Tag Archives: Hawaii

Hawaii sees 102 new coronavirus cases as the statewide tally rises to 29,408

Hawaii Department of Health officials today reported 102 new coronavirus infections statewide, bringing the state’s total since the start of the pandemic to 29,408 cases.

State health officials reported no new coronavirus-related deaths as the statewide death toll remains at 462.

The state’s official coronavirus-related death toll includes 364 fatalities on Oahu, 53 on Hawaii island, 38 on Maui, one on Kauai, and three Hawaii residents who died outside the state.

The U.S. coronavirus-related death toll today is more than 549,000 and the nationwide infection tally is over 30 million.

Today’s new statewide infection cases include 61 on Oahu, 26 on Maui, and 15 on Hawaii island, according to health officials.

The statistics released today reflect the new infection cases reported to the department on Friday.

The total number of coronavirus cases by island since the start of the outbreak are 22,924 on Oahu, 2,779 on Maui, 2,447 in Hawaii County, 189 on Kauai, 110 on Lanai and 34 on Molokai. There are also 925 Hawaii residents who were diagnosed outside of the state.

Health officials also said today that of the state’s total infection count, 1,104 cases were considered to be active. Officials say they consider infections reported in the past 14 days to be a “proxy number for active cases.” The number of active cases in the state increased by 52 today.

By island, Oahu has 639 active cases, Maui has 339, the Big Island has 119, Molokai has six, Kauai has three and Lanai has two.

Health officials counted 6.549 new COVID-19 test results in today’s tally, for a 1.5% statewide positivity rate. The state’s 7-day average positivity rate is 1.7%, according to the Hawaii COVID-19 Data dashboard.

The state’s Hawaii COVID-19 vaccine summary said Thursday that 568,376 vaccines have been administered of the 748,070 received by the state. About 25% of the general population in Hawaii has received at least one dose of the vaccine. Of those who have received at least one vaccine dose so far, 50% are age 59 or younger, while 50% are age 60 or older. Of the administered vaccines, 543,446 were given to the general public and 24,930 were distributed through the federal pharmacy program, officials said.

Of all the confirmed Hawaii infection cases, 1,978 have required hospitalizations, with three new hospitalizations — two on Maui and one on the Big Island — reported today by state health officials.

Eight hospitalizations in the statewide count are Hawaii residents who were diagnosed and treated outside the state. Of the 1,970 hospitalizations within the state, 1,681 have been on Oahu, 168 on Maui, 107 on the Big Island, eight on Kauai, five on Lanai and one on Molokai.

>> RELATED STORY: Maunalani Nursing Center halts visitation after vaccinated resident contracts COVID-19

According to the latest information from the department’s Hawaii COVID-19 Data dashboard, a total of 39 patients with the virus were in Hawaii hospitals as of Thursday morning, with seven in intensive care units and four on ventilators.

Oahu moved into the less-restrictive Tier 3 of the city’s four-tier economic recovery plan on Feb. 25 after being in Tier 2 since Oct. 22. Tier 3 permits social and outdoor recreational gatherings of up to 10 people, and restaurants to seat 10 people at a table, up from five now. Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi on March 11 announced modifications to Tier 3, including allowing bars to reopen under the same conditions as restaurants and extending the curfew until midnight.

Today’s seven-day average case count for Oahu is 52 and the seven-day average positivity rate is 1.9%, according to the mayor.


This breaking news story will be updated as more information becomes available.




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Is it safe to travel this summer? Optimistic travelers booking now

Fueled by Covid vaccines, flexible cancellation policies and people yearning to break free from home, the summer travel season is already booming for some parts of the travel industry.

A survey from research company Toluna indicates Americans are gaining confidence to travel with each passing month, with 27% comfortable to travel in April and 42% by July.

But a sudden surge in bookings shows many people are locking in reservations and rates before it’s too late.

A sharp rise in summer flights

U.S. domestic flight bookings for summer travel sharply rose earlier this month, according to research from the data identity company Adara. Since Feb. 1, domestic hotel bookings have more than tripled.  

Domestic flight and hotel bookings for travel between July 1 and Aug. 31, 2021.

Courtesy of Adara

International flights originating in the U.S., while fewer in number, followed the same upward trajectory, with bookings rising around mid-February. 

International flight and hotel bookings for travel between July 1 and Aug. 31, 2021.

Courtesy of Adara

Leisure travel — particularly family travel (which is outpacing bookings by singles and couples) — is driving the growth, according to Adara’s report. The most popular destinations for summer leisure flights are to:

  1. Honolulu
  2. Denver
  3. Chicago
  4. Miami
  5. Orlando

By comparing summer bookings this year against those in 2019, preferences for smaller, outdoor destinations emerge.  

“Best Relative Performance” chart for leisure flights booked between Jan. 1 and March 14 for travel between July 1 and Aug. 31, 2021.

Courtesy of Adara

Data from the mobile booking app Hopper also shows a strong uptick in summer travel planning, with searches for mid-summer travel increasing 100% in early February. The company expects domestic airfare prices to begin rising in March, and international airfare by mid-May.   

We’re forecasting that this will be our highest volume summer on record in the history of the company.

Andrew Collins

CEO, Sentient Jet

As flights fill, so will terminals, including private ones such as PS at LAX, which caters to Los Angeles’ celebrity and wealthy flyers.

The private terminal, which costs $4,500 per year for membership plus per-use fees, reached capacity several times this month and often has a waitlist.

“We are cautiously optimistic that this summer will be one of revenge travel,” said co-CEO Josh Gausman. “Travelers will spend more on upgrades, luxury services and unique experiences.”

“We project overall travel volumes to remain lower than 2019 but spending per trip to increase,” said PS at LAX’s Gausman.

Courtesy of PS at LAX

Many charter jet companies are expecting a banner summer.

“The pandemic has exposed a lot of people to private aviation who might never have considered or tried it under normal circumstances,” said Megan Wolf, CEO of Flexjet. “This has allowed the private jet travel industry to better weather the storm.”

Sentient Jet, which sells “jet cards” for 25 flying hours, is predicting it will fly 30%-50% more volume than in pre-pandemic summers, owing to new customers acquired during the pandemic. Between April and September of 2020, two out of three card purchases came from new clients, a ratio that was reversed prior to the pandemic, said CEO Andrew Collins.

“We’re forecasting that this will be our highest volume summer on record in the history of the company,” Collins told CNBC Global Traveler.

No vacancy: Hotels that are filling fast

Located in New York’s Catskill Mountains, The Roxbury at Stratton Falls opened in February of 2020, just before the pandemic hit the U.S. 

“Last year our reservations were dismal for the summer at this time,” said co-owner Greg Henderson. “This year we’re facing the opposite problem …. demand is so high that by mid-April there will be no weekend availability left all the way into October.”

His advice for weekend travelers: “Now is the time” to book.

The Roxbury at Stratton Falls has themed mansion rooms and tower cottages.

Courtesy of The Roxbury at Stratton Falls

Another New York hotel, The Inns of Aurora, is fully booked on select weekends in July and August, said Alex Schloop, the hotel’s creative director. The hotel, comprising five boutique inns in the Finger Lakes region, doesn’t typically have this many summer bookings, he said.

“In the past, we’d usually see summer bookings pick up … closer to end of April or early May,” Schloop said.

Club Wyndham, the member-based vacation company, said three of its resorts in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina are nearly fully booked in July. The beachfront Club Wyndham SeaWatch is 99% full in June, and 95% full in July, the company said.  

Club Wyndham Ocean Boulevard resort is 93% booked in July, according to the company.

Courtesy of Club Wyndham

An uptick in bookings is keeping travel companies busy too.

“InteleTravel experienced several record-breaking days last week where we booked more transactions in a single day than ever in our 30-year history,” said James Ferrara, the company’s president. “In Mexico, we’re … seeing an emerging preference for ‘swim-out’ suites found at some all-inclusive resorts, so travelers have less contact during their vacation.”

Last December, Sandals opened this style of suite at its South Coast resort in Jamaica. These “suites are essentially sold-out for the next 12 months,” Adam Stewart, executive chairman of Sandals Resorts International said.

The Rondoval swim-up suites at Sandals South Coast, which come with river pool access and butler service, are sold out for the next year.

Courtesy of Sandals Resorts

Three Sandals’ resorts in Jamaica are fully booked on various dates in June and July, and all three of the brand’s family-themed Beaches resorts — two in Jamaica and one in Turks and Caicos — are sold out from mid to late June.

The surge in bookings is causing some hotels to raise prices for remaining rooms.

After a big uptick in summer bookings, The Foundry Hotel in Asheville, North Carolina, decided to increase rates, said Julie Bivings, the hotel’s revenue manager.

“We feel confident in our rate structure to price both weekdays and weekends at higher levels than usual because of this increase in demand,” she said.

Where home rentals are hottest

Airbnb is reporting travelers are looking to rent homes near small beach towns and state and national parks this summer. Vacationers are searching for patios, backyards and barbecue areas (for Fourth of July gatherings) at higher rates than before.  

Vacation home rentals and villas are in high demand due to social distancing concerns and growing demand for “bubble travel,” said Inteletravel’s Ferrara, who cited Florida, Las Vegas, Puerto Rico and Hawaii as domestic hotspots.

Though travelers are largely expected to travel domestically this year, Americans are searching summer home rentals in Aruba; the U.S. Gulf Coast; Tulum, Mexico; and Reunion, Florida, according to HomeToGo’s “2021 Summer Travel Forecast.”

Massive availability issues … are going to play out … as the weather warms up.

Jonathan Weinberg

CEO, AutoSlash

The travel search engine named Orlando, Florida; the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and New York City as the most searched “most affordable” locations. With a $234 average nightly rental rate, the inclusion of New York City on a budget list illustrates the lack of travelers to the once-thriving metropolitan areas in the United States.

This year, only 12% of summer travel searches are for urban destinations, according to HomeToGo.   

Bookings at luxury travel agency Virtuoso are gaining steam each month, said Misty Belles, the company’s managing director of global public relations. Villas of Distinction, one of Virtuoso’s partners, is adding villa rentals in the Florida Panhandle, North and South Carolina, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Arizona and Hawaii, she said.

“Hotels with villas are also pacing well, particularly those with strong drive-to markets like Southern California,” she said.

One location was mentioned by nearly everyone who spoke to CNBC for this report — Florida.

Fourteen of the 24 locations with the biggest growth in booking interest (defined as searches and clicks) on VacationRenter are in Florida, the company said. The home rental website, which aggregates home rentals from VRBO, Booking.com and other websites, highlighted Key West and Orlando, as having nearly tripled in booking interest from last year.

Train and rental car shortages

Train tour operator Vacations By Rail is expecting Alaska, Colorado and the U.S. national parks to be the most popular destinations for train travelers.

“This is not unusual for us, but the demand is huge,” said the operator’s president Heather Leisman, who added the company “is working hard to add capacity to meet the overwhelming demand.”

Additional departure dates are being added to Mount Rushmore, Yellowstone National Park, Glacier National Park and on the company’s “Great Parks of the Southwest” tour, which includes the Grand Canyon.

Guided tour operator Trafalgar is reporting a 56% increase in travel to Alaska this summer.

Dagny Willis | Moment | Getty Images

Car rental shortages may be a bigger problem.

“Massive availability issues … are going to play out … as the weather warms up,” said Jonathan Weinberg, CEO of rental car website AutoSlash. He said there was a “de-fleeting” by rental car companies (selling of cars or deferring or canceling plans to buy new ones) last year and the difficulty and cost to buy new cars this year due to vehicle production and semiconductor shortages.

Car rental shortages are already occurring in the metro Phoenix area, Las Vegas, Denver, Hawaii (especially Maui and the Big Island) and “the entire state of Florida,” said AutoSlash’s Weinberg.

RUSS ROHDE | Cultura | Getty Images

Last weekend, 18 out of 20 commercial airports in Florida had zero availability, and off-airport locations “were similarly slammed,” said Weinberg, who said those who could rent cars were paying upwards of $500 a day.

“It’s almost a certainty that it’s going to get worse before it gets better, and it’s likely going to be the back half of the summer into the fall before things truly return to ‘normal,'” he said.

Weinberg’s advice: “Book early – way earlier than you would ever think. You can make a pay-later reservation where you don’t have to even give your credit card.”

Camping and outdoor travel

Part of the pleasure of camping is getting away from crowds and sold-out scenarios. But, that may change now that outdoor travel is one of the hottest travel trends of 2021.  

Reservations for the yurts — or rounded tents — at Snow Mountain Ranch in Granby, Colorado opened in January and are now nearly fully booked, the company said.

“The yurts are very popular for guests as a glamping option, and this year the demand to get outdoors and out of the city is even higher,” Trueman Hoffmeister, the ranch’s general manager said.

At $104 a night, the 24 yurts at Snow Mountain Ranch are dog-friendly and popular for those who prefer to camp “light,” said Snow Mountain Ranch’s Hoffmeister.

Courtesy of YMCA of the Rockies

Campgrounds have more availability, however, ones located near top national parks are filling up, according to booking website Kampgrounds of America. The West Glacier KOA Resort, near Glacier National Park, is mostly full for summer and is already taking reservations for the 2022 travel season, the company said.

Another booking website Campspot said campgrounds in the U.S. Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states are booking the fastest, with reservations for cabins, RV sites and tents all having increased from last year.

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Hawaii gets tourism surge as coronavirus rules loosen up

Tourists are traveling to Hawaii in larger numbers than officials anticipated, and many are wandering around Waikiki without masks, despite a statewide mandate to wear them in public.

Hawaii’s “Safe Travels” program reported that about 28,000 people flew into and throughout the islands on Saturday, the highest number of travelers in a single day since the coronavirus pandemic began, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Monday.

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Before the pandemic, Hawaii had about 30,000 arrivals daily. When quarantine rules were put in place early in the pandemic, arrivals plummeted and the state’s tourism-dependent economy tanked.

In October, state officials launched a pre-travel testing program that allowed visitors to sidestep quarantine rules. But travel remained sluggish until the second week in March, when spring break tourists started arriving in the islands.

Travel company Pleasant Holidays president and CEO Jack Richards told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser that the agency’s bookings increased 30% over the last two weeks.

“We haven’t seen travel demand for Hawaii this strong for over a year,” Richards said. “I thought we would have a U-shaped recovery; it’s V-shaped. January and February were terrible, but we’ve gone from zero to 150 mph in two weeks.”

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Hawaii News Now reported that officials are receiving complaints about visitors not wearing masks. With a few exceptions, people in Hawaii are still required to wear masks while in public.

“I’m a believer that if you’re outdoors, you can remove it,” said Glenn Day, a visitor from Indiana.

Visitors said rules in their home states are different than those in place in Hawaii.

“We carry our masks around and if we walk into an establishment we’ll wear one, and if people look like they’re uncomfortable with us around, we’ll put one on. But otherwise, like I said where we come from, people are really not required to wear them,” Wisconsin visitor Larry Dopke said.

“I’m not wearing one right now, I’m outdoors,” said Todd Hasley who was visiting from Idaho. “Boise city has an indoor mask mandate. The rest of the state has a mask recommendation.”

SPRING BREAK TRAVEL: AIRPORTS SEE RECORD NUMBER OF FLYERS SINCE PANDEMIC SLOWDOWN

Some lawmakers expressed concern about a possible backlash from residents.

“I think we’re all going to have to be prepared for a potential surge in tourism,” said Hawaii state Rep. Scott Saiki, a Democrat. “I think we have to be prepared because the public may have a response to a sudden surge.”

Such a reaction could hinder economic recovery.

“Pushing back against tourism is the same thing as telling your neighbor they shouldn’t have a job,” said Carl Bonham, executive director of the University of Hawaii’s Economic Research Organization.

Hawaii requires all visitors and returning residents to get negative pre-travel COVID-19 tests before flying to the state to be exempt from the 10-day quarantine rule.

The island of Kauai has additional measures that will be in place until April 5. All visitors to Kauai must either spend three days on another island or quarantine at a county-approved resort for three days and then get second, post-arrival tests.

DELTA ADDS NEW ROUTES, EXPANDS FLIGHTS TO OVER 20 VACATION DESTINATIONS

Violating the state’s coronavirus mandates, which are outlined in Hawaii Gov. David Ige’s latest emergency proclamation, is a misdemeanor that is punishable by up to a $5,000 fine, a year in prison, or both.

Each island county’s police are responsible for enforcing the rules. Messages from The Associated Press seeking comment from the Honolulu Police Department regarding enforcement of mask rules in Waikiki was not immediately returned.

Tim Sakahara, a spokesman for Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi, said in an email that the city recently put up banners throughout Waikiki reminding people to wear masks and remain socially distanced.

“These banners provide a tool to help Honolulu Police officers do their jobs in gaining compliance with COVID-19 rules,” Sakahara said. “The majority of residents and visitors are compliant with the rule or are cooperative when informed of it.”

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However, some residents have also opposed wearing masks. Two people were arrested and two others were cited during a weekend anti-mask rally in Waikiki.

Hawaii has had among the lowest rates of confirmed coronavirus infections in the U.S.

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Hawaii health officials prioritizing certain people over others in Phase 1C for COVID-19 vaccine

Hawaii health officials decided over the weekend to prioritize hotel, restaurant and bar workers for COVID-19 vaccines, in addition to those with specific high-risk medical conditions and residents 65 and older.

“We want those people first in line, absolutely. That’s because they’re at high risk and because we’ve seen infections in restaurants, in hotels and in bars. Their specific occupation mandates interaction with people and so we want to protect them,” Department of Health spokesman Brooks Baehr said today. “There are roughly 500,000 people in phase 1c and we don’t have a shot for everyone today, so we’re continuing to sub-prioritize them just as we did in the earlier phases.”

The decision came after the state announced Thursday that it would open up vaccination appointments for essential workers in phase 1c, which includes “people in industries and occupations important to the functioning of society and at increased risk of exposure” such as those working in banking and finance, transportation, energy, construction, media, legal, information technology and public safety.

Some workers in industries outside the latest DOH guidelines had already gotten appointments, which will be honored, said Hilton Raethel, president and CEO of the Healthcare Association of Hawaii.

“The reason we restricted it just to those groups is we wanted to manage the population and not just overwhelm all the vaccination centers. Because if people can’t get through, it’s just very frustrating. We’re trying to manage the flow,” he said. “It would’ve been preferable if this was all done at the same time, but it just took a little while to come to these decisions.”

Besides the priority workers frequently interacting with others in high-risk situations, many live in crowded households, which also puts their families at risk, he said.

“Pacific Islanders work in hotels and restaurants. Many of them do live in larger households,” Raethel added. “The DOH wanted to ensure that they got their vaccinations as soon as possible.”

Health officials are also working to schedule immunizations for blocks of essential workers, such as those in hotels, and are running mobile vaccination clinics in public housing and other high-risk settings “where we can actually … vaccinate entire households at the same time.”

An estimated 115,000 people fall into the 65 to 74 age group, while 80,000 individuals are in the 1c essential worker category. Another 340,000 are part of the high-risk medical group with serious respiratory conditions requiring oxygen, individuals on dialysis with end stage renal disease and those undergoing chemotherapy or other infusion therapy.

The state is currently administering 10,000 vaccines a day, or more than 60,000 shots a week, but has the capacity to deliver up to 120,000 doses a week, Raethel said.

Within two to three weeks, the state anticipates opening immunizations to those 60 to 64 years old.

“We’re not going to add any more disease conditions or any more categories. After we get through hotels, restaurants and bars and individuals with high risk conditions, it’s purely going to be five-year age bands,” Raethel said. “The reason is that just breaks it up … so you can roll through them faster. It just makes it so simple in terms of verification. We want to get to everyone as soon as we can.”

By Monday, Hawaii Pacific Health, which opened registration for all 1c essential workers on Thursday before the prioritization groups were determined, was completely booked with 2,000 appointments per day through Saturday.

Hotel worker Barry Niau was among the first in the 65-year age group to get vaccinated on Monday.

“I’m more relieved now that I got my first shot. This is the first step of being safe,” he said.

Health officials recorded 46 new coronavirus infections, bringing the state’s total since the start of the pandemic to 28,305 cases. The statewide death toll remains at 451 with no new coronavirus deaths reported.



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Hawai´i Identifies First 3 “Breakthrough” Cases of COVID-19

March 12, 2021, 5:51 PM HST

The Hawai´i Department of Health (DOH) on Friday noted the state’s first three “breakthrough” cases of coronavirus, which isn’t so positive a term as it sounds.

A breakthrough case describes an incident in which a fully vaccinated person (someone who received both doses) later contracts COVID-19.

“This number is not outside what we would expect with nearly 165,000 people in Hawai‘i who are fully vaccinated,” according to a statement released by the DOH Friday.

A vaccine with 95% efficacy will protect 95 out of 100 people. This means 5% may still contract COVID if exposed. 

“This another reason we must all do our part to keep case counts low,” the department continued. “The lower the prevalence of COVID in the community, the lower the chance any of us, even those who have been vaccinated, will be infected.”

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It is important to note that none of the individuals with “breakthrough” COVID became severely ill and none are known to have transmitted COVID to another person. Studies on all three currently approved vaccines circulating in the US notes that they are nearly 100% effective at stopping positive cases from resulting in hospitalization and/or death, in other words “severe” cases of COVID-19 infection.

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“The vaccines are preventing serious illness as they are designed to do,” the department said.



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Hawaii flooding: Emergency declared as flooding causes extensive damage, including bridge collapses

Gov. David Ige signed the proclamation Tuesday to free up state funds to assist those impacted by the heavy rains and flooding that has reached all islands, according to a post on Twitter.

The severe weather is expected to continue through Friday, but residents are already reporting widespread damage.

At least half a dozen homes on the island of Maui were reported to have been heavily damaged or destroyed. And two bridges in Wong’s Village, Oahu crumbled as a cement truck drove over it, according to CNN affiliate KGMB. Residents say the floodwaters from the stream below had almost reached the road on the bridge when it gave out.
Maui resident Mark Alexander said he found himself with water up to his chest in a matter of minutes at his home in Haiku. The family’s dog, Legend, was swept away by the water, but found a way to climb out and onto the roof of the home for safety, KGMB reported.

The floodwaters were so furious they knocked his daughter’s bedroom off the foundation, Alexander told the outlet, as he with family members and friends began shoveling feet of mud out of their home.

Officials order evacuations in light of dangerous flooding

The entire state is under a flash flood watch until 6 a.m. local time Wednesday.

The mayor of Maui says homes and bridges have been severely damaged in the community’s ongoing flooding emergency. “This has been unprecedented flooding, and we will be making damage assessments today,” Mayor Michael Victorino said in a written statement Tuesday.

On Monday, Victorino said that residents told him it was the worst flooding they’ve seen in over 25 years.

For a time, officials worried about water cresting over the Kaupakalua Dam in Haiku and ordered residents downstream to evacuate.

On Tuesday, a flash flood emergency was also issued for Haleiwa, on the north shores of Oahu in Honolulu county 6:15 p.m. HST, according to National Weather Service, and the community was ordered to evacuate.

“Catastrophic flooding from Opaeula Stream. Evacuate now from Haleiwa town,” the Honolulu County government said in an emergency notice Tuesday afternoon. “You are in danger. Leave now.”

Oahu Emergency Management issued a flash-flood advisory that could lead to life-threatening catastrophic flooding in Oahu until 9:30 p.m. Wednesday and residents were warned to move to higher ground, according to an emergency alert issued by the City and County of Honolulu. County officials identified short-term evacuation sites for residents affected by the flooding on the North Shore.

“My caution to anyone watching is please heed that warning and evacuate. We don’t do those kind of orders capriciously, we do those with purpose, they are most serious,” Mayor of the City and County of Honolulu Rick Blangiardi said in a video address on Tuesday.

Assessing the damage

Meantime, assessments of the damage in Maui also started Tuesday.

“When you see flood damage in the light of day, it’s a reminder of the sheer power of fast-moving water,” said Victorino, who visited flooded areas. “We are so fortunate there were no reported deaths or injuries. I want to publicly thank our first responders who did heroic work under very dangerous conditions.”

The mayor said the flooding had wiped out Peahi Bridge and at one time power was knocked out for more than 1,300 customers.

The Maui Fire Department reported it received more than a dozen calls for help from residents who were trapped in their homes because of rising floodwaters, according to an update from the County of Maui.

On Monday, Ana Paula DeCarlo told CNN her family was stuck at home due to the roadway washing out. She recorded video that showed water rushing over the roadway that used to have a small stream under it.

“Yes, it’s like a bridge, small one over a stream,” she said of the road. “It hasn’t stopped raining one second. We are about 15 minutes away from the dam.”

“This is our street right now. We can’t go anywhere. The street disappeared, it’s gone!,” she posted on Instagram.

CNN meteorologist Michael Guy, Amir Vera, Deanna Hackney, Hollie Silverman, Artemis Moshtaghian and Amanda Jackson contributed to this report



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Heavy Hawaii rains breach dam, force evacuations

The entire state of Hawaii was under a flash flood watch Tuesday morning after heavy rainfall overflowed a dam and forced people to evacuate their homes for fear of fast-rising waters and landslides.

“Deep moisture will remain over the state through tonight,” the National Weather Service based in Honolulu warned early Tuesday morning.

The grounds were already saturated from heavy rainfall Monday that caused the Kaupakalua Dam on the island of Maui to overflow. The Weather Service said Tuesday that the dam could potentially fail.

Maui officials on Monday thought the dam had failed but later said it had not suffered structural damage. Still, those in Haiku in the vicinity of the Kaupakalua Dam and Kaupakalua Road were ordered to evacuate, according to Facebook posts on the County of Maui page.

Water levels were above normal, about 3 feet below the top of the dam, a post on the County of Maui page said at about 8:30 a.m. local time Tuesday.

The dam can hold 68 million gallons of water, according to NBC affiliate KHNL.

Nearby residents were told not to return. “People near heavily flowing streams also should evacuate or seek higher ground,” the County of Maui posts said. “Even if it appears that there is less rainfall and conditions are improving, people should not return to the area until there is an ‘all clear’ announcement.”

One evacuation shelter remained open as of Tuesday morning.

Officials said flood waters destroyed Peahi Bridge and heavily damaged the Kaupakalua Bridge in Haiku. At least six homes were heavily damaged or destroyed.

The Maui Fire Department reported responding to more than a dozen calls from residents who were trapped by rising waters.

“This has been unprecedented flooding, and we will be making damage assessments today,” Maui County Mayor Michael Victorino said. “I ask everyone to stay vigilant and be safe.”

A flooded road Monday near the breached Kaupakalua Dam on the island of Maui, Hawaii.Maggie T Sutrov / via Reuters

While some roadways that had been closed Monday have reopened, others remain shuttered, according to the Maui Police Department. And an early morning power outage affected more than 1,300 customers.

A bridge off Peahi Road is overcome by floodwaters above the Kaupakalua Reservoir and Dam after heavy rainfall in Haiku, Maui, Hawaii, on March 8, 2021.Kehaulani Cerizo / The Maui News via AP

“This is a real flooding situation we have not seen in a long time,” Victorino said Monday during a live address on Facebook. “Some of the residents have told me this is the worst they’ve seen in over 25 years.”

“If you have family and friends and you can get out of the area, that is probably preferable. But be careful if you see high water, turn around and go back,” Victorino said. “Do not try to cross it at this time.”

He also urged tourists to stay in their hotel rooms or other lodging and not go out Monday evening.

The Weather Service cautioned residents to expect mudslides in steep terrains.

A dam failure turned fatal in Hawaii in 2006, when seven people were killed after the Ka Loko dam on the island of Kauai collapsed.

But East Maui residents say they haven’t seen rains like Monday’s downpours in years.

“I have lived here for 30 years and I think this is the first time that I have seen so much rain,” Makawao resident Lydia Toccafondi Panzik told KHNL. “I’ve seen hurricane times, I’ve seen floodings, but this was really a bad one.”

The Associated Press contributed.



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Hawaii dam: Evacuations ordered as Kaupakalua Dam on island of Maui is in danger of failure

Heavy rains have led to the dam cresting, the agency said.

“Failure of the dam will produce life-threatening flooding as well as significant property damage in areas downstream from the dam,” according to the National Weather Service in Honolulu.

The evacuation also comes at the same time as a flash-flood warning.

“”The state is standing by to support the County of Maui as residents and visitors downstream of the Kaupakulua Dam evacuate at this hour. Please stay out of the area until the danger has passed and continue to monitor local media for updates,” Hawaii Gov. David Ige said in a statement.

Maui County officials are advising that people near heavily flowing streams should also evacuate or seek higher ground. Evacuation shelters are being opened at the Paia Community Center and Hana High School.

All County of Maui parks are closing for the rest of the day because of heavy rains and flooding, the Department of Parks and Recreation announced.

The parks will remain closed until further notice. Parks will be assessed for reopening on Tuesday.

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Agency cancels Hawaii tsunami watch after huge Pacific quake

The U.S. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center cancelled a tsunami watch Thursday for Hawaii that was issued after a huge earthquake occurred in a remote area between New Zealand and Tonga.

The agency previously cancelled a tsunami warning it had issued for American Samoa.

The magnitude 8.1 quake struck the Kermadec Islands region. It forced thousands of people to evacuate in New Zealand but did not appear to pose a widespread threat to lives or major infrastructure.

A firetruck tells people along the road, through a public address system (PA) to move to higher grounds following a tsunami warning for American Samoa in Pago Pago, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Fili Sagapolutele)

In American Samoa, officials rang village church bells and police in marked vehicles and fire trucks used loudspeakers to spread word of the threat because the territory’s regular outdoor warning system has been out of commission since last year.

TSUNAMI COULD OVERWHELM WASHINGTON COAST, SWAMP STATE WHEN ‘THE BIG ONE STRIKES,’ SIMULATIONS SHOW

Repairs have been on hold because flights to American Samoa were suspended amid the pandemic and technicians have been unable to make the trip.

Residents weren’t taking any chances after a tsunami in 2009 killed 34 people in American Samoa and caused major damage.

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The Kermadec Islands quake was the largest in a series of tremors that hit the region over several hours, including two earlier quakes that registered magnitude 7.4 and magnitude 7.3.

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Love’s Bakery to close after nearly 170 years in business – Honolulu, Hawaii news, sports & weather

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Locally owned and operated, Love’s Bakery,a fixture in Hawaii for over 169 years will cease operations at the end of March due to lossesattributable to Covid-19.“Love’s Bakery has been a beloved brand for nearly 170 years,” stated

Monday, March 1st 2021, 9:07 PM HST



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