WAIANAE, Hawaii (AP) 鈥 Tedorian Gallano would like to buy a house for his wife and three youngest children in Hawaii, but real estate prices soared so high eight years ago he moved his family back to his childhood home outside Honolulu 鈥 and last year, his older brother followed suit.
Now, eight members from three generations of Gallano's extended family share one bathroom in a house that's so packed they've jerry-rigged an extra bedroom in the garage. Buying a home is 鈥減retty much unattainable for the average working family鈥 in Hawaii, the 49-year-old carpenter said.
鈥淲e always seem to have these hot markets that drive the prices up, and then it鈥檚 the hardworking local families that cannot buy houses who are kind of left out,鈥 said Gallano, who's a member of the carpenters' union that鈥檚 been active on the issue.
Gallano's situation is emblematic of the acute affordable housing crisis afflicting Hawaii, a problem so deep that there's now widespread concern that many of Hawaii's children won't be able to afford to live there as adults. Many residents are fearful their entire state 鈥 a diverse and culturally vibrant society with unique values and a complex identity 鈥 is being gentrified before their eyes as home prices soar.
The median price of a single-family home topped $1 million in most areas of Hawaii during the coronavirus pandemic and has declined only modestly since. The state has the in the nation after California, Vermont and Oregon. On Thursday, new data showed the islands experienced net population loss five of the last six years. In 2022, U.S. census data showed live outside Hawaii than within.
Now, amid growing urgency, both the governor and Hawaii's legislative leaders are making housing a top priority.
In one of his first moves after taking office in January, Democratic Gov. Josh Green created a new housing czar to oversee the effort. One thing Chief Housing Officer Nani Medeiros is focused on is identifying roadblocks and redundant permitting at local and state levels that can hold up construction. The administration also wants to pour $1 billion into housing programs, including $450 million to subsidize the construction of affordable dwellings.
Lawmakers have sponsored bills to trim bureaucracy, fund public housing renovations and encourage construction of dense housing on state land next to Honolulu's planned rail line.
Determined to find solutions, a college student taking a break during COVID-19 and a recent college graduate co-founded a nonprofit advocacy organization called to lobby on the issue. Nearly 1,500 people have signed their pledge to back more housing.
鈥淚t really bothers me that we are saying to the young people of Hawaii, 鈥業t鈥檚 great that you might have been born and raised and educated here, but now that you鈥檝e become an adult, you have to leave and you cannot come back,鈥欌 said state Sen. Stanley Chang, a Democrat who chairs the Senate housing committee.
The departure of so many Native Hawaiians could dissipate Hawaiian values, like caring for the land, kuleana (sense of responsibility) and lokahi (working together), said Williamson Chang, a University of Hawaii law professor who is Native Hawaiian and not related to the senator.
鈥淭here鈥檚 not a great effort to preserve Hawaiian values if you don鈥檛 have Hawaiians. In other words, who鈥檚 going to transmit these values? Who is going to teach these values?鈥 he said.
Some moves to shore up affordable housing by easing development regulations are being met with trepidation by conservationists, who warn that going too far in that direction could endanger the islands' world-famous ecosystems and farmland.
Wayne Tanaka, the director of the Hawaii chapter of the environmental and social justice nonprofit the Sierra Club, said efficiencies could expedite needed housing development, but the 鈥渄evil is in the details.鈥 He said the community must also consider the environment, water sources, food security and climate change threats, like severe drought and powerful hurricanes.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to just build, build, build and then all of a sudden we don鈥檛 know how we鈥檙e going to feed ourselves when the climate crisis shuts down our harbors or dries up the places where we import our food from,鈥 Tanaka said.
Currently, housing construction is not keeping up with demand. Only 1,000 to 2,000 new housing units are being built in Hawaii each year. Those numbers are dwarfed by the 50,000 new units a estimated would be needed by 2025.
In contrast, in 1973, Honolulu approved permits for some 13,700 housing units, and the state鈥檚 three other main counties approved more than 4,000, said Paul Brewbaker, an economics consultant with TZ Economics.
In extreme cases, developers face backlogs of years, or even decades.
Kauai County officials labored more than a decade obtaining state and county permits before they could break ground to build affordable homes on former sugar cane land.
Everett Dowling, the president of Maui developer Dowling Companies, said a developer can鈥檛 begin work on other housing when its money is tied up in a project awaiting permits. Engineers, architects and lawyers also can鈥檛 move on. And costs escalate.
鈥淭he longer you hold a piece of property, the more you spend on it, the less affordable the housing becomes,鈥 Dowling said.
Housing director Medeiros said even with the new urgency, some of the reforms might not happen fast enough for her to be able to afford a home. But she hopes her 20-year-old daughter will be able to do so when she鈥檚 40 and 鈥渕y grandchildren hopefully, definitely will,鈥 she said.
Housing Hawaii鈥檚 Future, the youth advocacy group, is also helping to get housing built now.
Evan Kamakana Gates, a Native Hawaiian who is attending Harvard University in Massachusetts, is one of the group鈥檚 co-founders. He鈥檚 worried Hawaii might be unrecognizable when he returns home because the people who make it home may not be there.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a real fear,鈥 he said. 鈥淏eing in Hawaii but losing it, in a sense.鈥