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Sunday, November 24, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Sunday, Nov. 24, 2013

Ka`u beekeeper Eric Belcher won first place in the light, mixed floral division yesterday at the Hawai`i Honey Festival.
Photo by Julia Neal
A KA`U HONEY produced by the bees of Eric Belcher, who owns 71 acres off Ka`alaiki Road, the old sugar haul road between Pahala and Na`alehu, took a first prize in the Hawai`i Honey Festival yesterday at Nani Mau Gardens. His Ka`u honey comes from Christmas berry, ohi`a lehua, paperbark and macadamia nut blossoms next to Belcher’s land – from orchards of Edmund C. Olson. Belcher is a member of Big Island Beekeepers Association and manned the organization’s booth at the Honey Festival. His Ka`u honey took first in the light, mixed floral division. Its brand name is `Aina Mele Pure Hawaiian Raw Honey. Belcher is the brother of Wood Valley flower and coffee grower Claudia McCall.
East Ka`u state Senator Russell Ruderman, right, played rock and roll for the Hawai`i Honey
Festival yesterday at Nani Mau Gardens. Photo by Julia Neal
      The Hawai`i Honey Festival at the recently reopened Nani Mau Gardens in Kea`au drew more than 2,000 people, said organizers Carol Conner and Chelle Pahinui. One of the participants was East Ka`u Senator Russell Ruderman, who played rock and roll in his band. Displays included honey, candles, soaps and other beeswax and honey products.
    The sponsoring organization is Big Island Beekeepers Association. The group assists with the startup of apiaries. It helps with marketing honeybee products, provides community service with bee issues and supports public policy to improve conditions for persons keeping honeybees, including lobbying for the Save Apiary Program Act. It supports the activities of the State Apiculture Specialist and sponsors continuing beekeeping education. The organization recently helped to sponsor the visit of the American Honey Queen Caroline Adams, who gave talks to seniors in Pahala and classes at Na`alehu Elementary School.
Carol Connor (middle) helped organize
the Honey Festival. Photo by Julia Neal
     Gov. Neil Abercrombie proclaimed yesterday Hawa`i Honey Festival Day, honoring the organization for remaining vigilant to the education of beekeepers and promoting the importance of the honeybees to agricultural sustainability, endorsing the vital role pollination plays in the health of our national forests and grasslands, providing forage, fish and wildlife, timber, water, mineral resources, recreational opportunities as well as enhancing economic development for our communities. The proclamation noted that honeybees are essential partners of farmers and ranchers in producing much of our food supply, locally, noting they are particularly important pollinators for our macadamia nut and coffee industries. See more at bigislandbeekeepers.com.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

“BLESSED WITH SEVERAL SOURCES OF RENEWABLE ENERGY, Ka`u has the opportunity to benefit from Hawai`i’s transition to a more sustainable energy future,” according to a new draft document for Ka`u Community Development Plan. Appendix V4C: Local Economic Development Analysis discusses solar water and photovoltaic, wind, micro-hydroelectric and biofuel. 
      According to the analysis, while South Point features strong and consistent trade winds, making it one of the best sites in the world for generating electricity using wind turbines, “many other areas in Ka`u are well suited to wind power generation.”
      Regarding hydropower, the document states that “Ka`u’s system of irrigation tunnels is uniquely suited for additional development of hydropower systems. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is also a potential funding source for these types of ventures.”
      The Olson Trust’s micro-hydropower operation is an example discussed in the document. The system “has the potential to power about 400 homes in Pahala along with operations at the new Ka`u Coffee Mill & Visitor Center and macadamia nut husking operations. The hydropower system costs approximately $1.5 million and has an anticipated three-year payback period, ” according to the analysis.
      Regarding biofuel, the analysis cites a 2006 report on biodiesel crop implementation in Hawai`i that suggests that 25,000 acres in Ka`u could be placed into agroforestry operations and that diverse crops be considered “to capitalize on the rainfall range (30” to 80”) in the region.
Ocean View map shows parcels slated for solar energy
development in yellow.
      “Because the fuel-to-energy conversion is more efficient, biodiesel is better suited as a transportation fuel than it is for power generation,” the document states. “Therefore, biofuels are not yet competitive in the power-generation market. In contrast, biodiesel on the mainland is being developed for transportation end use, and the prices are competitive with petroleum-based diesel. The August 2013 State Energy Policy notes that ‘biofuels should be targeted primarily for jet fuel and used in electric generation only as a transitional use.’”
      Specifically regarding the `Aina Koa Pono project, which would construct and operate a biorefinery and use about 13,000 acres in Ka`u to provide the feedstock for the planned biofuel facility near Pahala, the CDP document refers to a comparative analysis of land uses for diversified agriculture and biofuel feedstock production done by a group of students in an industrial ecology course at Yale’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. The group concluded that water demand for biofuel feedstock cultivation is higher than for other agricultural activities, “possibly making biofuel feedstock cultivation a difficult endeavor in arid Ka`u, especially on unirrigated lands.”
      Solar is another renewable energy sector discussed. Several solar farms are under development in the Ocean View area, as a result of amendments to a law expediting renewable energy projects, the document states. Also, “solar farms are not addressed in the county zoning code, as such, so solar energy facilities currently only require building permits.”
      In April 2012, building permits were issued to install solar photovoltaic systems on 22 approximately 15-acre parcels makai of the highway at Hawai`i Blvd. Also, Solar Hub Utilities “is expected to begin construction soon on a series of one-acre solar arrays on three-acre parcels in Ocean View makai. An interconnectivity study for HELCO was recently completed, and Solar Hub Utilities is contracting with HELCO as part of the feed-in tariff program,” according to the analysis.
      Regarding geothermal, the document states that “continued strong opposition to further geothermal development in Puna may help to encourage interest in other areas such as Ka`u.” The document identifies possible geothermal sites near South Point and between Pahala and Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park in the Ka`u desert.
      “There is a range of opportunities for Ka`u to benefit from the strong growth in the renewable energy sector,” the document states. “To date, firms from mostly outside the community have taken advantage of these opportunities. But they have encountered a range of challenges related to technology, land use, transmission and financing.
Possible geothermal sites include ares of South Point
and the Ka`u Desert.
      “Proven decentralized, locally managed alternatives may be more appropriate for Ka`u. Smaller systems create more jobs, circulate local dollars within the community and increase local energy reliability and independence.
      “Because many renewable energy jobs are in construction, Ka`u’s relatively large workforce of tradesmen is well positioned. However, to take full advantage of these opportunities, residents will have to build the requisite skills in installation, sales, operations and maintenance specific to renewable technologies,” the document concludes. 
      The draft document is available for review at area libraries and community centers and online at kaucdp.info. Planners seek input from the public by Dec. 16. A feedback form is available on the webpage.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

“WE HAVE THE GIFT OF GEOTHERMAL ENERGY,” says Richard Ha, owner of Hamakua Springs Country Farms, in a recent Civil Beat commentary. “We are extremely fortunate here on the Big Island to have a resource that most places don’t have.” 
      According to Ha, the biggest problem we face today is at the intersection of energy and agriculture. He writes, “As petroleum prices rise, there’s a direct consequence on agriculture and everything that goes into it (fertilizer, chemicals, packing materials, etc.).”
      Ha says Hawai`i Island is far more dependent on oil than the U.S. mainland is: “We generate 78 percent of our electricity from oil, whereas on the mainland, it’s only two percent. As oil prices rise, everything that has electric costs associated with it gets more expensive. We already see this happening.
      “Geothermal costs only half as much as oil, and the resource will be stable (we will be over the ‘hot spot’ that makes it possible) for 500,000 years.
Richard Ha
      “If we increase our use of geothermal over the years as the price of oil rises, we will be more competitive with the rest of the world. This will be good for our island’s ag industry and also for our people, who will see prices go down, instead of up.
      Ha is concerned that the time to start using alternatives to oil is coming quickly. “We have to let science and technology prevail so we can move forward, not stagnate nor fall behind, and we have to get on this now,” he says.
      “Oil is a finite resource, and its cost will rise. There is no question about this. It’s a predictable consequence of what’s happening now, and this is not just my take on it.
      Ha cites Gail Tverberg, an actuary on Peak Oil, who predicts that in two years “we’ll be in really serious trouble.” 
      He also cites a recent Citibank report predicting that Saudi Arabia will no longer export oil by 2030 because they will be using all their oil within their own country. “The consequence of this would be rising oil prices, and the effects would be felt much sooner than 2030,” according to Ha. 
      “It might be two years from now, or it might be 20 years, but it will happen, and it might happen soon,” Ha says. “We need to start preparing now.
      “Charles Darwin said it’s not the strongest nor the smartest who survive, but the ones that can adapt to change. Let’s survive, and more,” Ha concludes.
      To comment on or like this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

ST. JUDE’S CHURCH IN OCEAN VIEW hosts an interfaith service of thanksgiving today at 2 p.m. with speakers from the Christian Science church, the Tibetan Buddhist Mission, Wood Valley and Shepherds from Ka`u. All are welcome to share in this nondenominational service and bring some food to share.

Karen Tyler shows the annual wreath exhibit to Christmas in the Country attendees.
Photo by Julia Neal
CHRISTMAS IN THE COUNTRY CONTINUES TODAY at Volcano Art Center Gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park until 5 p.m.
      A campaign for membership and funding for new programs hopes to top $100,000.
      All activities and demonstrations at Christmas in the Country are free of charge; park entrance fees apply. For more information, call 967-7565.

THE TOPIC AT TUESDAY’S AFTER DARK IN THE PARK is Large Earthquakes in the Hawaiian Islands: What You Need to Know. Weston Thelen, a seismologist with USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, presents an overview of damaging earthquakes in Hawai`i, including current theories on why they occur and what we need to know about future large earthquakes. 
      The program begins at 7 p.m. at Kilauea Visitor Center Auditorium in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. $2 donation supports park programs; park entrance fees apply.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.




Saturday, November 23, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs Saturday, Nov. 23, 2013

The 2013 Volunteers of Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park were honored at a luncheon this week.
NPS Photo by Jay Robinson
AT A LUNCHEON HONORING HAWAI`I VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK volunteers Thursday, park superintendent Cindy Orlando praised the 1,193 people who worked 46,757 hours in fiscal year 2013 – which equals about $1,035,200.00 in donations. Varied duties for the volunteers included working in museum collections and archives, monitoring backcountry, visitor service, native forest restoration, trail maintenance, endangered species projects and much more. 
      “Volunteers not only enrich the visitor experience, but also the lives of our employees,” said Orlando. “They help us with every imaginable task, and we are indebted to their service.”
      Citizens interested in volunteering at Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park can see volunteer.gov or contact Kupono McDaniel at 985-6015 or kupono_mcdaniel@nps.gov.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard
KAU’S U.S. CONGRESSWOMAN TULSI GABBARD HIGHLIGHTED Hawai`i’s unique role in supporting relief and recovery efforts in the Philippines in a speech to the House of Representatives. 
      “In the wake of such a horrible tragedy, the positive that we can find is the outpouring of compassion, support and – most importantly – aloha, from my state toward the people in the Philippines,” Gabbard said. “The Hawai`i Air National Guard is working with the U.S. Pacific Command as we speak, which is based in Hawai`i, as collectively they provide unparalleled air, maritime and ground support to the aid efforts of the Philippines authorities.
      “I continue to pray for all those who have lost homes, family and friends and encourage all who are able to contribute in any way possible in this recovery effort.”
      American Red Cross is accepting donations at redcross.org.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

INTRASTATE CARGO SHIPMENTS INCREASED 5.2 percent from July through September of 2013 when compared to the same period of 2012, announced Young Brothers, Limited. This increase follows a 4.4-percent rise in cargo during the second quarter.
      Young Brothers president Glenn Hong and his lieutenants held their annual corporate planning retreat earlier this year in Pahala.
      “We believe this is another indicator that the broader local economy is continuing to gain strength, and we’re hopeful it’s the beginning of a trend that will sustain itself,” Hong said. “We still have some ground to make up to get back to levels seen six and seven years ago.” When compared to the peak-volume year of 2007, Young Brothers’ 2013 volume is still down approximately 20 percent.
      During the third quarter of 2013, cargo shipments increased on Hawai`i Island. Hilo climbed 4.2 percent and Kawaihae, 6.0 percent.
      Most industry segments finished the quarter with positive comparisons. Increases occurred in shipments of construction materials; renewable energy, including biofuels; automobile rental fleets; beverages and the entertainment industry, which includes tourism-related shippers.
       According to the Young Brothers Quarterly Report, overall volume for the first nine months of the year is up 1.8 percent compared to the first nine months of 2012.
      On Hawai`i Island, Hilo’s increase in volume for the first nine months of the year was 1.7 percent. Volume at Kawaihae, down slightly for the year, fell 3.4 percent.
      In the third quarter of 2013, agricultural cargo volume statewide increased by 5.3 percent over the year-ago quarter, continuing a trend of positive quarterly comparisons. For the first nine months of 2013, agricultural volume rose 5.8 percent.
      Ag exports from Hawai`i Island during the third quarter 2013 were up 11.8 percent at Kawaihae and 7.2 percent at Hilo. During the first nine months, agricultural exports from Hilo rose 6.5 percent. Agricultural cargo from Kawaihae dropped 8.5 percent.
      Agricultural volume includes only cargo that qualifies for the company’s island product discount of 30 to 35 percent, which applies to locally grown agricultural products.
      For more information, visit youngbrothershawaii.com.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

THE KA`U SCENIC BYWAY MANAGEMENT PLAN is now available for public comment at Na`alehu and Pahala libraries and Ocean View Community Association office. “This is an opportunity for residents to read the Byway Committee’s ideas for making our highway a more interesting and pleasant drive,” said committee member Marge Ewell. 
      Space is available in the documents for comments and suggestions.
      For more information, call Elwell at 929-7236.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

HAWAI`I HEALTH CONNECTOR HAS ANNOUNCED THE APPOINTMENT of Tom Matsuda, current Affordable Care Act implementation manager with the governor’s office, as interim executive director. He begins his new role Dec. 9.
      Coral Andrews has resigned as the nonprofit’s executive director, effective Dec. 6.
      A search for a permanent executive director by the board of directors is now under way, and Andrews is assisting the board with the transition to the interim executive director.
Coral Andrews
      “I am honored to have been a part of implementing part of the Affordable Care Act for the people of Hawai`i,” Andrews said. “The Hawai`i Health Connector has some of the most dedicated people I have ever had the honor of working with. Hawai`i is in good hands with this talented group as they continue the mission of delivering access to health care for all Hawai`i residents.”


      “On behalf of the board of directors, I want to thank Coral for her service to the Hawai`i Health Connector during a critical time and against a very challenging backdrop,” said board chairwoman Sherry Menor-McNamara. “Coral played a key role in building the Hawai`i Health Connector, securing funding and building a network of public and private stakeholders throughout the state. During all that work, she never lost sight of our vision – the Hawai`i Health Connector is of Hawai`i and for Hawai`i.”
      Hawai`i Health Connector is the state’s online health insurance marketplace.
      For more information, see HawaiiHealthConnector.com.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

YOUTH BASKETBALL TEAMS FROM KA`U are invited to compete in the 33rd annual Winter Basketball Classic to be held Dec. 26 through Dec. 29 at Hilo-area gymnasiums.
       Each participating team must submit a completed registration packet by Friday, Dec. 6, to the Department of Parks and Recreation’s Recreation Office located at 799 Pi`ilani Street in Hilo. Registration packets are available at the office and online at hawaiicounty.gov/parks-and-recreation.
      Registration fees are $60 per team for those enrolling in the mixed-gender division for players up to 8 years old and $80 per team for the other age-group divisions. Make checks payable to Winter Basketball Classic.
      Co-sponsored by Hawai`i Police Department’s Hawai`i Police Activities League, or HI-PAL and Hawai`i County Department of Parks and Recreation, the basketball tournament is open to boys and girls 5 to 14 years old.
      The Kevin Kai`ea Pavel Skills Challenge and dinner banquet will be held at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 27 at Afook-Chinen Civic Auditorium in Hilo. Championship games will be played Sunday, Dec. 29, at the auditorium.
      For more information, call Officer Joseph Botelho, Jr. at 961-8121 or Darrell Yamamoto of the Department of Parks and Recreation at 961-8735.
      To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

ST. JUDE’S CHURCH IN OCEAN VIEW hosts an interfaith service of thanksgiving tomorrow at 2 p.m. with speakers from the Christian Science church, the Tibetan Buddhist Mission, Wood Valley and Shepherds from Ka`u. All are welcome to share in this nondenominational service and bring some food to share.

Karen Kaufman signed up new Volcano Art Center members at the
opening of Christmas in the Country yesterday. Photo by Julia Neal
CHRISTMAS IN THE COUNTRY CONTINUES TODAY AND TOMORROW at Volcano Art Center Gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 
      Volcano Art Center has launched a campaign for membership and funding for new programs at its Ni`aulani Campus after suffering loss of income in the recent federal government shutdown. The goal is to top $100,000. Memberships are available at VAC Gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park and at the Ni`aulani Campus in Volcano Village or by calling 967-8222.
      All activities and demonstrations at Christmas in the Country are free of charge; park entrance fees apply. For more information, call 967-7565.

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS on Mamalahoa Hwy in Na`alehu hosts a Creche Festival for the entire community a week from today on Saturday, Nov. 30 from noon to 8 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 1 from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m.
      For more information, call 339-7402.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.




Friday, November 22, 2013

Ka`u News Briefs, Friday, Nov. 22, 2013



Old waterways are being found and restored by the Ka`u Agricultural Water Cooperative District, with help from the state of Hawa`i'i
and local state legislators. Archival photo from Olson Trust Collection.
MAC FARMS OF HAWA`I, with most of its workers coming from Ka`u, is cooperating with the federal government to protect immigrant farm workers from overcrowding in housing and other substandard working conditions. Mac Farms, with its macadamia orchards at Kapua near the Ka`u and Kona District boundary, is expected to file a consent decree in U.S. District Court by Dec. 9 to establish more accountability in following anti-discrimination and other labor laws. During a news conference earlier this week, federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission regional attorney Anna Y. Park said that farm owners must be involved in the enforcement of labor laws and cannot leave it up to labor contractors.
Mac Farms grows macadamia on the Ka`u border with Kona
at Kapua. Photo from www.macfarms.com
     Mac Farms hired laborers from Global Horizons, an international labor contractor, between 2003 and 2006. The company, along with Captain Cook Coffee Co. Ltd., Del Monte Fresh Produce, Kaua`i Coffee Co., Kelena Farms and Maui Pineapple Farms are being held accountable for Global Horizons’ treatment of the laborers, most of them from Thailand. Global was charged with overcrowding workers in substandard housing, low pay, insufficient food, deportation threat and other abuses. The EEOC included the farm owners in its complaints.
     While Mac Farms, like Del Monte, is expected to settle the case with the EEOC, Global Horizons and Maui Pineapple are taking the case to trial next year.
     Del Monte came up with its settlement this week and will pay $1.2 million, which will be distributed approximately 150 workers. The federal attorney applauded Del Monte for “being the first to come forward and show leadership in addressing discrimination issued in the agricultural industry, which as a whole, has been slow to enforce anti-discrimination laws. We hope this is a wake-up call for others in the agricultural industry to follow Del Monte Fresh Produce’s lead in recognizing signs of potential abuses by farm labor contractors and taking proactive steps to hold them accountable,” Park said. 
Mac Farms is working with the federal government to protect
farmworkers at its orchards. Photo from www.macfarms.com
    The agreement includes implementing the following: ensure that farm labor contractors provide policies and procedures prohibiting discrimination to the local and guest workforce in languages they understand; notify workers of their rights under the Civil Rights Act of 1964; tell workers how they can summit discrimination complaints; audit the procedures and designate someone to oversee compliance; train managers, supervisors and employees in the civil rights laws for workers; and make reports to the EEOC.

To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

KA`U AGRICULTURAL WATER COOPERATIVE DISTRICT members met yesterday and discussed smaller water management entities each coming up with voting procedures for water users and land owners. John Cross suggested that each group of users from Kapapala, through Wood Valley, Keaiwa, Mountain House, Mo`aula to Ha`o decide whether they want voting to be one vote for each water user, by the amount of water used, or the number of acres owned or used, or some other method.
     Some of the water tunnels have been surveyed and others will be surveyed before the state releases more money to repair the old plantation systems, members of the co-op said.
     The group also talked about the state Department of Hawaiian Home Lands discussion on providing farm land to Hawaiians near Ha`ao Springs in Wai`ohinu. To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

A PERMIT TO RUN A 3.5 -MILE WATER LINE from Old Plantation Spring to Ka`u ranchers and farmers has been approved by the state Board of Land & Natural Resources. The water source is within The Nature Conservancy’s Kaiholena Unit. The pipeline will travel through the Ka`u Forest Reserve to ranch and farm lands below, according to the application from Michelle Galimba, of Kuahiwi Contractors. The tunnel was built in the late 1920s to provide water to flumes that carried sugar to Honu`apo sugar mill. More recently the water has been used for farming and cattle ranching and the users are expected to be agriculturalists Richard Johansen, Phil and Merle Becker, Kirk Derasin and the Galimba ranching family. To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.
Hawai`i County Council joined New York City in banning sales of tobacco products to those under 18 years of age. Image from
 www.tobaccofreekids.org
SMOKING AGE WILL BE 21, if Mayor Billy Kenoi signs the new law passed by the Hawai`i County Council this week. The law would raise the allowable minimum age for buyers of cigarettes from 18 to 21. It would take affect July 1, 2014. The law would apply to electronic smoking devices as well as cigarettes, chewing and pipe tobacco, snuff, and cigars. The vote by the council included support from Ka`u council member Brenda Ford. It was unanimous, 9-0. The bill was initiated by council member Drew Kanuha.
      Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids president Matthew Myers released a statement, saying “Nearly all smokers start as kids or young adults and these age groups are heavily targeted by the tobacco industry. The tobacco industry never lets up in pushing its deadly and addictive products, so policy makers can’t let up in their efforts to reduce smoking and save lives. The Hawai1i County Council has delivered a victory for kids and health.” The statement noted that the vote on the Big Island was only one day after New York’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg signed a new law making the Big Apple the first major U.S. city or state to raise the tobacco sales age to 21. Two other U.S. cities, Needham and Canton, Massachusetts have also enforced the tobacco sales age at 18. See more at www.tobaccofreekids.org. To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

AIRPLANE MODE is allowed during Hawaiian Airlines domestic flights for passengers’ electronic devices, including during takeoffs and landings, the carrier announced yesterday. Hawaiian also expanded use of personal electronic devices on its international flights. The over-water flights to the mainland are considered domestic.
     The new rules follow the FAA’s decision at the end of October to allow Personal Electronic Devices during all phases of flights. Such devices include smartphones, tablets, e-readers, music players, GPS receivers, electronic/digital watchers, certain medical devices, one-way receiving pagers, digital and video cameras, calculators, electric shavers and handheld computer games.
      However, laptop computers over two pounds, noise reduction headphones, DVD players and other electronic devices over two pounds must be turned off until the plane reaches 10,000 in altitude.
     A PED Aviation Rulemaking Committee of industry and government experts determined that most planes in commercial service can fly safely with radio signals from the personal devices.
     Devices not allowed during any portion of the flight include wireless keyboards and mouses, electronic cigarettes, radio transmitters like ham and CB, batteries or cord operated radios, two way radios like walkie talkies, two –way pagers, remote controlled toys and tv’s.
      Hawaiian Airlines President Mark Dunkerley said in a statement, "We applaud the FAA's new policy and are excited to allow our customers to use their devices throughout their flight when they travel with us. We're committed to improving the travel experience for our customers." For more see www.HawaiianAirlines.com/News/PED.

To comment on or “like” this story, go to facebook.com/kaucalendar.

A CRECHE FESTIVAL will be held for the entire community on Saturday, Nov. 30 from noon until 8 p.m. ad Sunday, Dec. 1 from 1 p.. until 7 p.m. at Latter-day Saints Church on Mamalahoa Hwy in Na`alehu. The congregation invites the community of Ka`u to “celebrate the birth of the Christ child with more than 100 nativities from around the works in an artistic setting and with live music.” The celebration will include: “Local crèche artists; gallery of nativities; a children’s room with costumes and fun activities; and wholesome activity for the entire family,” says a statement from the Ka`u Ward of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
     For more information, call 339-7402.
Volcano Art Center is open to new members who can attend Christmas in the
Country this evening at the gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park.
Photo by Julia Neal

KA`U RESIDENTS CAN JOIN VOLCANO ART CENTER and attend Christmas in the Country’s opening event today from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Volcano Art Center Gallery in Hawai`i Volcanoes National Park. The celebration continues tomorrow with Christmas in the Country opening to the public. All activities and demos are free of charge; park entrance fees apply. For more information, call 967-7565.

HAWAI`I WILDLIFE FUND SPONSORS A KA`U COAST CLEANUP Saturday. Volunteers meet at 7:45 a.m. at Wai`ohinu Park to carpool to Kamilo Beach. HWF is looking for people with four-wheel-drive vehicles to transport volunteers. Register with coordinator Megan Lamson at 769-7629 or kahakai.cleanups@gmail.com.

HAWAI`I HONEY FESTIVAL is tomorrow at Nani Mau Gardens, with free honey tastings, demonstrations and entertainment from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The public is invited to cast votes for the People's Choice Honey Tasting Competition.

ST. JUDE’S CHURCH AT PARADISE CIRCLE AND KEAKA in Ocean View hosts events this weekend. Saturday is the church’s annual plant sale fundraiser from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. There will also be baked goods, coffee, books, gourmet mustards and slightly used items for sale.An interfaith service of thanksgiving takes place Sunday at 2 p.m. with speakers from the Christian Science church, the Tibetan Buddhist Mission, Wood Valley and Shepherds from Ka`u. All are welcome to share in this non-denominational service and bring some food to share.

SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS AT PAHALAPLANTATIONCOTTAGES.COM AND KAUCOFFEEMILL.COM. KA`U COFFEE MILL IS OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.

ALSO SEE KAUCALENDAR.COM AND FACEBOOK.COM/KAUCALENDAR.