AI brief

AI-generated from recent headlines

Statewide

Election season is moving onto the doorstep across the islands, with Maui County ballots due out and Kauaʻi primary packets already in the mail, while Maui mayoral politics and Kauaʻi’s candidate forum are also taking shape. Public safety and disaster readiness remain a clear thread, from Waikōloa residents pressing for better evacuation routes to Kauaʻi officials monitoring the Waimea River mouth after flood concerns and Haleakalā visitors urged to slow down for wildlife. On the policy side, Gov. Josh Green has finished the 2026 bill-signing season after signing 266 measures into law and issuing one veto. There is also a strong community and family-services angle statewide, with expanded free school meals on the Big Island and islandwide health survey results now out on Kauaʻi.

Maui

Maui politics is front and center, with the State of Hawaiʻi Organization of Police Officers backing Yuki Lei Sugimura in the county mayor’s race. At the same time, voters are beginning to receive primary ballots, putting the campaign season into a more active phase. Beyond politics, Mayor Richard Bissen is taking Holomua Kākou back to Lānaʻi and Lahaina fire survivors are returning for an emotional homecoming as the community marks a painful milestone in the burn zone. There is also a safety note for visitors and residents: Haleakalā National Park is warning drivers to slow down for wildlife.

Big Island

The Big Island’s most consequential thread is emergency preparedness, as a Waikōloa evacuation study confirms residents’ long-running concerns about inadequate routes. Public safety and family needs also stand out, with authorities still seeking help finding a missing Keaʻau woman and police inviting families to the 2026 Kohala Keiki Fishing Derby. On the policy side, the state is expanding free school meals for Hawaiʻi working families, while Gov. Josh Green’s final veto actions close out the legislative season. Weather and volcano coverage round out the day, with Hilo expecting more showers and USGS scientists revisiting the question of when Halemaʻumaʻu may fill with lava.

Kauaʻi

Kauaʻi is dealing with both immediate public-safety concerns and election-season activity. Conditions at the Waimea River mouth have stabilized after community efforts helped ease the flood threat, while residents are also being reminded to cross Kūhiō Highway only at marked crosswalks. On the civic side, primary election ballot packets are now going out and Zero Waste Kauaʻi is hosting a mayoral candidate forum focused on waste and the island’s environmental future. There is also a broader community-health snapshot now available through the 2026 public health emergency response survey report, along with practical updates like the new Kauaʻi Now app release and the latest weather and surf outlook.

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