Visitors below the cliff at a distance from the critically endangered Hawaiian monk seal. Photo by Summer Fisher |
Monk seal at Green Sand Beach, photo taken at distance with telescopic lens. Photo by Summer Fisher |
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The Kīlauea Summit Area and Corridor Management Plan aims to identify management strategies and solutions to reduce conflictsamong cars, buses, motorcycles, bicyclists (including e-bikes) and pedestrians on park roads and trails that traverse the popular and often-crowded summit of Kīlauea volcano.
An online newsletter describes the desired conditions of the project, the issues the plan will address, and project goals, and is available for comment at https://parkplanning.nps.gov/kilaueasummitcmp.
The public comment period began Feb. 22 and was extended to March 31. "This comment period is the initial phase of the plan and future opportunities to provide input will be announced as the plan develops," says the park statement.
Since 2008, following the first significant summit eruption since 1924, park visitation has soared with most visitors drawn to areas between Uēkahuna and Devastation, including Nāhuku lava tube, Kīlauea Iki, Kīlauea Visitor Center, the entrance station and the overall summit corridor. The high concentration of vehicles and people in a relatively small area often results in full parking lots, lines of traffic at the entrance station, crowded overlooks, resource damage and frustrated visitors.
Major damage to Crater Rim Drive and the loss of buildings and infrastructure during the 2018 Kīlauea eruption and summit collapse has exacerbated park congestion, especially during eruptions, and the busy winter and summer holiday travel seasons. The park lost Jaggar Museum, a portion of Crater Rim Drive, Halema‘uma‘u Overlook and ‘Iliahi Trail due to the eruptive events that year.
The need for, and development of, a Kīlauea summit site plan was included in the Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park 2016 General Management Plan. See: https://www.nps.gov/havo/learn/management/upload/Hawaii-Volcanoes-General-Management-Plan_2016_508.pdf.
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THE SOUTH HAWAI‘I SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA will present the concert An Afternoon at the Movies on Saturday, March 30 at Ocean View Community Center, starting at 2 p.m. The concert is free; donations are appreciated.
Farley Sangels will conduct An Afternoon at the Movies. |
The orchestra will be conducted by Farley Sangels, a musician with a long career in many of the country's top orchestras, and more recently with the Hong Kong Philharmonic. Sangels' taste for crowd-pleasing music and his relaxed conducting style have made him popular with Kaʻū audiences.
The South Hawai‘i Symphony Orchestra is composed of about 20 musicians, largely from Kaʻū, who play a wide variety of orchestral instruments. They perform as volunteers for the community orchestra.
This will be the third concert that the South Hawai‘i Symphony Orchestra has presented. Its previous shows drew audiences of over 100 music fans and culminated in standing ovations.