On Monday, Hawaiian governor Josh Green
announced that his administration was considering acquiring properties
in the seaside resort town of Lahaina that had been destroyed by the
recent wildfires.
He vowed to prevent foreign buyers from swooping in to exploit the
tragedy, suggesting the state was better suited to take control of the
land.
"I'm already thinking of ways for the state to acquire that land so that
we can put it into workforce housing, to put it back into families, or
make it open spaces in perpetuity as a memorial to the people who were
lost," Green said while standing amongst the rubble.
"We want this to be something we remember after the pain passes as a
magic place. Lahaina will rebuild. The tragedy right now is the loss of
life. The buildings can be rebuilt over time, even the banyan tree may
survive, but we don't want this to become a clear space where then
people from overseas just come and decide they're gonna take it. The
state will take it and preserve it first."
In a separate press conference, Green reiterated his committment to
ensure the land was protected for residents, and revealed that he had
spoken with the Hawaiian attorney general regarding "options to do a
moratorium on any sales of properties that have been damaged or
destroyed."
"It's going to be a very long time before any growth or housing can be
built, so you will be pretty poorly informed if you try to steal land
from our people and then build here," he said, adding, "I will try to
allow no one from outside our state to buy any land until we get through
this crisis and decide what Lahaina should be in the future."
According to the Honolulu Civil Beat,
over 2,000 structures were destroyed in the fire, three quarters of
which were residential. Nearly 100 people have been found dead, though
that number is expected to rise as crews continue searching the area.
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