Hawaii
University of Hawaii leaves Spectrum Sports for free over-the-air broadcasts
It will be much easier to watch University of Hawaii athletics this season, both in and out of the state.
Beginning this season, the University of Hawaii will move its broadcasts from Spectrum Sports to Hawaii News Now, a group of over-the-air stations owned by Gray Media. Gray will also have the opportunity to distribute some Hawaii programming on its stations outside Hawaii.
“This partnership is about maximizing exposure for our programs and ensuring every fan in Hawai’i and beyond can watch our games,” said UH Athletics Director Matt Elliott in a press release.
Broadcasts on Hawaii News Now will include 110 home sporting events per year, including all available football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, men’s volleyball, and women’s volleyball games, along with a select number of baseball, softball, and women’s soccer events.
The announcement builds on changes made last season, when football broadcasts moved from pay-per-view to cable on Spectrum Sports. Outside Hawaii, broadcasts moved from the mobile-only Team1 Sports app to the more accessible free Mountain West app. The Mountain West is also in the process of launching a new, and likely paid, direct-to-consumer streaming service through the app for this upcoming season.
The University of Hawaii is part of a long list of sporting entities that have worked to make their sports properties more accessible in recent years. The old pay-per-view broadcasts long helped fund the extra travel required for other schools to play at Hawaii. This new partnership is expected to return the university $7.5 million a year, up from $3.2 million in the previous pay-per-view-focused deal with Spectrum. In addition, the university will receive additional media revenue by moving its athletics entirely to the Mountain West. Outside of football, Hawaii has long been part of the Big West, which has a far less lucrative media rights deal.
Several NBA and NHL teams have made similar decisions in recent years, including the Phoenix Suns and New Orleans Pelicans, which partnered with Gray Media to move all of their broadcasts over the air. Teams that have made the move have publicly expressed satisfaction with their decision despite earning less revenue than was the case through traditional RSNs.
Hawaii
Scientists say major earthquakes feel frequent, but activity is on track
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Over the last month, strong earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 and higher have rocked the Philippines, Japan, Venezuela, and even Hawaii.
Researchers have been closely monitoring the activity, and while it may seem like more quakes than normal, they say it’s about on par with forecasts.
“This is all pretty normal for earthquakes. On a given year, we expect around 15 between magnitude 7 and 8, and about 150 between magnitude 6 and 7,” said Helen Janiszewski, assistant professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa’s Department of Earth Sciences.
The quakes are, however, hitting in more populated places compared to some large earthquakes in past years, making them more noticeable.
“A couple years ago, there was an actual very similar, sequence of earthquakes to the one that we had in Venezuela where it was, 7.8 and 8.1 in very close sequence, but it was here, where no one lives,” Janiszewski said, pointing to the Southern Atlantic Ocean on a map.
Despite advancements in technology, researchers say there’s still no way to precisely predict when and where the next big earthquake will strike. But some seismology enthusiasts believe patterns can be monitored, studied, and used to implement potential life-saving warnings.
“I think it’s something that could happen as well across the world if people, scientists got together and really understood what’s happening. And then governments also utilize this knowledge to better notify and warn their citizens,” Pahoa resident Bob Gentzel said.
There are upwards of 100 seismographs throughout Hawaii constantly monitoring for quake activity.
Very subtle energy from the Venezuela quake was mapped traveling through the continent.
Some hope investments will be made in early-warning technology, as well as individual emergency preparedness.
“I’m just trying to prove the point that they can be forecastable because I want to save lives,” Gentzel said.
Janiszewski added, “There’s a lot that we can do still in the interim, both on an individual scale for preparedness in your own home as well as investment at community and state levels.”
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Hawaii overpays SNAP benefits by nearly 10% in 2025
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – More than $10 billion in SNAP benefits paid nationwide in fiscal year 2025 were above recipients’ eligibility or went to people who didn’t qualify for the program, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
An annual analysis shows the national payment error rate was 10.62%, well above the congressional threshold of 6%.
The error rate measures how accurately states determine who is eligible for SNAP and how much they should get.
In Hawaii, the payment error rate is higher than the national average at 10.92%
“These payment error rates are further proof that state accountability is severely lacking in SNAP,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins said in a press release. “USDA has taken historic action to help interested states curb SNAP waste, and I hope other states, regardless of political leadership, prioritize needy families and the American taxpayer over politics.”
States above the threshold must now pay back a percentage of their benefits and submit an action plan to the USDA explaining how the errors will be addressed.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
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