Hawaii's Democrat governor wants to impose $25 'climate impact fee' on tourists to prevent wildfires, preserve beaches



The Democrat governor of Hawaii has proposed a $25 "climate impact fee" on tourists to help preserve the state's natural environment.

During his state of the state address last month, Gov. Josh Green claimed that the fee was necessary to "provide the needed resources to protect our environment and increase awareness of the impacts of climate change." Green believes that the fee will generate $68 million in much-needed annual revenue.

Green also claimed that the state would use this money to preserve beaches and guard the state against future wildfires such as the catastrophic fires that broke out in Lahaina last August, killing at least 100 people, most of whom were elderly. Green also hopes to earmark at least half of that revenue for a state disaster relief fund or disaster insurance, which he said is necessary to dissuade investors from taking their investment dollars elsewhere, thinking that the investment risk in Hawaii is too high, the Honolulu Civil Beat reported.

About 9.5 million people visited the Aloha State last year, far outnumbering the state's 1.5 million residents. Should Green's proposal pass, tourist parties, regardless of size, will be assessed that $25 fee when checking in at hotels or short-term rentals.

"I believe this is not too much to ask of visitors," Green stated.

Last week, the state House Energy and Environmental Protection Committee began debating the governor's proposal. Though Hawaii's legislature is overwhelmingly left-leaning, with just eight total Republicans compared with 68 Democrats, the proposal is not guaranteed to pass. Last year, Gov. Green proposed a similar measure that would have imposed a $40 or $50 tourism fee, but it failed "in the final hours of the legislative session," the Daily Mail reported.

In lieu of a tourism fee, the governor said he's open to alternative ideas such as increasing the Transient Accommodations Tax. However, at 10.25%, the Hawaii Lodging and Tourism Association has argued that TAT is already high and that bumping it up even higher will almost assuredly deter visitors.

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911 calls from deadly Maui fires reveal overwhelmed system, clogged streets, vulnerable seniors



On August 8, 2023, ferocious wildfires wracked the West Maui city of Lahaina, causing residents to panic and reducing many of their beautiful seaside homes to rubble. Blaze News was given copies of hundreds of 911 calls made on or to the island that fateful day, and these calls offer unique and deeply personal insights into what the horrific experience was like for those on the ground.

With 100 people confirmed dead and four still missing, the Maui fires are now considered the worst in modern U.S. history. Thus, as might be expected, the 911 calls made in the midst of the fires paint a grim picture. Through our observations of these calls, Blaze News learned about limited water and human resources dispersed across the island, seniors left abandoned, and streets clogged with vehicles as flames and smoke surrounded them, threatening the people inside.

Blaze News received these calls from Charles Couger, the founder of Blue Tarp Productions and an associate of Blaze Media, who received the calls as the result of a Freedom of Information Act request. Couger requested all 911 calls from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. on August 8, but he received calls as early as midnight and as late as 5:30 p.m. Blaze News did not receive any 911 calls between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.

Except in a few instances that Blaze News presumes to have been accidental, officials redacted all caller names and addresses before releasing the calls to protect callers' privacy.

'The whole forest is on fire': The Upcountry Maui fires

While much of the reporting has focused on the fires in Lahaina, the story of the Maui fires actually begins on another part of the island in an area known as Upcountry. Just before 11 p.m. on August 7, 2023, a surveillance camera at the Maui Bird Conservation Center in the rural Upcountry community of Olinda captured a strange flash, and shortly after midnight on August 8, officials reported a brush fire in that area.

At about the same time, 911 dispatchers began fielding calls about an enormous fire along Olinda Road by the bird sanctuary. This fire and a subsequent fire beneath the Kula Lodge in nearby Kula spread quickly, and together they eventually became known as the Upcountry Maui fires.

The Upcountry region is approximately outlined in yellow with Kula Lodge pinpointed. Lahaina is noted in red.Screenshot of Google Maps

At 12:38 a.m., a mother called to relay a terrifying report from her daughter about the fires. "My daughter was trying to go home to the top of Olinda. She just called, freaking out, [saying,] 'The whole forest is on fire, Mom,'" the woman said.

That call came shortly after midnight, in the earliest stages of the fires. By 5:18 p.m. that afternoon, a 911 operator told a concerned resident that the "big fire" she had seen was "below Kula Lodge," confirming that the fires that began more than 17 hours earlier had not abated.

These Upcountry fires were indeed relentless, raging for days and then smoldering for weeks afterward. In all, about 1,000 acres of Kula and the city of Olinda were destroyed.

'The electric went pop': The early-morning fire in Lahaina

The route from Upcountry to Lahaina extends about 40 miles through mountainous terrain, so there is no indication that the Upcountry fires directly led to the fires that eventually broke out in Lahaina. However, Bob Marshall — the CEO of Whisker Labs, which sells in-home devices that detect electrical fires — tells ABC News in the video below that the Lahaina electrical grid became "incredibly stressed" on Monday night and into Tuesday morning, the morning of the Lahaina fires.

At that time, Hurricane Dora also swirled over the ocean south of the Hawaiian Islands, and winds on Maui were especially strong in the days leading up to the fires. Hawaii Gov. Josh Green (D) later claimed some gusts on August 8 reached 81 mph, though others put the number closer to 65 mph. Between the powerful winds and unusually dry conditions, the Lahaina region was especially vulnerable to a fire outbreak.

At 6:34 a.m. on August 8, some six hours after the Upcountry fires started, a Lahaina woman called to report a brush fire that began after a "pop" from an electrical unit near Lahaina Intermediate School, located at the intersection of Ho'okahua Street and Lahainaluna Road. "There's a fire by ... Intermediate," she said. "I saw the electric went pop."

Officials later determined that the fire began from a downed power line.

Screenshot of Google Maps

In the next four minutes, 911 received five other calls about the fire at Lahaina Intermediate and the surrounding area along Lahainaluna. Though some of the callers expressed heightened concern as the fire crept nearer and nearer to homes in the neighborhood, this early-morning Lahaina fire apparently remained on the ground, and by 9 a.m., the fire department declared it to be "100 percent contained."

'Someone should have stayed': The early-morning fire reignites

About five or six hours after the fire department declared the early-morning fire in the Lahaina Intermediate School neighborhood to be completely "contained," it flared up once again. Only this time, it spread quickly, growing in size and scope.

Exactly when the fire restarted is difficult to pinpoint, but a recent article from the Hawaii Tribune-Herald provided some clues. The Tribune-Herald claimed that the morning fire was never really extinguished and that it began to burn again almost as soon as "fire crews departed."

"I was angry because they were leaving the area unattended," said 58-year-old Juan Advincula, who witnessed firefighters battle the morning fire. "It was the winds, the dryness, and the embers I was afraid of. Someone should have stayed."

Because Blaze News did not review any 911 calls between 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., we could not independently verify that reporting. But whatever the reason for the fire's resurgence, people in Lahaina began calling 911 in the middle of the afternoon on August 8 with truly frightening reports:

  • "There's a fire by my condo," said a caller at 3:37 p.m.
  • "The electric pole behind our house ... went down. ... And it's dangling," said another a minute later.
  • "Smoke [is] everywhere outside my window," a woman reported at 3:46 p.m.
  • "It appears that there might be a structure fire, perhaps on the next block up," someone else reported at 3:47 p.m.

Between 3:30 and 4:00 p.m., Maui dispatchers received nearly 40 calls, more than one per minute, though some of these calls related to the Upcountry fires, which still continued to rage.

Because of the Upcountry fires and other emergencies, the Maui County Fire Department and other county officials later defended the decision to dispatch firefighters elsewhere once the early-morning fire was considered "contained." County Fire Chief Brad Ventura noted that at that point, firefighters were needed for "numerous additional calls for service in other parts of West Maui," especially for downed power lines.

The county also issued a news release about a week after the fires, clarifying the difference between "contained" and "extinguished" fires. Contained "means that firefighters have the blaze fully surrounded by a perimeter, inside which it can still burn," the news release said, according to the Tribune-Herald. "A fire is declared ‘extinguished’ when fire personnel believe there is nothing left burning."

The Maui County Fire Department did not respond to Blaze News' request for comment.

'I just had to leave him': Some seniors left to fend for themselves

Perhaps the most heartbreaking calls from the Maui fires involved members of older generations, some of whom were significantly disabled. On multiple occasions, callers reported that elderly residents were trapped in their houses or apartments, with no ability to evacuate the area without help — help that may never have arrived.

A woman from the Hale Mahaolu Eono senior community near Lahainaluna and Kelawea Street called at 3:33 p.m. to say that several residents were still in their units even though community managers left earlier in the day. "My neighbor next door, she's very elderly, and then two doors down, she's 97," the woman said. She also mentioned a 90-year-old woman as well.

During the course of her nine-minute conversation with dispatch — an unusually long call compared to the others made that day — a fire broke out just across the street. "Oh, no, no. We're on fire. F***. ... There's bushes on fire," she exclaimed as fire alarms wailed in the background.

"It's too windy and smoky to go outdoors, and the air is, like, super, super hot," she added.

The woman, who had no car, eventually managed to flag down a stranger to give her a ride, but it does not appear that any of the elderly residents joined her in the car. And sadly, "multiple people" from Hale Mahaolu Eono are listed among the dead, reported the AP, another outlet that accessed copies of the 911 calls via FOIA request.

The residents at Hale Mahaolu Eono were hardly the only Lahaina seniors who were especially vulnerable during the fire. Just three minutes before the Hale Mahaolu Eono call, another woman dialed 911 to report that her uncle was "trapped." Though the caller did not mention the man's age, she did describe him as "handicapped."

"I live on Lahainaluna Road, and our house is right next to the fire, and my uncle is still trapped in the house," she said. "... He's handicapped, and he needs an escort out."

Yet another woman called at about the same time to report that she was forced to leave an aged, incapacitated family member inside his residence so that she could try to save the rest of her family. "He's an 88-year-old man. He cannot transport. He would literally have to be carried out," she explained to the operator. "... I just had to leave him because I have the rest of my family in the car."

The woman informed 911 that the sliding door to the residence was unlocked in the hopes that medics could come to his aid.

About an hour later at 4:29 p.m., as a motorist was speaking with an operator to try to figure out a way out of Lahaina, he interrupted their conversation with an alarming exclamation: "The old folks' home is on fire! The old folks' home is on fire, and there's probably old folks still in there!"

The identity of the "old folks' home" in question is unclear, but according to other callers, it was located across from the Lahaina Surf apartment complex on Waine'e Street, a few blocks from the ocean and nearly two miles west of Lahaina Intermediate School, where the fire first began. According to a dispatcher, the call center received "multiple calls" about that fire.

Twenty minutes after the reports about the fire at the "old folks' home," at 4:49 p.m., a man called to report that he and his wife were unable to evacuate their residence because the wind was too strong for his wife to venture down several flights of stairs. "She walked outside, and the wind almost blew her over, and she can't get down the four flights of stairs," the worried husband said. "So we can't get out of here, and we're surrounded by smoke."

Despite the couple's dire predicament, the operator had few options to offer, as so many first responders had been dispatched to fight the fires. "Where's your neighbors?" the operator wondered. "Do you have anyone around you that can help you?" When the man indicated that the "bunch of girls" nearby were unlikely to be much help, the operator replied, "Well, let me try my best to get a hold of somebody, OK, and try to send them your way."

Less than 10 minutes later, at 4:56 p.m., a man called from outside Lahaina, fretting about his parents who were still in town, as his dad stayed behind, trying in vain to put out the fire that had spread to his house. "My parents are stuck. ... They can't get out," the son began.

"They just called to say, 'I love you. We're not going to make it,'" he added with calm desperation.

Unfortunately, Blaze News was not able to learn whether these callers or their loved ones survived the fires, but the vast majority of those who perished in the fires were older. Of the deceased victims, almost 75% were at least 60 years old and a dozen were at least 80. The oldest victim was 97.

'There's no way out': Severe traffic jams keep people stuck in Lahaina

Another common concern for callers was the difficulty in escaping Lahaina by vehicle. By 3:30 p.m., the Lahaina Civic Center had already been set up as a designated shelter for fire refugees, and many people had access to transportation. But major roads like Front Street along the water and Lahainaluna Road, where the early-morning fire started, were soon clogged with cars.

  • "Hi, I was just calling to see if there's any policeman directing traffic on Lahainaluna," one caller asked at 4:01 p.m.
  • "I'm calling from Front Street, and ... we are stuck here," said another call made at the same time. "... We're wondering if there's any road closures or what's going on."
  • "Hi. I'm stuck in the traffic trying to get out of the Kanakea area, and it looks like a house on Kanakea Loop may have caught on fire," said another a minute later. The Kanakea Loop is a neighborhood a few blocks north of Lahainaluna Road.
  • "There's no way out, and we're trying to evacuate because the cops previously evacuated, but there is no way out. We're all trapped in the street," a person with a family in the car reported at 4:09 p.m. The family ultimately decided to leave their vehicle and walk.

They weren't the only ones who chose to go by foot rather than by car. As the hours ticked by and gas, cell phone power, and patience began to dwindle, more and more people abandoned their cars and made a run for it, some for the civic center, others for the ocean. Though no one should be criticized for making choices to protect themselves and their families, leaving vehicles in the middle of the street did create an issue for those still hoping to drive away from Lahaina.

One caller described the problem on a call made at 5:30 p.m.: "We don't know where we could go because people are just leaving their cars in the street, and we can't move up."

The dispatcher's response to that caller echoed the responses given to many frustrated drivers anxious to get away from the fire and smoke: Stay the course. "Just stay in your vehicle and be patient with the traffic, OK? There's traffic all over the place, traffic jams, and they're trying to alleviate that right now," the dispatcher said.

Another literal roadblock popped up unexpectedly just as some people thought they had discovered a route to safety. It seems that for a while, first responders were diverting cars onto a dirt road locally referred to as the old cane haul road, as well as to a bike path connected to it. The old cane haul road is located less than a mile inland from the ocean, just behind the Lahaina Civic Center, and runs parallel to Hawaii 30, the main road that follows the western coast of West Maui.

Not only would the old cane haul road have alleviated some of the traffic, but it would have led escapees to the shelter established at the civic center. The plan seemed to work for a while, but according to one woman, "just some guy" who was "not an authority" blocked the route, forcing cars to go back the way they came.

"The guy that closed the gate ... said we cannot go in any more because there's, like, lots of power lines down there," the woman explained to 911 at about 4:50 p.m. "So we go back, but we don't know where to go."

Though that caller never mentioned the old cane haul road specifically, her repeated references to the "dirt road" and her description of a blocked path match a report made by another woman less than five minutes later, at 4:54 p.m. "They routed us straight through on the cane haul road, instead of going down to the main highway [HI 30]," that woman said. "And then now, they shut the gate for everybody to go through, and they put us going back towards the fire."

The approximate location of the old cane haul road is shown in yellow and an existing bike path in orange. The black dot is the approximate location of the locked gate. (This map is intended to give only a rough idea of the location of the places mentioned. Readers are advised to consult it accordingly.)Screenshot of Google Maps and edited based on a similar map published by the Honolulu Civil Beat

Someone eventually unlocked the gate, the Honolulu Civil Beat later reported, allowing "several dozen cars" to turn toward the civic center or flee the area. However, others returned to Lahaina and back to the fire. "It’s just sad to even think about," Saman Dias, the chair of a bicycling nonprofit, told the outlet.

Two months after the fires, the Civil Beat openly questioned whether better utilizing the old cane haul road — itself the entry point of what the outlet called "a lesser-known network of private roads" that guide users further inland — could have saved lives that day. Maui County officials have been tight-lipped, with the Joint Information Center telling the outlet that retrospectively questioning the use of the old cane haul road was "irresponsible" during an ongoing investigation into the fires.

'Callous indifference': Electricity continues to flow across Maui

High winds and other conditions had already caused many residences and commercial buildings in Lahaina to lose power before, during, and after the fires, but Hawaiian Electric Co. — which powers 95% of Hawaii, including most of Maui — never shut down its electrical power grid. That decision to keep electricity flowing through the city has led to severe backlash against HECO from critics who claim that electricity exacerbated the wildfire catastrophe.

Such critics point to other fire-prone areas of the U.S., such as parts of California, which have policies in place to shut electricity down pre-emptively when conditions increase the likelihood of fire. Maui, however, has no such protocols.

In a statement issued days after the fires, HECO defended itself for not de-energizing regions of Hawaii during days of exceptionally high winds. The statement indicated that shutting the system down without prior notice would make firefighters' jobs more difficult since Lahaina water pumps require electricity.

Whether the continued flow of electricity contributed to the Lahaina fires has not yet been determined, but HECO currently faces more than a dozen lawsuits that claim the utility company was at least partially responsible for the fires. "To operate Hawaiian Electric’s power lines under these conditions was reckless and represented an abdication of their fiduciary duties and a callous indifference to the loss of human life, tangible property, and natural habitat," one lawsuit read.

HECO did not respond to the Civil Beat's request for comment on the lawsuits.

'I need an ambulance': Other noteworthy events mentioned in the 911 calls

There are a few other events that occurred in Maui on August 8 that, while not directly related to the above topics, are still worth noting.

Perhaps most important is the fact that, in addition to the Upcountry fires and the fires in Lahaina, there was yet another fire on the island on August 8. At 6:10 a.m. that day, a fire was reported near a high school in Kihei, located more than 20 miles south of Lahaina.

Screenshot of Google Maps

This fire may have been easily managed, as all calls about it stopped within five minutes or so. However, another fire erupted elsewhere in Kihei on August 9, the day after catastrophe struck Lahaina. Thankfully, the fire in Kihei remained at least 100 yards away from all area residences, Maui Now reported. Still, drone footage captured by Hawaii News Now reveals an extensive burn:

On August 27, CBS News gave an update on all the Maui fires from earlier that month. By that time, Lahaina was 90% contained; Kula and Olinda in Upcountry were 90% and 85% contained, respectively; and Kihei was 100% contained, the outlet said. But the sheer force of these fires and their distance from one another exhausted resources and first responders alike, as water hydrants in Lahaina reportedly began to run dry and just 65 firefighters are typically on duty on the entire island on any given day, the Hawaii Fire Fighters Association estimated.

And, as critical as containing the fires was, not all first responders could give the fires their undivided attention. Police and medics were still needed to perform other vital services, and several 911 calls regarded emergencies that were unrelated to the fires.

"I need an ambulance," one man in Kihei reported at 5:02 p.m. on August 8. "My auntie ... just fell right now." The situation was quite serious, as the man called back 16 minutes later and indicated that his aunt was drifting in and out of consciousness. The dispatcher assured him at the end of that call that an ambulance was on its way.

Another worried father called twice about his son, who had gotten into a moped accident. The father managed to transport his son to a police station but could not find anyone to render the young man medical assistance. Like the woman in Kihei, the man's son seemed to lose consciousness. "Just hang tight, sir," the operator told the father. "... The ambulance is coming right now."

Other calls reported possible criminal behavior, including disorderly conduct and drunk driving. One woman even called to say that her father, who may have previously threatened to kill her family, had stopped by her house and refused to leave.

Finally, Blaze News noticed that later in the afternoon on August 8, beginning around 4:30 or 5 p.m., the 911 operating system no longer operated as smoothly as it had earlier in the day. On a significant number of recorded calls, no caller seemed to be on the line, leaving operators to repeat "hello?" into the void for about 30 precious seconds when time was of the essence.

A few other calls about the fires were somehow misdirected to 911 systems on other islands and had to be transferred to Maui. Maui County encompasses the islands of Lana'i, Moloka'i, Kaho'olawe, and Molokini as well as Maui, so perhaps calls directed from other islands are not unusual. Still, the frequency of such calls seemed to increase later in the afternoon on August 8.

A few 911 calls were also included in the 26-minute Blaze Originals documentary "What Really Happened in Maui?" which features BlazeTV host Lauren Chen and was produced by Charles Couger, the man who furnished Blaze News with the 911 calls. The documentary is available to all BlazeTV subscribers. To become a subscriber, click here. The official trailer for the documentary can be seen below:

What Really Happened in Maui? | Official Trailer

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Biden’s tone-deafness reverberates as Hawaiians search for survivors



As stories featuring heroes who risked their own lives to save friends, family, and strangers from the fate of the flames in Maui continue to flood the media, President Biden continues to reflect an inability to grasp — or at least be sympathetic to — what has happened.

Biden claimed, while wearing a lei, that he and Jill have a “little sense” of “what it's like to lose a home,” as their home was once struck by lightning. He also loudly complained that the ground was hot while visiting the ashes of a once-beautiful city.

Mark Levin, who despises the president’s reaction to the wildfires, sheds light on the stories of devastation and hope that Biden has confirmed he is incapable of understanding.

One story features a young man, Benny Reinicke, who carried Sincerity Mirkovich, a total stranger, for miles in order to get Mirkovich and her daughter, Lani Williams, to safety.

The mother-daughter duo had jumped in their car to escape as wildfires began to ravage the town they have lived in for most of their lives. As they sat in standstill traffic, the two found that embers were already falling down on them.

"Then we see another fire on the side of us, a whole house. We're in the car and a whole tree is on fire, and I was like, 'Oh my God, we're going to die,’” Williams told "Good Morning America."

The two decided the best course of action was to seek shelter in the water. However, their escape route proved too difficult, as Mirkovich uses a walker for assistance.

That’s when Benny Reinicke came in.

The man saw the women struggling and told Mirkovich to lean on his back so he could carry her over the seawall and into the water.

Reinicke got them to safety and then stayed with them for over eight hours until the fires subsided.

The trio had not seen each other since the rescue, but they were brought together for a heartwarming reunion on "Good Morning America."

Levin is convinced that it was the Biden-led government that let people like Mirkovich and Williams down — and the government still refuses to acknowledge that obvious fact.

“You can’t prevent every fire and you can’t prevent these high winds in the middle of the Pacific, but to keep blaming climate change for something that obviously had nothing to do with climate change,” Levin comments.

“Then I have this fraud of a president, dementia, no dementia, who has to be told he needs to get there and he has to break off from his second vacation [in] Lake Tahoe, where he constantly is mooching off billionaires and foreign governments and so forth and so on,” he adds.


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The blame game begins over deadly Maui wildfire — but what officials aren't blaming sticks out



Hawaiian Electric Company is forcefully denying accusations that it is responsible for setting off the deadly wildfire on Maui that killed more than 100 people.

Last week, Maui County officials filed a lawsuit claiming the utility company "acted negligently by failing to power down their electrical equipment despite a National Weather Service Red Flag Warning on August 7th." Officials, moreover, asserted that "energized and downed power lines ignited dry fuel such as grass and brush, causing the fires" and argued that Hawaiian Electric failed to maintain the safety of its systems.

But none of that is true, according to Hawaiian Electric.

Instead, the company explained in a response that power lines had been "de-energized" for more than six hours when the fire that eventually destroyed Lahaina was ignited.

Hawaiian Electric claimed there were two fires on Aug. 8, the first of which was ignited around 6:30 in the morning by downed power lines. Firefighters responded to that fire, reported it was "100% contained," and then allegedly left the scene and declared it "extinguished," according to Hawaiian Electric.

But it was a second fire, spotted around 3 p.m. that afternoon near the location of the first blaze, that is responsible for the massive fire that eventually raced to Lahaina, the company said. Hawaiian Electric claimed its employees were the witnesses who first spotted the new fire and reported it to authorities.

"Power had been out for more than six hours by that time," the company explained. "There was no electricity flowing through the wires in the area or anywhere else on the West Maui coast. Hawaiian Electric has informed ATF investigators of the availability of records that demonstrate these facts."

In light of the company's version of events, Shelee Kimura, president and CEO of Hawaiian Electric, called Maui County's lawsuit "factually and legally irresponsible."

"We were surprised and disappointed that the County of Maui rushed to court even before completing its own investigation," Kimura also said. "Unfortunately, the county's lawsuit may leave us no choice in the legal system but to show its responsibility for what happened that day."

Interestingly, what is not being blamed for the wildfire — either by Maui County officials or Hawaiian Electric — is climate change. That sticks out after repeated attempts to pin blame for the wildfire on climate change.

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'I think Joe Biden should take his $700 and get back on the f***in' plane': Hawaiian woman calls out the president for shoveling money into Ukraine while Americans are in dire straits



A Hawaiian woman who said that she lost her home, vehicle, animals, medicine, and rent money due to wildfires noted that the $700 payments being offered to those impacted by the disaster pales in comparison to the massive quantities of aid that the U.S. has shoveled into the nation of Ukraine.

"I haven't had any money come in. I haven't had anybody call me back," she said in a video posted on X by Jeremy Loffredo.

"I lost my house. I lost my car. I lost my animals," the woman said, noting that her "medicine was all burnt in my house. My rent money was all burnt in my house. I have no money anymore."

"I think Joe Biden should take his $700 and get back on the f***in' plane and go home, that's what I think," she added. She then juxtaposed "$700 compared to all the millions he's given" to the nation of Ukraine. "Fix your house before you fix somebody else's house," she said.

Loffredo described the woman he spoke to as an "indigenous Lahaina local."

According to the White House, FEMA has authorized payments of $700 per household to assist people displaced and facing critical needs due to the fires.

"Critical Needs Assistance provides a onetime payment of $700 to address immediate needs such as food, water and clothing. This is just one of several types of federal assistance you may be eligible to receive," according to FEMA.

The U.S. has provided billions of dollars' worth of aid to assist Ukraine as that embattled nation has been fighting against a Russian invasion for more than a year.

Someone replied to Loffredo's post asking who the woman is and noted that they would "gladly send $100 to her directly."

— (@)

Loffredo responded, writing, "Venmo: Joy-Shelton-4."

The giving individual later posted a screenshot showing that they had sent the woman $100.

— (@)

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Hawaii officials are concerned not enough Maui residents are handing over their DNA samples after wildfires



Hawaii officials are pleading with Maui residents who have missing family members to give the government their DNA samples to aid the identification of human remains discovered in the ashes on the island.

With more than 1,000 people still considered unaccounted for or missing after devastating wildfires destroyed Lahaina, the Family Assistance Center has collected only 104 DNA samples from families with missing relatives, the Associated Press reported.

Maui Prosecuting Attorney Andrew Martin, who is running the center, expressed concern that more Maui residents have not handed over their DNA.

"That's our concern, that’s why I’m here today, that’s why I’m asking for this help," he said, the AP reported. "What we want to do — all we want to do — is help people locate and identify their unaccounted-for loved ones."

Officials promise that any DNA samples collected will be used only for the purpose of identifying remains. They vow the samples will not be entered into law enforcement databases.

Tragically, not every person believed to be missing will be identified. That's because, according to the AP which spoke to fire experts, it is "possible some bodies were cremated by the intense heat, potentially leaving no bones left to identify through DNA tests." More than 1,000 people who perished in 9/11, for example, never had their remains recovered.

The exact number of missing people is not known. Officials say that is because authorities do not have complete information on those missing persons and because individuals who initially reported missing people are not returning calls from authorities.

There are no children on the list of missing people, according to Maui Now, but officials believe that children will be among those found in the coming days and weeks.

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Maui's wildfire death toll officially 114, but locals running out of body bags reckon it's closer to 500, with thousands still missing



The County of Maui and the Maui Police Department confirmed Sunday that at least 114 people were dead as a result of the Hawaii wildfires that torched thousands of acres and reduced much of the historic town of Lahaina to ash.

Maui Police Chief John Pelletier indicated early last week that rescuers accompanied by scores of cadaver dogs were working their way through the aftermath, over 85% of which had been covered by Sunday, according to Hawaii Gov. Josh Green.

Locals, whose morgues have reportedly run out of body bags, indicated that the actual number of deaths is the neighborhood of 500.

Allisen Medina told the Daily Mail, "I know there are at least 480 dead here in Maui, and I don't understand why they're [the authorities] not saying that. Maybe it's to do with DNA or something."

Authorities are encouraging people to provide DNA samples to help identify victims, reported Axios.

The FBI announced Friday it would be opening a DNA matching site to speed up the process.

"I do know they ran out of body bags by the first or second night and had to ship some in from the mainland," added Medina.

Medina criticized the Biden administration's relief effort, saying, "100 percent not enough is being done, so people are doing it themselves. The government, relief organizations — they're not doing anything."

"We're only 100 miles from Oahu, which has several military bases. Why is the response so lacking? Why are they doing so little? Why is nothing else being done?" asked Medina, who has been traveling to and from Lahaina over the past two weeks, helping burned-out residents.

The 24-year-old also took aim at the apparent failure of some officials, particularly Herman Andaya, the administrator of the Maui Emergency Management Agency who resigned Thursday despite refusing to admit fault.

While she did not mention Andaya by name, Medina blasted his decision not to sound warning sirens.

A part-time morgue worker similarly suggested that around 480 people had already been confirmed dead, telling Southwest flight attendant Sarah Trost that authorities had only searched 13% of Lahaina as of last week, where he personally "found so many children, children and moms holding each other. Infants, toddlers, the unimaginable. Husbands and wives, whole entire [families] in a room just huddling together, burning to death."

The morgue worker further claimed, "It's all bones. ... They have no more room on the island in the morgue, so they're shipping in containers to hold those body bags."

Gov. Green told CBS News Sunday there were still an estimated 1,050 people unaccounted for, noting both that search and recovery efforts in the ruins of larger buildings could "take weeks" and that "the remains of those who died, in some cases, may be impossible to recover" on account of the high temperatures at which the fires burned.

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NBC News reported that an accurate count could take months or even years according to researchers and forensic anthropologists.

"The death toll number is always provisional, in a way," said Lynn Goldman, an epidemiologist and the dean of the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University. "I assume people won't stop trying to find remains and the work will take a very, very long time."

Goldman added, "It's going to be challenging to account for all the direct deaths, whether it was people who were burned or people who jumped into the ocean and drowned or people who died of smoke inhalation."

Although the official number is less than one-quarter of that counted by the morgue worker, Medina, and others, Pelletier underscored that it is already "unprecedented."

"No one has ever seen this that is alive today. Not this size, not this number, not this volume — and we're not done," said the Maui police chief.

While officials continue to tabulate how many souls perished in the blazes, some survivors are trying to establish precisely who or what set Maui up to burn.

Numerous lawsuits allege that Hawaiian Electric, which serves 95% of the state's 1.4 million residents, helped set the stage for the wildfires.

TheBlaze previously detailed a report claiming Hawaiian Electric had prioritized its shift to 100% renewable energy — as mandated by Democratic lawmakers — over the clearing of flammable vegetation and the maintenance of its power lines.

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Hawaii's Dem governor tries to suspend property sales in wildfire damaged town — but wants the state 'to acquire that land'



Hawaii Gov. Josh Green (D) wants to enact a moratorium on property transactions in Lahaina, the Maui-based city destroyed by wildfires last week.

Green revealed on Monday that he asked Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez (D) to explore legal maneuvers to suspend "any sales of properties that have been damaged or destroyed" by the wildfires in Lahaina.

According to Green, his motivation for such action is to prevent Maui residents from being "victimized" by out-of-state people (or companies) seeking to grab up land at a reduced price.

"My intention from start to finish is to make sure that no one is victimized from a land grab," Green said on Wednesday. "People are right now traumatized. Please do not approach them with an offer to buy their land. Do not approach their families saying they'll be much better off if they make a deal. Because we’re not going to allow it."

But, at the same time, Green is exploring how the state can grab up some of that precious land, some of which he would like to use for "workforce housing."

Green said this week:

I'm already thinking about ways for the state to acquire that land, so that we can put it into workforce housing, to put it back into families, or to make it open spaces in perpetuity as a memorial to people who were lost. We want this to be something that we remember, after the pain passes, as a magic place. And Lahaina will rebuild. The tragedy right now is the loss of life. The buildings can be rebuilt over time; even the Banyan tree may survive.

The realities of the scene on Front Street in Lahaina www.youtube.com

Last month, Green issued an emergency housing proclamation, which, according to the Honolulu Civil Beat, "suspends several state and county laws" to expedite housing development.

Now, he plans to use the crisis to control the fire-ravaged land.

"Much of what we do is challenged by other laws, federal and otherwise, that don’t let us restrict who can buy in our state. ... But we can do it deliberately during a crisis, and that's what we're doing," he said, according to the Civil Beat. "And so for my part I will try to allow no one from outside our state to buy any land until we get through this crisis and decide what Lahaina should be in the future."

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Biden finally addresses the historic devastation in Maui but at times appears unable to recall the island's name: 'Not the one where you see on television all the time'



President Joe Biden, who has reportedly spent over a year of his presidency on vacation, was recently lambasted for idling on a beach in Delaware while historic wildfires raged in Maui, Hawaii, claiming the lives of at least 106 people and torching over 2,100 acres.

When Biden finally returned to his post, he prompted outrage again, declining to comment on the tragedy.

On Tuesday, the Democratic octogenarian broke his silence on Maui, but appeared at times unable to name the island on the minds and lips of many Americans, including the former Democratic state representative official who has called him out despite having previously campaigned for him.

Speaking to a crowd of roughly 150 workers and supporters at the Ingeteam Inc. electrical engineering factory in Milwaukee, Biden focused primarily on hyping his so-called "Bidenomics" plan, claiming that it was "working," notwithstanding rising inflation, dwindling hourly earnings, failing banks, runaway spending, and rising mortgage rates.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel indicated that the visit was of strategic importance, as Biden wanted to set the tone ahead of the GOP presidential primary debate in Milwaukee on Aug. 23.

When Biden came around to discussing the Hawaii wildfires, he prefaced his remarks with an apology for going over time with his speech.

With the aid of teleprompters, he initially invoked Maui by name, indicating that 500 federal personnel had been deployed to the island to "help communities and survivors get back on their feet." However, in the 44-minute speech, he would only speak the name "Maui" once more.

After remarking upon the damage done and the misery left in the wake of the fires, Biden indicated that he and Jill Biden would soon be traveling to Hawaii, then proceeded to detail the efforts of the Coast Guard and Navy to support search and rescue operations.

The Daily Mail reported that Biden appeared to struggle to name Maui, stating, "The Army helicopters helped fire suppression efforts on the Big Island because there's still some burning on the Big Island — not the one that, not the one where you see on television all the time."

Biden's seeming memory lapse regarding the American region burning under his watch does not appear to have prompted nearly as much outrage as his refusal to speak about the tragedy for four days or his offer of a one-time payment of $700 per household in emergency aid to victims of the wildfires, which Newsweek reported critics have set in contrast to the billions of dollars in aid sent to foreign nations.

The White House has intimated that its actions speak more loudly than the words Biden can recall, citing the provision of 50,000 meals, 75,000 liters of water, 5,000 cots, and 10,000 blankets by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to victims of the wildfires, along with the response efforts by the Coast Guard, the Navy's Third Fleet, and the Marines, reported NBC News.

While the Biden administration has taken action, residents on the "Big Island" have indicated that volunteers have provided for more support than the government, according to a New York Times report.

Concerning criticism of Biden's response to the tragedy, White House spokesman Andrew Bates stated, "We won't be lectured by Republican officials in Washington who are doubling denial of the climate crisis that is devastating red and blue states."

Various other Democrats have insinuated or claimed outright that the specter of anthropogenic climate change is responsible for the fires, whereas the Times has indicated the unchecked weeds and other highly flammable invasive plants that took over Hawaii's derelict farms predisposed the state to burn.

With the Wisconsin speech and double mention of Maui behind him, Biden is reportedly headed to Lake Tahoe for a week-long vacation.

President Biden vows Hawaii will have 'everything it needs' for tackling wildfiresyoutu.be

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