The process of rebuilding in Lahaina begins

GEORGE F. LEE / GLEE@STARADVERTISER.COM

Rebuilt following the Aug. 8, 2023 wildfire, a home belonging to the Alexander family on Komo Mai Street in Lahaina appeared to be near completion.

GEORGE F. LEE / GLEE@STARADVERTISER.COM

Debris removal by heavy equipment continued on Aug. 2 at the site of the Spinnaker Apartment building. Pictured is U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Col. Eric Swenson on hand for a press conference.

GEORGE F. LEE / GLEE@STARADVERTISER.COM

Lahaina resident Kim Ball of Komo Mai Street waters down a concrete foundation to help it set. His foundation was one of the first to be poured in the neighborhood

GEORGE F. LEE / GLEE@STARADVERTISER.COM

Kari Alexander and her husband, Rich Alexander, stand in their home, which is being rebuilt, on Komo Mai Street in Lahaina.

LAHAINA — Kari and Rich Alexander have a goal to celebrate this Christmas with their two children in a new home just like the one they lost in the Lahaina wildfire one year and four days ago.

The couple, who began rebuilding their three- bedroom house in June, likely will be the first property owner in the West Maui town to replace a residence destroyed by the inferno that claimed roughly 3,500 homes, more than 800 businesses and other structures including schools, churches and government buildings.

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Several neighbors, meanwhile, aren’t far behind the Alexanders.

At least nine or so property owners on Komo Mai Street in a mauka section of Lahaina are in some stage of rebuilding — from ground compacting to framing.

Kim Ball, who along with the Alexanders was among about 60 property owners on Komo Mai Street whose homes burned down on Aug. 8, 2023, had his concrete foundation poured two weeks ago.

Ball said it’s awesome to see rebuilding up and down the street.

“We want to give people hope that we’re making progress,” said the 44-year Lahaina resident. “But also at the same time, there’s so much more to do. I mean it’s like — it’s going to be a long road still.”

Komo Mai Street property owners had an advantage because their subdivision, largely built by developers, is only several years old. So resubmitting previous building plans for permits saved time.

Overall, rebuilding in Lahaina is being challenged in many cases by daunting forces that include financial constraints of property owners and regulations governing special areas such as the town’s historic district and nearshore parcels.

By some estimates it could take five years or longer for some displaced homeowners to rebuild. Yet Komo Mai Street appears to be the leading edge of a building boom.

Beating expectations

Maui County officials said last week that 14 homes in Lahaina are under construction, along with two in Kula where an Upcountry fire destroyed 19 homes on the same day as the Lahaina fire.

The county also had issued building permits for 50 homes and was reviewing another 111 residential construction permit applications under an expedited process for fire survivors.

Maui Mayor Richard Bissen said in a statement that the county’s expectation a year ago was that it would be two to three years before any rebuilding started in Lahaina, and that efforts since then by federal agencies, county workers and private contractors have sped up results.

“The progress has happened more quickly than we initially thought,” Bissen said. “With each lot cleared and every new foundation continuing to be poured, a sense of hope is gaining momentum throughout Lahaina town.”

Jennifer Gray Thompson, founder and CEO of After the Fire USA, a nonprofit that has engaged in 18 wildfire disaster recovery efforts since 2017, said Maui’s pace of rebuilding is extraordinary.

Gray Thompson said having close to 20 homes under construction within a year of a megafire is unusual, and she’s not aware of any prior instance where rebuilding homes began before removing all disaster debris.

“You are definitely ahead of what we would have expected,” she said.

Elements aiding Lahaina’s rebuilding pace include knowledge gained from past megafires, extra contributions by federal agencies, a relatively compact burn area, incredible goodwill and strong community determination, according to Gray Thompson. She also said rebuilding in Lahaina had exceptional challenges, including near-shore proximity, cultural protection needs and many casualties. The fire killed 102 people.

Federal heft

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has been the financial backbone of recovery work, allocating more than $1.3 billion so far largely for the Environmental Protection Agency to clear hazardous materials from the burn zone, followed by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers work removing debris.

EPA also helped Maui County assess damage and make repairs to Lahaina’s water and wastewater infrastructure.

“The progress we’re making is unbelievable,” Shayne Agawa, director of the county Department of Environmental Management, said at a community recovery meeting in July. “We’re at this stage because of them (EPA).”

At that time, 63% of Lahaina’s sewer system had been made operational. Bissen said at the same meeting that the work EPA handled would have taken the county two years.

Lahaina’s potable water system was completely restored Aug. 2 after testing and fixes made with much help from EPA, an agency that has not typically done such work.

“This was a big event for Maui, for a small county, and knowing that they were overwhelmed, we want to provide them as much support as we can,” Bob Fenton, FEMA’s regional administrator heading up response work on Maui, said last week in an interview. “It’s really been a collective effort.”

As for debris removal, USACE, commanding a team of hired contractors, had as of about a week ago cleared all but 27 of 1,399 residential lots. Within about 90 days it expects to have the rest done, including very large parcels where apartment buildings once stood.

On Aug. 2, Col. Eric Swenson, USACE recovery field office commander on Maui, participated in a news media briefing in front of a former 57-unit condominium complex called The Spinnaker where two large excavators were clawing and scooping material on the site where only remnants of four two-story buildings remained.

As a debris hauling truck rolled by on Wainee Street, Swenson, dressed in camouflage fatigues, proclaimed, “That is the sound of progress here in Lahaina town.”

Permit process

To process building permits faster for destroyed properties, the county on April 29 opened a “recovery permit” office in Kahului run by contractor 4Leaf Inc.

County officials said permit review time would average 15 days for properties outside areas with special development rules.

Ball said he rejoiced upon hearing that his permit got issued May 22 after about 15 days.

“It was like, wow, it’s really happening,” recalled Ball, who is living with his wife and two dogs in a rented cottage in Launiupoko not far from Lahaina.

The Alexanders, whose house has a roof, windows and doors but still needs interior build-out, visited the recovery permit center on the day it opened after working on their application for all of April, and received their permit May 15.

Kari Alexander said she didn’t expect the county would deliver on its permitting timetable goal, but it did.

Many Lahaina property owners, however, face more difficulty with permitting.

For owners of property in the town’s historic district spanning several blocks, an environmental assessment is required if interior space of a home or homes on a parcel exceeds 3,500 square feet.

Such obstacles, along with longer initial expectations for when rebuilding could begin, have contributed to some Lahaina property owners deciding not to return.

“We thought that this was going to be a three- to five-year process,” said Laurie Lei DeGama, who like Ball is a member of the county’s community advisory committee and lost her home in the fire. “That’s why people left, because we didn’t have a good idea how long this process was going to take.”

Pulling together

Bissen said at recent community meetings that the county is working to ease burdens of rebuilding in Lahaina in ways that include helping property owners finance construction and potential land swaps with owners in the shoreline setback area.

One big source of funding to rebuild is a $4 billion tentative settlement of an estimated 10,000 fire damage claims. If approved in state court, payments would be made over four years.

Several historical buildings in Lahaina that weren’t totally destroyed are destined for restoration by the Lahaina Restoration Foundation, including the Baldwin Home Museum and possibly the Spring House, which date to when the town was the capital of the Hawaiian kingdom from 1820 to 1845.

Other properties to be restored include the Old Lahaina Courthouse, Hale Aloha, U.S. Seamen’s Hospital and Old Lahaina Prison, according to the foundation.

Gray Thompson of After the Fire USA said the collective effort in Lahaina is amazing, and she expects 99% of the town will be rebuilt within six years.

“I’m very optimistic, mostly because of the people,” she said.

Back on Komo Mai Street, the Alexanders visit to see the progress on their home every day, and they want others to know what is possible.

“It gives us hope that everybody can do it,” Kari Alexander said. “It really takes a village. It takes everybody.”

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