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$398,000 grant allows for launch of Native Hawaiian Owner-Builder project on Molokaʻi [MauiNow]

Hawai‘i Community Lending announced grant awards totaling $1.5 million that aim to increase economic stability on Moloka‘i by helping the island’s native Hawaiian community to actualize affordable homeownership.

A $398,000 grant was issued through the Office of Hawaiian Affairs that will match $1.1 million in funding from the Administration for Native Americans. The grant funds will allow HCL to launch the 3-year Native Hawaiian Owner-Builder Project on Moloka‘i. The project will serve 58 Nāʻiwa lessee families and five native Hawaiian builders to increase their capacity to build and own homes on Hawaiian Home Lands.

$198,000 grant allows for launch of Native Hawaiian Owner-Builder project on Molokaʻi

HCL, as the construction and mortgage financing partner, will join with native Hawaiian beneficiary-led Nāiwa Agricultural Subdivision Alliance to bring together other native-controlled and -committed organizations so services can be brought on-island to the families. Additional project partners will include, Hawaiian Community Assets, 1st Tribunal Lending, Honsador Lumber, and Ozzy’s Construction.

On behalf of the lessees of the Nāiwa Agricultural Subdivision we are so very grateful and thankful to the tremendous support and genuine care from OHA and Administration for Native Americans in helping us step foot onto our Agricultural Homestead lots and giving us the opportunity to receive access to home-owner builder support and agricultural trainings so that we may one day soon see the fruition of a livable home to shelter our multi-generational families and eventually develop our food-producing farms to feed our families and meet the obligation of our leases,” said NASA volunteer and beneficiary, Liliana Napoleon.

“On a much broader scale, this tremendous support from both OHA and Administration for Native Americans will truly serve as a saving grace in giving hope and motivation to our lessees and their families to want to strive toward breaking the chains of generational poverty and suppression so that they and their generations to come can have a better quality of life and live full and active healthy lifestyles knowing that they have a secured place to call home, and that being their Nāiwa Agricultural Homestead lots,” said Napoleon.

The project will train native Hawaiians as owner-builders, assisting them in navigating the permitting, approval and construction process unique to Hawaiian Home Lands as well as build their capacity to move their agricultural land leases into production. HCL will provide consumer and affordable housing loans for credit building, debt consolidation, and interim construction financing so families can obtain mortgage financing. Native Hawaiian homebuilders will also receive technical assistance and lines of credit to increase their capacity to build package homes on Hawaiian Home Lands using federal financing.

Nāʻiwa Agricultural Subdivision Project Nāʻiwa, Island of Molokaʻi. PC: DHHL

Hawai‘i Community Lending announced grant awards totaling $1.5 million that aim to increase economic stability on Moloka‘i by helping the island’s native Hawaiian community to actualize affordable homeownership.

A $398,000 grant was issued through the Office of Hawaiian Affairs that will match $1.1 million in funding from the Administration for Native Americans. The grant funds will allow HCL to launch the 3-year Native Hawaiian Owner-Builder Project on Moloka‘i. The project will serve 58 Nāʻiwa lessee families and five native Hawaiian builders to increase their capacity to build and own homes on Hawaiian Home Lands.
Nā’iwa Homestead Subdivision EA Information Meeting. VC: DHHL

HCL, as the construction and mortgage financing partner, will join with native Hawaiian beneficiary-led Nāiwa Agricultural Subdivision Alliance to bring together other native-controlled and -committed organizations so services can be brought on-island to the families. Additional project partners will include, Hawaiian Community Assets, 1st Tribunal Lending, Honsador Lumber, and Ozzy’s Construction.

“On behalf of the lessees of the Nāiwa Agricultural Subdivision we are so very grateful and thankful to the tremendous support and genuine care from OHA and Administration for Native Americans in helping us step foot onto our Agricultural Homestead lots and giving us the opportunity to receive access to home-owner builder support and agricultural trainings so that we may one day soon see the fruition of a livable home to shelter our multi-generational families and eventually develop our food-producing farms to feed our families and meet the obligation of our leases,” said NASA volunteer and beneficiary, Liliana Napoleon.

“On a much broader scale, this tremendous support from both OHA and Administration for Native Americans will truly serve as a saving grace in giving hope and motivation to our lessees and their families to want to strive toward breaking the chains of generational poverty and suppression so that they and their generations to come can have a better quality of life and live full and active healthy lifestyles knowing that they have a secured place to call home, and that being their Nāiwa Agricultural Homestead lots,” said Napoleon.

The project will train native Hawaiians as owner-builders, assisting them in navigating the permitting, approval and construction process unique to Hawaiian Home Lands as well as build their capacity to move their agricultural land leases into production. HCL will provide consumer and affordable housing loans for credit building, debt consolidation, and interim construction financing so families can obtain mortgage financing. Native Hawaiian homebuilders will also receive technical assistance and lines of credit to increase their capacity to build package homes on Hawaiian Home Lands using federal financing.

Each of the partners has a role in the project:

NASA (Nāiwa Agricultural Subdivision Alliance) is native Hawaiian beneficiary-led will form a community advisory committee, recruit community members, host workshops including agricultural trainings for the lessees and coordinate with HCL for quarterly meetings. 
HCL (Hawai‘i Community Lending)is native Hawaiian-controlled and provides grants and loans to help families qualify for construction and mortgage financing. HCL will also create an owner-builder handbook focused on the needs of native Hawaiian beneficiaries. 
HCA is native Hawaiian-controlled and provides HUD housing counseling to assist families with budgeting, saving and reducing debt. 
1st Tribal Lending will offer affordable mortgage options to native families nationwide. 
Honsador Lumber is committed to native Hawaiians and will provide building supplies with value-engineered home packages that will be affordable for the families. 
Ozzy’s Construction is native Hawaiian-owned and will build homes and hire and train on-island workers. 

“As a leader in providing affordable mortgage lending in Hawai‘i, we’re honored to join the Nāiwa lessees and all our partners to launch this important project on Molokaʻi,” said Jeff Gilbreath, executive director of Hawaiʻi Community Lending. “We mahalo OHA for making this investment in the Nāiwa lessee families and look forward to the day when we can celebrate their return to the land.”

About Aikū’ē Kalima

Aikū’ē Kalima, former Native Hawaiian Revolving Loan Fund Manager for the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, joins Hawaiʻi Community Lending as its lending director.
Kalima comes to HCL with more than 25 years of experience in community development and mortgage lending. In his new position, Kalima will direct HCL’s consumer, construction, mortgage and small business lending.
“As a native Hawaiian and Hawaiian Home Lands beneficiary, I understand the financial needs for economic development and quality housing for kānaka is great,” said Kalima, who led OHA’s deployment of $9.8 million in loans to 286 native Hawaiians statewide over the last five years. “For over 25 years, I have worked tirelessly at the grassroots level, educating kānaka on the skills necessary to achieve the dream of homeownership and providing resources to achieve financial sustainability. I plan to continue serving the lāhui empowering ‘ohana and communities as the lending director for Hawai‘i Community Lending.”
Kalima takes the reins of HCL’s $16-million revolving loan fund and will oversee a team of seven staff members statewide. “HCL is honored to have Aikū’ē join us in our mission to help tackle our housing crisis by funding native Hawaiian and local families to build, buy and save homes from foreclosure,” said HCL Executive Director Jeff Gilbreath. “He has proven leadership in both the public and private sectors and has the passion to get families on the land through homeownership.”


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About Nikki

Nikki Hollern is a mother of five, born and raised in Upcountry Maui, but she spent the last 15 years in the beautiful town of Lahaina. Lahaina stole her heart, with the people and the town being unlike any other. After the fire, her family had to relocate to Kahului.

Her heart remains in Lahaina, and her goal is to help this amazing community get back to where they belong. She feels blessed to have the opportunity to be part of the HCL ‘ohana, helping navigate this incredibly hard time and hopefully serving as a guiding light to assist the community in returning home and coming back even stronger.


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