Partner Meetings

NOAA National Weather Service Drought Presentation

Forecasting droughts can play a significant role in determining the severity of the next fire season. With this in mind, Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization, represented by Planning Assistant Ilene Grossman, attended NOAA's National Weather Service Drought Presentation at the Department of Hawaiian Homelands (DHHL) building on the wet side of Waimea. A solid core of representatives from various agencies were in attendance: NOAA National Weather Service, State Commission on Water Resources Management, DHHL, UH Manoa, US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Mauna Kea Soil & Water Conservation District, Civil Defense, and Hawaii Department of Agriculture (DOA). Malama Solomon, State Senator representing District 4, also attended the meeting. 

One of the hot topics of the meeting was the possibility of a strong El Niño this year. NOAA's predictions point to severe drought conditions and a more active hurricane season in the Central Pacific. Attendees gathered together for a round table discussion to give agency updates on how the drought would affect their resources and what they would need to respond appropriately. HWMO was honored to be a part of such a critical discussion and is looking forward to future collaborations with the attendees and their respective agencies and groups.

Banner photo: The latest Drought Monitor map of Hawaii, displaying abnormally dry conditions in Maui and Hawaii Counties.

NOAA Interactive Mapping Project for South Kohala Meeting

HWMO is getting involved in an exciting new collaborative interactive mapping project. Elizabeth, Orlando, and Pablo represented HWMO in a meeting at the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) office in Waimea with members from NRCS, The Nature Conservancy (TNC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), University of Hawaii Sea Grant, and Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail. The eleven attendees began strategizing and providing input on a project that would sync data from a number of different agencies, groups, and organizations that work towards conserving the South Kohala region of the Big Island. NOAA would host an interactive map of South Kohala that would provide information on current projects, past research, management plans, site specifics, and other useful data that would be accessible to the public as a free information tool. The map would also increase the capacity for groups or individuals to share knowledge, increase collaborations, and fill in information and management gaps in the region.

NOAA spearheaded the project as part of a combined Sentinel Site and Habitat Blueprint program in an effort to target specific regions across the U.S. showing that relevant advances in science can impact management and thus affect actual change. In Hawaii, these programs are being implemented in Midway and French Frigate Shoals in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, Heʻeia Wetland Restoration project on Oʻahu, and South Kohala on the Big Island of Hawaiʻi. NOAA's objectives for the program include focusing on coral reef health, reducing sedimentation, and mauka to makai connectivity; climate change; and community capacity (i.e. outreach, education, and training). HWMO is in full support of the mapping project as we find it will be an incredibly useful tool for the organization and for the managers and community members we represent. 

Banner photo: NOAA interns present data that has been collected so far for the interactive map.

Field Tour of Leeward Wildfire Projects and Fire Prone Areas with Alex Friend (USFS PSW)

Through the Pacific Fire Exchange (PFX), Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization’s (HWMO) Elizabeth Pickett and Pablo Beimler and U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Institute for Pacific Islands Forestry’s (USFS PSW IPIF) Christian Giardina facilitated a field tour of leeward wildfire mitigation projects and fire-prone sites for the Station Director of the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station, Alex Friend. 

The group first visited HWMO’s Waikoloa Dryland Wildfire Safety Park, Hawaii’s only Firewise demo garden, located at the end of Melia St. in Waikoloa Village. The park demonstrates how to reduce the impacts of wildfires through defensible space landscaping and fire-resistant building materials. The garden primarily consists of low-maintenance, native Hawaiian species that are resistant to drought, wind, and heat. Pickett and Beimler led the site visitors through the freshly-weeded garden (HWMO had held a Community Work Morning that day), explaining all of the hard work that HWMO and its partners and community members have put into the project. The hard work had payed off, judging by the plethora of new blossoms emerging on many of the native dryland plants (including ‘Ihi, ‘Ilima papa, Pohinahina, and ‘Ulei). The garden has made a positive impact for the community by not only adding aesthetic value to the neighborhood, but also providing a learning space for Firewise principles that residents can directly apply to their own homes. HWMO is planning on further site visits, including for the upcoming CNH Seminar Forest Fire Seminar and Training on April 9th-11th, and holding a Wildfire Awareness, Prevention, and Work Day event for the first National Wildfire Prevention Day on May 3rd. 

To top off the field tour, the group traveled to the Waikoloa Dry Forest Initiative’s (WDFI) Forest Preserve, located just southwest of Waikoloa Village. Jen Lawson, the Project Manager who has tirelessly coordinated the restoration, education and volunteer efforts for the preserve, greeted the group at the front gate and led a site tour. The group only scratched the surface of the 275 acre preserve, but were able to see the results of the projects, thus far. Wiliwili trees were sprouting new offspring, while ‘Ilima papa groves were blossoming. The group stopped by the lush nursery, where Jen pulled out a map of the preserve and described the wildfire threat that always looms. HWMO has coordinated with WDFI to co-fund fuelbreak implementations around the perimeter of the preserve, not without their share of challenges. However, the fuelbreaks have added significant security against wildfire scares, especially on the Northeast end of the preserve, where a wildfire would most likely come from. 

Through the field tour, HWMO, PFX, and USFS PSW IPIF were able to communicate to Friend the wildfire issues that Hawaii faces and how these organizations are making great strides in mitigating wildfire threats on the leeward side of Hawaii island, as well as the rest of the State and the Pacific.

Banner photo: (Left to Right): Alex Friend (USFS PSW), Jen Lawson (WDFI), Christian Giardina (USFS PSW-IPIF & PFX), and Elizabeth Pickett (HWMO & PFX) scan through Waikoloa Dry Forest Preserve maps and discuss HWMO co-funded fuelbreaks.

Big Island Wildfire Coordinating Group (BIWCG) Meeting - Feb. 2014

The Big Island Wildfire Coordinating Group (BIWCG) met for its quarterly meeting at the DOFAW office in Hilo. Members represented the following agencies: DOFAW, USFWS, HCC, HFD, NPS, Firewise Hawaii, HWMO, and PFX. Wayne Ching (DOFAW), lead organizer of this year's CNH Spring event kicked off the meeting with an update on the upcoming event's proceedings and logistics. 

Clay Trauernicht of PFX then gave a review of the recent Hawaii Wildfire Risk Assessment organized by Ching a few weeks ago. The risk assessment was developed for the 17 western-most states (including Hawaii and Alaska) using a variety of inputs such as fuel models, topography and historical ignition points. Clay emphasized that the most striking message from the assessment was that Hawaii showed the largest amount of burnable acres out of all 17 states. Such striking data and maps will be useful in conveying the severity of Hawaii's wildfire issue to community members, land managers, first responders, and decision-makers. 

The PFX team also presented the group with a rough draft of Trauernicht's Hawaii Wildfire Problem Statement in newsletter-type form along with a variety of new templates for upcoming PFX fact sheets. BIWCG members were enthusiastic and appreciative to see the work done by PFX and HWMO, which could not have been done without partner support.

Elizabeth Pickett of PFX and HWMO and Clay Trauernicht of PFX and UH Co-op Extension were then invited to represent their respective agencies at the State Fire Council meeting to present the problem statement to the group.

Banner photo: BIWCG members discuss current projects from around the island.

West Maui CWPP Meetings with West Maui Fire Task Force & West Maui Mountains Watershed Partnership (WMMWP)

HWMO started ramping up its West Maui Community Wildfire Protection Plan efforts by holding meetings with the West Maui Fire Task Force and the West Maui Mountains Watershed Partnership (WMMWP). In order for us to better understand the issues at hand in West Maui, members from these groups provided input regarding wildfire concerns of theirs and possible resolutions for those specific issues. 

These meetings were an important early step in this giant collaborative effort that will later involve a wider range of community input. In the end, the West Maui CWPP will identify, prioritize, and bring funding towards projects to reduce the threat of wildfire to West Maui communities.

As described by our own Elizabeth Pickett in a recent Lahaina News article:

"CWPPs are meant to tie into existing or planned projects. Many communities are developing disaster plans or long-range community plans, and the CWPP is meant to complement those plans.

"It will be a useful tool for community members to help make West Maui's neighborhoods and natural areas fire-safe. Wildfires tie into many natural resource, municipal and community issues, so this is an important opportunity for communities to learn, have their voices heard and get involved."

Banner photo: West Maui Fire Task Force with our very own Ilene Grossman (on left) and Elizabeth Pickett (on right).

Big Island Wildfire Coordinating Group (BIWCG) - Sept. 2013 Meeting

Elizabeth Pickett and Pablo Beimler attended the Big Island Wildfire Coordinating Group meeting, where they provided results of the statewide hazard assessments which were recently completed, as well as draft fire history maps for the state.

Banner photo: Left to right - Wayne Ching (DOFAW), Chief Eric Moller (USAG-P, FES), and Jay Hatayama (DOFAW) are all exemplary partners of ours.

Pacific Fire Exchange - 3rd Advisory Panel Meeting

HWMO’s staff members Elizabeth Pickett and Pablo Beimler flew to Oahu to meet with members of the Pacific Fire Exchange Advisory Panel, which includes our very own Board President, Miles Nakahara, and partners from the University of Hawaii, USDA Forest Service and Natural Resource Conservation Service, Department of Defense, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Pacific Disaster Center, and many more. We presented the PFX overview and goals and broke out into discussion groups to brainstorm "knowledge themes." 

Banner photo: J.B. Friday, Extension Forester at UH Manoa, takes notes from a group discussion regarding "knowledge themes" for Applied Science and Management.

Annual HWMO All-Partner Meeting 2013

HWMO and its firefighting and natural resource management partners gathered at the Pohakuloa Training Area to share updates about fire mitigation and planning work that has taken place throughout the last year. HWMO released, for the first time, results of our statewide community hazard assessments, as well as draft maps of a statewide fire event history. Over fifty partners from eighteen agencies and organizations attended the event, as well as two County Council Members and State Representative Cindy Evans.

The PFX field tour, following the meeting, to Mauna Kea State Park was the first tour PFX had organized in its young existence. The tour highlighted, at the physical location of the Mauna Kea State Park Fire, the first-hand experiences of fighting the fire - topics included fire boundaries, initial and extended attack details, incident command, mop-up, results of the After Action Review, and suppression challenges/successes. These topics were led by five of our partners (including one of our very own Board of Directors):

  • Eric Moller, PTA Army Fire Chief
  • Glen Timbal, PTA Army Assistant Fire Chief
  • Jay Hatayama, DOFAW Protection Forester
  • Wayne Ching, DOFAW Fire Management Officer
  • Miles Nakahara, HWMO President

The tour concluded with a discussion on the ramifications on future fire and resource management for this area and its included and nearby critical habitat.

Banner photo: Field Tour of Mauna Kea State Park, after the meeting, to highlight the 2010 wildfire.