02/28/19-HA‘ENA STATE PARK PROVIDES SILVER LINING TO HISTORIC APRIL ’18 FLOODING

Posted on Feb 28, 2019 in slider, State Parks
DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES
News Release
DAVID Y. IGE
GOVERNOR
SUZANNE D. CASE
CHAIRPERSON

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Feb. 28, 2019

HA‘ENA STATE PARK PROVIDES SILVER LINING TO HISTORIC APRIL ’18 FLOODING

Community-Driven Master Plan Moves to the Forefront

To view video please click on photo or at this link: https://vimeo.com/315327874

(Hā‘ena State Park, Kaua‘i) – Opening is totally dependent on the repair and restoration of Kūhiō Highway, the only road to Kaua‘i’s north shore, and completion of the intense work that is underway at Hā‘ena State Park, which was also heavily damaged during last April’s world-record rain storm.

About 80% of Hā‘ena’s parking lot washed away and the water line was severed.  In addition to Ke’e beach, a destination snorkeling spot, Ha‘ena is the gateway to the adjacent Nāpali Coast State Wilderness Park and the famous Kalalau Trail, which experienced five large landslides. The closure of both parks, due to lack of access, has been a blessing in disguise, in that it’s given the trodden landscape and marine environment an opportunity to rest and for State Parks to implement  a 20-year-long planning effort targeting park improvements.

Alan Carpenter, the Assistant Administrator for the DLNR Division of State Parks, is spearheading repairs and restoration. He put it this way, “It was a crisis that created an amazing opportunity. The master planning process identified two major issues: physical improvements and visitor management.  They are equally important.  We managed to switch gears and borrow funds from other planned projects which gave us the chance to implement a master plan at almost record speed. In this compressed timeframe we’re creating a new experience and when the highway reopens we should be finished with work at Hā‘ena State Park.”

Upon completion, park users will experience a new, smooth parking lot that better manages the previous congestion.  A boardwalk and pathway is being constructed through a restored loʻi system and into the coastal forest to provide safer and more aesthetic access to  Kē‘ē Beach and the Kalalau Trailhead.  Carpenter said, “We’ve long known about the risk of people walking on the road beneath steep cliffs, where rock fall is frequent. This was exacerbated first by a fire and then by the flooding.”  He feels it will be a greatly enhanced and more immersive experience than before.

A key piece of the redevelopment of the area and a major paradigm shift in Hawaii State Park  management honors the desires of the local community.  For years the highway leading to both parks has been jammed with people and cars and in recent years has become detrimental to community values due to record tourism numbers.  Local residents asked State Parks to come up with some sort of system to manage the enormous number of visitors. Carpenter explained, “The community put faith in us, as part of the master planning process, to reduce the number of people in the park at any given time. We anticipate cutting the number of daily park users in half…from 2,000 a day to 900. We’ll have a variety of methods to accomplish this, including a controlled-entry system through online purchasing of parking slots or a seat on a shuttle. Some of the details are still being worked out as we continue to collaborate with partners and the community on the best ways to manage the flow of people and traffic.

Ultimately, Carpenter says, the first and foremost mission is to protect the sensitive natural and cultural features of Hā‘ena and Nāpali. “One of the best ways of doing this is to limit visitation and any mainland or world travelers have likely already experienced limited-park entrance at certain National Parks and international destinations like Machu Picchu or Nepal.

He concluded, “We are trying to create a situation where there is always room for local people and cultural practitioners.”

No date for the reopening is set and again is predicated on Kuhio Highway reopening and completing the critically needed park restoration.

Media Contact:
Dan Dennison
Senior Communications Manager
(808) 587-0396
[email protected]