With wild fish stocks dwindling, Congress considers backing aquaculture.”
Accessed on 25 August 2025, 1931 UTC.
Views expressed in this Hawaii Island, Oahu, Maui, and Kauai News update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
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With Wild Fish Stocks Dwindling, Congress Considers Backing Aquaculture
After years of fish farmers criticizing the state of Hawaiʻi for overlooking aquaculture, the federal government is offering some hope in new legislation.
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UH Launching Advanced Degrees in Fisheries Management
The University of Hawaiʻi has hired eight faculty members for new master’s and doctorate degree programs in sustainable fisheries management, coincidentally as President Donald Trump opened up prohibited fishing areas to Hawaiʻi’s longline fleet.
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For Environmental Scientists, Climate Change Means Coping With Death.
As deep anxiety over climate change and the future grips the general public, this summer’s Hawaiʻi Conservation Convention conference featured a first-of-its-kind grief seminar.
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Campaign Reform Is Forcing Lawmakers To Raise More Cash In Non-Election Years
Two new laws intended to slow the easy flow of money to lawmakers while they’re in session significantly crimped incumbents’ cash-raising abilities during the 2025 session. But the new restrictions have not stopped special interest money from finding its way to state legislators at other times.
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Hawaiʻi Is Increasingly Relying On Unlicensed Teachers To Fill Vacancies
The number of unlicensed teachers has steadily grown in Hawaiʻi schools since the pandemic, and the state may see a wave of retirements in the coming years.
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Hawaii Business Magazine
The Highest Honor in Our Field
A story doesn’t come alive through words alone. It’s the photographers, designers and art directors who give our reporting its visual heartbeat. And no one does that better than our creative director, Jeff Sanner.
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O‘ahu Headlines
Aloha Stadium Project Partners Include Sports Arena and Entertainment District Pros
Hawaiʻi doesn’t have a professional sports team to support a planned new stadium on Oʻahu, but the consortium working to develop a mixed-use community around a future Aloha Stadium has big-league players.
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East Honolulu’s Last Undeveloped Valley Faces Uncertain Fate
Kamehameha Schools has yet to release its plan for Kamilonui Valley. But the school’s history of development in the area is stoking fears about what will happen to Hawaiʻi Kai’s last farmlands.
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Grant Helps Provide Stable Housing for Native Hawaiian Women
The Office of Hawaiian Affairs announced last month that it was contributing $180,000 to provide additional rent subsidies for Native Hawaiian women living at Mohala Mai — a permanent supportive housing project — to help combat the prison recidivism rate.
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Sponsored by Hawaii Dental Service
Building a Local Solution to Hawai‘i’s Dental Shortage
Through its Smile Makers initiative, the HDS Foundation is helping local students pursue dental careers and serve their island communities.
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Elevated Safety Ambassadors Help Fight Crime in Waikīkī
The pilot program, which began Wednesday, is meant to serve as a “force-multiplier” for the staff-constrained Honolulu Police Department.
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Popular Waikīkī Promenade Is Finally Open Again
The area languished for about a year as the city fenced it off for repairs.
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Engineering Company Oceanit Turns 40
The company had modest beginnings as a small coastal engineering firm. Founder and CEO Patrick Sullivan, an engineer and scientist, followed his wife Jan Sullivan — who hailed from Hawaiʻi — to the islands to pursue her law career.
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East-West Center President on Importance of Pilina
Since taking the helm of the East-West Center in July, long time White House advisor and diplomat Celeste Connors has been applying Hawaiian values to help navigate a tumultuous time.
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Hawai‘i Island Headlines
Residents, Commissioners Weigh In on Search for Next Police Chief
The top concern with of majority of testifiers on Friday was that whomever becomes top cop in Hawaiʻi County not enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Department of Homeland Security and/or Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which reportedly raided coffee farms in West Hawaiʻi and removed a first-grader from Honduras from Konawaena Elementary School.
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Salvation Army Dedicates Hilo Overnight Safe Space Expansion
The shelter, which opened last year to assist the houseless community, has doubled in size and is ready to serve up to 50 overnight guests.
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Hawaii Business Magazine
Forget Hollywood: Why Three Maui Filmmakers Made Their Own Show
Season two of the comedy “Moku Moku” is now in production. It’s part of an effort to create a more visible local film industry.
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Hāmākua Wildland Fire 75% Contained, Highway 19 Near Pāʻauilo Reopens
The Hawaiʻi Fire Department reports a wildland fire in Hāmākua and has issued a wildfire watch for Pāʻauilo.
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Removal of Banyan Cost $153K: Questions, Concerns Linger Following Collapse of Tree That Killed 2
The debris from the banyan tree on Hilo’s Kilauea Avenue that uprooted and fell July 12, killing two women, has been trucked away and disposed of, and damage caused by the massive tree crashing onto the roof of Calvary Chapel Hilo’s church building is now visible.
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Maui Headlines
Owners Mulling Legal Action if Maui County’s Short-Term Rental Bill Passes
At about 70 condo complexes where short-term rentals could become illegal under a proposed bill before the Maui County Council, property owners have been watching, waiting and talking with their lawyers.
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Lawsuit Reveals the Sentry Golf Tournament Is in Jeopardy
The Sentry golf tournament is in jeopardy. The lawsuit, filed on Monday in the Second Circuit Court on Maui, also revealed that the Plantation Golf Course at Kapalua may have to close due to deteriorating conditions caused by the water restrictions.
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Environmental Advocates Propose Interim Ban to Protect Molokai From Invasive Beetles
The proposal calls for a temporary block on plants, soil, mulch, and other goods prone to infestation to the island.
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Kaua‘i Headlines
How Did State Count More Kauaʻi Ballots Than County Said It Delivered?
The next meeting of the Hawaiʻi Elections Commission on Wednesday is expected to be dominated by recent findings of discrepancies in the number of drop box and mail-in ballots cast on Kauaʻi during the 2024 general election.
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Kauaʻi County Council Greenlights Use of $361,000 From National Opioid Settlements
The County of Kaua’i now has the green light to accept and spend more than $361,000 in national opioid settlement funds aimed at curbing the island’s opioid crisis.
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Kauaʻi Fire Department Graduates 5, Promotes 2
Five graduates of the Kauaʻi Fire Department 34th Recruit Class, and two promotions from within the KFD were celebrated on Friday before a throng of family members and friends at the Moikeha Building rotunda.
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