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Statewide

Across the islands, public-safety and stewardship issues are running alongside everyday community concerns. On Maui and the Big Island, magnitude-4.5 quakes off the west side did not trigger a tsunami threat, while Big Island officials are also weighing toll-road proposals for Maunakea access and new evacuation traffic planning in Waikōloa Village. Environmental oversight remains a major thread, from new state legislation signed by Gov. Josh Green to airport carbon-reduction progress and Mauna Kea stewardship leadership changes. Ocean conditions and weather remain important daily watch items, with swimming advisories at Hanalei Bay and surf and shower forecasts shaping plans on Maui, the Big Island, and Kauaʻi. At the same time, communities are focused on practical needs, including Maui’s parking changes at Kamaʻole, Kauaʻi early-childhood services, and Big Island food-safety enforcement in Kailua-Kona.

Maui

Maui’s biggest immediate local story is the launch of Park Maui at Kamaʻole Beach Parks, which will give kamaʻāina priority access as the county rolls out the new parking program in Kīhei. The island also has a strong community-services thread, including Raising Cane’s and Maui United Way’s school-supply drive and Coral Spawning Night at Maui Ocean Center. Public safety and conditions remain part of the daily picture, with a swimmer rescued at Baldwin Beach Park and no tsunami threat after the offshore quake.

Big Island

The Big Island is dealing with a mix of seismic, land-use, and public-safety issues. A magnitude-4.5 quake off the west coast was felt Wednesday night, while state agencies are considering making Maunakea access a toll road and the Mauna Kea stewardship authority’s first executive director is retiring. On the practical side, residents and businesses are also watching free soil and plant testing for storm-affected farmers, food-safety action at a Kailua-Kona pizza shop, and new Hawaiʻi Energy rebates aimed at easing costs.

Kauaʻi

Kauaʻi’s main local concerns today center on family services, ocean conditions, and island operations. Community support for Tūtū and Me early childhood learning services stands out as a direct effort to protect a program for local ʻohana, while Hanalei Bay remains under a no-swimming advisory because of runoff and brown water. Broader state policy is also reaching the island through new legislation supporting Hawaiʻi’s film industry and blue economy and airport carbon-management progress, while local business news includes a new membership-services manager at The Club at Kukuiʻula.

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