Opinion
Talking story about values.
The staff reporters at Aloha State Daily have a clear mission on the news side of the house: to tell you what happened, not what to think or how to feel about what happened. Here in the opinion section, we want to talk story about values — what we think Hawai‘i should do, or should not do, and why. This is where we welcome informed debate and where people can argue for their perspective.

Community Voices: Idle Land and Natural Resources funds
The state Department of Land and Natural Resources has racked up some unencumbered balances from its State Parks Special Fund, the Special Land and Development Fund, the Turtle Bay Conservation Easement Special Fund, and more.
Tom YamachikaFebruary 10, 2026

Community Voices: The kind of playbook Hawaiʻi lawmakers need
State and county lawmakers have started taking small steps to lift some of the many regulations that have stifled homebuilding in Hawaiʻi, but bold action is needed to pare back decades of bad policy.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.February 10, 2026

Letter to the Editor: Remembering Bob Krauss
Krauss had influence on Hawaiʻi politics, culture and more, including family.
Letters to the EditorFebruary 10, 2026

Community Voices: Maintaining Hilo's Keaukaha Beach Park
A recent cleanup at Puhi Bay was initiated to utilize community resources and ʻike to support the park's transition into community-driven management. Discussions remain ongoing between Department of Hawaiian Home Lands and Keaukaha Community Association, which helped organize the event called “People for Puhi,” along with the group, Kānewala.
Kuʻuwehi Hiraishi February 10, 2026

Community Voices: Beyond the poverty line: Why income alone doesn't tell Hawaiʻi's economic story
Several states and regions have created multidimensional poverty measures tailored to their specific contexts. Hawaiʻi could do the same.
Corey IdleburgFebruary 07, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Economic diagnosis déjà vu
Something about the new report from UHERO about Hawai‘iʻs weak economy seemed awfully familiar ... namely, everything. Here are things you need to know about what's been going on for decades and what you can do about it.
A. Kam NapierFebruary 06, 2026

Hamada: Look after your heart for American Heart Month
Three guests on my show recently shared personal and professional stories of how heart disease impacts all of our lives in Hawai‘i.
Rick HamadaFebruary 04, 2026

Residual spirits at Morgan’s Corner
Arguably the most famous haunted place on O‘ahu is Morgan's Corner in Nu‘uanu. Do you know the real story behind it? Turns out, there's more than one possible explanation for the things seen and presences felt where life and death intersect on Nu‘uanu Pali Drive.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiFebruary 04, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Shopping Carts II — This time, it's buy-back!
The bill to punish businesses when their shopping carts get stolen and abandoned moved forward, and got weirder.
A. Kam NapierFebruary 04, 2026

Community Voices: Bringing hula to Kentucky
As an alakaʻi of Kumu Kawika Keikialiʻi Alfiche, Kaila Chung has led Hui Kaululehua in Louisville since 2022.
Megan Ulu-Lani BoyantonFebruary 04, 2026

Community Voices: Tax versus Judiciary
There are two Hawaiʻi Supreme Court cases pending that involve fights over the extent to which courts can get involved with the Department of Taxation.
Tom YamachikaFebruary 03, 2026

Community Voices: Honolulu’s economic revitalization office has revitalized very little
Ultimately, this should come as a shock to no one.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.February 02, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Hawai‘i’s proposed anti-ICE laws mimic Minneapolis in the worst ways
On Tuesday, Gov. Green and Hawai‘i lawmakers stood in front of some wild allegations about ICE, and they're about to rush legislation as if every horror story on display were true.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 31, 2026

Whispers in the holding cells
If trauma and intense emotion can lead to hauntings, it's no surprise that a former police station, once home to holding cells, would harbor lingering echoes of the past.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiJanuary 28, 2026

Hamada: Something important happened at Honolulu's anti-ICE protest
No violence at all. What we see happening on the Mainland isn't the way things need to be.
Rick HamadaJanuary 28, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Legislature to clamp down on ... shopping carts!?
House Bill 1636 wants businesses to pay $500 fines when their shopping carts are stolen and dumped. There's an entire mindset at work behind the idea that the way to solve a problem — abandoned carts — is to rob the store a second time with a fine.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 27, 2026

Community Voices: New year, new variance
One way agencies can continue striving for improvement in their service to Hawaiʻi’s people is by filling out variance reports, and for legislators to facilitate that improvement.
Tom YamachikaJanuary 27, 2026

Community Voices: Finding her niche in repatriation
Sarah Sissum serves as the repatriation fellow at the Field Museum’s Center for Repatriation, Tribal Relations, and Provenance Research in Chicago. There, she helps facilitate the return of human remains and sacred objects to their respective Indigenous communities.
Megan Ulu-Lani BoyantonJanuary 26, 2026

Hawai‘i’s evolution, as related by Tom Coffman
“Statehood wasn't the end of history, but a transition to a new history,” Tom Coffman once said. “Statehood allowed Hawai‘i to open up, and to let people assert themselves more, and allowed the genie of the Hawaiian movement to get out of the lantern.” Here, our political historian examines Coffman's life in the Islands as an investigative journalist, historian and filmmaker.
Perry ArrasmithJanuary 26, 2026

Community Voices: Alternatives to ‘pausing’ Hawai‘i’s income tax cuts
A Grassroot analysis of the governor’s proposed budget shows that rather than walk back the tax cuts, the Legislature could simply identify and reallocate about $350 million a year in current state funding to make up for the governor’s projected expenses.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.January 26, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Confusion reigns at Legislature opening day
Attendees spent the morning asking "Where do we go? What do we do?" No one seemed to know.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 22, 2026

The haunting history of Kualoa
Long regarded as sacred, Kualoa was originally a special place reserved for chiefs and it was once a place where ali‘i from O‘ahu and Maui wrestled for control. With legends dating back to ancient times, and more modern tragedies as well, spirits of the past make their presence known.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiJanuary 21, 2026

Aloha State Daily Turns One
This site went live a year ago as the new news for Hawai‘i. Our editor talks about the site's growth since then and about the team who makes it all happen.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 21, 2026

Hamada: Word salads on the menu this Legislative session
Politicians have their own language, and Hawai‘i's politicians have perfected the art of sounding like they're doing something when they're really ... not. Check out these statements from the Hawai‘i Senate Majority Outlook for examples, as the Legislature kicks off this week.
Rick HamadaJanuary 20, 2026

Community Voices: Kuleana to care for whales as living ancestors
Traditionally, koholā (humpback whales) are acknowledged as ancient beings and considered to be a kinolau (manifestation) of Kanaloa, the god of the ocean – which is why they may be referred to as “Kanaloa” by cultural practitioners.
Lisa EllerJanuary 19, 2026

Community Voices: More idle special funds, this time in ag
Tax Foundation of Hawaiʻi takes a look at the state Department of Agriculture and Biosecurity's 2026 Report on Non-General Fund Appropriations, and some projections aren't adding up.
Tom YamachikaJanuary 19, 2026

Uncles and Aunties: What Darren Ho can do with a chainsaw and a block of ice
An internationally acclaimed ice sculptor, Darren Ho began his ice-carving career as a cook at what was then the Intercontinental Maui in Wailea, inspired by the work of a colleague. Still a Valley Isle resident, he now also owns the state's only business that makes the giant blocks of ice.
Cheryl Chee TsutsumiJanuary 19, 2026

The Pilgrimage of Bob Krauss
A half-century ago, legendary journalist Bob Krauss joined a 300-mile trek across Hawai‘i island, inspiring his 1975 book, "The Island Way." In it he explored "an Island approach to our global future" that was influential on local politics at the time and very much worth revisiting today.
Perry ArrasmithJanuary 15, 2026

Hamada: Hawai‘i to get democratically stoned. Maybe.
State Representative David Tarnas is proposing a legalization of recreational marijuana initiative to appear on the November election day ballot. Since failure is the calling card in the legislature, he believes he can succeed if there is a direct binding vote from the people.
Rick HamadaJanuary 14, 2026

Community Voices: How to achieve a policy trifecta
What if we could help farmers, ease the housing crisis and improve Hawaiʻi’s economy all at the same time?
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.January 13, 2026

Community Voices: The Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana celebrates 50 years of aloha ʻāina
“Laʻa, Maʻa, Paʻa; Sanctify, Sustain, Solidify,” is an ʻōlelo noʻeau from Aunty Alice Kuloloio of Maui that has been adopted as the ʻOhana’s 50th Anniversary slogan. It provides vision for their aloha ʻāina work.
Davianna Pōmaikaʻi McGregor, Hina Keala & Kaipu KealaJanuary 13, 2026

Community Voices: No need for idle DOE funds
Will the state Department of Education spend its money or just keep asking lawmakers for more?
Tom YamachikaJanuary 12, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Schatz, Tokuda, Hirono, fanning flames over ICE
Three of our Congressional reps have spent years participating in a narrative that America is occupied by an illegitimate, authoritarian regime. It's getting their followers killed.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 10, 2026

Community Voices: Complete this Word Find for a hidden message
A creative recap of the past year by the Tax Foundation of Hawai‘i with 26 key words and phrases having to do with government.
Tom YamachikaJanuary 08, 2026

Hauntings at Honolulu's Yokohama Yokai
On the corner of Merchant and Bethel Streets in Downtown Hotel, you'll find the Yokohama Special Bank Building. It's a storied site, once home to the hale pili of ali‘i. After the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Army took over the bank building as a military police station. Is it any wonder occupants have reported strange occurences?
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiJanuary 07, 2026

Hamada: Hawai‘i not immune to antisemitism
What has been called "The Longest Hatred" is intensifying around the world, with incidents even here in the Islands.
Rick HamadaJanuary 07, 2026

Community Voices: OHA’s 2026 Legislative priorities
"The state legislative session that opens on the third Wednesday in January is particularly important for advancing policies that improve the conditions of Native Hawaiians and defending against attacks on Native Hawaiian rights."
Leināʻala LeyJanuary 06, 2026

Community Voices: Three simple resolutions for Hawaiʻi lawmakers in 2026
And if they stick to them, this year could be a great one for everyone who lives and works in Hawaiʻi.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.January 06, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Minnesota fraud vs. Hawai‘i taxpayers
It may seem far away, but if you want a sense of how massive the theft of federal dollars in Minnesota is, compare it to how much we in the Islands pay in federal taxes.
A. Kam NapierJanuary 02, 2026

Pipikaula Corner: Honolulu drinking, by the numbers
Honolulu Liquor Commission data details a billion-dollar business.
A. Kam NapierDecember 31, 2025

Disembodied voices at Queen Kapi‘olani Hotel
Spirits ancient and modern have been heard and seen in the hallways and kitchens of this hotel, named for King David Kalākaua’s gracious wife.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiDecember 31, 2025

Hamada: Remembering the late John Henry Felix and Cliff Slater
Both men, whom we lost this year, were passionately engaged in civic life. Felix as a longtime politician; Slater as a rail critic who brought facts and research to bear on the issue, back when it was projected to a cost a mere $1.8 billion.
Rick HamadaDecember 31, 2025

Community Voices: The tax side of charitable giving in Hawai‘i
Is your giving deductible, or not? It depends. The Tax Foundation of Hawai‘i has advice.
Tom YamachikaDecember 30, 2025

Community Voices: Gaming this year?
Gambling that the Hawai‘i state Legislature just might explore legalized — and taxed — gambling in the upcoming session, here are some of the complications lawmakers will have to keep in mind.
Tom YamachikaDecember 25, 2025

Residual energy manifests at Ali‘i Place
More than a century ago, the site hosted stables that were burned down during an outbreak of bubonic plague. Now, it's home to the Ali‘i Place office tower. One tenant, the Prosecuting Attorney for Honolulu, is the kind of place where strong emotions leave a mark on their surroundings, resulting in eerie experiences.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiDecember 24, 2025

Hamada: Why you should vote, especially if you think it doesn't matter
Through taxes and regulations, government touches your life 24/7, from your morning coffee to the clothes on your back. Voting is one way you can stand up for yourself — and with the number of races that are quite close, your vote really does matter.
Rick HamadaDecember 24, 2025

Pipikaula Corner: Missing details on charter schools
Civil Beat has launched a three-part series on Hawai‘i's charter schools that seems to want to write them off as underperforming. There are some big caveats to that conclusion, however, that haven't been explored.
A. Kam NapierDecember 23, 2025

Community Voices: Uplifting Indigeneity on Turtle Island
Kēhaulani Vaughn, a professor based in California, was taught about Native Hawaiian values and her roots from her mom growing up. Today, she continues to perpetuate her culture and pursue academics, while taking care of her own ʻohana and helping to support the lāhui in the diaspora.
Megan Ulu-Lani BoyantonDecember 22, 2025

Community Voices: Collaboration, not controversy — the real story of genki balls and the Ala Wai
A Civil Beat article a few months ago looked at Hawai‘i Pacific University research suggesting that Genki Balls are ineffective. Since then, volunteers for Genki Ball days have dropped by 70%. Here, Genki Ala Wai Project leaders discuss the shortcomings of the HPU study and call for scientists and community members working together as the way forward.
Dr. Kenneth Y. Kaneshiro & Fumiko ChunDecember 19, 2025

Community Voices: There’s a new kids’ market in town
The Children’s Entrepreneur Market aims to help keiki learn about entrepreneurship, innovation and leadership through hands-on experience.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.December 18, 2025

The dark history beneath Blaisdell Center
The Kewalo area where this entertainment complex now stands was once home to a pond called Kawailumalumai, or Drowning Waters. Members of the kauwā, the outcasts who were often used as sacrifice, were drowned there. People have reported seeing faces in the water of the present-day pond, including our ghost column author.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiDecember 17, 2025

Op-Ed: Hawaiʻi’s regulation of humorous political speech is no laughing matter
Mathew Hoffmann is legal counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom, which represents satire site The Babylon Bee in its lawsuit challenging Hawaiʻi’s law that criminalizes the distribution of “materially deceptive media” that may risk harming “the reputation or electoral prospects” of politicians. He argues the law violates the First Amendment by targeting speech, including political memes, humor and satire.
Mathew HoffmannDecember 16, 2025

Hamada: Trump steps in it over Reiner
The late director Rob Reiner was a harsh and dramatic critic of the president, but Trump's statement on the murder of Reiner and his wife, Michele, allegedly by their own son, was completely unnecessary.
Rick HamadaDecember 16, 2025

Community Voices: Who decides what is historic?
A personal essay discovering how parts of Hawaiʻi’s past — houses and the land they sit on — are preserved, and a recommendation to the state for its future.
Maxx RamosDecember 16, 2025

Pipikaula Corner: Hawai‘i's confidence crisis
People are not just packing their bags because Hawai‘i is expensive. They’re packing their bags because they don’t believe any institution can do anything about that, least of all the politicians and bureaucrats who set policy.
A. Kam NapierDecember 13, 2025

Community Voices: Lessons from Lahaina could help Hilo recover
Although the scope of the Lahaina and Hilo fires differs, the lesson is the same: Inflexible regulations can severely delay or even prevent rebuilding. Hawai‘i County could act now to identify and work around those barriers.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.December 10, 2025

Huaka‘i Pō at First Hawaiian Center
First Hawaiian Center remains the tallest building in Downtown Honolulu. The property on which is stands is home to an amazing — and sometimes frightening — history. Long before there was a bank, a house stood on the property, known as Haleʻākalā. Bernice Pauahi lived there, as did the future Queen Liliʻuokalani. Duke Kahanamoku was born there. And some say Huaka‘i Pō, the Night Marchers, still make their presence known there.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiDecember 10, 2025

Hamada: Debate on Hawaiʻi's taxis and rideshares
Some thoughts about the Honolulu City Council's legislation aimed at giving traditional taxi services an even playing field against Uber and Lyft. Plus, tips for drivers and riders.
Rick HamadaDecember 09, 2025

Community Voices: Restoring abundance along our Skyline
The city’s new vision to bring food, culture and connection through food access hubs.
Kealoha FoxDecember 08, 2025

Community Voices: Making a federal case out of the Green Fee
The Cruise Line Industry Association has taken the unusual step of filing suit against Hawai‘i's new Green Fee in federal court.
Tom YamachikaDecember 08, 2025

Community Voices: Culture and imagination at play
How this group of creatives united to form Theorycraftist Games, a company that makes entertaining games, while integrating Hawaiian culture.
Donalyn Dela CruzDecember 03, 2025

The Spirit of Kamakahonu
Hungry spirits and haunted history surround the King Kamehameha Hotel on the Kona Coast of Hawai‘i Island. The area of Kamakahonu was home the royal compound of Kamehameha I, where he worshipped at Ahu‘ena heiau and where the most influential figures in Hawaiʻi gathered nightly.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiDecember 03, 2025

Hamada: Why I'm done with shopping in stores
’Tis the season to hit the malls ... or not!
Rick HamadaDecember 02, 2025

Community Voices: Pitfalls in Hawai‘i tax appeals
When the Hawai‘i state Department of Taxation audits taxpayers, it sends them guidance about the legal process. But the guidance is 20 years old, and could lead taxpayers to do the wrong things in protecting themselves.
Tom YamachikaDecember 01, 2025

Community Voices: State-funded marketing is not the answer to low tourist turnout
Tourism is a competitive, global business. Someone needs to pay for advertising to keep Hawai‘i top of mind, but it shouldn't be local taxpayers.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.November 27, 2025

Spooky shadows at the Pink Palace
The Royal Hawaiian Resort Waikīkī is nearly a century old, and at least three centuries of history and legends predate it at its seaside location. Is it any wonder guests have reported otherworldly experiences?
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiNovember 26, 2025

Hamada: Hard lessons about Iremamber Sycap
The City & County of Honolulu is poised to settle a lawsuit with Iremamber Sycap's family over his fatal shooting by Honolulu police in 2021. Are we doing everything we can to set young people on the right path before they get into trouble that could cost them their lives?
Rick HamadaNovember 25, 2025

Community Voices: Bringing ‘ike kūpuna to genome sciences
Follow the path of human geneticist, Keolu Fox, a Native Hawaiian who aims to advance the lāhui in his field while on the Mainland, with hopes of returning home in the near future.
Megan Ulu-Lani BoyantonNovember 24, 2025

Community Voices: Lighting the way to safer streets in Waipahu and ‘Ewa
Residents in these Leeward neighborhoods are about to make their bus stops and crosswalks safer in a project led by the Hawaiʻi Appleseed Center for Law & Economic Justice, aided with federal grant money.
Abbey SeitzNovember 22, 2025

Community Voices: Many of the proposed Honolulu Charter amendments actually make sense
Among the 250 charter amendment proposals submitted by the public were four from Grassroot Institute of Hawai‘i aimed at speeding up permit approvals and improving cost-of-government accountability.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.November 21, 2025

Uncles and Aunties: Meet Steve Butler, AKA Santa Claus
Wahiawā Heights resident Steve Butler has been appearing as Santa for 15 years. Looking the part helps, but he's also perfected his performance by attending the world's oldest Santa school.
Cheryl Chee TsutsumiNovember 19, 2025

Ups and downs of haunted Harbor Court
Long ago, the land under Harbor Court in Downtown Honolulu hosted a heiau and generations of Native Hawaiians. Layers of landfill and modern architecture may have covered the area, but they can't erase the lingering traces of the past.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiNovember 19, 2025

Community Voices: Startup founders aim to make clean energy affordable in Hawai'i, beyond
Honolulu-based Shifted Energy was created in 2016 by co-founders Olin Lagon and Forest Frizzell "to enable widespread access to energy solutions," particularly for renters and underserved communities. Learn how the business has grown from a garage to thousands of installs in the Islands, Mainland and Canada.
Donalyn Dela CruzNovember 18, 2025

Hamada: Government shutdown showed Hawai‘iʻs vulnerabilities
Groceries cost a "thrifty" family of four nearly $1,000 per month on the Mainland. In Hawai‘i, itʻs more like $1,500.
Rick HamadaNovember 17, 2025

Community Voices: Student loan forgiveness gets complicated
Student loan forgiveness has been tied to working for the government or for certain nonprofits. Under new federal rules, that might depend on whether the state or local government, or nonprofit, engages in "substantial illegal activities" in the eyes of the federal government
Tom YamachikaNovember 17, 2025

Community Voices: Hawaiʻi’s rising child poverty is a policy choice — and we can choose better
New data suggests public programs work to meet basic needs for Hawaiʻi’s keiki. Here's how.
Nicole WooNovember 14, 2025

Haunted halls of Honolulu Hale
Honolulu's city hall, Honolulu Hale, is nearly a century old — old enough to acquire a reputation for sightings of a supernatural nature. Here's the history of how the building came to be, and what people have experienced in its hallways.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiNovember 12, 2025

Hamada: Weighing emotions versus pragmatism on illegal immigration
Feelings to the contrary aside, nothing about the enforcement of immigration law contradicts America's ideals as a place the welcomes newcomers or that helps people escape oppression.
Rick HamadaNovember 12, 2025

Pipikaula Corner: I am an AI hallucination!
"Don't let Hawaiian Kam Napier fool you," the closed captioning said. That's not what the speaker said, however. Welcome to the hallucinatory reality of current AI.
A. Kam NapierNovember 11, 2025

Community Voices: Health care providers might be overcharging on Hawai‘i taxes
Here's how some medical bills might run afoul of Hawai‘i tax laws in overcharging on the GET.
Tom YamachikaNovember 10, 2025

Community Voices: Kapa, ready to wear
Maui-born kapa maker turns traditional clothing into "pieces that people can wear every day.”
Christine HittNovember 10, 2025

Pipikaula Corner: How the City keeps Honolulu afraid
On the issue of homelessness, it's as if the people and their government live on different planets. As an exchange at a recent Neighborhood Board meeting shows, everyday people are expressing real fear that goes unacknowledged by officials spouting jargon.
A. Kam NapierNovember 06, 2025

The bones beneath the Contessa
The Contessa condominium in Mo‘ili‘ili stands where Kamo‘ili‘ili Church and its mainly Hawaiian graveyard had served the community since 1850. The remains of nearly 500 people were moved for the condo, but workers and residents over the years have reported chilling tales of the spirits that remain.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiNovember 05, 2025

What endures in Palaka?
Palaka — the fabric — has passed through many hands and generations to become a distinctive fabric of the Islands, reflecting its multicultural history. So, too, has Palaka Power, the political philosophy that took its name from the working-class history associated with the humble cloth. Is there a place for that philosophy now?
Perry ArrasmithNovember 05, 2025

Community Voices: A life of service and advocacy for Native Hawaiians
Remembering Louis "Lui" Hao (Jan. 2, 1935 – June 20, 2025), a lifelong community servant, social justice advocate, and two-term OHA trustee.
Puanani Fernandez-AkamineNovember 04, 2025

Hamada: Awareness and compassion needed for mental health issues
People don't hesitate to get help if they catch a flu or sprain an ankle. Looking after one's mental health should be just as natural and free of shame or stigma.
Rick HamadaNovember 04, 2025

Community Voices: The TATmas Tree
Department of Hawaiian Home Lands is the latest state entity looking for dedicated funding via yet another increase to the Transient Accommodations Tax — but there are problems with both raising this tax repeatedly, and using it for automatic spending that never goes through the normal budgeting process. Here are some solutions.
Tom YamachikaNovember 04, 2025

Community Voices: Lahaina rebuilding inches toward progress
Maui County lawmakers have succeeded at removing some of the barriers to speedy reconstruction.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.October 29, 2025

Ages of unrest at Windward Mall
The former Sears store in particular had been a nexus for unexplained activities — staffers and shoppers pushed by unseen forces, clothes flung along their racks.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiOctober 29, 2025

Hawai‘i Then and Now: Kealakekua's Aloha Theater
Built in 1932 for movies by the Tanimoto family, this South Kona landmark started offering live theater performances as early as 1939. Now it's the full-time home of the Aloha Performing Arts Company, where, Artistic Director Sarah Athens says, "Anyone can be an actor. Anyone can be an artist. All you have to do is want it.”
Andrea CavaliereOctober 29, 2025

Hamada: What I love about "Community Matters"
Here are just a few of the many worthy nonprofits in Hawai‘i that I've gotten to know through my years in talk radio. All of them do important work and deserve our support.
Rick HamadaOctober 28, 2025

Community Voices: Spend that money, Vought is watching
It's going to be hard to defend federal block grants for Native Hawaiian housing from budget cuts when state officials are leaving tens of millions of dollars unspent.
Tom YamachikaOctober 28, 2025

Community Voices: With housing, let's have an intergenerational conversation
On Oct. 28, Housing Hawai‘i's Future will host a conversation among the seven living generations who call Hawai‘i home, because housing — and Hawai‘i's lack of affordable housing — affects everyone. Come join the conversation.
Lee WangOctober 25, 2025

Unseen visitors at the Mission Houses
Between 1821 and 1832, missionaries built three houses on what was then a dry and dusty plain. A city has grown up around then since then, but eerie shadows of the past have been seen at these Honolulu landmarks.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiOctober 22, 2025

Hamada: "No Kings" anything but grassroots
A well-funded, Washington, D.C., organization supports these protests and while we can all applaud the right to free speech being celebrated in the streets, it's worth pointing out that the content of that "No Kings" speech borders on defamation and libel.
Rick HamadaOctober 21, 2025

Community Voices: Rail is a fail; who’s going to hit the brakes?
We don't know yet just how late and over budget the Honolulu Skyline rail system will be. We do know that its annual budget is growing by nearly 10% a year and city officials are talking about any number of rail extensions. Maybe it's time to let the public drive this train and put such decisions to a vote.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.October 21, 2025

Community Voices: Even More TANF Hoarding
While federal cuts to spending on the states for social service gets headlines, the fact is, Hawai‘i has been letting federal money sit unspent — more than $400 million so far. Here's what the money could help with in the Islands if the state would only use it.
Tom YamachikaOctober 21, 2025

Ghosts of the past at the Navy Exchange
The building rests on the slopes of Āliamanu and Āliapaʻakai, places bound to the legends of the goddess Pele and her sister Hiʻiaka. Shoppers and staff alike have shared eerie tales of what they've seen and felt here.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiOctober 15, 2025

Japanese Breakfast — Teshima’s and a Century of Change in South Kona
Teshima's Restaurant is a South Kona landmark dating back to 1929. Here is the family story behind the landmark, with then-and-now photos.
Andrea CavaliereOctober 15, 2025

Community Voices: Rebelling against the culture of silence
Too often, state government operates behind walls of consensus and secrecy that leave the public in the dark.
Tom YamachikaOctober 14, 2025

Hamada: In the shutdown showdown, you are a pawn
It's divide-and-conquer gamesmanship, reaching all the way to the Islands.
Rick HamadaOctober 13, 2025

Community Voices: Erasing progress not the way to move forward
Last year, state lawmakers passed Act 39, a major piece of housing reform — but the state's most populous county is trying to get that legislation overturned.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.October 09, 2025

Hauntings at Honolulu’s “Ghostbusters” building
At the corner of Kapiʻolani and Ke‘eaumoku stands a modern building with some possibly ancient nighttime visitors, according to people who have worked there late at night.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiOctober 08, 2025

Community Voices: Nonresident withholding, six years later
State legislators passed a law six years ago impacting any partnership, estate or trust operating in Hawai‘i to withhold taxes for nonresident partners. Now the state Department of Taxation has finally issued the rules to start collecting. Here's what you need to know.
Tom YamachikaOctober 07, 2025

Hamada: Golf gets a black eye
Nearly 100,000 Hawai‘i golfers take to local courses every year, so a lot of kama‘āina likely saw what went down at the Ryder Cup. Not much aloha spirit on display in Farmingdale.
Rick HamadaOctober 07, 2025

Uncles and Aunties: Robert Castro keeps plantation history alive
Through his years of volunteer work at Hawai‘i’s Plantation Village in Waipahu, Castro pays his respects to Hawai‘i's history and to that of his own family.
Cheryl Chee TsutsumiOctober 06, 2025

Hawai‘i's bizarre legacy of population control (and why it's still here)
In the 1970s, Hawai‘i gave in to fears of overpopulation, so much so that population control was put into the State Constitution.
Perry ArrasmithOctober 03, 2025

Community Voices: Do we really want a ‘rubber stamp’ Legislature?
Hawai‘i's legislators vote "yes" on bills a staggering 98% of the time. Where is the debate on issues that affect us all?
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.October 02, 2025

Disembodied eyes at Mānoa Falls Trail
If you look out into the dark of night at this storied trail, something just might look back at you.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiOctober 01, 2025

Hamada: Hawaiʻi’s General Excise Tax — helping or hurting the cost of living?
You may not enjoy an ever-increasing cost of living in Hawai‘i, but thanks to the pervasive GET, rising prices are very good for state government.
Rick HamadaSeptember 30, 2025

Community Voices: What's happening with state and local tax deductions
What Hawai‘i taxpayers need to know about changes to the SALT deductions.
Tom YamachikaSeptember 30, 2025

Community Voices: Empowering the diaspora in the Pacific Northwest
“No matter how long you’ve been away from home, it’s still home,” says Leialoha Kaula.
Megan Ulu-Lani BoyantonSeptember 29, 2025

Pipikaula Corner: Dr. Gov. Josh Green, patron saint of perpetual pandemic
A deep dive into Gov. Josh Green's recent emergency proclamation defying federal rules on Covid vaccines.
A. Kam NapierSeptember 25, 2025

Kaukonahua’s Haunted Drive
The tree-lined two-lane connecting Wahiawā to the North Shore just might be home to the ghostly presence of a doomed bride.
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiSeptember 24, 2025

Hamada: Should students be allowed to use their cell phones in school?
Sweden just banned cell phones in school, Hawai‘i is talking about doing so. Who should make the call?
Rick HamadaSeptember 23, 2025

Community Voices: Your money stays in Vegas — then the IRS wants some
A trip to Hawai‘i's Ninth Island could have tax ramifications, if you're writing off gambling losses to offset gambling gains. Here's how the One Big Beautiful Bill Act is changing those equations, and a look at what the State of Hawai‘i will have to consider regarding its own gambling taxes.
Tom YamachikaSeptember 23, 2025

Community Voices: Geothermal energy — solution or sacrilege?
The subject of geothermal energy has long divided the Native Hawaiian community. Proponents cite energy sovereignty and decreased reliance on foreign oil. Opponents point to the genealogical, cultural and spiritual ties that many Hawaiians have to Pele.
Cedric DuarteSeptember 23, 2025

Letter to the Editor: 'We're already fighting a civil war'
"Even if you don't believe in God, how can you argue against these 10 basic rules for living?"
Letters to the EditorSeptember 17, 2025

The mana remains at Pu‘u o Mahuka
Above Waimea Bay on O‘ahu stands the island's largest heiau, Pu‘u o Mahuka. Dedicated to the war god, Kū, the place still holds special power. Is it any wonder people have had some intensely strange experiences there?
Lopaka Kapanui and Tanya KapanuiSeptember 17, 2025

Community Voices: Hawaiʻi Legislature sued over ‘blank’ bills
The League of Women Voters of Hawaiʻi contends that this practice of passing a measure with boilerplate language is unconstitutional. Learn also what lawmakers claim.
Keliʻi Akina & Ph.D.September 16, 2025



