“Homeowners rush to install solar on roofs before tax credits expire.”
Views expressed in this Hawaii News update are those of the reporters and correspondents. Accessed on 09 September 2025, 2009 UTC.
Content and Source: “Hawaii Business Magazine Newsletters.”
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Top Headlines |
Homeowners Rush to Install Solar on Roofs Before Tax Credits ExpireDue to the passage in July of H.R.1, the “big, beautiful bill,” the 30% federal tax credit for residential solar PV panels and batteries ends Dec. 31 instead of the end of 2032. Star-Advertiser. KHON2. Maui Now. |
This Is What Residents Think the New ‘Green Fee’ Should Be Spent OnThe state is deciding how it will spend an estimated extra $100 million a year from the new “Green Fee” tax on hotels and cruise ships that starts next year. More than half of those surveyed touted projects that focus on restoration, recovery and workforce development. Hawaiʻi Public Radio. |
Kiko Downgraded to Tropical Storm as It Passes North of HawaiʻiKiko weakened to a tropical storm Monday night and is on track to pass well north of Hawaii over the next two days. Once a major Category 4 hurricane just a few days ago, Kiko is now a shallow tropical storm and is mostly a swirl of low level clouds. Star-Advertiser. Hawaii News Now. |
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Girls Remain Underrepresented In Hawaiʻi High School SportsSeven years after the state education department faced a civil rights lawsuit over gender inequality in sports, Hawaiʻi girls remain consistently underrepresented in high school athletics. Civil Beat. |
How Small Businesses Are Breaking Into Hawaiʻi’s Big Tourism MarketsAirlines and hotels can provide a lucrative market for Hawaiʻi entrepreneurs, but making inroads with large brands and scaling up production isn’t easy. Civil Beat. |
O‘ahu HeadlinesHPD Tried To Fire This Cop. He’s Retiring With A Giant Pension InsteadThe police department has opened an inquiry into the 2,375 hours of overtime filed last year by Darren Cachola, who is one of the officers being sued along with the department for arresting sober drivers at DUI checkpoints. Civil Beat. |
Council OKs 750-Unit Affordable Rental Project in KapoleiThe Council’s approval allows Laulima Affordable Housing LLC, an affiliate of Utah-based the Wasatch Group, to build its project within a part of a 516-acre Kapolei West master-planned development. Star-Advertiser. |
Hanauma Bay Closed for Parking Lot RepavingHanauma Bay Nature Preserve is closed for two weeks starting Monday. A city contractor is repaving and restriping the attraction’s two main public parking lots, which includes approximately 280 parking stalls. Hawaii News Now. |
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Hawai‘i Island HeadlinesCouncil Committee Passes Bill to Extend Free Bus Rides Through 2028The move aims to address ongoing staffing shortages within the Mass Transit Agency and give officials time to implement improvements, including a micro-transit program that will better serve rural residents. Tribune-Herald. |
Final EIS For Keauhou Bay Management Plan PublishedThe documents detail Kamehameha Schools’ proposal to implement the Keauhou Bay Management Plan on approximately 29 acres at Keauhou Bay. Big Island Video News. |
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PETA Weighs in on K-9 Archer’s DeathPeople for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said it sent a letter Monday to Hawaiʻi Police Department Interim Chief Reed Mahuna concerning Archer, the West Hawaiʻi Vice Division K-9 that died Thursday after being left unattended in a police vehicle. Tribune-Herald. |
Once Homeless, Man Helps Job Seekers Through the Same Organization That Helped HimWhen Kevin Aki Jr. first attended an American Job Center Hawaii community outreach event a decade ago, he and his family were “homeless and low-income.” Tribune-Herald. |
Maui HeadlinesState Violated Due Process in Maui Water Case, Hawaiʻi Justices RuleThe Hawaiʻi Supreme Court has ruled that the state Board of Land and Natural Resources violated constitutional rights when it allowed Alexander &Baldwin Inc. to divert streams in East Maui without granting community groups a full hearing on the environmental and cultural consequences. Star-Advertiser. |
Free Building Trades Courses Offered at UH Maui College This FallThe University of Hawaiʻi Maui College is offering a free eight-week carpentry pre-apprenticeship training beginning next Monday, Sept. 15 and running through Friday, Nov. 14. The tuition value is $6,000. Maui Now. |
Guided Tours Resume at the Remote Hawaiʻi Leprosy Settlement of KalaupapaA former leprosy settlement in a remote part of Hawaiʻi will reopen this month for the first time since the pandemic, when it closed to shield the few remaining patients, all of whom are over 80, from exposure to COVID-19, officials said Monday. Assocaite Press. |
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Kaua‘i HeadlinesCounty Strengthens Wildfire Safety in West Kauaʻi Plantation Camp CommunitiesOn Monday, Mayor Derek S.K. Kawakami signed into law Bill No. 2961, an ordinance passed unanimously by the Kauaʻi County Council to advance wildfire mitigation in West Kauaʻi’s plantation camp districts. Garden Island. Kauai Now. |
Healthy Coconut Trees Cut Down on Kalalau Trail; State Staff Reprimanded for Not Protecting Natural ResourcesThe Hawaiʻi State Department of Land and Natural Resources is facing criticism from residents and outdoor enthusiasts after its employees cut down more than a dozen healthy coconut trees along the Kalalau Trail on the Nāpali Coast of Kauaʻi. Kauai Now. |
ID Card Production Resumes After Temporarily Being Unavailable on KauaʻiThe Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) announces that the production of identification cards will resume on Tuesday for Kauaʻi residents. Hawaii News Now. |
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