October 8, 2024

(Photo credit: Hawaiʻi Department of Land and Natural Resources)

The number of households living below the poverty line has more than doubled since the August 2023 Maui wildfires—one of a host of alarming findings revealed by the University of Hawaiʻi Economic Research Organization (UHERO)’s new survey of fire-affected Maui residents.

The August 2024 survey also showed that fire-impacted households typically pay 43% more rent for the same or fewer bedrooms, and nearly one in five participants have seen their income drop by more than half. The data came from 402 individuals representing 374 households.

The survey results are presented in UHERO’s Maui Recovery Dashboard: Housing & Jobs.

“This dashboard is a critical tool for measuring and accelerating Maui’s recovery,” said UHERO Executive Director Carl Bonham. “It provides key insights into housing and economic challenges.”

This initiative, launched one year after the devastating August 2023 wildfires, provides continuously updated data after individuals and households who lived, worked, or owned businesses in fire-impacted areas at the time of the wildfires complete monthly surveys about their current situation.

According to UHERO, the findings from the survey reflect the ongoing challenges fire-impacted households face. Poverty, unemployment, rent costs and housing instability have risen dramatically, and these increases are persisting more than a year after the disaster. This suggests that gaps in assistance are still widespread and disproportionately affect the most vulnerable population groups.

Key survey findings

Housing

Economic Impact

A tool for timely recovery monitoring and transparency

The ongoing, frequently updated nature of this survey is critical to assessing the progress of Maui’s recovery. For example, the poverty rate for the survey cohort is more than three times higher than the most recent available poverty data for Maui County in 2023. This staggering disparity underscores the importance of collecting data in real time and on an ongoing basis.

“There’s a lack of timely data on how fire-impacted individuals are coping,” Bonham said. “Without this information, it’s hard to fully grasp the true pace of recovery or identify unmet needs. This is why we launched the survey.”

According to UHERO, most of the existing data about the fire-affected community is held by federal and state agencies. It is often not publicly available, not updated on a frequent basis and not shared between agencies. This lack of transparency hampers public accountability and effective coordination among stakeholders. Most publicly available data is only released with a substantial time lag, limiting usefulness for timely decision-making. The Maui Recovery Survey contributes to filling this data gap.

For further details and to explore the dashboard, visit this website.

This UHERO project is run in partnership with the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement and the Hawaiʻi Community Foundation, and is part of their shared commitment to Maui’s recovery and statewide resiliency.

UHERO is housed in UH Mānoa’s College of Social Sciences.

Source: A UH News story