Hawaii
American Airlines to launch service from Dallas to Kona, Hawaii – The Points Guy
Hawaii’s Big Island may be the next airline network planner battleground.
American Airlines filed plans over the weekend to relaunch service between Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) and Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport at Keahole (KOA) beginning Nov. 20, as first seen in Cirium schedules and later confirmed by a carrier spokesperson.
American’s Dallas-to-Kona route will operate seasonally through Feb. 28, 2026. Note that American will operate daily flights on this 3,724-mile route from Nov. 20, 2025, through Jan. 6, 2026, before taking a short six-week hiatus until resuming daily flights again Feb. 12, 2026.
The airline will deploy a 234-seat Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner featuring 20 Flagship Business pods, 28 premium economy recliners, 48 extra-legroom Main Cabin Extra seats and 138 standard economy seats on the route.
The Fort Worth, Texas-based carrier last operated this route in January 2022, according to Cirium schedules.
American’s plan to relaunch its Dallas-to-Kona service follows another major expansion on the Big Island.
Last week, Delta Air Lines announced that it, too, would add a new Kona route, this time from Salt Lake City. Delta’s service will operate using a Boeing 767-300ER.
Save money: How you can book flights to Hawaii using points and miles in 2025
The Big Island may not be as popular with tourists (or airline network planners) as Oahu and Maui, but seeing all the attention it has gotten from the airlines over the past few days is interesting.
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While there may not be a sudden uptick in demand for travel to the Big Island, carriers need to find a home for their wide-body jets during the winter season. That’s when transatlantic traffic declines and airlines have spare capacity on their biggest planes.
In recent years, Oceania has proved to be a popular spot to send twin-aisle planes during the Northern Hemisphere’s winter season, as have some hot spots in Africa, like Marrakech, Morocco.
But with its appeal to sunseekers, Hawaii has long been a popular bet for airline network planners. As such, it’ll be interesting to see how all the new service performs.
In fact, this weekend, American also added a second daily flight from DFW to Maui’s Kahului Airport (OGG) during the peak winter season. This is seemingly another play to deploy wide-body aircraft on the most appropriate routes this winter.
Ultimately, flyers will be the winners, as new airline service means more competition and, ultimately, more frequent fare wars and upgrade and award availability.
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Hawaii
Hawaii’s ‘Tokyo Toe’ honored outside Honolulu Hale
HONOLULU (KHON2) — Spirits were high for the University of Hawaii Night outside of Honolulu Hale on Thursday, Dec. 18.
A special member of the UH football team was honored by the mayor. Even though it is called University of Hawaii Night, Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi had one team in particular that he wanted to give praise to.
“We’re here tonight especially for the football team, given the great winning season they’ve had. But I really want to include the coaches in that, coaches never get enough credit,” Blangiardi said.
The star of the show was UH’s kicker, who is commonly known as the “Tokyo Toe,” who was honored with a proclamation that declared Dec. 18 as Kansei Matsuzawa Day.
“Consensus all-American, first in the school’s history, all of this deserves celebration,” Blangiardi said. “Kickers have always been my favorite guys, but this guy here is off the charts. You got to give him credit where credit is due, you know?”
The all-American kicker stayed humble despite the accolades and said he could never have done it without the local community.
“Because of the coaches, because of my teammates, that’s the biggest reason why I am here right now, so I want to appreciate everybody supporting me throughout my journey,” Matsuzawa said.
Hawaii’s athletic director had some good news in terms of the Rainbow Warriors being televised in the islands for fans who prefer to watch the games at home.
“Pay per view is a thing of the past, we’re not going to have that any longer, I’m committed to that, and we’re certain about that,” UH athletics director Matt Elliott said. “We are in the process of working on what is the next phase of our media rights deal, so, waiting for the Mountain West to finish their job, which is to figure out the national rights and partners, and then we’ll turn our focus on the local rights.”
Matsuzawa will take the field as a Warrior one last time against the University of California on Christmas Eve in the Sheraton Hawaii Bowl.
Hawaii
I flew to the ‘least touristy’ island in Hawaii on a 9-passenger plane. I’d only suggest this trip to certain travelers.
Often described as Hawaii’s “least touristy” island, Molokai hosted around 30,000 visitors in 2024, a minuscule percentage of the millions of tourists who came to our state.
Home to about 7,400 residents, much of the island’s land remains dedicated to agriculture, cultural preservation, and rural areas.
The island has no big-box resorts, not much nightlife, no permanent traffic lights, and limited visitor infrastructure. The tight-knit community has historically resisted large-scale tourism to protect its slower pace of life.
Until 2016, travelers could reach Molokai by ferry from my hometown of Lahaina, but the service was discontinued due to competition from commuter air travel and declining ridership, Maui News reported.
Today, small commuter planes are the only way to access the island.
I paid $190 for my round-trip ticket from Maui, and the turbulent 20-minute flight quickly made it clear to me why this trip isn’t for everyone.
Hawaii
Hawaii agencies unite to stop illegal fireworks | Safe 2026
On New Year’s Eve 2025, Honolulu witnessed one of the most devastating illegal fireworks incidents in Hawaii’s history.
It was a neighborhood celebration that turned tragic, claiming the lives of several residents and leaving many others with life-altering injuries.
In this special “Safe 2026: Stop Illegal Fireworks” news forum, KHON2 brought together the key agencies and voices who are working to stop incidents like that from happening again.
The conversation will shed light on the dangers of illegal fireworks — and the united effort to ensure that the 2025 Aliamanu fireworks tragedy is never repeated.
Be part of the conversation with these special guests:
- Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi
- Honolulu Police Department Interim Chief Rade Vanic
- Hawaii Department of Law Enforcement Director Mike Lambert
- Deputy Honolulu Prosecutor Mike Yuen
Together, we will examine what went wrong, what’s being done to strengthen enforcement and how we can all help our communities stay safe this New Year’s Eve.
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