CONSTRUCTION OF NEW SEWER LINES IN PĀHALA STREETS will start soon. A public meeting will be held next Monday, Jan. 13 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Herkes Kaʻū District Gym Annex. The public meeting was announced on Tuesday by Goodfellow Bros., which won the contract to build the wastewater collection lines and wastewater plant for Hawai'i County. Goodfellow Bros. and county representatives are expected to give an overall explanation of the project which is expected to take 1.5 years.
The project replaces the old sugar plantation gang cesspools and sewer lines that run house to house in the oldest part of the town. Gang cesspools have been illegal in the U.S. for decades and the County took over the system after the sugar company shut down and will replace it.
The wastewater collection line construction calendar includes approximate times when roads will be partially closed as sewer lines are installed in the public right of way, about five to eight feet under the streets and grounds where homes will be hooking up.
Last April, county project manager Mark Grant showed Pāhala residents the wastewater treatment plan. Photo by Michael Neal |
A public presentation in Pāhala by the County last April included the statement that the Waste Water Treatment Plant and new collection system "will meet the goals of the Kaʻū Community Development Plan to improve environmental management facilities of extending wastewater services within the Pāhala Community, which will protect the community health, safety, and the island's environmental resources."
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VOLCANO AWARENESS MONTH program heads to Nāʻālehu on Wednesday with a talk story with USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory chief field engineer Kevan Kamibayashi. He will host a table from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Nāʻālehu Public Library. He invites all questions about recent eruptions in Hawaii, volcanic hazards, how eruptions are monitored, and what it's like working for a volcano observatory? Kamibayashi, who has worked for the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory for over 25 years, will be available to answer those questions and more. People of all ages are invited to talk story, browse resources, and learn more about the volcanoes in this community's backyard.
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Kevan Kamibayashi, Chief Field Engineer for Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, will talk story Wednesday with the public at Nāʻālehu Library. USGS photo |
To read comments, add your own, and like this story, see facebook.com/kaucalendar. See upcoming events, print edition and archive at kaunews.com.
Trojan Girls at Pa'ani: Coach Chantel Bender, Brayshell Hoohuli-Pogtis, Dreana Vierra-Mukini, Rain Nihipali-Sesson, Waileia Kainoa, Coach Connor Norton. Photos from Trojan Wrestling |
Coach Mazyck reported, “This was like wrestling boot camp for the boys. We slept on the mats in the gym for two days, woke up and wrestled the toughest teams around.” Twenty-four teams from across all the Hawaiian Islands and California made the tournament extremely competitive, said the coach. “Dual tournaments are a great way to get mat time. Instead of being bracketed individually by weight class, teams are bracketed against one another wrestling line-up v. line-up."
He explained, "There are 14 weight classes total, so only filling six weights puts Kaʻū at a disadvantage against teams with a full line-up of 14. Each weight class we fail to fill forfeits 6 team points to our opponents, against a full team we are automatically down 48 pts.”
The second day teams were put into three 8-team tournament brackets, Gold, Silver, and Bronze. Kaʻū drew the 8th seed in the bronze bracket, which pitted them against the 1st seed Castle. Losing the dual 60-17, Trojans dropped into the consolation bracket across from Kapolei. “ Kapolei had around the same number of wrestlers as we did. This was the first time in the tournament the Trojans had an opportunity to win a dual, the boys rallied and the dual was tense.” The dual ended with a tie score of 24-24, with the Trojans winning through the criteria of having more wins(including forfeits). The win against Kapolei advanced the Trojans to the 5th place match against Kamehameha Big Island’s B team. “With the opportunity to place 5th in a bracket in which they were expected to take 8th the boys wrestled hard and came out victorious with a narrow 30-27 win for 5th. It was an amazing way to end such a grueling weekend. As they are beginning to understand, nothing good comes easy.”
The Mighty Trojan female wrestlers competed the same days just down the road at Kamehameha Kapalama. They participated in the Pa’ani Challenge, one of the largest gatherings of female wrestlers in the nation. With approximately 400 female wrestlers from the islands and the mainland. “This is a once in a lifetime opportunity for any female wrestler, the organization pays for all the girls' flights, and pays for 1-night in a hotel. That alone is a huge blessing, not to mention the event they offer,” said the coach.
He said, “ Without the support of our school, amazing community organizations like OKK, the generosity of the organizers of the Pa’ani Challenge and the Hiram Palimo’o Duals we would not have been able to take advantage of such opportunities. The Mighty Trojan wrestling team can’t begin to thank these people enough.”