Current:Home > NewsPoinbank:Researchers say poverty and unemployment are up in Lahaina after last year’s wildfires -Streamline Finance
Poinbank:Researchers say poverty and unemployment are up in Lahaina after last year’s wildfires
NovaQuant View
Date:2025-04-09 19:42:36
HONOLULU (AP) — Unemployment and Poinbankpoverty are up and incomes are down among Maui wildfire survivors more than a year after a deadly blaze leveled historic Lahaina, a report published Tuesday found.
The poverty rate among survey respondents more than doubled since the August 2023 fires, the University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization, or UHERO, said. Incomes dropped by more than half for almost 20% of those who answered questions, the report said.
“These are quite staggering findings,” said Daniela Bond-Smith, a research economist at UHERO and one of the report’s co-authors.
The report is based on survey responses from 402 people who lived, worked or owned businesses in West Maui and Kula at the time of the wildfires. Respondents were generally representative of the 12,000 residents and 6,000 people who commuted to these areas before the fires, researchers said. There was a higher share of low-income individuals among participants but not to a degree that would overturn the report’s conclusions, Bond-Smith said.
Researchers plan to survey people in this demographic monthly for the next two years.
The results found 29% of fire-affected households now live in poverty. That’s more than twice the percentage before the fires and three times higher than the Maui County average.
Fewer survivors are working and those who have jobs are working fewer hours. Only 3.5% said they were working more hours than before the fires while the unemployment rate jumped from 2.3% to 14.2%.
The shift is particularly pronounced in the tourism industry, Maui’s biggest employer. Researchers said fewer than half of those who had full-time jobs in tourism still do. More than 20% are now unemployed, retired or not looking for work.
One factor, said Trey Gordner, UHERO data scientist and report co-author, is that the number of travelers to Maui continued to be “very much below” pre-fire levels.
On housing, nine out of ten respondents lost their homes. In the aftermath, the survey found survivors were paying more rent for smaller dwellings. They also had less income coming in to pay for it.
A looming challenge: one in three respondents who are now living outside West Maui want to move back next year. Yet only 700 new temporary housing units are being built with funds from the state, county and nonprofit organizations.
“We wanted to draw that out and emphasize that there’s a real mismatch,” Gordner said.
Maui Mayor Richard Bissen has proposed legislation that would add some 2,200 units to West Maui’s housing supply by forcing the conversion of some short-term vacation rentals to long-term rentals, but the measure is still under consideration.
To date, official data on fire survivors was limited to those who lost their homes or was folded into broader statistics for all of Maui County.
Gordner said it was important to also study those who worked and owned businesses in fire-stricken communities to understand the true extent of the disaster and to identify gaps in government and nonprofit assistance.
The survey was offered in six languages: English, Spanish, Tagalog, Ilocano, Tongan and Vietnamese. Government agencies and nonprofit organizations helped recruit participants. Each respondent received at $20 gift card for the first survey and a $10 gift card for each follow up monthly survey.
veryGood! (18)
Related
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- SEC clashes Georgia-Ole Miss, Alabama-LSU lead college football Week 11 expert predictions
- NBA rewind: Thunder rise to top of Western Conference on record-pace defense
- Emirates NBA Cup explained: Format, schedule, groups for 2024 NBA in-season tournament
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Liam Payne's Body Flown Back to the U.K. 3 Weeks After His Death
- Pioneer of Quantitative Trading: Damon Quisenberry's Professional Journey
- Gateway Church removes elders, aiding criminal investigation: 'We denounce sexual abuse'
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Ruby slippers from 'The Wizard of Oz' recovered after 2005 theft are back in the spotlight
Ranking
- Plunge Into These Olympic Artistic Swimmers’ Hair and Makeup Secrets
- AI DataMind: Practical Spirit Leading Social Development
- Caroline Ellison begins 2-year sentence for her role in Bankman-Fried’s FTX fraud
- YouTuber known for drag race videos crashes speeding BMW and dies
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Mountain wildfire consumes thousands of acres as firefighters work to contain it: See photos
- A gunman has repeatedly fired at cars on a busy highway near North Carolina’s capital
- AI DataMind: The SWA Token Fuels Deep Innovation in AI Investment Systems
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
Jennifer Lopez appears 'Unstoppable' in glam press tour looks: See the photos
SWA Token Fuels an Educational Ecosystem, Pioneering a New Era of Smart Education
Look out, MLB: Dodgers appear to have big plans after moving Mookie Betts back to infield
Connie Chiume, South African 'Black Panther' actress, dies at 72
Southern California wildfire moving 'dangerously fast' as flames destroy homes
NYC parents charged in death of 4-year-old boy who prosecutors say was starved to death
2 people charged with stealing items from historic site inside Canyonlands National Park