Hawaii
Hawaiʻi House Advances Sports Betting Bill
The House on Tuesday took the unprecedented step of passing a controversial measure to legalize online sports betting.
Gambling on sports in Hawaii is already legal. However, there is no legal avenue for placing bets with a sportsbook or online. To date, 38 states have legalized some form of online sports betting, which often involves placing bet on apps through a person’s smartphone.
The 35-to-15 vote on House Bill 1308 marked the furthest that a gambling proposal has made it in the Legislature in at least the last decade.
The bill would legalize online sports betting applications in the state. The measure would allow for up to four operators to become licensed and operate in Hawaii.
The ease with which problem gamblers could access betting applications drew opposition from some lawmakers.
Rep. Andrew Garrett said he had a friend with a gambling addicition who fell into financial ruin because of it.
“I wouldn’t wish that pain on anyone,” he said.
Proponents argued that gambling addiction exists in Hawaii even without a legal form of gambling. HB 1308 would allocate a portion of tax revenues to treat gambling addiction.
Hawaii’s current laws “have not stopped thousands of residents from participating in online sports betting through offshore and illegal platforms,” Rep. Dan Holt said. “The reality is that sports wagering is already happening.”
Experts have warned that sports betting has not created a windfall in states that have passed similar measures.
Representatives of the sports betting industry previously told lawmakers that the tax on revenues generated in Hawaii could result in about $10 million to $20 million in additional revenue for the state each year.
“Do we need that money to fix our roads?” Rep. David Alcos said. “Maybe taking care of families is a better choice.”
The state Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs would be tasked with regulating the industry. But Director Nadine Ando told lawmakers that the $200,000 a year that would be allocated to the department through licensing fees, as a previous draft of the bill called for, wouldn’t be enough to pay for a new gambling enforcement division.
Ando noted that other states that regulate sports betting often already had gaming commissions to oversee all gambling in the state. Some have up to 400 full-time employees.
“It’s monumental, what would need to be done in order to set this up to regulate this industry,” Ando told the House Finance Committee on Feb. 24.
The measure that passed the House on Tuesday leaves the amount that each operator would need to pay in fees blank.
Like the House, the Senate is also exploring legalizing gambling. While it shelved a bill earlier this year to allow for casinos on Oʻahu, on Tuesday senators gave the nod to establishing a tourism and gaming working group to study the idea of how gambling might create jobs, investment and tax revenue for the state.
The group would be housed within the Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism and could include representatives of Boyd Gaming Corp., DraftKings Inc. and MGM Resorts International. A report from the working group would be submitted just before the 2026 legislative session.
Civil Beat politics editor Chad Blair contributed to this report.

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Hawaii
Florida woman dies in possible drowning in South Kona – West Hawaii Today
A Florida woman died Saturday in an apparent drowning at Honaunau Bay in South Kona.
According to police, at 11:47 a.m. Kona patrol officers were dispatched to Honaunau Boat Ramp following a report of a swimmer in distress.
Police learned that 65-year-old Mindy Morris of Panama City had been snorkeling in the bay with family members. As Morris returned to shore, she reportedly began experiencing difficulty breathing before losing consciousness.
Bystanders initiated life-saving measures until emergency responders arrived.
Morris was transported to Kona Community Hospital, where she was later pronounced dead.
Police have initiated a coroner’s inquest investigation and ordered an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death. No foul play is suspected.
Police ask anyone who may have witnessed the incident to contact Officer Cody Sheddy of Kona Patrol at (808) 935-3311 or via email at cody.sheddy@hawaiipolice.gov.
Hawaii
Man killed while changing tire after crash in South Kohala
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaiʻi Island police are investigating a traffic collision that claimed the life of a 59-year-old Waimea man on Sunday afternoon.
At 1:22 p.m., South Kohala patrol officers responded to the collision and determined that a black 2008 BMW sedan was traveling eastbound on Kawaihae Road when it veered onto the south shoulder and collided with a parked, unoccupied gold 2004 Toyota Camry sedan that was facing east on the shoulder.
Police identified the victim as 59-year-old Sione Tilini of Waimea.
At the time of the collision, three individuals were outside the Toyota Camry on the passenger side of the vehicle, changing a front passenger-side tire.
Tilini is believed to have been positioned between and partially underneath the passenger-side wheels of the Toyota when the collision occurred. The impact caused the Toyota to fall onto him.
Tilini was transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital, where he was later pronounced dead at 2:47 p.m.
Two additional individuals, a 19-year-old man and an 11-year-old boy, sustained minor injuries after being struck when the parked vehicle was pushed forward during the collision.
Both were transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital for treatment and later released.
The driver and sole occupant of the BMW, a 22-year-old Waimea man, was transported to Queen’s North Hawaiʻi Community Hospital and remains in critical condition.
The BMW driver was arrested on suspicion of negligent homicide, negligent injury, driving without a license, no motor vehicle insurance, and operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant.
The Hawaiʻi Police Department’s Area II Traffic Enforcement Unit has initiated a negligent homicide investigation.
Police ask anyone who witnessed the collision or has information relevant to the investigation to contact Officer Dayson Taniguchi at dayson.taniguchi@hawaiipolice.gov or at (808) 326-4646, ext. 229.
This was the fourth traffic fatality within five days and the ninth traffic fatality on Hawaiʻi Island in 2026, compared with 12 at the same time last year.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
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