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SCREEN CAPTURE / ABC Oahu's North Shore communities were the hardest hit by the double deluge. |
Over 5,500 residents across Hawaii were forced to evacuate as flash floods—the worst in over two decades—tore through neighborhoods, uprooted families, and left an estimated $1 billion in damages in their wake.
While the headline-grabbing wind and rain of the March 2026 double "Kona low" storm system -- essentially, a slow moving storm followed by another slow moving storm -- have started to subside after dumping 8-14 inches of rain. The reality of storm damage for thousands in Hawaii is just beginning to sink in.
For many in our Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities, this isn't just a weather event; it’s a direct hit on ancestral lands and cultural hubs already facing economic and environmental pressures.
Ground zero
“It was a scary moment for us, especially my mom being here by herself,” Leilua Scott of Laie told Hawaii News Now. “Seeing what was damaged and how the water was still rising, I didn’t worry about anything. All I worried was my mom and my little brother.”
“Everything was damaged from the bed, sofas, couches, icebox, everything. We can’t save anything,” Scott said.
Officials and residents are worried about the 120-year-old Wahiawa Dam overtopping casting a shadow of fear over downstream families for days.
The earthen dam was built by the Waialua Sugar Company to irrigate North Shore sugar fields. Today it is owned by the Dole Food Company.
The earthen dam has been cited for lacking adequate spillway repairs since 2009. The historic rains brought the reservoir to critical levels, causing concerns about potential failure, though Dole management stated it remained structurally sound.
Maui: disaster after disaster
On Maui, in areas like Lahaina and South Kihei, residents still healing from the 2023 wildfires are now navigating mudslides and sinkholes. The "sky weeps" (Uwe ka lani), but for those in temporary housing or already displaced, the "life" it brings to the earth is a heavy weight to carry.Kauai & Molokai
How to support recovery efforts
- Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement (CNHA): Launched the Kākoʻo Oʻahu fund specifically to provide financial and housing assistance to families displaced by these floods. They are currently running a $100,000 matching campaign.
- Hawaiʻi Community Foundation: Activated the Stronger Hawaiʻi Fund, designed to move resources quickly and flexibly across all islands where the need is greatest.
- The Salvation Army (Hawaiian & Pacific Islands): Deploying emergency teams to provide meals and essential supplies to those in shelters across Oahu and Maui.
- Hawaii Farmers Union Foundation: Supporting rural and agricultural AANHPI communities through the Hawaii Flood Response Fund, helping small farmers recover lost crops and livestock.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge.












