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Kamehameha Schools opened the doors to its new Kikiwelawela Preschool in Heʻeia on Oʻahu this spring. After just three months, rising demand for early childhood education is prompting the school to expand — doubling its capacity for keiki this fall. HPR's Kuʻuwehi Hiraishi reports.
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Hawaiʻi Island’s Keauhou Bay is going to look a bit different as Kamehameha Schools draws up plans for its lands there. Pacific Business News editor A. Kam Napier has more.
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Four years ago, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that Kamehameha Schools had agreed to begin an audit of some 3,000 properties to determine which still had cesspools. The Conversation talked to Marissa Harman, director of asset management for Kamehameha Schools about where they are in the process.
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For the last couple of days, The Conversation has been taking a closer look at a proposed development out in West Oʻahu. The Conversation talked to a couple of area lawmakers about the proposed project, Rep. Henry Aquino and Honolulu Councilmember Brandon Elefante.
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The Conversation has been taking a closer look at a proposed development project along the rail route in Waipahu. Waipahu Neighborhood Board Member Richard Oshiro and Harrison Rue, head of Honolulu’s transit-oriented development program, shared how the Keawalau project might fit in, or not fit in, with the community.
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For about a year now Kamehameha Schools and its developer Highridge Costa have been shopping around a plan to build a mixed-use project that includes two 20-story towers of low-income rentals in Waipahu.
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You can’t talk about Hawaiʻi’s hybridized hibiscus without mentioning Charlies Nii Nursery tucked away in Kamilonui Valley in Hawaii Kai. The future of this second-generation family business is now uncertain.
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Kamehameha Schools is encouraging public input on its long-term plan for 33 acres it owns at Keauhou Bay on Hawaiʻi Island.
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A business grant organized by the American Heart Association is being extended to Hawaiʻi for the first time this year. Kamehameha Schools is sponsoring the grant to the tune of $100,000.
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When we send our kids off to school, we usually do so with the expectation that they’ll be safe and will eat a good lunch. But parents and students at Kamehameha Schools Keaʻau on Hawaiʻi Island, have sounded the alarm over some of the meals served there.