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A resident shares her experience after fuel was discovered in the Navy water system in 2021; An upcoming rally at the State Capitol is set to bring awareness to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
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Heidi Nicholls is a postdoctoral fellow in sociology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. She has been researching the working conditions during the construction of the Navy Red Hill fuel tanks in the early 1940s.
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HPR takes a tour of Honolulu's Chinatown; the lives of workers who constructed the Red Hill underground fuel facility; expanding opportunities for women in esports
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The newly stood-up Navy Closure Task Force-Red Hill appears to be off to a rough start. A community group maintains the Navy is trying to strong-arm a process agreed to under a work order issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The Navy said it would look to meetings in February and March, indicating it wants to restructure the gatherings to make them more productive.
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Community's response to Navy's decision not to attend community meeting about Red Hill fuel tanks; insights from the first of two Right-of-Entry informational workshops for West Maui residents
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The Navy has started removing tens of thousands of gallons of sludge and leftover fuel from the tanks at the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility. The Joint Task Force-Red Hill finished gravity-draining 104 million gallons of fuel from the facility in December. What’s leftover is sediment and fuel that can’t be drained through gravity. HPR's Mark Ladao has more.
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Red Hill defueling process enters its next phase; Resources for victims of human trafficking; Hawaiian musician Henry Kapono kicks off a new series of concerts
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To mark a decade since 27,000 gallons of jet fuel leaked from an underground tank in the Navy's Red Hill facility, The Conversation's Catherine Cruz spoke to representatives from the Honolulu Board of Water Supply and the Sierra Club of Hawaiʻi. BWS Manager Ernest Lau said he doesn't want to take any chances with Honolulu's drinking water.
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Pipelines used to remove fuel from the storage tanks at the Red Hill facility have residual fuel in them that needs to be removed. The Navy hopes to complete that process by March 2024.
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A chromatogram, or fingerprint analysis, was performed for each detection of total petroleum hydrocarbons and showed that it did not match the type of jet fuel that was stored at Red Hill.