Hawaii
Snake captured at Kaimuki home
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A slithery visitor was caught in the backyard of a Kaimuki home Sunday night.
The Hawaii Department of Agriculture said the homeowner initially thought it was a child’s toy, but when he saw it moving, he called police.
Police arrived at the home and then contacted inspectors from the Plant Quarantine Branch (PQB). A PQB team then used snake tongs to capture a three-and-a-half-foot non-venomous ball python.
While captured, officials said the snake was docile and likely to be an escaped pet. It is being held at PQB.
HDOA reminds the public that snakes are illegal to import and own in Hawaii.
People who have any illegal animals can turn them in under the amnesty program, and will not be subject to criminal or civil penalties if they are turned in before an investigation is initiated.
Animals can be dropped off at any HDOA office, local Humane Society, or at municipal zoos.
Any animal turned in under amnesty will not be euthanized, HDOA said.
Anyone found with illegal animals may be charged with a class C felony, issued fines of up to $200,000, and may be sentenced to up to five years in prison.
Anyone with information on illegal animals should call the state’s toll-free PEST HOTLINE at (808) 643-PEST (7378).
Officials said that snakes have no natural predators in Hawaii and pose a threat to the environment because they compete with native animals for food and habitat.
The ball python can grow up to six feet in length and is common in the pet trade in the continental U.S., officials said.
Copyright 2025 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Delta Air Lines adds 2 Hawaii routes for next winter – The Points Guy
A year ago, Boston travelers had nonstop flights to Hawaii on two different airlines. This winter? None. That’s because both Delta Air Lines and Hawaiian Airlines dropped their service between New England and the Aloha State.
But there’s good news to report.
Delta just announced it’s bringing back its Boston-Honolulu flights.
The Atlanta-based airline on Friday said it will restore service between Boston Logan International Airport (BOS) and Honolulu’s Daniel K. Inouye International Airport (HNL), just ahead of the 2026 holiday season.
The route will reclaim the title of America’s longest domestic flight and mark the return of a seasonal route Delta previously operated for just one winter between 2024 and early 2025.
But that wasn’t the only Hawaii news the carrier shared.
Delta also announced its Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) hub will get new nonstop service next winter to a second Hawaiian destination: Maui.
Both flights will launch Dec. 19, which, for those glancing at their calendars, is the Saturday prior to Christmas. (The holiday comes on a Friday this year.)
Those routes — one new and one returning — were among a series of other moves Delta revealed to bolster its service between the U.S. mainland and Hawaii for next winter, a warming thought after a brutally cold few weeks in much of the country.
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Here’s what to know about the new service.
Boston to Honolulu
Delta will operate its Boston-to-Honolulu route four times per week for most of next winter but plans to run its planes between New England and Oahu each day during the peak holiday travel rush.
The carrier will operate its BOS-HNL flights with an Airbus A330-300, which sports:
- 34 lie-flat Delta One seats
- 21 Delta Premium Select (premium economy) recliners
- 24 extra-legroom Comfort seats
- 203 seats in the main cabin
While Delta previously went head-to-head with Hawaiian on what was — and will soon be again — America’s longest domestic route, it appears the carrier will (for now, at least) have the run to itself … unless Hawaiian follows Delta in pulling an about-face on a route it cut last year, citing underperformance.
Lounge review: Inside the fancy Delta One Lounge in Boston
Minneapolis-St. Paul to Maui
Passengers will also see the A330-300 on Delta’s all-new nonstop route from MSP to Kahului Airport (OGG) on the island of Maui.
Delta will operate five weekly round trips on this route for most of the winter but will expand it to daily service during both the peak holiday rush and the busy spring break period.
This will be the carrier’s second nonstop flight to Hawaii from Minneapolis. It already flies between MSP and HNL.
Other Hawaii additions
On top of those additions, Delta is planning a larger Hawaii expansion for next winter.
The carrier will operate extra weekly flights to Honolulu from three hubs: Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL), Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport (DTW) and New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK).
Elsewhere, the carrier is planning an earlier start this fall to its winter seasonal service from Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC) to Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport at Keahole (KOA) on Hawaii’s Big Island.
Its flights from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) to KOA will also get a bigger plane for the winter season — one of Delta’s twin-aisle Boeing 767-300s.
Read more: Some of our favorite ways to use Delta SkyMiles
Reclaiming the mantle
The return of Boston flights to Honolulu means current service to Hawaii from the New York City area will lose the distinction of being the longest domestic flights in America.
Still, there are plenty of nonstop options to the Aloha State from JFK and nearby Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), as TPG’s Clint Henderson recently experienced for himself.
The best hotels on Oahu, from luxury resorts to iconic hotels
Bottom line
If you have a stash of Delta SkyMiles to use and like the sound of Hawaii for the holidays, I’d keep a close eye on Delta’s booking channels in the coming days to try to see how the newly released award space looks. Remember, as long as you don’t book one of the carrier’s “basic” award flights, you can get your miles, taxes and fees fully restored and refunded if you later have to cancel.
Related reading:
Hawaii
Donations scandal puts shadow over city COVID testing program
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A $100 million COVID testing program organized by a central figure in an ongoing donations scandal is facing new scrutiny with critics calling the effort a wasteful use of taxpayer money.
Tobi Solidum organized a plan for the National Kidney Foundation Hawaii to become a city contractor for testing with subcontractors including his own company and H2O Process Systems, owned by his friend, Milton Choy.
Choy was later convicted of bribing former state Sen. Kalani English and Ty Cullen for other favors.
In November 2021, the city paid nearly $20 million to bring in a customized testing lab inside a shipping container and start running a rapid test service at the airport with tests costing $120 each.
Testing program called unnecessary
Former mayor Kirk Caldwell said the program was designed for island residents who wanted to “come down here, park, get swabbed, wait three hours.”
At the time, the city and Kidney Foundation said they were responding to a lack of rapid testing capability.
But Dr. Scott Miscovich, who led many other testing programs, said by the time the portable lab was delivered, there was plenty of testing available at lower costs.
The city program, which would eventually cost taxpayers and customers over $100 million, was a boondoggle, he said.
“It was just greed and the whole concept of easy money was being floated around, and everybody just said, ‘I’ll stick out my hand and just put in as much into my hand as you can as you go,’ and grab the big amount,” Miscovich said.
Company files bankruptcy, cites problems
The mainland company that stood to gain the most, Contact Diagnostics, filed for bankruptcy last year.
The company called the program “chaotic” and said Hawaii officials urged the company to buy way too much testing supplies, which mostly went unused as vaccination increased and home testing became available.
The company said Solidum overbilled $7 million and left the country. He also caused trouble with his donation to Lt. Gov. Sylvia Luke, which was recorded by Cullen and cited in a federal sentencing document. He also allegedly bribed Cullen.
The Kidney Foundation later produced a video that described the testing program as heroic and featured reviews from politicians and former adjutant general Kenneth Hara.
“They organized, and they resourced themselves, and they brought this capability to Hawaii,” Hara said in the video.
Foundation attorneys offered a link to the video when asked for comment.
Miscovich said the effort was a tremendous waste compared to how local companies like his performed.
“I lost $1.2 million doing testing in the state of Hawaii. I did not make money in the state of Hawaii doing testing. We just put ourselves out there to help, and we relied on the insurances to pay,” Miscovich said.
Milton Choy died in prison. Attempts to reach Tobi Solidum through a company he may have set up in the Philippines were unsuccessful.
Previous coverage
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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.
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