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Wednesday, October 7, 2020

It's Time To Show Waikiki A Little Aloha - Honolulu Civil Beat

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During these COVID-19 times my family has rediscovered the beauty of Waikiki. Being from Windward Oahu, our visits to Waikiki are few and far between. We usually think of Waikiki as being a place that is too crowded and a pain to find parking!

Back in May, on a whim, we decided to go surfing for Mother’s Day. Not having surfed in over 20 years, being middle-aged and the mother of two teenage girls, we thought it would be the best time to go since there were no tourists!

Four months later, we are still surfing two to three days a week. We have fallen in love with the beautiful waters of Waikiki, the gentle world-class surf, and the camaraderie with fellow surfers, many whom are local. We have rediscovered and reclaimed our right to Waikiki.

Now, with the impending reopening of transpacific travel, I feel a sense of despair and gloom lurking. How do we persevere and continue surfing in a place we love when we know it may soon again be overused, disrespected, and trampled? What are we teaching our children if we sheepishly retreat back to the safety of the Windward Side?

Bonnie Kahapea-Tanner (center) and her daughters at the Duke Kahanamoku statute in Waikiki. With the reopening of tourism set to begin next week, she is concerned about what will happen next in Waikiki.

Courtesy

COVID-19 has exposed many things. Mostly to me it has exposed the truth that our government isn’t equipped to make decisions based on the health and well-being of its people — the natives, the locals, the taxpayers. Police are being sent out to give citations instead of educating and encouraging compliance.

Parking Problems

The parking in Waikiki is still challenging, but we have found our spots. With heavy longboards, we have a system of dropping off. When the banyan tree loading zone was open, it was easy, pull in unload quickly, then head off to find parking. Since the more recent shutdowns, the loading zone has been blocked off, forcing us to use two spots — the trolley stop near the police station or a small loading area just past the banyan tree.

Well, since there are no trolleys running, many families have been using this spot to do a quick unload — and it is relatively safe since the police station is nearby. It’s also become a parking lot for the police — and a few have been very vocal, albeit a bit aggressive, in telling us “this is not a loading zone.”

When I recently tried to ask when they would be opening up the loading zone, the officer just walked away.

I have used the smaller loading zone just past the banyan tree, but it is an area with many homeless. And while that is another issue, on many occasions I have witnessed very aggressive behavior and drug use — both of which I do not want my teens exposed to, nor do they feel safe waiting with the boards while I go get the car.

I wouldn’t even consider going to the restroom in Waikiki.

So what do we do with this new found love for Waikiki and surfing? Where is the aloha for the residents? For the families? For the Native Hawaiians?

In addition, the place is dirty — and we are talking way less people around these days and yet the city and state can’t even malama (care) for it now? It’s just shocking really. I wouldn’t even consider going to the restroom — but my husband did on a Saturday morning, and he reported deplorable and embarrassing conditions.

So, while it seems the state is in such a rush to get the tourists back so they can make money and stabilize the economy, do they really care about them? Do they have aloha for them?

It is clear they really don’t have aloha for us.

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October 07, 2020 at 05:07PM
https://www.civilbeat.org/2020/10/its-time-to-show-waikiki-a-little-aloha/

It's Time To Show Waikiki A Little Aloha - Honolulu Civil Beat

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

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