Kaʻū High School's Class of 2019. Photo from Kaʻū High |
INSPIRED SPEAKERS SHARED THEIR QUEST FOR HAPPINESS AND
SUCCESS with 54 graduates at the Kaʻū High School commencement ceremony Friday
night in Kaʻū District Gym. Principal Sharon Beck bragged about the class of
2019, noting their diversity in personalities, interests, and cultural
backgrounds.
Co-Valedictorians Brennen Nishimura, who is
headed to David Moskalenko, who will attend of Hawaiʻi. Photo by Julia Neal |
Beck said their differences taught them how to work as a team and
to accomplish in a group. She pointed to the Unity Celebration created and
produced by students each year. She pointed to Co-Valedictorian Brennen
Nishimura, who will attend Princeton University
on two scholarships. She noted that Ryan Ah Yee will receive a Hawaiʻi Community
College Tuition Waiver Scholarship and an ʻO Kaʻū Kākou Scholarship.
Wrapped in gifts of love, a graduate with
Dr. Angie Miyashiro. Photo by Julia Neal
|
MeLin Galban
Kin In is one of three graduates receiving an athletic scholarships and going to Washington state. In has signed on to play basketball for Pierce College. Joining her
is Kianie Medeiros-Dancel, also to play basketball. Chaunalisa Velez has signed on to play basketball and volleyball for Everett College.
Jake Villa and Monique Hughes each
received a Rotary Club of Volcano scholarship, with Hughes also receiving a
Citizen Scholar Award. Terree Oyama and Shanastie Hu-Blanco will go to
college on the United States Army GI Bill.
Miss Kaʻū Coffee Helena Nihipali-Sesson
graduates. Photo by Julia Neal
|
The speakers
talked about a wrong attitude that people can adopt about Kaʻū, about this district being remote,
without opportunities to create a successful future. Co-Valedictorian Nishimura
said he emerged from worry about being in Kaʻū, set his goals, and achieved
them, with a scholarship to Princeton.
Capt. Melvin Yokoyama gave the
Commencement Address. He is Commanding Officer of the Naval
Information Warfare
Center of the Pacific and lives in San
Diego , where he leads over 5,000 people. He grew up in
Kaʻū and graduated from Kaʻū High School 31 years ago.
Yokoyama talked about the sugar plantation
days, smelling the sugar from the school grounds, and playing football. He said
he remembers, whenever he faces a big challenge, to think of the believe-in-yourself
mantras he learned in Kaʻū. He urged students to find what they love to do, do
it well, and make the world a better place. He said that working on something
you love brings happiness, no matter how tough the job.
Yokoyama said he learned that money is
not everything, and pointed to wealthy princes in the Middle East
with whom he interacted when he was stationed there. Despite all their
trappings of being rich, he said, they did not have the freedom of choice found
in the United States .
The money didn't buy them happiness, he reported.
The welcome Oli was conducted by Kumu Aina
Akamu, Miss Kaʻū Coffee Helena Nihipali-Sesson, and Mandy Crabbe-Jones. Masters
of Ceremonies were Maliah Ababa and Luke Watson.
Navy Capt. Melvin Yokoyama graduated from Kaʻū 31 years ago
and manages more than 5,000 service men and
women after becoming a Navy pilot.
Photo by Julia Neal
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Class Officers
are President Lei Chun Galban Kin In, Vice President Karlee Fukunaga-Camba,
Treasurer Kanani Petrill-Abrojina, and Secretary Aaron Delos Santos.
Class Advisors
are Aaron Aina Akama, Sonja Caldwell, Tolu Rasmussen, Renee Duflaut, and Janice
Javar.
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VOLCANO'S ʻŌHIʻĀ LEHUA HALF MARATHON IN VOLCANO VILLAGE happens Saturday, July 27. The idea for the new race sparked after local runners, Nick and Kelly Muragin, along with Volcano resident, Keely McGhee, heard that the Volcano Rainforest Run was cancelled, said McGhee. She said they "came together to create this new race for a cause that they all strongly believe in."
This race is
being directed by Hawai'i Island Racers. The organization's goal is to "bring
business to the Volcano area while providing a low cost running event for the
community," said McGhee.
In addition, the race will donate a
portion of the proceeds to the University of Hawaiʻi Foundation to assist with
research on the prevention of Rapid ‘Ōhi‘a Death. The Volcano
School of Arts & Sciences will open
their campus to runners and spectators to sponsor the inaugural event and aid
in the fight against ROD.
The inaugural
Volcano's ‘Ōhi‘a Lehua Half Marathon includes a 5K and a Keiki Dash. The event
happens the same weekend as the new Experience Volcano Festival. The
half-marathon begins at 7 a.m. at Volcano
School of Arts & Sciences' Haunani
Road campus. The 5K starts from the same location
at 7:15 a.m. The Keiki Dash takes
place in the VSAS field at 10 a.m. ,
and will consist of two a 300 meter run for the 6 and under age group, and a
600 meter for the 7 to 10 year old age group.
Packets can be picked
up Friday, July 26, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ,
location to be determined, or Saturday, July 27, 5:30
a.m. to 6:30 a.m. at the VSAS race site. Late registration is
available at Packet Pick-up on both Friday and Saturday. Entry fees are
non-refundable and non-transferable. To change to a different distance, pay the
difference to upgrade; no refunds for downgrading. There is a four hour
cut-off for the half marathoners; the finish line officially closes at 11 a.m. Results will be posted in real-time at Race Results. Half
marathoners will receive a finisher's medal. Pre-registered half marathoners
and 5Kers will receive a finisher's shirt.
Volcano's ‘Ohi‘a
Lehua Half Marathon will be run up Wright Road
with an elevation change of about 500 feet. Runners will turn around at the top
and head back down. The 5K features rolling hills. There will be six aid
stations for the half marathon and one aid station for the 5K.
Race Day weather
can be as low as the mid 50s at the start of the race and can get up to the mid
70s. July is known to have moderate amounts of rain in Volcano, so be prepared for
the possibly of a sprinkle.
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SPECULATION OVER PUNA GEOTHERMAL'S AFFECT ON THE 2018 KĪLAUEA ERUPTION was brought up by east Kaʻū Sen. Russell Ruderman on the PBS program Insights on PBS Hawaiʻi. Episode Puna Geothermal Restart? featured Host Yunji de Nies moderating Ormat's Senior Director Hawaiian Affairs at Puna Geothermal Venture, Mike Kaleikini; Hawaiian Electric Company Senior Vice President of Public Affairs, Scott Seu; Life of the Land and Puna Pono Alliance Vice President, Henry Curtis; and Ruderman.
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HIGH-SPEED BROADBAND ACCESS is headed to Hawaiian Ocean View
Estates, reported Sen. Brian Schatz. He is lead Democrat on the Senate
Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, Innovation, and the Internet. The
Federal Communications Commission announced that Hawaiian Telcomwill receive $18.1 million over 10 years to "expand high-speed broadband access to 3,936 underserved locations across the most rural areas of Hawai‘i," reported Schatz.
The funding is authorized through the FCC's Connect America Fund Phase II auction, a 10-year program "intended to close the digital divide in rural America ."
Said Schatz, "Broadband access opens doors. This investment will help people in Hawai‘i's most rural areas access health care, do their homework, make a living, and more."
Other areas Hawaiian Telcom plans to
expand broadband service to on Hawai‘i Island include Hawaiian
Acres, Kohala, Laupahoehoe, Orchidland, and Pepeʻekeo. Maui ,
Oʻahu, Molokaʻi, Lanaʻi, and Kauaʻi will also benefit from the program.
SPECULATION OVER PUNA GEOTHERMAL'S AFFECT ON THE 2018 KĪLAUEA ERUPTION was brought up by east Kaʻū Sen. Russell Ruderman on the PBS program Insights on PBS Hawaiʻi. Episode Puna Geothermal Restart? featured Host Yunji de Nies moderating Ormat's Senior Director Hawaiian Affairs at Puna Geothermal Venture, Mike Kaleikini; Hawaiian Electric Company Senior Vice President of Public Affairs, Scott Seu; Life of the Land and Puna Pono Alliance Vice President, Henry Curtis; and Ruderman.
East Kaʻū Sen. Russell Ruderman. Photo from Big Island Video News |
Ormat's Senior Director Hawaiian Affairs at PGV, Mike Kaleikini. Photo from Big Island Video News |
Ruderman asked
for a "real analysis" of whether or not "there was any
relationship between the 30 years of injection of fluid that (PGV has) been
doing," and the "location and intensity" of last year's eruptive
events in Puna. He referred to a Tufts
University study that states "data
suggest a new link between subsurface injections and earthquake swarms" published
May 2 in ScienceDaily.
Said Ruderman, "It
has not been disproven that those two are related. What we saw was an eruption
that was unlike any we've seen before: much hotter, much more fluid, much more
fast moving, with 24 fissures erupting in an area within about a mile of PGV.
There's a 20-mile rift zone. If you just did a probability analysis, what're
the chances 24 fissures erupted within a mile of PGV, by coincidence? That
probability is one in a million. We have had a lot of research on the effects
of fracking, of which fluid reinjection is form of fracking.
A line of fissures along the property line of PGV. Photo from Big Island Video News |
"This month, Tufts
University came out showing
fracking – including fluid injection – causes seismicity, earthquakes, and
fractures for miles around it. They've been doing this. And we see a line of
fissures, right along their property line. Aren't we going to — are we really
going to move forward, before answering the question: did this activity
contribute at all to the nature and intensity of last year's eruption? I
believe that question needs to be answered before we go forward."
Kalekini
responded that the idea is "absurd," and that USGS scientist-in-charge
Tina Neal "put out a nice write-up about how the earthquakes travel down
from Halemaʻumaʻu, down through Puʻu ʻŌʻō and along the east rift." He
said USGS provided "a sound scientific explanation about this 2018
eruption. So I'd be happy to share that report with you." He remarked that
PGV wasn't there in 1955 or 1960, or in the 1800s, when there were other
eruptions through fissures in the area. "There's going to be more
eruptions. Whether PGV is there or not."
Lava coverage after the eruption had quietened. Photo from Big Island Video News |
Ruderman said he
has seen the report and "was in the room when someone asked USGS this
question." He said USGS said "the lava looks for cracks and weak
spots," and that the follow-up question, "are you aware of the
reinjection going on there?" was not answered. "From that point on,
USGS has been silent on this subject. I think it needs to be addressed… I'm not
saying you caused the eruption. I'm saying location and intensity could well
have been influenced by the reinjection you've been doing. It has not been
disproven. It has not been objectively analyzed yet."
Host Yunji de Nies, center, moderating Ruderman, far left, and Kaleikini, far right. Scott Seu, near left, and Henry Curtis, near right, also participate in the discussion. Photo from Big Island Video News |
The discussion also ranged from how and when the geothermal facility will again start providing power to Hawaiʻi Island through Hawaiʻi Electric Light and whether a supplemental environmental impact statement should be done, to whether or not Hawaiʻi Island needs a geothermal plant. The facility provided 31 percent of electricity used through HELCo on Hawaiʻi Island in 2017.
Said Ruderman, "As for the need for the power: we, us consumers, don't feel that need. HELCo assured us in the very first week that they could be OK without it." He said two "major utility scale solar plants with battery backup" are "coming on line next year at a much, much lower cost. So if we don't need electricity, if PGV comes back on line, with its current contract, we will be paying more than if they don't come back on line. So we don't feel the need for it, we don't know whether it's wise for the rate payers."
Said Ruderman, "As for the need for the power: we, us consumers, don't feel that need. HELCo assured us in the very first week that they could be OK without it." He said two "major utility scale solar plants with battery backup" are "coming on line next year at a much, much lower cost. So if we don't need electricity, if PGV comes back on line, with its current contract, we will be paying more than if they don't come back on line. So we don't feel the need for it, we don't know whether it's wise for the rate payers."
See the program at Big Island Video News. Learn more about PGV's restarting efforts on May 19 Kaʻū News Briefs.
To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see Facebook. Follow us on Instagram and Twitter. See our online calendars and our latest print edition at kaucalendar.com.
See public Kaʻū events, meetings, entertainment.
Print edition of The Kaʻū Calendar is free to 5,500 mailboxes
throughout Kaʻū, from Miloliʻi through Volcano, and free on
stands throughout the district. Read online at kaucalendar.com
|
NEW FARMERS MARKET in Ocean View happens every Friday from 9 a.m. until pau at 92-1424 Moana Drive .
Expect vendor goods to include local produce, Hawaiian made products, and free visitor
info. There is a toilet on site. New vendors welcome. Call 808-989-2026 for
more.
UPCOMING
SUNDAY, MAY 26
ʻO Kaʻū Kākou Public Update on Senior Housing happens Sunday, May 26, 4 p.m. okaukakou.org
MONDAY, MAY 27
Memorial Day Ceremony, Monday, May 27, 3 p.m., Front Lawn, Kīlauea Military Camp. Keynote speaker: Lt. Col. Loreto Borce, Jr., Commander of Pohakuloa Training Area. Open to public. In case of rain ceremony will be moved indoors. Park entrance fees apply. 967-8371, kilaueamilitarycamp.com
Memorial Day Buffet, Monday, May 27, 4 p.m. – 7 p.m., Crater Rim Café, Kīlauea Military Camp. BBQ Pork Ribs, Local Styles Fried Chicken, Smoked Vegetable Kabobs, salads and more. $20.95/Adults, $11.95/Child (ages 6-11). No reservations required. Open to all authorized patrons and sponsored guests. Park entrance fees apply. 967-8356, kilaueamilitary
camp.com
TUESDAY, MAY 28
HOVE Road Maintenance Board Mtg., Tuesday, May 28, 10 a.m., HOVE Road Maintenance office. hoveroad.com, 929-9910, gm@hoveroad.com
Ka‘ū Food Pantry, Tuesday, May 28, 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m., St. Jude's Episcopal Church in Ocean View. Volunteers welcome. Dave Breskin, 319-8333
After Dark in the Park – Hawai‘i's Landfill Crisis: From Hopeless to Hopeful, Tuesday, May 28, 7 p.m., Kīlauea Visitor Center Auditorium. Special guest speakers Lori Kahikina, P.E. Director, Department of Environmental Services and Jim Howe, Emergency Services Director present sobering look at Hawaiʻi’s future and a call to action that provides hope while separating myth from reality. Free; park entrance fees apply. 985-6011, nps.gov/havo
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29
Kōkua Kupuna Project, Wednesday, May 29 – last Wednesday, monthly – 9 a.m. – 11 a.m., St. Jude's Episcopal Church, Ocean View. Seniors 60 years and older encouraged to attend, ask questions, and inquire about services offered through Legal Aid Society of Hawai‘i – referral required, 961-8626 for free legal services. Under 60, call 1-800-499-4302. More info: tahisha.despontes@legalaidhawaii.org, 329-3910 ext. 925. legalaidhawaii.org
THURSDAY, MAY 30
Summer Keiki Learn-to-Swim Registration, Thursday, May 30, and Friday, May 31, 1 p.m. – 4 p.m., Pāhala Swimming Pool, Ka‘ū High & Pāhala Elementary School Campus. $15 per session; cash or check accepted. Payable to County Director of Finance. 928-8177, hawaiicounty.gov/pr-aquatics
Volcano Friends Feeding Friends, Thursday, May 30, 4 p.m. – 6 p.m., Cooper Center, Volcano Village. Free community dinner for all. Additional packaged goods to take home for those in need. Donations and volunteers encouraged. 967-7800, thecoopercenter.org
FRIDAY, MAY 31
Coffee Talk at Kahuku, Roosevelt's Tree Army: Civilian Conservation Corps in Hawai‘i, Friday, May 31, 9:30 a.m. – 11 a.m., Kahuku Unit Visitor Contact Station. Talk story with Dr. Jadelyn Moniz Nakamura. "Bring your own cuppa." Free. nps.gov/havo
SATURDAY, JUNE 1
Lā‘au Lapa‘āu Workshop, Saturday, June 1, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m., Kaʻū District Gym. Free workshop open to the public from Hui Mālama Ola Nā ‘Ōiwi. Hui Mālama Traditional Health team, 969-9220, hmono.org
Andy McKee Plays in Volcano at Kīlauea Military Camp's Kīlauea Theater on Saturday, June 1. Tickets are $48. Show begins at 7:45 p.m. A Park entrance fee may apply if arriving before 7:30 p.m. McKee is an acoustic guitar "virtuoso, a master practitioner" of folk, blues, bluegrass, and other musical genres, says the event description. Call (808) 896-4845 for information or to purchase tickets.
Summer Programs for Kaʻū High & Pāhala Elementary registrations are open.
Uplink All-Stars runs Friday, June 7 through Friday, June 28 for students in grades 6, 7, and 8.
Algebra camp is also open to students in grades 6, 7, and 8 from Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 21.
Uplink All-Stars runs Friday, June 7 through Friday, June 28 for students in grades 6, 7, and 8.
Algebra camp is also open to students in grades 6, 7, and 8 from Monday, June 10 through Friday, June 21.
All three programs require registration by calling 313-4100.
Seamless Summer Program, open to all people under age 18, no registration required, offers free breakfast from Exhibit – Hulihia, A Complete Change: The Hawai‘i Nei Invitational Exhibition, runs through Sunday, June 16, daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Volcano Art Center Gallery. Multi-media exhibition of seven artists. Free; National Park entrance fees may apply. 967-7565, volcanoartcenter.org
Full-Time Teaching Assistant Sought by Tūtū & Me to implement curriculum for caregivers and keiki in Tūtū & Me Traveling Preschool in Kaʻū. Competitive salary and benefits package, including medical, dental, drug, and vision; flexible spending plan; 403b retirement plan; vacation, sick days, and 14 paid days off; and more.
Hi-Employment Seeks Student Employees to work in a macadamia nut orchard on weekends and holidays. Duties include hand-harvesting macadamia nuts, filling and transporting nut bag and buckets, loading 25-plus pound bags into truck beds, and possible clearing of brush and branches. Applicants must be at least 15 years old, have a work permit, two forms of ID, and transportation to "Panaʻewa Stretch." Call for more details, 238-3741, hi-employment.com.