Abandoned vehicles littering the sides of Mamalahoa Highway and elsewhere around the island are slowly disappearing, thanks to new contracts inked last month by Hawaii County. ADVERTISING Abandoned vehicles littering the sides of Mamalahoa Highway and elsewhere around the island
Abandoned vehicles littering the sides of Mamalahoa Highway and elsewhere around the island are slowly disappearing, thanks to new contracts inked last month by Hawaii County.
The news is a huge relief to Shirlee Shumway of Holualoa. She’s seen cars appear on the roadside, followed some months later by a county tag indicating they are abandoned vehicles, and then the long wait for them to be removed, punctuated by individuals stripping the more valuable parts from the vehicles under cover of night.
“For a while the midnight marauders have been quiet but the vehicles once again are being left on the roads,” she said Tuesday. “It takes three months before the AV sign is posted and usually by this time the late night auto supply has done its work.”
According to Shumway, one vehicle, covered in a silver tarp, has been on the makai side of Mamalahoa Highway, just north of Kona Coffee Villas, for 10 months to a year. It has no engine and is not parked on private property, she said, adding the tarp is old and is being kept in place by lava rocks.
Shumway had enough. She called Kona Councilman Dru Kanuha and the county Department of Environmental Management, and talked with business owners and neighbors about the problem.
“I’m just hoping they get the message and start doing better,” she said about the county. “It’s just so silly that they sit so long. … It takes so much time to get anything done here.”
Plummeting scrap metal prices and the loss of markets in China during the past few years contributed to a less-than-enthusiastic response to county recycling efforts. But county Environmental Management Director Bobby Jean Leithead Todd said Tuesday that new contracts with haulers are moving the cars off the roadside and onto county lots.
The vehicles collected by a contracted hauler are sold at twice-annual auctions or they’re hosted at the county’s two vehicle scrapyards to be sent off-island for recycling.
“We try to recover our costs that way,” Leithead Todd said.
Haulers get between $58 and $75 per vehicle, plus $4.50 to $7.50 per mile to haul the abandoned vehicles off the roadsides.
Email Nancy Cook Lauer at ncook-lauer@westhawaiitoday.com.
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How to get abandoned vehicles moved
On public roadways abandoned automobiles can be removed by calling the Hawaii Police Department at 935-3311. Provide the location and description of the vehicle. Only the Police Department can initiate the abandoned vehicle removal process.