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Hawai‘i Community Lending Launches Fund to Prevent Displacement of Native Hawaiians Impacted by Maui Wildfires

Maui Relief and Kanaka Anti-displacement fund

Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL) today announced the launch of the Kānaka Anti-Displacement Fund to prevent displacement of kānaka maoli (native Hawaiians) from Maui after the tragic wildfire that destroyed thousands of homes and businesses in Lahaina.

The Fund’s goal is to assist up to 271 kānaka in preserving their stewardship and access to ʻāina (land) on Maui over the next five years. The objective is to ensure that homeowners impacted by the Maui fires maximize their insurance claim payouts and disaster assistance funding to preserve their access to ‘āina and rebuild. Under the Fund, HCL ‘Ohana representatives will connect kānaka with experts to create emergency budgets, apply for financial assistance, obtain mortgage forbearances, and file insurance claims or appeal denials.

“This fund emerges in response to the urgent need to support the native Hawaiian population in the wake of the Maui fires, which uprooted 271 kānaka homeowners from their lands in Lahaina,” says Jeff Gilbreath, executive director of Hawai‘i Community Lending. “We must safeguard our kānaka community and ensure they can remain rooted in their homeland.”

The Fund’s Phase I objective is to first support the 102 ʻōhana in the Leialiʻi Homestead on Maui. HCL helped the Leialiʻi ʻohana to get their mortgages to secure their place on the land in 2007. Now 15 years later, HCL aims to make sure they stay on the land. HCL will raise $6.5 million over the next six months to provide loans to Leialiʻi Homesteaders to help them retain Sentinel Pacific, a native Hawaiian public insurance adjuster, to file insurance claims and provide resources on their behalf. The average homeowner loan will be $50,000 up to 5% interest and repaid from insurance claim monies or other loans.

Following the successful implementation of Phase I, the Fund’s focus will extend to the remaining 169 kānaka homeowners who have been similarly impacted by the fires, with the intention of offering them the same level of support and resources.

Both investments and donations are being sought from community members, institutions, funders, and investors. HCL has already raised $680,100 for the Fund and extends a big mahalo to funders – Omidyar ‘Ohana Fund at the Hawai‘i Community Foundation ($250,000), Oweesta ($250,000), Kataly Foundation ($30,000), and Jeannine McCune ($100). HCL has also allocated $150,000 of its own monies to making loans to native Hawaiian homeowners. You can invest or donate at to the Fund at www.HawaiiCommunityLending.com.

The Kānaka Anti-Displacement Fund is included in the Phase I – Response of the two-part Maui Response and Recovery Strategy, launched by HCL and its parent nonprofit, Hawaiian Community Assets (HCA), on Aug. 28. The strategy prioritizes increasing public awareness of and access to homeowner insurance, disaster assistance, and grants and loans for recovery and rebuilding.

“We know the work ahead can seem overwhelming to families who have lost everything,” Gilbreath says. “But we are here to stand with our kānaka maoli, to bring them hope and navigate to get the resources they need to rebuild their homes and return to their land. That is the goal of the Kānaka Anti-Displacement Fund; that is why we are here.”

Gilbreath will be taking to the airwaves this week to explain the Fund and to help reach impacted families in the disaster area. Pacific Media Group is collaborating with HCA and HCL to run PSAs on all six stations, giving accurate information about filing insurance claims, applying for disaster assistance, requesting mortgage forbearances, and preventing scams and displacement from the land by predatory investors.

In addition, HCA and HCL are doubling their on-island teams and working with partners to help households navigate the filing of insurance claims, applying for disaster recovery funding, stopping foreclosure, and requesting mortgage forbearances. The organizations are working out of community hub offices in West Maui in partnership with the Leialiʻi Homestead community and Department of Hawaiian Home Lands and at the Maui Mall managed by the Council for native Hawaiian Advancement.

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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