Government and Politics
April 16, 2025
From: Hawaii Governor Josh Green, M.D.Event Adds to 790 Project Leases Awarded on O?ahu Weeks Ago
DHHL beneficiary Kanani Takata accepts first West Hawai?i project lease award alongside Lieutenant Governor Sylvia Luke and state and county leaders.
SOUTH KOHALA, HAWAI?I ISLAND - Volcanic haze rolled in on ka makani pahoa Saturday veiling a sunny South Kohala sky, but nothing could obscure the air of excitement felt in the Monarchy Ballroom as the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands prepared to present nearly 400 project lease awards in West Hawai?i: a feat that hadn’t been done since the early 2000s.
More than 660 native Hawaiian beneficiaries and their ?ohana were invited to the Hilton Waikoloa Village April 12, 2025 for their opportunity to select between two homestead developments in West Hawai?i – La?i ??pua in Kealakehe and Kailapa in Kawaihae.
On that day, everyone heard their names called; starting with the first application submitted in 1963 to the most recent in December 2023.
“Homesteads not only put our people back on the land; homesteads restore hope in our communities,” said Lieutenant Governor Sylvia Luke. “This administration will continue to invest in our Native Hawaiian community, and the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, to ensure our families have a home here in Hawai?i for generations to come.”
The leases, 368 in La?i ??pua and 22 in Kailapa, represent a significant step toward homeownership for many native Hawaiians waiting decades. This initiative is part of DHHL’s comprehensive approach to addressing its waitlist by expediting homesteading opportunities.
“The success of our homesteading program relies on our ability to pivot towards the needs of our beneficiaries and project leases are one example of that,” said DHHL Director Kali Watson. “With developers in place and construction on the way, the department will deliver on some 1,200 units on Hawai?i Island in the next few years. Prince Jonah K?hi? Kalaniana?ole established homesteads in response to what some called a landless and dying race. Today we issue project leases to bring his vision to fruition.”
Unlike previous processes, beneficiaries secure a homestead lease prior to the completion of development. This approach gives families the chance to prepare for both financial and program requirements, thereby ensuring long-term stability and the opportunity to transfer their leases to eligible successors.
Act 279, the department’s transformational $600 million allocation of general funds set forth in 2022 by the Hawai?i State Legislature funded La?i ??pua’s $32.9 million infrastructure costs.
‘Forever Homes’ for Families
The West Hawai?i project lease awards are the second of three major project lease distributions this year. DHHL awarded 790 leases in West O?ahu in March and will award nearly a thousand on Maui at the end of the year. The department’s ambitious plan aims to issue more than 6,000 project leases statewide over the next two years.
Accepting a lease on behalf of her grandpa, on the waitlist since 1963, Kanani Takata was first up.
“I hear the cheers of the families that are celebrating a lease award and it is my prayer, my hope, that this would be able to bless generations now or future generations,” Takata said.
West Hawai?i project lease awardee Charmaine Davis succeeded to her mother’s lease and intends on passing it to her own daughter. Davis’ mother became an applicant in the late-1970s.
“Going forward, this is all about generations now,” said Davis. “We look forward to being able to provide and assist my grandchildren, and my great-grandchildren, in carrying on the legacy through Hawaiian homes. We have a forever home.”
The department is currently in the process of developing five additional projects on Hawai?i Island. These projects include:
“We can no longer bypass individuals on our waitlist – doing so disregards the decades-long wait our families patiently endured and tarnishes the legacy Prince K?hi? dedicated his life to building,” Watson added. “Each new home represents an opportunity for generational change and will be built in ways that are accessible, high quality, and sustainable for our Native Hawaiian families.”
Project leases provide a critical pathway to homeownership, offering options such as turnkey homes, owner-builder lots, and rent-to-own opportunities.
For more information about DHHL’s lease awards and upcoming projects, visit dhhl.hawaii.gov.
Click here to download visuals, soundbites.
B-ROLL (2:09)
SOUNDBITES
Kanani Takata, West Hawai?i project lease awardee,
(:32 seconds)
“I knew that grandpa would be the number one pick, and I also knew that I would be the one standing in as his proxy so I hear the cheers of the families that are celebrating the awards, or a lease award, for these people who have been sitting on the list like my grandpa since 1963, so for me, my prayer, my hope is that this would be able to bless generations whether it be now or future generations to come.”
Charmaine Davis, West Hawai?i project lease awardee
(:17 seconds)
“Going forward, this is all about generations now, we look forward to being able to provide and assist my grandchildren, and my great-grandchildren, in carrying on the legacy through Hawaiian homes, we have a forever home, a forever home.”
Nathan Kapule, West Hawai?i project lease awardee,
(:27 seconds)
“I wasn’t really sure until they called me, and when I saw that I go wow, and being the front of the list is something special, so that’s what I felt, it’s a special opportunity for me, there’s a reason why things happen, I think there’s a reason why, and it is to support my family and being native Hawaiian.”