-
Funding for the Native American Housing and Self-Determination Act provides financial assistance for families to obtain homes, make renovations and build community facilities. The funding is a record increase of over $320 million from last year.
-
It’s an effort planned in coordination with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the State of Hawaiʻi and private developers.
-
The fate of a controversial development on the south side of Hawaiʻi Island remains in limbo after a public hearing in Hilo stretched more than eight hours into Thursday evening. HPR's Kuʻuwehi Hiraishi reports.
-
A new survey finds kamaʻāina more worried than ever about Hawaiʻi's future. Pacific Business News editor in chief A. Kam Napier has more.
-
A young Lahaina resident and her partner survived the August wildfire and were housed in a hotel — only to be kicked out days before Christmas. She said they were told that they weren't eligible for housing anymore because they were "pre-disaster homeless." She is due with their first baby any day now. HPR’s Catherine Cluett Pactol has more.
-
A University of Hawaiʻi report says regulatory costs account for more than half of the price of a new condo in Hawaiʻi. High housing costs in the state are fueling an exodus of local-born residents searching for cheaper places to live.
-
Developer Christine Camp of the Avalon Group sat down with The Conversation's Catherine Cruz to talk about the $38 million deal she closed on the former Walmart property in downtown Honolulu. Camp said the plan is to build a "commercial center" with restaurants, bars, and indoor and outdoor recreation.
-
Avalon Group has acquired the former Walmart building in downtown Honolulu; Conservation workers are needed on Maui; Kaiser High grad wins a spot on "The Voice"
-
Local developer Christine Camp says her Avalon Development company is the new owner of the former Walmart building in downtown Honolulu. She says Avalon will soon unveil plans for a combination of commercial, residential and recreation space.
-
A mystery has been brewing in a small ranching town on Hawaii's Big Island. Word has it that Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff bought the land, stirring worries about what he plans to do with it.