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West Maui reopens to tourism after wildfires. Is it too soon?

Almost three months ago, Heidi Denecke watched flames consume Lahaina, Hawaii. When a police officer ordered her to evacuate, the owner of Maui Animal Farm piled bunnies into her truck bed, wrote her phone number on her horses, and opened the gate.

“It’s a slower coming-back process,” says Ms. Denecke. “But it’s going to come back, I think.” She’s recovered her horses. 

Why We Wrote This

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West Maui is open to tourism after August wildfires devastated Lahaina. Residents are trying to find an equilibrium between meeting pressing economic needs and caring for each other.

Maui is tense right now. As displaced families still actively grapple with the tragedy that unfolded, a community struggles to find the right pace between reopening to the main driver of the economy – tourism – and retaining a space for its own recovery and needs.

All of West Maui has reopened for tourism, as of Nov. 1. The number of daily domestic incoming flight passengers to Maui has risen to just above 4,000 – up from below 2,000 passengers just after the fires. There are still an estimated 6,800 displaced residents in West Maui receiving temporary housing. 

The wildfires and debate over reopening “revealed the cracks in the economic system,” says Malia Akutagawa, an associate professor at the University of Hawaii. Recovery, she says, should be consistent with the Hawaiian ethic of sustainability. 

“The Hawaiian way of doing things is prevention,” she says. 

Heidi Denecke feeds her animals at dusk. As the sun dips below the neighboring island of Lanai, red shadows abound on Maui Animal Farm. Up here, it’s easy to forget. Almost.

Downtown Lahaina sits just a mile down the hill. Nearly three months ago, Ms. Denecke watched the flames consume the town. When a police officer ordered her to evacuate, she piled bunnies into her truck bed, wrote her phone number on her horses, and opened the gate.

Though her property did not burn and she recovered her horses, Ms. Denecke, like the rest of Maui, is still contending with the ashes. “It’s a slower coming-back process,” she says. “But it’s going to come back, I think.” 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

West Maui is open to tourism after August wildfires devastated Lahaina. Residents are trying to find an equilibrium between meeting pressing economic needs and caring for each other.

Maui is tense right now, a combination of disjointed worlds. As displaced families still actively grapple with the tragedy that unfolded, a community struggles to find the right pace between reopening to the main driver of the economy – tourism – and retaining a space for its own recovery and needs.

Lionel Pascual and his family lost their Lahaina home in the Aug. 8 fires. Since then, they’ve moved nine times, from hotel to hotel. Currently, the Pascuals are staying at Papakea Resort. They’ve been told by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is providing them and other survivors with temporary housing, that they can remain there until Nov. 30. But they’re not sure where they will be sent next.

“The recovery effort is going very, very slow,” explains Mr. Pascual. “There’s no places for us to rent; that’s the biggest thing.” 

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