KAUAI HAWAIIAN HOMELANDS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
People discussed the paperwork last Saturday prior to the start of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands meeting at a school in Puhi, Hawaii. In the background, Gov. Linda Lingle chatted with Anahola resident Robin Danner. Yvonne Pascua, second from right, was the recipient of the first lease assigned.
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New lease on life
The state begins a program to give Hawaiians 6,000 land leases over five years
By Mark Niesse
Associated Press
Hawaiian Henry Kupihea hoped for 23 years that the state would someday give him property to build a home.
He got his wish last weekend when the state awarded 160 land leases to Hawaiians on Kauai in an effort to put the islands' native people back on the land.
"I was always on the waiting list, waiting to come home," Kupihea said Thursday. "It's so beautiful there. The ocean and the mountains are five minutes apart."
Kupihea, who is 50 percent Hawaiian, said he and many other Hawaiians need this kind of help because they would have a hard time financing a home by themselves. He looks forward to escaping $1,400 monthly rents for him and his four children.
The Department of Hawaiian Home Lands distributed the land leases for $1 per year last Saturday, part of an effort to give out 6,000 leases in five years, more than were issued in the first 80 years of the program, which started in 1921.
About 1,300 residential leases have been awarded since 2003.
The latest are part of Kauai's largest development for native Hawaiians.
The leases come from 200,000 acres statewide that were set aside by Congress in 1921, said Lloyd Yonenaka, spokesman for the department.
"The wrongdoings to the Hawaiian people put them at a disadvantage. There is a desire by many to see that wrong made right," said Micah Kane, chairman of the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands.
Any resident who is at least 50 percent Hawaiian is eligible to sign up for the lease program. The state has been trying to give out the leases more quickly, and it is offering programs to help people finance the mortgages for houses built on the land.
The Hawaiians who receive the leases still must pay for the house, but it could cost less than half as much after the land is already purchased, Yonenaka said.
"The price of a home in Hawaii is astronomical," he said. "It'll help relieve the pressure on the market for affordable homes for everyone."
More than 700 people, including Gov. Linda Lingle, attended the meeting last Saturday when the state announced who would receive the leases. They were allocated first to the families who had been on the waiting list for the longest amounts of time.
The New Home Ownership Assistance Program provides home-buyer counseling and ownership readiness training. Another program gives Hawaiians more time to raise money for the home after they have been granted the lease.
About 18,000 people are on the residential waiting list for Hawaiian land leases, Yonenaka said.
"This provides incentives for families to improve their quality of life," Kane said.
The Piilani Mai Ke Kai subdivision will be built in three phases on 71 acres on the coastline in Anahola in eastern Kauai.
Infrastructure improvements such as waterlines, roads and electricity will be paid for by the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. Construction on the first 80 lots is expected to begin in a few weeks, and the first homes could be completed in about a year and a half.
"We're very happy for those who were awarded homestead leases," said Kauai Mayor Bryan Baptiste. "Many of them had been waiting years for this to happen, and now their dreams of owning a home have come true."