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16.09.2023 - 15:57 / forbes.com / Josh Green
Hawaii Governor Josh Green has been a busy man.
Unlike Maui’s Mayor Richard Bissen, who is under fire for dodging questions, Green has made himself widely available and has spoken at length on a number of hot topics.
On Friday, he answered a broad range of questions from local media in a sweeping presser, discussing everything from resident relocation to future strategies of disaster prevention.
As noted earlier this week, there is a chance that tourists could be staying alongside displaced locals at West Maui hotels when the area reopens to tourism on October 8th. Since, concerns have swirled that there won’t be enough time to relocate those residents before the tourists arrive.
Green confirmed Friday that the government will not be kicking residents out of the hotels until a long-term lodging solution is secured for them, setting up the possibility that displaced residents and tourists could indeed wind up in the same hotels.
He went on to suggest, however, that they may try to keep several hotels as residents only.
“We may consolidate hotels so that four or five hotels are where [displaced residents] stay,” he said. It seems the exact plan will depend on how many residents can be placed in long-term housing between now and October 8th, and how many visitor bookings hotels receive between now and then.
Also of note from the interview was Green’s answer to a question from local news station KHON2 about how he plans to mitigate and prevent future tragedies.
The governor seemed to imply that future incidents were inevitable given the status of climate change.
“The reality today here and globally, is things are drier, storms are stronger, and that means that disasters are going to be large,” he said. “We saw our disaster here. We also saw a disaster in both Libya and Morocco in the last two weeks that resulted in tens of thousands of lost lives.”
He discussed a variety of recommendations to help prevent future fires that included a satellite-based warning system and burying power lines underground.
“We changed our policy prerogatives after 911 to focus on security, we focused a lot of our public health priorities after the COVID pandemic, and now I think it’s going to be climate driven,” Green said. “So I hope people will accept that.”
In terms of how the state might pay for such measures, Green said he would like to consider charging tourists a “climate impact fee.”
Local news wrote about the potential climate impact fee, which Green previously campaigned on, in depth earlier this year. Editorials also called for its passing as recently as last April.
At that time, the fee was proposed as $50 per person, and has also been referred to as a “visitor-impact fee.” When those aforementioned articles were
Hone your skills on selling Hawaii by becoming an expert.
It’s been ten days since Hawaii’s governor announced that West Maui would reopen to tourists on October 8th, but the debate seems to just be heating up now.
As travellers look to support Maui’s recovery efforts this fall, Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea invites guests to come back, and in turn, give back to the island through thoughtfully curated offers and programming that celebrate and support community, culture, and conservation.
Maui’s tourism recovery has been moving at a sluggish pace since the wildfires devastated the island’s western region in early August. One factor: Tourists have been slow to return out of sensitivity to locals.
“Morocco is open, Morocco is safe, and Morocco is still an incredible place to visit.”
In theory (according to hotels, anyway), resort fees should help hotel guests save money. Rather than charging individually for amenities like pool towels, beach chairs and entertainment, some hotels group these fees into one fee that is added to your room rate.
This as-told-to story is based on a conversation with Samantha Meany, a TikTok content creator, and lifelong Taylor Swift fan from Raleigh, North Carolina. It's been edited for length and clarity. Meany's trip took place in the first week of August, shortly before the wildfires broke out on Maui.
As the plane descends to Maui’s airport in Kahului, it’s readily apparent how sharply tourism has dropped off following the massive fires a month ago: hundreds of unrented rental cars parked in a field near the runway. In the aftermath of the blaze that leveled the historic town of Lahaina and caused so much personal suffering and loss, it was understandable for Hawaii’s Governor Josh Green to advise visitors not to come to Maui. Now facing the financial devastation of an island that depends on tourism, the government changed its position and is urging visitors to come, including to the resort areas of West Maui north of Lahaina which are reopening October 8th. But should visitors listen?
The airport lounge life is a taste of luxury every traveler needs to experience at least once.
Scott Pauli. (Photo Credit: Island of Hawai‘i Visitors Bureau)
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West Maui will officially welcome visitors again next month following the devastating wildfires that swept the paradise destination in August.