Hawaii
Hawaii scientists closely monitoring seismic activity spike at Kilauea volcano
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – For the last week, scientists have been keeping an especially close eye on seismic activity at Kilauea.
No eruption is underway, but a big jump in earthquakes over the last several days has experts wondering what could happen next.
The latest seismic spike stretches back to last Friday.
U.S. Geological Survey Scientist-in-charge Ken Hon says his team tracked 500 earthquakes in the first six hours and since then, there have been over 3,000.
“We had field crews out who were reporting rockfalls off of the southside of Halemaumau, felt a lot of earthquakes, heard a lot of noises,” Hon explained.
“So it really sounded like things were really primed. That’s the kind of stuff that happens before an eruption and then it shifted kind of back over to the south end of the caldera.”
The shockwaves stretch from Halemaumau Crater down through the southwest rift zone. Hon describes it as a by-product of infusion, where magma is moving underground and shifting rock.
“I guess you can think of it like a deck of cards that you pull across,” Hon said.
“There’s some space there, but it’s like on tiny fractures. So when the magma comes in, it can kind of push all the rocks together like a deck of cards and make room for itself down there.”
Despite the spike in activity, Hon says it’s not an indicator that an eruption is imminent.
“We’re not really sure what it’s going to do,” Hon said.
“We have to have the pressure to put that upwards and out of the fractures and also push those fractures apart. It’s just this compressible space versus magmatic pressure versus surface weakness that’s going on. Those are things that we can’t possibly measure.”
In this case, if lava does eventually break through, Hon says it would remain within the park boundaries. “All the activity so far shows that any possible eruption will either be confined to the summit or an area out around the southwest rift zone of Kilauea,” Hon said. “Unpopulated areas, no infrastructure out there, so we don’t expect any impact on the surrounding communities.”
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
3 candidates to be considered for District 18 seat
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The Democratic Party of Hawaii selected three nominees to fill the vacant Senate District 18 seat, serving Central Oahu, Mililani, Waipio and Waipahu, after Sen. Michelle Kidani’s retirement.
Kidani’s retirement took effect on June 30.
The party announced Thursday that Sechyi Laiu, Beth K Fukumoto, and Danielle Bass were submitted for selection to fill the seat.
Laiu is a senior Hawaii civil service administrator with more than 15 years of experience in commercial, family, immigration and legislative law. He is the litigation coordinator for the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and was a staff attorney for the city on transportation, public safety, legal affairs and salary compensation.
Fukumoto is a political columnist, longtime Miliani resident and former state representative. She served as vice chair of the House committees on Tourism and Veterans, Military and International Affairs and Culture and the Arts.
Bass is a fourth-generation, lifelong Miliani resident, with more than 20 years of experience serving Central Oahu and Hawaii. She served as Legislative and Committee Manager in the House and advanced sustainability and resilience initiatives and policies as the state’s sustainability coordinator.
The governor will choose one of the three to serve as the next state senator for Central Oahu.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
First 5 Hawaii is a comprehensive online resource that helps families with young children find and connect to state and federal programs and services.
Honolulu (KHON2) – Navigating the many programs and services available for young children can be overwhelming, but First 5 Hawaii is making it easier for families to find the support they need.
Designed for families with children from birth to age 5, First 5 Hawaii is the state’s first comprehensive online resource that helps connect parents and caregivers with state and federal programs they may qualify for.
By answering a few simple questions, families can quickly discover resources tailored to their specific needs.
The website serves as a one-stop shop, partnering with 18 state and federal programs to help connect families with services such as preschool, child care assistance, health coverage, nutrition programs including WIC and SNAP, parenting support, developmental screenings, and special needs services.
Parents can also explore age-appropriate activities, child development information, and helpful parenting resources.
What sets First 5 Hawaii apart is its personalized eligibility screening tool.
Instead of searching multiple websites and applying for programs one at a time, families can use a single resource to identify benefits they may qualify for across early learning, health care, nutrition, housing assistance, and more.
Even families who aren’t sure they qualify are encouraged to give it a try. The online eligibility screener is free, confidential, and only takes a few minutes to complete.
Many families are surprised to learn they may be eligible for programs they didn’t know existed.
By bringing trusted resources together in one convenient location, First 5 Hawaii helps remove barriers for busy parents and makes it easier to access services that support healthy child development during the most important early years of life.
To learn more or complete the eligibility screener, visit the First 5 Hawaii website.
Hawaii
Three West Hawaii sex offenders arrested – West Hawaii Today
Three convicted sex offenders were arrested on Hawaii Island last week for allegedly failing to comply with sex offender registry requirements.
Multiple law-enforcement agencies conducted checks in Kona on registered sex offenders who had been identified as potentially out of compliance with the state’s Sex Offender Registry laws, according the Department of the Attorney General.
As a result of the three-day operation, several individuals were brought back into compliance, and three West Hawaii men were arrested for allegedly failing to comply with the requirements.
The three men who were arrested are Joseph Debus, 56, of Kailua-Kona, Garth Coleman, 53, of Holualoa and Alexsandr Skelcey, 34, of Kailua-Kona.
Debus was convicted of second-degree sex assault in Hawaii in 1993 and sentenced to five years probation with a year in jail. Coleman was sentenced to 20 years in prison for first-degree assault in 2000 after a jury trial in Hawaii. And Skelcey was convicted in Michigan in 2012 of assault with intent to commit sex assault.
“Sex offender registration requirements exist to protect our communities and ensure law enforcement knows where convicted offenders are living,” Tom Alipio, chief of the AG department’s Investigations Division, said in a press release. “Compliance operations like this send a clear message that we will actively monitor the registry, investigate violations and work closely with our law enforcement partners to hold offenders accountable when they fail to meet their legal obligations.”
HPD Chief Reed Mahuna said, “Operations like this allow us to verify that offenders are maintaining strict compliance with registration laws and those who aren’t will be addressed immediately. We will continue to leverage these multi-agency partnerships to keep our island communities safe,”
Members of the public can look up publicly available offender information and subscribe to notifications at sexoffenders.ehawaii.gov/coveredoffender/.
Anyone with information regarding a registered sex offender who may be violating registration requirements is encouraged to contact the Department of the Attorney General’s Investigation Division at (808) 586-1240 or their local law enforcement.
-
Movie Reviews11 minutes ago‘Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass’ Review: We’re Off to Hump the Wizard
-
World19 minutes agoBacklash on ethanol-blend fuel intensifies in India, puts carmakers in the dock
-
Politics29 minutes ago
Crews Drape Tarp Over White House in Latest Trump Restoration
-
Health44 minutes agoGLP-1 Users’ Guide to Protein Snacks: Here’s What a Dietitian Actually Recommends
-
Lifestyle59 minutes ago‘The Invite’ is a marriage comedy with sex and heart
-
Technology1 hour agoI spent a week using the Trump phone — it sucks
-
World1 hour agoWith US unleashing attacks, Iranian official threatens that the Islamic Republic will deliver a ‘hard slap’
-
Politics1 hour agoWATCH: Trump’s Energy chief reveals what escalating Iran tensions could mean for gas prices