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Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Kaʻū News Briefs Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2023

Between Ka Lae and Kamilo volunteers from here and New Zealand picked up over 1,800 tons of marine debris.
Photo by Megan Lamson/Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund

HAWAI‘I WILDLIFE FUND TEAMED UP WITH SEA CLEANERS NEW ZEALAND LAST WEEK. They brought a group of visiting youth and young adult ocean ambassadors from New Zealand, Australia and Oʻahu, to help support cleanup efforts in Kaʻū with HWF, and in Kohala with Pololū community stewards. The dozen ambassadors, ages 16 to 20, also led environmental education lessons in classrooms at public schools
    Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund community-based cleanup events are funded by private donations and a 2021 NOAA Marine Debris Program competitive grant award, and this Sea Cleaners youth ambassador trip was supported by the Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority, Hawaiian Airlines, and Billabong Australia.
Sea Cleaners from New Zealand joined Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund to clean up the Kaʻū
 Coast from Kalae to Kamilo. Photo by Megan Lamson/ Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund
    Megan Lamson, Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund Program Director, said, "Over 100 bags of ocean pollution were removed from the coastline between Ka Lae and Kamilo with support from community volunteers and the ocean ambassadors with Sea Cleaners during two cleanup events. We were able to remove over 1,850 pounds of marine debris, including an estimated 400 pounds of derelict fishing net bundles, and divert approximately 500 pounds of plastic pollution from the landfill by collaborating with local artist, Don Elwing of Sea Love. Together, we can stem the rising tide of trash and better protect our native wildlife and coastal communities."
    Capt. Hayden Smith, founder of Sea Cleaners said, "We've made a lot of progress, but there is still much to do. That's why — even 20 years in — we still measure every day in bags of rubbish removed from the water – this isn't the kind of problem you can solve overnight with a silver bullet, it takes consistent effort every day. It will require ongoing work from all of us, from governments to companies and individual people, to shift the health of our oceans back towards where they need to be."
    Kona-based nonprofit, Clean Rewards, also teamed up with Tan & Salty Hawaiʻi to host a community

Interested persons can volunteer for cleanups in Kaʻū. 
Photo by Megan Lamson/Hawai'i Wildlife Fund
cleanup event on Saturday, Sept. 16 at Old Kona Airport with an educational booth by The Marine Mammal Center, beginning with with a yoga class from The Yoga Nest. They had 15 volunteers who helped to remove 10 pounds of trash, primarily small pieces of litter (e.g., microplastics, cigarette butts, bottle caps), including 501 cigarette butts.
   Aaron Draime, founder of Clean Rewards, said, "Small sustainable changes create ripples to help change the future."
    Also on Saturday, the Marine Option Program led 16 University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo students to clean along the Hilo coastline from the mouth of Wailoa River (near Hilo Bay Café and Liliʻuokalani Gardens) to the old Uncle Billy's Hotel. This MOP team removed an estimated 150-200 pounds of trash, including many old bike parks, broken glass fragments and miscellaneous accumulated litter from abandoned homeless encampments. Fishing line collected that day was added to the monofilament line bins that were previously installed by a past UHH MOP student, and are currently being maintained by the Hawaiʻi DLNR Division of Aquatic Resources' Protected Species Program staff.
Fishing nets that wash into tidepools and
the shore are major polluters of Kaʻū Coast.
Photo by Megan Lamson/Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund
 Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund recommends that interested persons support upcoming legislation to reduce the amount of single-use plastics in Hawaiʻi County. "Try your best to eliminate disposable items from your daily lives, and join in for a community or coastal cleanup event near you! You can check out cleanup calendars on various NGO websites or ask HWF about their do-it-yourself beach cleanup tips for local    County / State beach parks and along public trails."
    Hawaiʻi Wildlife Fund has removed over 325 tons (650,000 pounds) of marine debris from the shores of Hawaiʻi Island since 2003 (over 90% recovered from along the remote Kaʻū coastline) with help from over 60,000 hours of volunteer labor.
    Clean Rewards has removed over 16,000 pounds of litter since it was founded in 2018. Clean Rewards will have a station at the Hokulia Bypass Cleanup hosted by Miss Kona Coffee 2023, Shyla Victor, on Saturday, Sept. 23 from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. with kids events and entertainment to follow in the Keauhou Shopping Center from noon to 3 p.m.
    Cleanup contacts – Hawaiʻi Island: Hawai‘i Wildlife Fund (Kaʻū) – kahakai.cleanups@gmail.com or wildhawaii.org/calendar; University of Hawai‘i at Hilo Marine Options Program: http://uhhmop.hawaii.edu/;
Clean Rewards (Kona) – cleanrewards@gmail.com; Clean The Pacific (North Kohala) cleanthepacific808@gmail.com; Keep Puakō Beautiful (South Kohala)- keeppuakobeautiful@gmail.com; Ocean Defenders Alliance (Kona – Kohala dive cleanups) – sarah@oceandefenders.org
Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park invites volunteers to help
 at its native plant nursery. NPS Photo by Jay Robinson


VOLUNTEERS ARE INVITED TO THE PLANT RESTORATION NURSERY at Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park. Nursery Operations Lead Eric-Preston Hameren said the Ke Ēweiēwe – Plant Restoration project welcomed volunteers back to the greenhouses "to give all of our plants some love! I am very excited for you all to see the plants because everything has grown so much over the summer." Sign up to volunteer for September and October at https://forms.office.com/g/DnGcatTKmS. Call 808-985-6195.


Band-rumped storm-petrel lives at sea but nests on Mauna Loa. DLNR wildlife biologist Alex
Wang searched for the bird for seven years and finally found its nesting place in July
Photo by Alex Wang

THE BAND-RUMPED STORM-PETREL HAS BEEN FOUND. State Department of Land & Natural Resources released a report on the critically endangered species on Tuesday saying:
    For seven years, Alex Wang, Wildlife Biologist with the DLNR’s Division of Forestry & Wildlife, has searched for signs of the band-rumped storm-petrel, or ‘akē‘akē, nesting on Hawai‘i Island. After a long process of night surveys requiring patience, method refinement, and a generous dose of resolve, that day finally arrived in July.
    The cryptic, nocturnal seabird species is native to Hawai‘i and inhabits remote areas of our state, with the vast majority likely breeding on Kaua‘i. Though the storm-petrel is widespread across the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans with numbers estimated at 150,000, the Hawaiian population is small, maybe fewer than
The critically endangered band-rumped storm-petrel was found in a huge lava cave
 on Mauna Loa with help from detective dogs. Photo by Alex Wang
250 pairs. It is listed as Critically Endangered. As Wang and a group of fellow Hawai‘i Island biologists have learned, it is challenging to locate and estimate the population size of the smallest and rarest seabird species to breed in Hawai‘i.
    “I’m super excited to finally confirm a burrow, because ‘akē‘akē aren’t the easiest to track,” said Wang. “Investing so much time and energy, to get proof is a relief. It’s been a long time coming.”
    Prior to the recent discovery, only four other nesting sites have been confirmed in the state. Part of the challenge of tracking the species is their furtive behavior. On Hawai‘i Island, these birds nest in high-elevation burrows and crevices on barren lava flows, often in burrow complexes with multiple entrances and exits.
    ‘Akē‘akē also leave their burrows before first light, spend the entire day, or multiple days at sea, and return only after dark. And, unlike their larger cousins, the Hawaiian Petrel or ʻUaʻu, who leave guano just outside their own burrows making detection easier, ‘akē‘akē offer no such assistance.
    Steps taken to determine their presence at the Mauna Loa Forest Reserve include the use of infrared thermal binoculars, remote acoustic recorders called song meters, night vision equipment, and motion-activated game cameras that canvas the lava flows for nightly bird activity. In addition to these tools, special ‘akē‘akē detection dogs were brought on board to pinpoint potential nests. The addition of the dogs, Slater and Ikaika, and biologist/trainer Michelle Reynolds to the team, offered a complementary and welcome boost to the search effort.
    “The detection dogs are game changers,” said Wang. “They’ve made the search much more feasible. Each time we take them out, we uncover more potential burrows. It’s a big step.”
    Ecological detection dogs are trained similarly to dogs used in law enforcement. The dogs get imprinted on an odor, are reinforced to associate that odor through a primary reward, and use their keen sense of smell to locate the scent.
A detection dog imprinted with the odor of the endangered
petrel worked with the researchers to find their bird.
Photo Alex Wang
    “One of the most fantastic things about dog olfaction is their ability to navigate,” Reynolds said. “It’s not that they can just smell it, they can find it.” She added that it’s more of a game than an obedience activity for the dogs. More fun than work.
    It was five-year-old Ikaika who discovered the burrow which was later confirmed by game camera images. Armed with little more than a sharp nose and an intrinsic drive for a “rewarding” job, dogs can spend hours tracking down a scent.
    Reynolds acknowledged that paw protection was a concern that could hinder their search capability due to the rough, uneven surfaces of the pāhoehoe lava. She alleviated the issue by creating special lava booties constructed from motorcycle tire inner tubes. This made a potential major issue a minor one.
    With the help of the detection dogs, Wang is hopeful the team can track down more petrels in the near future. Their work to find these stealthy ‘akē‘akē is important as they may be endemic and soon be recognized as a distinct species. In the meantime, he wants to defend these birds from predator threats to ensure their continued existence.
    “We know these seabirds are vulnerable to invasive mammals, especially cats and mongooses,” Wang said. He hopes to add a predator-proof fence as a more secure control method to the traps and other protections to help preserve this endangered species indefinitely.

Monday, September 18, 2023

Kaʻū News Briefs Monday, Sept. 18, 2023

National Park Service staff and conservation dogs on petrel survey on Mauna Loa. A $10,000 donation goes toward
protection of the federally endangered Hawaiian petrel and volcanic eruption response. See more below.
Photo from Hawai‘i Pacific Parks Association

HAWAIIAN HOME LANDS BENEFICIARIES TOOK THEIR CONCERNS directly to the Hawaiian Homes Commission and its Chair Kali Watson during a meeting in Nāʻālehu on Sunday. The public commentary followed a presentation by Department of Hawaiian Home Lands leaders. 
    Watson said he and the commission, all new to their positions, will be much more aggressive on getting Hawaiians into houses and onto pastoral and agricultural lands in Kaʻū.
    See the entire meeting at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jkQgHjhG6rI&t=1198s.  
    Jeff Kekoa, President of Kaʻū Hawaiian Home Lands Association, said Kaʻū Hawaiians have been waiting a long time "for actually putting people on the land down there at South Point...What's holding everything up is the water so I am glad you guys working on that right now." 
    Kekoa pointed out that there are 7,390 people from Hawai‘i Island alone on the waiting list for ag lands and 2,022 for pastoral lands. "That's over 9,000 people waiting, and I'm just wondering if maybe we can help people get off the list. "We're getting to the age where we're now more concerned about at least getting on the land and transferring it to our mo'opuna; cause we're getting older, not sure how many more years we have left to do things." 
     In talking about long waits for land, Kekoa reported that the Kaʻū Hawaiian Home Lands Association applied for five acres for a sustainable farming project which was approved by Hawaiian Homes Commission in 2016 for mauka Wai‘ōhinu but the organization didn't get a right of entry until 2022. In the six years, it became overgrown and the group is planning to spend more time getting it ready for farming.
    Paul Makuakane said the focus for the Wai‘ōhinu Kaʻū Hawaiian Home Lands acreage is taro and the plan is to start in January, with about 500 huli ready to go. He said the group wants to produce poi and taro leaf.
    Makuakane said he has personally been on the waiting list for Hawaiian Home Lands for some 35 years. He said he doesn't want his mo'opuna to be on the waiting list.
    Kekoa also called for protecting sacred sites at South Point and said young drunk people recently flipped a truck doing doughnuts on the side of Pu'u Ali'i, a burial ground. He said, "We can prevent outsiders coming to Kaʻū and doing those crazy things with their off-road vehicles." He said there is a need for security to watch the place, working with Hawaiian Home Lands, DLNR and County of Hawai‘i police department.
    Homesteader Dean Kaniho, who has been on his ranch since the first awards in 1989, compared the degradation of lands around Green Sand Beach at South Poing to the invasive axis deer on Maui, Lana‘i and Moloka‘i lands. The axis deers overgraze, leading to runoff into the ocean, and damaging the aquatic resources. Here the invasion at South Point is people eroding the land and leading to runoff. He said public access at South Point is not being controlled. "This is man-made destruction."
    He said ranchers, farmers and gardeners on Hawaiian Home Lands are helping with some of them fencing their lands to keep people and their off-road vehicles off the land. 
    Kaniho urged Hawaiian Homes commissioners to look at YouTube which promotes and "shows everything on Green Sand Beach... We need help down there." 
    He talked about the DHHL Kaʻū Regional Plan, which calls for managing access: "Nothing happened. He urged Chairman Kali Watson to "make the difference, Commission, make the difference." 
Paul Makuakane, Jeff Kekoa and Kali Watson at  Hawaiian Home Lands
 Commission meeting at Nāʻālehu on Sunday. See meeting at 
    Kaniho remembered his late father, paniolo and South Point rancher Tommy Kaniho, who spoke numerous times years ago before the Hawaiian Homes Commission. Dean Kaniho remembered his father saying, "We got to save 'em for the kids, their children and their grandchildren." Now Dean Kaniko urged the same. "Please, by all means," he pleaded to the Hawaiian Homes commissioners.
    David Kuhalani said he came to the meeting "for our people to get our land on Hawaiian Home Lands. It doesn't matter how big it is. We just need a piece of property to put up a house for our people of Kaʻū. We can't afford these freakin' $300,000 houses. Whoever came, he don't belong here. He rich!"
    Concerning South Point, Kuhalani cautioned that when executing a management plan for South Point, "Don't stop our people from coming down to the beach and go fishing. Don't stop our people from coming down to the beach and go camping. This is where our kids learn how swim. This is where our kids learn how to fish and eat and survive."
   He said, "South Point is the last fishing village of Kaʻū. We get people fishing down there every single day, 24/7 in the night. We got people coming from all over the island. You can't only hand-pick one side of the island. That's why it's called Hawai'i... That is my mana‘o."
    See more testimony and the Department of Hawaiian Homes presentation on planned housing, new agriculture lots, upgrade in the water system and management of traffic to Green Sands Beach in upcoming Kaʻū News Briefs.


HAWAI‘I COUNTY GENERAL PLAN 2045 IS PUBLISHED FOR PUBLIC COMMENT THROUGH NOV. 20. The County of Hawaiʻi Planning Department announced on Monday that it is "proud to announce the release of the recommended General Plan 2045 (September 2023 Draft) on September 18, 2023. The General Plan (GP) serves as a 25-year blueprint for the long-term growth and sustainable development of Hawaiʻi Island. It envisions a future that balances growth with preserving the island's unique cultural and natural resources."

     Mayor Mitch Roth said,
"Sustainability means responsibly safeguarding our environment, resources, and culture for the prosperity of future generations. The General Plan is our roadmap, guiding us to achieve this vital balance. It ensures that our actions as a community align with our commitment to future generations. We take pride in the work accomplished by our community thus far and eagerly anticipate further collaboration to create a plan as diverse and vibrant as the communities we serve."
    The County of Hawaiʻi statement says the County encourages all residents to review the GP and provide feedback through Konveio, an interactive online platform. The link to the Konveio site is cohplanning.konveio.com. "The County will accept public feedback until Nov. 20, 2023. Together, we can take action to ensure a brighter future for our island and planet."
   Also, see the Kaʻū Community Development Plan at https://www.planning.hawaiicounty.gov/general-plan-community-planning/cdp/kau.
    Public Informational Workshops are scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 30 at West Hawaiʻi Civic Center, Building A from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and on Saturday, Oct. 7 at Auntie Sally's Lūʻau Hale from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.

    To stay informed about upcoming events, progress, and the overall process, interested individuals can sign up for the Department's eNews at www.planning.hawaiicounty.gov/general-plan-community-planning/gp/connect. For more information, please get in touch with the County of Hawaiʻi Planning Department at 101 Pauahi Street, Suite 3, Hilo, HI 96720. Call (808) 961-8288 or email generalplan@hawaiicounty.gov.


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SUPPORT FOR ENDANGERED HAWAIIAN PETREL has come from Hawai‘i Pacific Parks Association, which has donated $10,000 to Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park. The money also goes toward meeting future volcanic eruption response needs.
    The funding comes from Hawai‘i Pacific Parks Project Pays It Forward through a donation from the manufacturer of a recent apparel collection designed around Hawaiian volcanoes and the ecosystems they create. 
Parks Project fashion sales raise money for Volcanoes.
    The company Parks Project donated $10,000 to support Hawaiʻi Pacific Parks Association's mission: With the spirit of aloha, to inspire the discovery and stewardship of the natural and cultural heritage of Pacific island parks.
    Surveys for the federally endangered Hawaiian petrel require that park staff work in harsh, remote, high-elevation Mauna Loa nesting areas, notes the statement from Hawai‘i Pacific Parks.
    Hawai‘i Pacific Parks Executive Director Mel Boehl said, “This generous donation from Parks Project goes hand in hand with our longtime support of Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park’s wildlife and other programs over the decades.” 


WORLD TEACHERS'S DAY IS AROUND THE CORNER ON OCT. 27 BUT TEACHERS receive an average of $3,644 less per year than they did 10 years ago when adjusted for inflation, reports the personal-finance website WalletHub. On Monday, WalletHub released its report on 2023's Best & Worst States for Teachers, as well as expert commentary.
    The overall rank for Hawai‘i for teachers, using WalletHub metrics is 49th. Hawai‘i is 51st in the Average Starting Salary for Teachers (Adjusted for Cost of Living). It ranks 35th for Quality of School System, 28th in Pupil-Teacher Ratio and 42nd in  Teachers' Income Growth Potential.
    The top states for teachers, according to WalletHub, are Virginia, New York, Utah, Washington, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Dakota, New Jersey and Georgia.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Kaʻū News Briefs Sunday, Sept. 17, 2023

 
Kaʻū Trojans stir up dust en route to a touchdown drive in Saturday's home game. Photo by Mark Peters. See more below.

KAʻŪ AIR IS CLEANER WITH THE VOLCANIC ERUPTION STOPPING at around noon on Saturday. The eruption "is unlikely to restart," according to USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. The Kīlauea summit eruption that began on Sept. 10 stopped Sept. 16. "No unusual activity has been noted along Kīlauea’s East Rift Zone or Southwest Rift Zone." says the USGS report. On Saturday morning, HVO field crews reported that "active lava was no longer flowing onto Halemaʻumaʻu crater floor and was restricted to a ponded area north of the vents on the downdropped block. They observed lava spattering at the vents cease at approximately 11:15 a.m. Saturday.
    "Overnight webcam views showed some incandescence across the eruption area as lava erupted over the past week continues to cool. Field observations are supported by geophysical data, which show that eruptive tremor (a signal associated with fluid movement) in the summit region decreased over Sept. 15 and 16 and returned to pre-eruption levels by 5 p.m., Sept. 16. Information on the recent Kīlauea summit eruption is available at:https://www.usgs.gov/volcanoes/kilauea/recent-eruption."
    Sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions have decreased to near background levels based upon the very weak plume visible on Sunday morning. Sulfur dioxide levels were measured at a rate of 800 tonnes per day on Saturday, while the eruption was waning. "This value is down dramatically from the 190,000 tonnes per day measured just after the onset of the eruption on Sunday, Sept 10, and is only slightly above the 100-200 tonnes typical of non-eruptive periods," says the USGS report.

Color photographs of scientists near eruption
HVO geologists collect a molten lava sample near the erupting vents during the morning of Sept. 11, 2023.
USGS photo by M. Patrick

VOLCANO WATCH DESCRIBED THE ERUPTION AS ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN.
The weekly column from USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates said that
Kīlauea's eruption was the fifth since 2020 and offered opportunity for Hawaiian Volcano Observatory staff to learn and collaborate with partners at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo Geology Department:
Kīlauea eruptions in 2020–2021, 2021–2022, January–March 2023, and June 2023 started and remained within Halemaʻumaʻu crater, The newest eruption that began Sunday, Sept. 10, also started as a lava fountain bursting from within Halemaʻumaʻu.
   However, in the minutes to hours immediately following eruption start, vents opened to the east, on the downdropped block that lowered during the 2018 summit collapse. This represents the first lava that has erupted within the summit caldera, but out of Halemaʻumaʻu, in 41 years! In 1982, there were two summit eruptions, both lasting less than one day, that occurred outside of Halemaʻumaʻu.
    Since the 2018 summit collapse, eruptions have slowly filled in Halemaʻumaʻu. In fact, the eastern rim of Halemaʻumaʻu is nearly covered with flows originating from the downdropped block. These lava flows are more accessible than those produced during earlier eruptions and geologists were able to collect a molten sample of lava from close to an erupting vent.
University of Hawai‘i at Hilo geology major Paige Johnson
 compresses a lava sample, collected by Hawaiian Volcano
 Observatory scientists during the ongoing Kīlauea summit
 eruption, into a solid pellet that can be analyzed.
UH-Hilo photo by S. Lundblad
    HVO works closely with partners at UH-Hilo to quickly analyze eruption samples. What does a day in the life of a lava sample look like as it makes its way from the volcano to ultimately provide information about the nature of the eruption?
    When they collect a hot and molten lava sample, HVO scientists quench (cool) it in water. The sample collected on Sept. 11 was driven from the eruption to UH-Hilo, where undergraduate geology research assistants immediately started sample preparation and analysis. First, they dried the sample by putting it in a warm oven for two hours.
    In the early afternoon, a portion of the dried sample was pulverized in a paint-shaker-like device called a shatterbox. This process turns the rock into a homogenous powder. The powder was then compressed into a pellet under 25 tons of pressure. The pellet provides a dense, fine-grained, flat surface, that can be analyzed for its bulk composition in an instrument called an Energy Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (EDXRF), which takes only 20 minutes to complete.
    EDXRF uses a small portion of sample, leaving most of the rock for other types of analyses. The chemical composition provided by EDXRF gives a first glimpse of what is happening with the magma during the eruption. Analysis of the sample collected the morning of September 11 was completed less than 24 hours after the eruption began.
    Rapid analyses of eruption samples provide valuable information to track eruptions at Kīlauea. The high-quality geochemical characterization that EDXRF analyses offer in near-real-time allows HVO and UH-Hilo geologists to track daily changes in lava chemistry. The partnership between HVO and UH-Hilo began several years before the devastating 2018 lower East Rift Zone eruption but was put to the test during that eruption.
    Knowing the compositional changes in the lava samples the very same day they erupted proved critical to understanding changes in lava flow behavior as the 2018 eruption transitioned from cooler, sluggish lava, to hotter, faster-moving lava. This was a valuable tool in assessing the hazard to properties from the advancing lava flows.
    Processing eruption samples in a timely manner takes a team. Working together, HVO and UH-Hilo have learned that the temperature and chemistry of lava erupted during this new eruption look very similar to lava from the past four eruptions. This suggests that even if hotter magma from a deeper source is moving into the volcano, it is continuing to mix and cool in a shallower magma body before reaching the surface.
    At HVO, scientists collect samples and other important data about the eruption. At UH-Hilo, faculty and students prepare and analyze the samples. They work together to interpret the compositional data and learn about the processes associated with recent eruptions at Kīlauea.


AT THE UNITED NATIONS ON SUNDAY, GOV. JOSH GREEN SAID, "We are no longer anticipating the destructive effects of climate change — we are now fully enduring them," referring to the deadly August firestorm in Lāhainā. Green spoke about Hawai‘i's efforts to implement policies to achieve the UN's Sustainable Development Goals and the importance of local leadership to achieve the goals by 2030.
    "There is no town, city, or human community on earth that is safe from the kind of extreme weather fueled by climate change that we experienced in Hawai‘i last month. We are in this together — we are all part of one interconnected and interdependent global community."
    Green stated that Hawai‘i commits to move forward "with a higher standard," as reflected in the Aloha+ Challenge and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
   "We urge our friends and neighbors in the global community to join us in our commitment to renewable green energy systems, protecting and strengthening our energy grids, and investing in solutions and technologies that can help reverse climate change," he said.
   This is the second time Green, along with Hawai‘i Green Growth, has addressed a United Nations summit. He first presented at the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development on July 12, "providing the only state-level Voluntary Local Review on implementation of the UN's 17 SDGs, contained in the Aloha+ Challenge," says the statement from his office.
    Kamehameha Schools students opened the session with an oli that rang out through the chamber. Later, Kamehameha Schools Kaʻāmauloa Pathway students presented the second Voluntary Local Review (VLR) in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi, the Hawaiian language.  "This report, drafted in partnership with public and private stakeholders, provided a comprehensive overview of Hawaiʻi's progress and challenges toward meeting the SDGs."
    The Governor said, "The leadership displayed by the students from Kamehameha Schools is nothing short of remarkable. Their dedication to sustainability and their role in presenting the second VLR in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi to the United Nations is a testament to the bright future of Hawaiʻi and the global community."
    Hawaiʻi Green Growth CEO Celeste Connors said, "Hawaiʻi and island economies understand the challenge of achieving a safe, equitable, and resilient future against the backdrop of climate change. They can help the rest of the world navigate towards a more sustainable path for island earth based on their experiences."
    On Monday, Green and the Hawaiʻi Green Growth delegation will participate in a panel titled American Leadership on the SDGs as part of the Brookings Institution/UN Foundation Event. The 20-minute moderated fireside chat will be led by Tony Pipa of Brookings and will provide a platform for in-depth discussions on transitions required to achieve the SDGs by 2030. The panel discussion will be at 2 a.m. HST and is in-person only, with no livestream available.
   Remarks by the Governor and video of the Hawai‘i Green Growth delegation are available via UN Web TV.


Diya Ellis-Reyes rolls out to pass with blocking by Isaiah Manila-Louis and Oli Silva-Kamei. Photo by Mark Peters









Trojans Dominic Nurial-Dacalio and Ian Beck make a nice
 pass block on Honoka‘a defender. Photo by Mark Peters







DUSTED BY THE DRAGONS, Kaʻū Trojans football suffered a loss on Saturday on home turf to the defending BIIF D2 Champions, the Honoka‘a Dragons.
    The next two weekends will feature two more home game opportunities, with game time at 1 p.m. against Kohala on Saturday, Sept. 23 and Pāhoa on Saturday, Sept. 20. The Trojans take to the road against Hawai‘i Preparatory Academy on Saturday, Oct. 7 at 2 p.m.
    Trojans return home for the last two games, the first against Kamehameha School on Saturday, Oct. 14 at 1 p.m. The second is against Honoka'a on Friday, Oct. 20 at 6 p.m.
  In other sports this week, Trojan Girls Volleyball takes on Hawai'i Preparatory at home on Saturday, Sept. 23 at 3:30 p.m.  

Kaʻū Trojans' defense lines up against the defending BIIF D2 Champions, the Honoka‘a Dragons, on Saturday.
Photo by Mark Peters