Mikey Burke, a Native Hawaiian and fourth-generation Lahainan, lost her home in the Maui wildfires last August. She wants to rebuild for her family of six, but the costs are overwhelming, especially since her rental assistance ran out two months ago. And when she tried to get an extension, she was denied. She also didn’t qualify for FEMA aid until her rent was due.
Lifelong Lahaina residents who have squeezed out every avenue of assistance are now at a unique crossroads: leave the only home they’ve known or figure out a way to stay — both of which feel impossible.
For many Lahaina homeowners, rental assistance through their insurance ended in October after they’d spent the first couple of months post-fire filing claims and getting shuffled into hotels.
Now, they’re feeling a multipronged pinch of expiring financial assistance, rising rents and an insurance gap that has left them unable to pay for rebuilding costs.
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Carolyn Auweloa and Mikey Burke have started Lahaina Community Land Trust so residents have the option to stay in Lahaina or sell within the community.Jessica Machado / NBC News
“A couple of months ago, we all felt like we were finally at that ‘we can breathe’ phase,” said Kukui Keahi, a fire survivor and the community care lead for the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement’s Maui recovery program. “Now, I think we’re at this rocky area again.”
Burke is part of a large swath of Lahaina homeowners who had hoped insurance companies would extend their loss of use (LOU) and additional living expense (ALE) benefits past 12 months, like companies had done after wildfires in other states, but they didn’t. Before they can apply for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s rental assistance, homeowners must first exhaust all of their LOU and ALE policies, which cover rental costs when a disaster makes your home uninhabitable. Burke said she applied as soon as she qualified, but it took two months to get approved and the amount was based on her mortgage, not current sky-high rental rates.
FEMA Regional Administrator Bob Fenton said the lag between applying for assistance and approval often has to do with filing proper paperwork and can be “as quick as 24 to 48 hours” or take “an extended amount of time.” Around half of the valid and referred Maui survivors who have applied for FEMA have been approved for aid, according to the agency.
Burke said she tried multiple avenues of assistance and even negotiated her rent with her landlord to no avail. Stuck with paying $3,100 for her mortgage and $7,600 in rent, she said it was the first time she considered leaving her hometown.
“It was just a split-second,” she said. “But sometimes that’s all people need is that split-second to make that decision.”
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A crisis of rising rents
Over the past year, the federal government has focused on moving fire survivors out of hotels and shelters and into something more stable. Because homeowners with LOU or ALE benefits, standard in most homeowners’ insurance policies, don’t qualify for FEMA aid, the agency’s housing programs effectively prioritize those who had been renting before the fires.
“A lot of folks feel there’s a disparity between people who were previously renters and people who are homeowners,” said Maui County Councilmember Tamara Paltin. “There’s a little bit of feeling that homeowners didn’t get much help from the federal government, like how the renters did.”
Fenton said FEMA provides everyone the help they’re authorized to receive through Congress and regulations. “Those that have insurance are probably in a much better situation than those that have nothing,” he said.
Homeowners like Burke disagree. With LOU and ALE coverage expiring, they are now having to pay rent, their mortgage and sometimes homeowners association fees, while navigating the rebuilding process and the costs for permits, architectural plans, contractors and materials on an island with finite resources.
Meanwhile, rents on Maui have climbed significantly. To house survivors in the immediate aftermath of the fire, FEMA put up many in short-term rentals and paid the vacation rental market rate. That cost increase was passed on to survivors with or without FEMA assistance, and they now pay 43%-80% more rent for a home with the same or fewer bedrooms, according to a University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization survey released last month.
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Burke said homeowners like herself are forced to consider dipping into their rebuilding money to pay their rent. “The longer we have to rent, the less money we have to build,” she said. “And if it goes on for long enough, homeowners might not be able to build at all. It’s almost having to choose between housing now and housing later.”
The state-built temporary housing development, Ka La’i Ola, in Lahaina, Hawaii.Jessica Machado / NBC News
Since the fires, about half of survivors have had to move out of West Maui, and nearly a tenth of that group have relocated to the continental U.S. or overseas, according to the UHERO survey. While a third said they plan to move back in the next year, data researchers and community leaders wonder if they will.
Lahaina’s exodus exemplifies what’s happening with Native Hawaiians across the state. As of 2022, nearly a quarter of all Native Hawaiians born in Hawaii had moved away to the continent, according to data from the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement. Today, more Native Hawaiians live in the continental U.S. than in Hawaii.
“What happens is, you just have people holding on as long as they can, and then eventually they break,” said data researcher Matt Jachowski, who compiled the data for the council. “You hear, ‘Oh, if I move to Texas, if I move to Vegas, if I move to Washington, I’m going to get higher wages. I’m going to get better housing.’”
Bert Noury and his wife, whose Native Hawaiian family goes back generations in Lahaina, decided to take up FEMA on its relocation program. Sick of jumping from one temporary housing situation to another, he took a job transfer to Orlando, Florida. But instead of living with more security, he said FEMA is behind on paying their rent. (Fenton said Noury has not provided FEMA with the necessary documentation; Noury said he’s resubmitted their information multiple times.) Meanwhile, he continues to pay his HOA fees for their townhome in Lahaina, hoping the homeowners association will rebuild in the next five years.
“We’ve been using every single dollar that we’ve saved over the years to give our family a roof and stability, but I want to go back home,” he said. “I want to save up money again and live at home.”
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Impossible to rebuild
Earle Kukahiko’s ALE benefits also expired this fall. One of many families in Lahaina who lived several generations on a property, he, his wife, their grown kids and their cousin have been living at his sister’s. Kukahiko and his son sleep in tents outside. He just found out he was accepted for one of the 450 temporary homes built by the state, for which more than 1,500 people applied.
Earle Kukahiko has yet to rebuild his house but still spends his days on his property in Lahaina.Jessica Machado / NBC News
Antsy to rebuild, Kukahiko, 67, is working through the process as fast as it will let him — he hired a draftsman to draw up architectural plans so he can get his building permit, which costs anywhere from $6,000-$10,000. In the meantime, he is not waiting to be back on his ‘āina or land. He spends his days tending to his yard — grasses gathered from the side of the road and replanted. At the center is a stone mound with red and yellow ti leaves, saved from what his father planted decades ago.
“People pass and they say, ‘Wow, first time we see somebody take care of the yard before you even have a house,’” said Kukahiko. “And I’ve always felt that no more hale (home), but get ‘āina.”
Carpenter Jeremy DelosReyes, a seventh-generation Lahainan and a Native Hawaiian, is also caught up in the red tape of rebuilding. Construction was supposed to start in July, but the power lines were cut on his block and the Environmental Protection Agency found his water contaminated. He says with the rise in construction rates, it would take over $1 million to build his house and he got only $410,000 from his insurance.
“I know how to build my house. I can build my house for $400,000,” he said, “but that’s calling in every favor I know from everybody that I know, and I owe them for the rest of my life.”
Jeremy DelosReyes says it would take over $1 million to rebuild his house.Jessica Machado
Community help
It’s been up to community groups and nonprofits to step in to fill the financial gaps for survivors. Burke helps lead the newly formed Lahaina Community Land Trust, which is creating an insurance gap program to help homeowners bridge the costs between insurance payouts and rebuilding. While the trust’s first goal is to help families stay, if a resident does want to sell their land, the trust will offer to buy it at fair market value, build a home on it and sell the home, with a long-term land lease, at an affordable price through a lottery system that prioritizes Lahaina community members.
“There’s this inherent connection to this place and our people that we have and that a lot of us are very conflicted about — like what do I do with this?” Burke said. “For me, [throwing myself into my community] was my coping mechanism at first, and then it also just became the most natural thing in the world. It became my kuleana.”
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Kuleana, or the Hawaiian notion of one’s responsibility to the land and community, is what keeps other Native Hawaiians in Lahaina pushing through, they say. DelosReyes has started Kaiāulu Initiatives, where community members can reconnect with the ‘āina by planting native plants on an area overrun with the types of invasive grasses that fueled the wildfires. Kukahiko now serves on the mayor’s advisory team as a liaison to the community.
Keahi said it’s her “biggest honor to give back to the community that raised me,” as she helps residents navigate not just FEMA bureaucracy and unemployment, but also the programs the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement offers, like rental placement and temporary housing. But she worries about the longevity of recovery programs, as there is no shortage of disasters capturing funders’ attention across the county. Then there are fears the returning Trump administration could cut FEMA funding.
The Lahaina Community Land Trust understands that funding is an uphill battle, but it has slowly been making gains. Last month, the trust acquired its first property — the sellers, who weren’t originally from Hawaii, wanted the property to stay in community hands — and is in the process of acquiring a second. When Burke and the trust’s founders went out to celebrate the sale over dinner, they noticed a local family commemorating an event of their own: their last dinner in Lahaina. They were moving away that night.
“That was crushing,” said Carolyn Auweloa, a co-founder of the trust. “It’s what we know is going to happen. But it’s one thing for people to have to leave for a little while. What’s scary is some of them are leaving and don’t really have a clear path to come back. They’ll be displaced and then replaced with who?”
HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK (HawaiiNewsNow) – The United States Geological Survey Volcanoes said episode 47 of lava fountaining at the summit of Kilauea is expected to begin on Wednesday or Thursday.
USGS said that with the eruption likely imminent, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory raised the alert level from advisory to watch and the aviation color code from yellow to orange.
All activity remains confined to Halemaʻumaʻu crater in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
Click here to check the alerts and conditions before heading to the park.
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Episode 43: Volcano Watch issued for Kilauea(USGS)
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
A Kona community committee on Tuesday unanimously approved submitting testimony to the Leeward Planning Commission calling for revisions to a county bill that would expand short-term vacation rentals.
The Kona Community Development Plan Action Committee approved a document authored by Chair John Pelletier criticizing aspects of Bill 147 — a Hawaii County Council measure aiming to redefine hosted and unhosted short-term vacation rentals, establish working standards and set punitive fines, and expand the list of zoning areas where these rentals are allowed to operate.
The KCDP committee is a nine-member volunteer body appointed by the mayor to work with the Planning Department to guide development in North and South Kona.
Bill 147, which was forwarded to the planning director and planning commissions by a council committee on April 7, would lengthen the rental period considered “short-term” to stays less than 180 consecutive days, as opposed to 30 days under current rules.
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It would also set occupancy limits, reduce “quiet hours,” and restrict the types of activities allowed on rental properties.
The bill also calls for the creation of an enforcement fund, leveraging fines ranging from $5,500 for first violations to $10,000 for third violations and beyond. If county enforcers find an unregistered property listed as bookable anywhere online — including on popular sites like Airbnb and VRBO — they could consider that sufficient evidence of illegal operation, with owners then having to prove they’re in compliance.
Under the proposed legislation, all short-term rentals would be divided into two groups: bed and breakfasts and STVRs.
The new rules define B&Bs as hosted rentals where someones lives on the same property as the rental unit during guest stays. Conversely, STVRs are defined as unhosted rentals with no on-site presence by a “host” — specified in the bill as someone “reachable,” whether it be an owner, family member, property manager or tenant.
Registration fees would be set at $250 for new B&Bs with a $100 annual renewal, and $500 for new STVRs with a $250 annual renewal.
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Whichever group a particular property falls into determines where it’s allowed to operate and what rules it must follow. B&Bs would be permitted in a large section of zoning categories, including residential, commercial and agricultural without the need for a special use permit. STVRs, on the other hand, would be mostly limited to resort areas, but with two notable exceptions: properties zoned multi-family residential and neighborhood commercial.
This would broaden the areas where unhosted rentals can operate, which is what prompted the KCDP on Tuesday to approve the submission of opposing testimony to the planning commission.
“Bill 147 (should) be amended to remove STVRs as an allowable use in Multiple-Family Residential (RM) and Neighborhood Commercial (CN) districts,” the testimony read.
Justifying their opposition to the bill’s expanded zoning areas, some committee members worried the measure would further reduce Kailua-Kona’s already dwindling supply of long-term resident and workforce housing.
“Kona is by far the place with the most vacation rentals … over a quarter of the vacation rentals on the whole island are located in Kona,” Pelletier said. “Condo prices and multi-family residential prices are really driven up by this. … I do think there is a big contingent of people who are buying condos because they can vacation rent them, and it’s causing housing problems in Kona.”
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Pelletier claimed that county officials are naively trying to bolster tourism without understanding conditions on the ground in one of the areas of the island most impacted by tourism.
“I feel that council members not located in Kona want to direct visitors to urban Kona and promote the visitor industry there, without thinking about people who live there,” he said. “People do live here in Kona, and I want people to have housing.”
Committee member Shane Palacat-Nelsen shared this sentiment and offered the perspective of a Native Hawaiian watching his neighborhood be changed by unchecked vacation rental growth.
He said he grew up in Kealakekua Bay and has spent 57 years of his life in an area that’s been called home by many generations of his family dating back “over 700 years.”
“We did an analysis in our village, and less than 1% is remaining generational residents, which means the rest are all vacation rentals,” Palacat-Nelsen said. “And that changed the ability of how our village operates and how it conducts itself. We struggle today to restore our resources on the shoreline. … The state has to spend millions of dollars alongside the community to restore coral because there is no management of the STVRs.”
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And it’s not just ecological damage, he said. The behavior of tourists staying at vacation rentals in his neighborhood has irked locals for years.
“All the time when they visit, they think that they in one resort, and so they conduct themselves (like it),” he said. “They party all night long, they do things that are disrespectful to our lifestyle. And so something gotta be put in place to manage them … if the Hawaiians got to be regulated then so do the visitors — that’s how I feel.”
Testifiers at Tuesday’s meeting included Hilo resident Kalei Kailikini, who argued that homeowners should be allowed to rent out rooms in their homes without paying for county approval.
“You will have people that, when the children grow up and leave home, they have this big house, and then they decide, well, you know, should I sell it?” Kailikini said. “But these are local people that say, ‘no, I want to live up my life here on this island.’ So, they decide to rent a room out … but the bigger picture would be that if you take away our ability to earn extra money — that’s the reason why we cannot afford food, gasoline, blah, blah.”
She said she feels that many legitimate B&B operators are being punished with legislation like Bill 147, instead of officials going after what she described as “bad apples,” like landlords who price-gouged displaced residents still reeling from the loss of their homes during the 2023 Lahaina fire on Maui.
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“So, all we’re doing as ordinary people, we’re trying to be creative to earn more money,” she said. “So, if you have bad apples go after them, don’t take away the privilege from everybody. Go after the people that charge $6,000 a month for a one-bedroom in Lahaina.”
Another testifier was Jason Masters, chair of the Ka‘u Community Development Plan Action Committee.
“I think its erroneous to believe that short-term vacation rentals don’t have an impact on property values or home prices in either the zoning districts or the entire island even,” Masters said. “I think many studies have indeed shown that people who buy short-term vacation rentals generally don’t live there. They might provide some economic benefit to the community — people cleaning the house, managers, et cetera. But I don’t think that’s outweighed by removing that housing stock from the residents.”
Email Stefan Verbano at stefan.verbano@hawaiitribune-herald.com.
Hawaii island police are investigating a possible drowning at Honaunau Bay in South Kona over the weekend.
At about 11:47 a.m. on Saturday, Kona patrol officers were dispatched to the Honaunau Boat Ramp in response to a report of a swimmer in distress.
Police learned that Mindy Morris, 65, of Panama City, Fla., had been snorkeling in the bay with family members, but reportedly had difficulty breathing after returning to shore, then lost consciousness.
Bystanders initiated life-saving measures until emergency responders arrived. Paramedics took Morris to Kona Community Hospital, where she later died.
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Police have ordered an autopsy to determine the exact cause of her death. No foul play is suspected.
Witnesses are asked to contact Officer Cody Sheddy of Kona Patrol at (808) 935-3311 or via email at cody.sheddy@hawaiipolice.gov.
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