Hawaii
Hawaiian Electric Finalizes $2 Billion Maui Fire Settlement
Hawaiian Electric Industries formalized a $2 billion agreement to settle damage claims from a wildfire that razed the historic town of Lahaina and killed more than 100 people.
The utility-owner had reached a tentative agreement in August in which it, along with other defendants including the state of Hawaii, Maui County and landowners, would pay $4 billion to resolve hundreds of lawsuits stemming from last year’s wildfire, according to a filing Tuesday.
Hawaii
How this N.J. husband is keeping his wife’s legacy alive after tragedy struck in Hawaii
When Andy Chiang lost his wife on a trip to Hawaii, he says it was a pain like no other.
But the thought of not continuing the legacy of her passion was one reality he would not be able to handle.
“The unspeakable thing happened to my wife when visiting our daughter,” said Chiang, who lives in Fort Lee. “Each day, I carry that. But also, the legacy of my wife’s dance production that is so beloved.”
Now, the dance company that has had over 20 years of success is continuing its tradition of bringing Chinese culture across the United States.
The Fort Lee-based Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company will celebrate the Lunar New Year with its annual production, “Year of the Horse,” set for 2 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark.
Founded in the late 1980s by Taiwanese-born choreographer Nai-Ni Chen, the company grew out of Chen’s early success in New York’s downtown dance scene, where a critically acclaimed commission at La MaMa helped launch her career. At a time when opportunities for Asian American dancers on Broadway were limited, Chen established her own troupe, which has since become one of the few Asian American dance companies to tour extensively across the United States.
A longtime winter tradition at NJPAC that started in the late 1990s, the family-friendly matinees blend traditional Chinese dance with contemporary choreography, featuring colorful costumes, lion and dragon dances, ribbon work, acrobatics and live music, according to Chiang. The performances honor the spirit of renewal associated with the Lunar New Year while showcasing the company’s cross-cultural approach.
This year’s program includes three premieres. The first is a duet choreographed by residency artist Ying Shi that highlights the folk traditions of China’s Yunnan Province, known for fluid hip sways and soft shoulder movements.
The second, “Mongolian Harvest,” by Inner Mongolia native Lawrence Jin, draws on the region’s nomadic horse culture with bold, athletic choreography.
The company will also debut “Vira of the Red Horse,” a collaboration with Newark’s Rancho Camponeses do Minho, blending Portuguese Minho folk dance with Chinese movement in a tribute to the city’s immigrant history and its Ironbound community.
In addition, the program will feature a work-in-progress, “Mythical Echos,” inspired by the art of the Dunhuang caves along the Silk Road.
Live music will be performed by LiangXing Tang, a National Heritage Fellow, on the pipa, or Chinese lute, and by Yi Yang, a 2026 New Jersey State Council on the Arts Heritage fellow, on the guzheng, a 21-to-27-stringed instrument akin to a zither.
Festivities begin at 12 p.m. on Saturday with a dragon parade from NJPAC to the Newark Museum of Art three blocks away, followed by a marketplace in the theater lobby before the 2 p.m. performance. Tickets are on sale now at NJPAC.org.
Hawaii
Hawaii-born actor Jason Momoa prepares for next film
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Honolulu-born star actor Jason Momoa prepares for his next project.
Just two weeks after the release of his latest movie “The Wrecking Crew,” he’s landed another role.
Reports say Momoa will star in the action-adventure movie “Helldivers.”
The movie will be an adaptation of a shooter style video game. The soldiers known as helldivers will battle alien creatures threatening to destroy the fictional planet of super earth.
The film is set to be directed by Justin Lin and backed by Sony Pictures and PlayStation.
Helldivers is slated for release in November 2027.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Hawaii Marijuana Legalization Bills Are Likely Dead For 2026 Session, Key Lawmakers Say – Marijuana Moment
A pair of Hawaii House bills aimed at legalizing marijuana in the state are effectively dead for the 2026 session, key lawmakers say.
Despite renewed hopes that the proposals—including one from House Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee Chairman David Tarnas (D) that would have put the issue of legalization before voters at the ballot—would advance this year, the sponsor and House Speaker Nadine Nakamura (D) say there isn’t enough support within the legislature to pass them this year.
“We’re the same members from last year,” Nakamura told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser on Friday, “and when we checked around, it didn’t sound like it would change anyone’s mind.”
“It’s just not a clear-cut ‘let’s do it,’” she said, adding that legislators “represent 1.4 million people” across the state, and “the constituencies are so different and they have to represent their constituencies.” The speaker said an informal head count of House lawmakers that leadership conducted last month revealed no clear signs that the general sentiment toward legalization had meaningfully changed.
“The feedback we were getting from members is that this doesn’t rise to the level of a constitutional amendment where we’re changing the way government operates,” Nakamura said. “This is more of an issue that should be addressed within the body.”
If the legislature agreed to advance the latest legalization plan, voters would see this on their November ballots:
“Shall the Constitution of the State of Hawaii be amended to:
(1) Authorize individuals aged twenty-one and older to use and possess personal-use amounts of cannabis; and
(2) Require the legislature to enact laws governing the use, manufacture, distribution, sale, possession, regulation, and taxation of cannabis within the State?”
If a majority of voters approved the ballot measure, cannabis legalization would take effect on July 1, 2027.
Tarnas, for his part, said he believes “the bill we put out this year addressed the concerns better than the bill last year.”
“So I think we got more votes from our internal polling but it’s not enough. So I still need to keep working on it,” he said. “I’m being courteously persistent. I think it’s incumbent upon me to continue the conversation in a productive way and a collaborative way to address the concerns of House members and the concerns of the chairs of those committees that have referred the bill.”
A Senate version of the legislation is still technically in play, but the same political dynamics on the House side would still complicate its path to passage if it were to cross over to that chamber.
Karen O’Keefe, state policies director at the Marijuana Policy Project, told Marijuana Moment on Monday that the Hawaii House “is not only blocking legalization against the wishes of those it represents, but it is also depriving voters of the transparency needed to hold their lawmakers accountable.”
“Last year, instead of allowing a floor vote on legalization, the House sent legalization back to committees it had already passed due to a lack of ‘consensus,’” she said. “This deprived voters of the knowledge of where their representatives stood. Now, it appears poised to kill a voter-referral and a legalization trigger bill, with no committee hearings or votes.”
“Hawai’i voters deserve a chance to legalize cannabis if their lawmakers are unwilling to do so. And they deserve to know which lawmakers are responsible for their continued criminalization,” O’Keefe said. “We hope the Senate has more respect for liberty, democracy, and transparency.”
State officials last month released a report on the potential economic impact of recreational marijuana legalization in the state, including revenue implications related to domestic and international tourism.
All told, researchers said survey data and comparative analyses indicate that Hawaii could see anywhere from $46-$90 million in monthly marijuana sales by year five of implementation, after accounting for a maximum 15 percent tax rate on cannabis products.
Hawaii’s Senate last year narrowly defeated a proposal that would have increased fivefold the amount of cannabis that a person could possess without risk of criminal charges.
Had the measure become law, it would have increased the amount of cannabis decriminalized in Hawaii from the current 3 grams up to 15 grams. Possession of any amount of marijuana up to that 15-gram limit would have been classified as a civil violation, punishable by a fine of $130.
A Senate bill that would have legalized marijuana for adults, meanwhile, ultimately stalled for the session. That measure, SB 1613, failed to make it out of committee by a legislative deadline.
While advocates felt there was sufficient support for the legalization proposal in the Senate, it’s widely believed that House lawmakers would have ultimately scuttled the measure, as they did last February with a legalization companion bill, HB 1246.
In 2024, a Senate-passed legalization bill also fizzled out in the House.
Last year’s House vote to stall the bill came just days after approval from a pair of committees at a joint hearing. Ahead of that hearing, the panels received nearly 300 pages of testimony, including from state agencies, advocacy organizations and members of the public.
Green signed separate legislation last year to allow medical marijuana caregivers to grow marijuana on behalf of up to five patients rather than the current one.
And in July, the governor signed another bill that establishes a number of new rules around hemp products in Hawaii, including a requirement that distributors and retailers obtain a registration from the Department of Health.
Lawmakers also sent a bill to the governor that would help speed the expungement process for people hoping to clear their records of past marijuana-related offenses—a proposal Green signed into law last April.
That measure, HB 132, from Tarnas, is intended to expedite expungements happening through a pilot program signed into law in 2024 by Green. Specifically, it will remove a distinction between marijuana and other Schedule V drugs for the purposes of the expungement program.
The bill’s proponents said the current wording of the law forces state officials to comb through thousands of criminal records manually in order to identify which are eligible for expungement under the pilot program.
Meanwhile, in November, Hawaii officials finalized rules that will allow medical marijuana dispensaries to sell an expanded assortment of products for patients—including dry herb vaporizers, rolling papers and grinders—while revising the state code to clarify that cannabis oils and concentrates can be marketed for inhalation.
The department also affirmed its support for federal marijuana rescheduling—a policy change that President Donald Trump ordered to be completed expeditiously but has yet to come to fruition.
Meanwhile, Hawaii lawmakers recently advanced a bill to allow qualifying patients to access medical marijuana at health facilities.
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Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.
Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.
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Regulators are also launching a series of courses designed to educate physicians and other healthcare professionals about medical marijuana as the state’s cannabis program expands.
The underlying medical marijuana expansion bill signed by the governor in late June, in addition to allowing more patients to more easily access cannabis, also contains a provision that advocates find problematic.
Before lawmakers sent the legislation to Green, a conference committee revised the plan, inserting a provision to allow DOH to access medical marijuana patient records held by doctors for any reason whatsoever.
Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.
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