Current:Home > ScamsBurley Garcia|Weeks after the fire, the response in Maui shifts from a sprint to a marathon -Elevate Money Guide
Burley Garcia|Weeks after the fire, the response in Maui shifts from a sprint to a marathon
Algosensey View
Date:2025-04-08 16:53:26
MAUI,Burley Garcia Hawaii — It's Sunday afternoon at the Kahana boat ramp in West Maui. Until recently this spot was a place mostly to launch boats. Now it's morphed into a community-run hub where volunteers are working to address both short and long term concerns of all kinds.
Ka'imikila Moraes, an EMT with family ties to Lahaina, has been staffing the site as a volunteer with the grassroots group Maui Medic Healers Hui. "Some people are recovering from burns and so they need their dressings changed," he says, "Others inhaled a lot of smoke either during the fire, or in the immediate aftermath when they went to look for people and belongings, so we do a lot of nebulizer treatments over here, as well."
But mostly what he's doing now is helping people deal with trauma. "They just need to talk about it, they need to process. A lot of times what starts as patching up a band-aid on a finger turns into a lot more," Moraes says.
It's a stark difference from the frenetic early days of the crisis.
It's been three weeks since the Lahaina wildfire tore through downtown, killing at least 115 people and leveling 2,000 homes and buildings. As the situation stabilizes, the crisis response to the Lahaina fire is evolving from a sprint to a marathon. Responders at sites like this one are looking beyond the immediate needs of the disaster to the longer-term consequences for the community's health and recovery.
The emergency medical needs that were initially tended to by volunteer groups like the Maui Medic Healers Hui have been reabsorbed by a functioning 911 and the medical establishment. This group – started by Native Hawaiians – is finding its stride in providing culturally competent care. Most of their volunteers have medical training, but "the most important thing we do is spread calm," says Dr. Kalamaoka'aina Niheu, who co-founded the group with Noelani Ahia, an health care worker and indigenous activist with deep family roots in Lahaina.
Talking story: a tool and tradition
One way to spread calm is by talking story – slowing down and making time to connect with others. It's long been part of the culture in Hawaii.
"Talk story is what happens at the grocery store, when you go to pick up something fast and you notice the clerk is talking story with the customer for awhile," says Teri Holter, a social worker and therapist in Maui, and a volunteer with the medic group.
It's especially important after this collective trauma, where people may be feeling disconnected, says Tia Hartsock, director of the Office of Wellness and Resilience in the Hawaii governor's office. "Some people have been in severe pain. Some people have lost their family. There's a huge, collective loss of sense of place," she says. "Talk story is our ability as a community to reconnect."
At the Kahana boat ramp, friends and neighbors swing by to talk story. Joseph Ah Puk — a third-generation Lahainan – has two nieces and a brother that lost their homes in the fire. It missed his house by two blocks. He returned to his house on Sunday morning to mow the lawn. "Hard for me to understand how the water can be compromised, because the fire blew downhill," he says, referring to an "unsafe water advisory" issued by the county.
Assessing and mitigating damage will likely take years
There are some early signs that the water could be safe. Dr. Lorrin Pang, the top health official in Maui, says the water advisory was first issued out of an abundance of caution based on water contamination after other wildfires. Water testing results, shared last week, showed tap water still within the EPA standards. While health authorities plan to keep monitoring the levels, Pang is hopeful that as the water system gets repaired it will flush itself out.
Layers of toxic ash are relatively harmless undisturbed – but could lead to serious health concerns, if people start digging through it unprotected. "There's petroleum products, heavy metals and asbestos," buried in the ash, Pang says, which is dangerous for people to breathe and ingest. "If it gets disturbed, it can aerosolize and it can be quite potent."
But the looming health concern is grief, and the different forms it takes. "There's acute trauma and then there's post-trauma," Pang says. While moving people in need of housing out of shelters and into individual hotel rooms has reduced the risk of some health threats like COVID and norovirus – it's also created the circumstances for experiencing grief and depression in isolation. He says the health department is conducting door-to-door wellness checks in the interim hotel housing several times a week.
"Now that their medical needs and their food, shelter, clothing [needs] are met, they will start to look back and be traumatized by the escape and the loss," Pang says, "Some people deal with it individually, and for others, a community can help."
Dr. Niheu, with Maui Medic Healers Hui, plans to make a consistent sense of community available to people who want it over the long haul. "As Indigenous people, we understand the violence of entry and exit," she says. To make the effort sustainable, they're building up a cohesive group of Maui-based volunteers, led by people from Lahaina – to prepare themselves for a recovery of home and belonging that will take many years.
veryGood! (33)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- 'In shock': Mississippi hunter bags dwarf deer with record-sized antlers
- China drafts new rules proposing restrictions on online gaming
- Prized pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto agrees with Dodgers on $325 million deal, according to reports
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Recall roundup: How many children's products were recalled in 2023, how many kids hurt?
- North Korea’s reported use of a nuclear complex reactor might be an attempt to make bomb fuels
- ICHCOIN Trading Center: Bitcoin's Boundless Potential in Specific Sectors
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- California lawsuit says Ralphs broke the law by asking job-seekers about their criminal histories
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Mystery Solved: This Is the Ultimate Murder, She Wrote Gift Guide
- How Jason Momoa Is Spending Holidays With His Kids
- Half of Americans leave FSA healthcare money on the table. Here are 10 ways to spend it.
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Jury acquits 3 Washington state officers in death of a Black man who told them he couldn’t breathe
- US land managers plan to round up thousands of wild horses across Nevada
- Pacific storm that unleashed flooding barreling down on southeastern California
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
'Everyone walked away with part of themselves healed' – 'The Color Purple' reimagined
Timothy Olyphant on 'Justified,' 'Deadwood' and marshals who interpret the law
This $299 Sparkly Kate Spade Bag is Now Just $69 & It's the Perfect Going Out Bag
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
The Impact of Restrictive Abortion Laws in 2023
Nike will lay off workers as part of $2-billion cost-cutting plan
Probe: Doomed Philadelphia news helicopter hit trees fast, broke up, then burned, killing 2 on board