Hawaii
Mitre expands R&D in Hawaii as US focus on Indo-Pacific intensifies
:quality(70)/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/archetype/U4S6WXHYLFBJJK5333C4YPBSSY.jpg)
WASHINGTON — Mitre, which operates federally funded facilities that help the U.S. authorities with science analysis, growth and techniques engineering, stated it should open a facility in in Hawaii to bolster safety and nationwide protection operations within the Indo-Pacific.
This web site in Honolulu will help Hawaii and Indo-Pacific priorities of the U.S. Division of Protection, U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, the intelligence neighborhood and worldwide allies, whereas fostering “whole-of-nation” expertise collaborations in cybersecurity, transportation, healthcare, veterans companies and legislation enforcement, the not-for-profit stated.
The U.S. sees the Pacific as a key strategic area, as Washington works to counter China’s rising affect. The White Home Indo-Pacific Technique, revealed in February, pledges an prolonged position within the space, together with establishing extra resilient command and management and rising the scope of joint workout routines and operations.
“We’re immersed in practically each side of worldwide strategic competitors—from countering aggressive army actions by adversary nations, to safeguarding provide chains, accelerating maritime analysis and innovation, and making ready for the subsequent world well being disaster,” stated Keoki Jackson, senior vp, basic supervisor, Mitre Nationwide Safety, in an announcement.
Mitre, which works throughout six federal R&D facilities and greater than 200 particular person labs, additionally stated it entered right into a partnership with UH to determine alternatives for collaborative evaluation, engineering and analysis. The partnership will deal with advancing marine expertise, enhancing cyber protection, strengthening local weather resilience, addressing pure useful resource administration and testing vitality applied sciences.
The group has been working at Ford Island and Camp Smith in Hawaii for nearly 50 years. Creating the location on the Kaka’ako Innovation District will double its native workforce, advance STEM training and bolster safety within the area, it stated.
Final month, Mitre named Cedric Sims to the brand new position of senior vp, enterprise innovation and integration, and Austin Y. Wang as vp, intelligence heart, Mitre Nationwide Safety.
Sims will develop methods to foster enterprise-wide innovation, drive cross-cutting integration to learn authorities sponsors, and oversee company technique, Mitre stated. He joined the group from Booz Allen Hamilton, the place he served as senior vp main the justice, homeland safety and transportation enterprise and has greater than 25 years of expertise in acquisition, danger administration, cybersecurity, synthetic intelligence/machine studying, program governance and techniques engineering.
Sims additionally served in management roles on the U.S. Division of Homeland Safety and the U.S. Secret Service.
Wang will drive whole-of-nation, joint, and multi-agency companies by integration throughout the intelligence neighborhood and Mitre’s nationwide safety enterprise. He labored for greater than twenty years on the CIA, most just lately as a senior govt and clandestine technical operations lead, and served eight years within the U.S. Marine Corps working alerts intelligence and floor digital warfare.

Hawaii
Public sends off the crew of Hokule‘a, Hikianalia – The Garden Island
Hawaii
Exploring the extraordinary tradition of Hawaiian lei making:

From its golden sun to its turquoise surf, Hawaii can always take your breath away. But it’s the colorful leis that may dazzle the most.
The island’s exquisite array of flowers, valued for their fragrances, are harvested by Hawaiians for the ancient tradition of lei making.
Hawaii native Meleana Estes picks flowers – like the valued flower puakenikeni, known as the perfume flower tree ten cent flower – to create a colorful palette for her leis. A single lei can use 300 individual flowers and take hours to make.
An “expression of aloha”
CBS Sunday Morning
Hawaiians have been proudly sewing leis for more than 1,000 years. It’s a tradition that was introduced by early Polynesian settlers who wore garlands around their necks or heads as a gesture of respect for the gods.
There’s never a wrong time to bestow someone with a lei, Estes says. Today, Hawaiians hand out leis for nearly every occasion – from weddings to funerals, to airport pickups and beyond.
“Really a lei is your expression of aloha. Your love,” Estes explained, adding that it can also show a warm welcome to a house guest.
Estes learned the intricate art of lei-making from her grandmother or “Tutu,” and published a book called “Lei Aloha” to celebrate her traditions.
“She was very intentional. I feel like my Tutu would think about it for three days prior, you know, as she’d start gathering with intention for that one person,” Estes said.
With dozens ofspecies of flowers growing on the islands, the designs are endless. Estes makes extraordinary creations for family and friends using a long needle and thread.
“It’s beautiful, very architectural,” Estes said of the process.
You can see the colorful creations on display at the Annual Lei Day Celebration in Hawaii, held every May 1 since 1929. Dozens of master lei makers enter their work for a chance of being crowned best in show by judges, including Jamie Adams Detwiler.
“It’s really difficult” to pick just one winner, Detwiler said, noting that she looks for “what feeling” the leis bring to her and that they stay true to the lei method.
This year’s winner: a customary lei kui or sewn lei.
Getting creative
CBS Sunday Morning
But while lei making remains popular, its future could be in peril. Suburban sprawl has paved over many flower farms and climate change has overheated remaining land. An estimated 90 percent of flowers used in leis are now imported from countries like Thailand.
Andrew Mau, who owns a small Oahu boutique called ISLAND-BOY, where he makes leis from mostly family sourced flowers, said he’s seeing the impact firsthand.
“Everybody’s personal lei making stash or, you know, garden or mango tree or whatever you have, it’s been reduced,” he said.
The fact that a lei only lasts around two or three days has also added more stress on the island’s dwindling flower stock, forcing lei-makers like himself to adapt.
“We work with what we can get. Sometimes we don’t get enough flowers to make a lei. We use unripe fruit. An ornamental banana. We recently had someone bring in avocados from their tree,” said Mau, though he admits it breaks from tradition.
Mau’s work – particularly his “forever lei” – is so popular it regularly sells out.
“A forever lei is our response to the perishability of flowers. We work with wood beads – seeds, shells, nuts…it doesn’t have an expiration date,” he explained.
Hawaii
Man arrested for negligent homicide after deadly pedestrian crash in Hawaii Island

PUNA (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaii County police arrested a man for operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant and for negligent homicide after a deadly pedestrian crash Friday.
Dallas Brooks, 30, was arrested Friday evening after he hit Maxwell Robertson Sherword, 21, in Kurtistown.
According to police, at around 7:20 p.m. Brooks was traveling in an SUV eastbound on Orchidland Drive, near the intersection of 36th Avenue, when he struck Sherwood.
At the time of the crash, police said Sherwood was in the roadway and not in a marked crosswalk.
Officials said a witness told police that other vehicles had swerved to avoid hitting a man who was located in the middle of the roadway.
Sherwood was taken to the Hilo Benioff Medical Center, where he later died.
Police have ordered an autopsy to determine the exact cause of death.
Brooks was not injured as a result of the crash.
The investigation is ongoing, but police believe alcohol is a factor in the crash.
Brooks was arrested for operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant and for negligent homicide. He remains in custody at the Hilo Police Station pending further investigation.
Anyone with information is asked to call Officer Joshua Rodby-Tomas at (808) 961-2339 or email Joshua.Rodby-Tomas@hawaiicounty.gov.
Tipsters who prefer to remain anonymous may call CrimeStoppers at (808) 961-8300.
This is Hawaii County’s 13th traffic fatality of 2025 as compared to 16 traffic fatalities this same time last year.
Copyright 2025 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
-
Austin, TX1 week ago
Best Austin Salads – 15 Food Places For Good Greens!
-
Politics1 week ago
President Trump takes on 'Big Pharma' by signing executive order to lower drug prices
-
News5 days ago
As Harvard Battles Trump, Its President Will Take a 25% Pay Cut
-
Business1 week ago
In-N-Out Burger adds three new California locations to list of 2025 openings
-
Politics1 week ago
DHS says Massachusetts city council member 'incited chaos' as ICE arrested 'violent criminal alien'
-
News1 week ago
Why Trump Suddenly Declared Victory Over the Houthi Militia
-
Technology1 week ago
Mexico is suing Google over how it’s labeling the Gulf of Mexico
-
Politics5 days ago
Republicans say they're 'out of the loop' on Trump's $400M Qatari plane deal