Current:Home > InvestLahaina residents brace for what they’ll find as they return to devastated properties in burn zone -Aspire Financial Strategies
Lahaina residents brace for what they’ll find as they return to devastated properties in burn zone
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-09 07:19:51
HONOLULU (AP) — Soon after one of Maui’s Japanese Buddhist temples, the Lahaina Hongwanji Mission, burned in the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century, its resident minister was desperate to go back and see what remained.
Six weeks later, he’s more hesitant.
“Now I feel like I have to have mental preparation to go there,” the Rev. Ai Hironaka said. “I’m kind of afraid.”
Hironaka and other Lahaina residents are grappling with a range of emotions as Maui authorities plan next week to begin allowing some on supervised visits back into the areas devastated by the Aug. 8 fire, which killed at least 97 people and demolished thousands of buildings.
Lana Vierra is bracing to see the ruins of the home where she raised five children, a house that started with three bedrooms in 1991 and was expanded to six to accommodate her extended family as the cost of living in Hawaii soared.
She’s been telling her family to be ready when it’s their turn, so that they can all visit together.
“We’re preparing our minds for that,” she said. “I don’t know know if our hearts are prepared for that.”
Authorities have divided the burned area into 17 zones and dozens of sub-zones. Residents or property owners of the first to be cleared for reentry — known as Zone 1C, along Kaniau Road in the north part of Lahaina — will be allowed to return Monday and Tuesday on supervised visits.
Government agencies including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Maui County’s highways division are involved in clearing the zones for reentry by, among other things, removing any hazardous materials, checking buildings for structural safety and ensuring safe road access.
Those returning will be provided water, shade, washing stations, portable toilets, medical and mental health care, and transportation assistance if needed, said Darryl Oliveira, Maui Emergency Management Agency interim administrator.
Authorities are also offering personal protective equipment, including respirator masks and coveralls. Officials have warned that ash could contain asbestos, lead, arsenic or other toxins. There are other hazards, too, Oliveira said, such as burned out cars along roads and chunks of metal or concrete in the ruins.
“We really want to help guide them, provide them the support, but also provide them the privacy, that space and quiet, so they can get the closure they’re looking for,” Oliveira said in a video message Thursday.
Some people might want to sift through the ashes for any belongings or mementos that survived, but officials are urging them not to, for fear of stirring up toxic dust that could endanger them or their neighbors downwind. Other residents said they didn’t immediately have plans to return to the properties because jobs or the hassle of obtaining a pass to reenter the burn zone would keep them away.
Melody Lukela-Singh plans to take a hazardous materials course before visiting the Front Street property where the house she lived in with about a dozen relatives once stood.
“I’m hoping to learn what we’re going to encounter as far as exposure to things we know nothing about,” she said. “The winds pick up and it’s going to be all in the air. It’s going be a while before all of that is gone.”
Hironaka reflected on how his feelings toward reentry have changed as the weeks have passed — and as the magnitude of losing the temple, along with his home on the temple grounds, has set in.
“After a week, I feel like I still have energy, like a car with full tank of gas,” Hironaka said. “After I use all the gasoline, I don’t know where to fill it up, what to fill it up. No gas. I feel like I’m pushing the empty-gas car only by myself. Pushing from the back.”
He, his wife, their four children and their French bulldog piled into his Honda Civic to escape the flames. As they drove off, he said, he imagined the temple as protecting their home.
In a phone interview, he said he initially intended not to cry until he could return to thank the temple and apologize to the Buddha statue that had been at its main altar. But he became emotional and sobbed as he spoke, saying, “The temple building, I was supposed to protect as resident minister.”
He has found solace, he said, in Buddhism’s teachings of wisdom and compassion, that Buddha has no judgment and allows him to feel whatever he feels in the moment.
Hironaka said he often sees a photo taken by The Maui News and distributed worldwide by The Associated Press that shows the temple burning alongside Waiola Church next door. He considered the temple, built in 1933, to be like a family member, he said.
“That’s the end-of-life picture to me,” he said.
Lahaina’s two other Japanese Buddhist temples also burned down.
Jarom Ayoso is eager to get back to the property where he and his wife rented a house for nearly 15 years. His son was able to get in the day after the fire and took video of the destruction.
“I want closure for my end,” he said. “The only way I going get that is if I go and see it.”
Ayoso wants to see what’s left of the vehicles he lovingly rebuilt, including his 1986 GMC Sierra pickup truck. There were also motors he built on the property, including one that cost more than $13,000. He was just about to install it, he said, and “poof — gone.”
veryGood! (8333)
Related
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Top US Air Force official in Mideast worries about possible Russia-Iran ‘cooperation and collusion’
- Man who shot Black teen who mistakenly went to his door enters not guilty plea; trial is scheduled
- Saudi crown prince says in rare interview ‘every day we get closer’ to normalization with Israel
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Work stress can double men's risk of heart disease, study shows
- Malaria is on the ropes in Bangladesh. But the parasite is punching back
- Detroit Auto Show underway amid historic UAW strike
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Adidas CEO doubts that Kanye West really meant the antisemitic remarks that led Adidas to drop him
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Japan’s troubled Toshiba to delist after takeover by Japanese consortium succeeds
- Catholic priests bless same-sex couples in defiance of a German archbishop
- Asian Games offer a few sports you may not recognize. How about kabaddi, sepaktakraw, and wushu?
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- UK leader Rishi Sunak delays ban on new gas and diesel cars by 5 years
- Young Latinos unable to carry on a conversation in Spanish say they are shamed by others
- A grandmother seeks justice for Native Americans after thousands of unsolved deaths, disappearances
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Tenor Stephen Gould dies at age 61 after being diagnosed with bile duct cancer
Man who shot Black teen who mistakenly went to his door enters not guilty plea; trial is scheduled
An Idaho man has measles. Health officials are trying to see if the contagious disease has spread.
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Smoke, air quality alerts descend on San Francisco Bay Area. A study explains why.
No house, spouse or baby: Should parents worry their kids are still living at home? Maybe not.
In Kentucky governor’s race, Democrat presses the case on GOP challenger’s abortion stance