaii state pageant,” said Ponce, who will travel to Oahu to compete for the Miss Hawaii Filipina 2009 crown on July 18.

Aunties and uncles gathered on the dance floor to dance ballroom, Filipino folk and the Electric Slide. Danny Mateo danced with emcee Starlet Luczon for one number, and Aunty Moana’s hula halau performed two dances.  

“This is how it used to be,” said emcee Eugene Santiago, reminiscing about pineapple plantation era dances held at the Maunaloa and Kualapu`u community centers.

Formerly crowned Miss Molokai Filipina 2007 Deisha Pico made an appearance at the coronation ceremony and performed a final walk. The audience tried their luck for luxury raffle prizes, including a roundtrip ticket on Island Air, MP3 players and pearl jewelry. Auction items up for bid were a gift basket and a live goat. All proceeds went to Ponce to help fund her upcoming Oahu travels.  

A 2007 graduate of Molokai High School, Ponce was active in the Student Council and Aunty Moana’s hula halau. She is currently working on a liberal arts associate’s degree at Maui Community College, and hopes to attend a university in Las Vegas. The Miss Molokai Filipina pageant was sponsored by the Molokai Filipino Community Council.   







A Place to Park

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

A Place to Park

Dept. of Parks and Recreation gets a new base yard

Officials from the Department of Parks and Recreation break ground at the department’s future base yard facility.

By Catherine Cluett

It’s been a long, cramped wait for a space to call their own for the Department of Parks and Recreation on Molokai,. Last Friday marked the groundbreaking for a new base yard at Duke Maliu Park, a project that first came to the table about six years ago, according to Molokai’s Zachary Helm, Deputy Director of Maui County Parks and Recreation.

Reverend Jimmy Duvauchelle offered a blessing for the effort, and participants dug golden shovels in the earth where the future building will stand.

Helm congratulated those present. “Finally we’re going to get one hale,” he laughed.

The new building at Duke Maliu Park will house Parks facilities including office space, a staff area, maintenance shop, vehicle parking and equipment storage, according to April Shiotani, Design Consultant for Hiyakumoto and Higuchi Architects. The 5,000 square foot building will be constructed behind the existing Duke Maliu Park building.

Parks and Recreation Director Tamara Horcajo called the Molokai operation a “shining example” for the county.

The Molokai Department of Parks and Recreation has been housed at Mitchell Paoule Center since 1983, according to Helm. Because space is so limited there, the department has no centralized headquarters, and their equipment is spread out around the island.

BCP Construction of Hawaii won the $1.3 million county contract to build the facility. Helm said construction will begin July 1, and the department could be moving in to the new facility as early as the first of next year.

“The project is going to go fast,” he said.

Helm said the project will create jobs, and adding that hopes work will be contracted to Molokai companies as much as possible to stimulate local economy. BCP Construction Project Foreman Max Toa of Molokai said his crew of four will consist of two workers from Honolulu and two from Molokai.

Helm said the Department of Parks and Recreation’s next Molokai project is improvements to the community pool, including new restroom faculties, scheduled begin in August.

Keeping the Culture

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Keeping the Culture

Molokai gets a koa canoe.

Molokai paddlers take the island’s new koa canoe for its maiden voyage at Kamalo Wharf. Photo by Ed Misaki.

By Catherine Cluett

For the first time in over 30 years, Molokai has its own koa canoe. The canoe took its maiden voyage at Kamalo Wharf last Thursday, and was celebrated by the island’s four canoe clubs which will be sharing the outrigger.

“It’s a special day in our lives,” said one community member who has been involved in building the canoe. “We’re celebrating Hawaiian culture.”

Not having their own koa canoe means clubs must borrow one to paddle when they travel to state races. “It’s already a disadvantage to paddle on waters you are unfamiliar with,” said Molokai Canoe Club President Liko Wallace. Getting in a canoe you’ve never paddled is an added handicap.

“It’s like a customized glove,” she said of having a club boat. “Everybody would feel comfortable in it.”

Wallace said koa canoes are required by the Hawaiian Canoe Racing Association (HCRA) for state races for cultural reasons.

“They want to try to keep as much as the cultural alive and not let upcoming technology kill what we are trying to preserve,” she explained.

Wallace said she thinks the canoe will first be used for practice in a couple weeks. However, before it can be raced, HCRA officials must come over to weigh it and make official measurements. She said according to regulations, the canoe cannot be lighter than 400 pounds.

After its first trip into the water on Thursday, the canoe was “water lined,” a measuring process that ensures the canoe will handle well with the weight of a crew. The measurements serve as a guide for the canoe’s builders to put the finishing touches on its design. Water lining is also done so the canoe will meet HCRA’s rigorous standards for racing canoes’ weight, shape and size to assure fair competition.

Those who paddled the koa canoe during its maiden voyage all agreed it handled beautifully.

Molokai’s koa canoe was crafted by boat builders Kirk Clarke and Rae Young.

Welcome to the Gun Show

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Welcome to the Gun Show

Mel Chung displays French military rifles.

By Catherine Cluett

With a French flag hanging in the window and “La Marseillaise,” the French national anthem, playing in the background, attendees of gunsmith Mel Chung’s latest gun show had the opportunity to examine French military rifles to their heart’s content.

French military rifles displayed at the show last Friday were used by the French and their allies in World War I, WW II, and some models were still used until the 1980’s.

“Their designs are a little quirky,” said Chung of the French. “They marched to the beat of their own drum.”

But quirky or not, they had some good ideas. The French were the first to invent and use smokeless powder in the late 1800’s, which gave them a tactical advantage, according to Chung. They were also among the first to use smaller rifle caliber: while other countries used 45 caliber, the French fired 8 millimeter ammunition.

Four weapons displayed on the counter representing a variety of French models and time periods stole the show. Visitors had the opportunity to examine each gun and rise to the challenge of finding two distinct physical features present in all four weapons. Guess them right, and you received a prize.

The common features were the same sling attachments (an economic measure, said Chung), and the type of screw used to construct the rifles, called a spanner screw. A special two-prong screw driver is needed to remove them, and Chung explained, this made it difficult for soldiers to disassemble the weapon.

“It makes them ‘idiot proof’,” he chuckled.

Higher Education

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Higher Education

MEC gets funds for land acquisition.

A depiction of Phase 1 and 2 of the MEC campus shows the current buildings to the left of the dashed diagonal line in the picture’s left half. The portion to the right of the line shows Phase 2 on the three acres of land to be acquired.

By Catherine Cluett

Molokai boasts many successful college graduates, and now, thanks to $500,000 recently allocated by the state legislature to expand the Molokai Education Center (MEC), students will have more opportunities to complete their education right here on Molokai.

The three-acre land acquisition project was at the top of Senator Kalani English and Representative Mele Carroll’s legislative priority lists this year, according to Donna Haytko-Paoa, MEC’s Coordinator and Professor. She said the development project is phase two of the campus’ original plan, expanding the current two-acre campus to five acres.

“I’m just thrilled that it came through,” said Haytko-Paoa.

A Bigger Spread
The land earmarked for acquisition extends to the border of the adjacent Duke Maliu Park. It is currently owned by Molokai Ranch and leased by Monsanto. Phase one, which is the current 10,000 square-foot building, opened its doors in 1999.

Haytko-Paoa said the phase two facilities could include a science classroom and lab, more offices, another computer classroom and a large lecture hall. She added she also hopes plans will include a theatre or auditorium which could serve as the center of performing arts and culture on Molokai. But classroom space is currently spread thin, and Haytko-Paoa said additional classrooms will be the priority of the project.

“What makes it all worth while is the students and the results,” said Haytko-Paoa.

Growing Student Body
Haytko-Paoa said the Molokai campus’ average enrollment is 225-250 community college students per semester, not including the 25-30 students in Bachelor and Masters programs. She said enrollment is already way ahead of what it was this time last year.

“When the economy is bad, people go to school. When it’s good, people go to work,” said Haytko-Paoa.

The value of the land is not yet established. MEC, the Maui Community College’s Molokai campus, is a branch of the University of Hawaii (UH) and Haytko-Paoa said UH will assess and negotiate the property’s fair market value with Molokai Ranch. She said leftover funds from the $500,000 allocated for the acquisition will go back to the legislature.

There is currently no time frame set for construction. But once phase two is built, Haytko-Paoa said she expects enrollment to increase immediately by 50 percent. The more you can offer, she explained, the more you can get. Haytko-Paoa said the college’s current limited resources restrict the opportunities it can afford its students.

A History of Hard Work
In 2007, money for the land acquisition was on the wish list of both Senator English and Representative Carroll, but went no further, according to Haytko-Paoa. Finally, the funding went through legislature at the end of last month, and Haytko-Paoa credits Molokai’s “dire straits” as well as support showed by the University of Hawaii system.

The 1992 Molokai Community Plan set aside 15 acres for Maui Community College Molokai campus, and Haytko-Paoa has not lost sight of the big picture.

“We’re still holding out for 15 acres,” she said. “If you don’t have dreams, what do you have?”

Haytko-Paoa said the college’s long term vision is for a full-service campus that includes marine research, visual arts, culinary arts, and nursing training facilities, as well as a cafeteria and students’ gathering place.

“Just because we’re from Molokai, doesn’t mean we don’t have the faculty and students to excel,” she said.

National Park Service Announces Date for Kalaupapa Barge

Monday, June 15th, 2009

National Park Service Announces Date for Kalaupapa Barge

By Melissa Kelsey


For Kalaupapa residents waiting to hear if and when this year’s barge delivery would be made to the peninsula, an announcement last Friday assuring their life-line delivery came as a relief to many. The settlement’s annual barge that delivers fuel, food and equipment will sail on August 1 from Honolulu to Kalaupapa, according to Kalaupapa National Park Service (NPS) Superintendent Steve Prokop. Because of a shortage in the fuel supply delivered last year, the settlement has already been observing strict fuel rations since last winter.

For the first time in Kalaupapa’s history, Prokop said the NPS secured a five-year contract with Young Brothers to manage a barge delivery to Kalaupapa every summer through 2014. Before this year, the NPS has negotiated a barge delivery contract and sailing date on an annual basis.

Normally set in the spring, the announcement of the sailing date was delayed this year because the extended five-year contract needed special approval from solicitors at the NPS regional headquarters, according to Prokop. Over the next four years, Prokop said the barge sailing date will be determined earlier in the year, probably in the fall.

Choosing the Boat

The five-year contract is between the NPS and Young Brothers to manage the annual barge delivery. However, Prokop said Young Brothers has not had a barge small enough to fit inside Kalaupapa’s narrow harbor since 2007. Last year, Young Brothers subcontracted a company called American Marine to supply the barge itself. American Marine won the subcontract again this year after at least three vendors competed to supply the barge. Young Brothers will still have to negotiate a vendor to provide the barge on an annual basis for the next four years.

“Young Brothers will tow the barge, but not their barge,” said Prokop.

Securing the Future

Prokop said American Marine is the only company located in the State of Hawaii that has a barge small enough for the Kalaupapa harbor. The other vendors who bid on the contract are out-of-state companies. To secure reliable barge service for the future, Prokop said the NPS is working with Hawaii Senator J. Kalani English to determine if there is a legal route for the State of Hawaii Public Utilities Commission to require Young Brothers to provide barge service to Kalaupapa.

“We are seeing if there is some way a state agency can require safe and reliable barge service for the Kalaupapa community,” said Prokop. 

Last April, the NPS conducted a series of public scoping meetings to discuss the possibility of Kalaupapa harbor improvements, including dredging. The dredging caused environmental concerns, but would increase the width of the harbor, allowing larger barges to service the peninsula to increase delivery reliability.

Prokop said the extended contract “solves the dredging problem for five years.” While the contract does not solve the long-term problem of the dwindling availability of barges for Kalaupapa, there is now no immediate need to widen the harbor’s channel.

Kalaupapa State Employee Work Days Cut

Monday, June 15th, 2009

By Melissa Kelsey

Patients at Kalaupapa enjoy three hot meals each day, thanks to the settlement’s resident cooks employed by the State of Hawaii Department of Health (DOH). Starting in July, some of those meals could be at risk, as a result of a $730 million gap in the state’s budget.   

For the next two years, Governor Linda Lingle will require all state employees to take three unpaid “furlough” days off each month, in an effort to balance the state’s budget, according to her June 1 speech announcing the budget cuts. To comply with the initiative, Kalaupapa Acting Administrator Tim Richmond has suggested closing the settlement’s kitchen for three Saturdays each month. Kalaupapa resident and DOH employee Shannon Crivello said the move would reduce the quality of patient care. If the kitchen closed for those Saturdays, workers would prepare three cold meals for the patients ahead of time on Fridays.

Kalaupapa Lacks Adequate Fire Personnel

Monday, June 15th, 2009

By Melissa Kelsey

Until last summer, two trained state firefighters stationed at Kalaupapa Airport provided reliable fire safety for both air traffic and the peninsula’s residents. Those personnel were transferred out of Kalaupapa after state airport regulations determined that not enough passengers arrive on incoming Kalaupapa flights to warrant their employment, according to Kalaupapa National Park Service (NPS) Superintendent Steve Prokop.   

Almost a year later, there are only two NPS rangers in Kalaupapa certified to operate the NPS fire truck in the settlement, and Prokop said government regulations require three for its operation in the event of a fire. As a result, he said the two rangers would be acting out of compliance with the law if they operated the fire engine without a third firefighter.

More closely scrutinizing the situation at the Kalaupapa town meeting last Tuesday, resident Marco Jordan wondered out loud what would happen if the two trained rangers were not on the peninsula at the time a building caught fire. Jordan and other community members debated the proper ethical response to the possible scenario.

Art of the Chanter

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Art of the Chanter

Keali`i Reichel brings evening of Hawaiian chants to Molokai.

By Melissa Kelsey

While Hawaiian cultural practices are a part of daily life for many on Molokai, residents got a taste of Hawaii’s best last Thursday. Voices of chanters reverberated throughout the halau at Kulana `Oiwi, carrying the Hawaiian mele of the ancestors, as internationally known kumu hula Keali`i Reichel and his Halau Ke'alaokamaile delivered an educational performance of chants.

“We are the vessels of these mele for our kupuna to communicate to the next generation,” Reichel explained.

The goal of the performance was to bring a taste of Hawaiian chanting styles to the audience.

“If we inspire a few of you to become practitioners through the proper avenue of the halau, our job has been completed,” Reichel said to the audience.

In ancient times the Hawaiians chanted informally on a daily basis, but Reichel’s audience learned that certain forms of chants required specific training. The art of chanting became specialized after the Hawaiian language was banned from everyday use in the nineteenth century.

The most common form of chant is olioli, a verbrato style sometimes used to tell stories. Another chant form, called oli kepa, involves great breath control and garbling the words, as Reichel explained. Oli kepa was used for prayer communicated privately with gods. The words were mumbled to protect the oli from listeners known as “mele stealers” who sometimes took others’ oli and made them their own. This type of chant was learned in ancient times by chanting with a stone on the tongue.

Reichel’s cousin and a member of his halau, Miss Aloha Hula 2009 Cherissa Henoheanapuaikawaokele Kane, performed a lovemaking chant style called ho`aeae, a form done softly for the ears of one’s lover.  

Halau Ke'alaokamaile members performed rarely heard haku kole, which are chants of ridicule that portray how kupuna dealt with irritation. Reichel said haku kole were intended to rip another person to shreds, and were sometimes performed at public events like luau and pa`ina to intensify their psychological effect. Some haku kole were chants of protest, including the protest of the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy. For the last chant of the night, a chanter performed a haku kole by a young and beautiful woman chiding an older woman for seeing her lover.

The event was sponsored by the Maui Arts and Culture Center.

Before Us Are Dreams

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Before Us Are DreamsBy Melissa Kelsey

Showered with lei and balloons, graduating Ho`omana Hou High School senior Shae Pedro was one of ninety Molokai students to graduate from the island’s two high schools last weekend. Nine students received diplomas from Ho`omana Hou High School and 81 students were awarded diplomas from Molokai High School.  

“Always remember where you come from and who you are,” said Molokai High School principal Linda Puleloa in her Principal’s Address at the MHS commencement ceremony. John Rosales, one of four class valedictorians, echoed her words as he encouraged students to find success by keeping in mind their Molokai roots.      

MHS Commencement Address speaker Wescott Lee received a round of applause from the audience when he reminded families to make sure their graduates made it home safely after the festivities.    

“This is the first test of your adulthood and maturity,” he said, urging students to drive safely.   

As they received their diplomas one by one, the graduates posed for photographs, broke into tears, and one even did a cartwheel.

“Behind us are memories, beside us are friends, before us are dreams,” read a painted stone outside the school. “The class of 2009 that never ends.”