July 1, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—As part of a three-day conference on the Kohala Coast this week, dozens of statewide representatives and Big Island partners gathered to brainstorm on local food production and how this key component of The Aloha+ Challenge can best be implemented statewide over the next 14 years. »Read more
June 17, 2016 (Big Island Now)—The Kohala Center’s FoodCorps Hawai‘i program received a $28,000 Walmart Foundation grant to address childhood obesity and food insecurity at 12 schools on Hawai‘i Island and O‘ahu. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-06-17 17:25:022016-06-18 12:00:48Healthy Food, Healthy Children Program Receives $28,000
May 23, 2016 (Big Island Now)—Entrepreneurs striving to make a positive impact in communities on the Big Island and Moloka’i may be eligible for the Kahiau Rural Business Development Microloan Program, which is administered by the Kohala Center. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-23 15:27:402016-05-24 11:30:25Microloans Available for Local Entrepreneurs
May 23, 2016 (Hawaii Tribune Herald)—Gardens are a rich resource for classrooms, giving kids hands-on experience with the concepts they learn about in school. But in East Hawaii, school gardens are like any backyard garden: they’re a place where slugs and snails make their homes, and where there are snails and slugs, there’s a potential for rat lungworm disease. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-23 10:05:112016-05-24 11:28:43Keiki get jump on rat lungworm education
May 16, 2016 (Maui Now)—A new report has been released by The Kohala Center, addressing the importance of subsistence fishing on Native Hawaiian health in the Moʻomomi area of Molokaʻi. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-17 10:43:002016-05-17 10:43:00Report Highlights Subsistence Fishing on Native Hawaiian Health
May 13, 2016 (North Hawaii News)—As with the rest of the world, Hawaii is beginning to see the effects of growing environmental problems such as climate change, deforestation, urban growth and low water quality. Just as our canoe was built with many hands, Hawaii is going to need the efforts and insights of citizen scientists to address environmental issues. »Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-13 08:00:472017-10-17 15:58:12Connections for sustainability
May 11, 2016 (North Hawaii News)—As with the rest of the world, Hawaii is beginning to see the effects of growing environmental problems such as climate change, deforestation, urban growth and low water quality. Just as our canoe was built with many hands, Hawaii is going to need the efforts and insights of citizen scientists to address environmental issues. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-11 14:24:062016-05-24 14:26:20Connections for sustainability
May 2, 2016 (Honolulu Star-Advertiser)—Darren Strand, president of Maui Gold Pineapple Co., sells fresh and frozen pineapple to customers as far away as Japan, but getting Hawaii’s emblematic fruit into local public school cafeterias is a tougher order.
“It’s really frustrating to see how much pineapple they eat in the schools and none of it’s from Hawaii,” said Strand, whose company has 1,000 acres in cultivation. “So we’d like to fix that.” » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-05-02 13:26:512016-05-24 11:37:52Isle public schools enticed to “buy fresh, buy local”
April 11, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—Some brought leafy cuttings in gallon buckets, while others laid out baggies of tiny hot peppers and boxes of roots and tubers. Most brought seeds: squash seeds, pepper seeds, carrot seeds, herb seeds, and beans of all sorts, to name a few. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-04-11 08:00:342016-05-24 11:37:21Farmers, backyard gardeners share seeds and more
March 26, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—NORTH KOHALA — A $6 million trophy property on Kohala Mountain Road — plus a sweeping expanse of cliffside land near Keokea Beach Park in North Kohala — will be protected under a new initiative of The Kohala Center designed not only to safeguard lands but bring them back to production of traditional crops. » Read more
https://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.png00liamhttps://kohalacenter.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/TKC_logo_1.pngliam2016-03-26 08:00:342016-05-24 11:36:58New nonprofit initiative restores donated lands to original Hawaiian crop purposes
Food Sustainability Focus
/in Kū I Ka Māna News, Laulima News /by liamJuly 1, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—As part of a three-day conference on the Kohala Coast this week, dozens of statewide representatives and Big Island partners gathered to brainstorm on local food production and how this key component of The Aloha+ Challenge can best be implemented statewide over the next 14 years.
»Read more
Healthy Food, Healthy Children Program Receives $28,000
/in HISGN News /by liamJune 17, 2016 (Big Island Now)—The Kohala Center’s FoodCorps Hawai‘i program received a $28,000 Walmart Foundation grant to address childhood obesity and food insecurity at 12 schools on Hawai‘i Island and O‘ahu.
» Read more
Microloans Available for Local Entrepreneurs
/in Laulima News /by liamMay 23, 2016 (Big Island Now)—Entrepreneurs striving to make a positive impact in communities on the Big Island and Moloka’i may be eligible for the Kahiau Rural Business Development Microloan Program, which is administered by the Kohala Center.
» Read more
Keiki get jump on rat lungworm education
/in HISGN News, HPSI News, Kū I Ka Māna News /by liamMay 23, 2016 (Hawaii Tribune Herald)—Gardens are a rich resource for classrooms, giving kids hands-on experience with the concepts they learn about in school. But in East Hawaii, school gardens are like any backyard garden: they’re a place where slugs and snails make their homes, and where there are snails and slugs, there’s a potential for rat lungworm disease.
» Read more
Report Highlights Subsistence Fishing on Native Hawaiian Health
/in News /by liamMay 16, 2016 (Maui Now)—A new report has been released by The Kohala Center, addressing the importance of subsistence fishing on Native Hawaiian health in the Moʻomomi area of Molokaʻi.
» Read more
Connections for sustainability
/in HI-MEET News, KBEC News /by liamMay 13, 2016 (North Hawaii News)—As with the rest of the world, Hawaii is beginning to see the effects of growing environmental problems such as climate change, deforestation, urban growth and low water quality. Just as our canoe was built with many hands, Hawaii is going to need the efforts and insights of citizen scientists to address environmental issues.
»Read more
Connections for sustainability
/in KBEC News /by liamMay 11, 2016 (North Hawaii News)—As with the rest of the world, Hawaii is beginning to see the effects of growing environmental problems such as climate change, deforestation, urban growth and low water quality. Just as our canoe was built with many hands, Hawaii is going to need the efforts and insights of citizen scientists to address environmental issues.
» Read more
Isle public schools enticed to “buy fresh, buy local”
/in HISGN News, HPSI News, Laulima News /by liamMay 2, 2016 (Honolulu Star-Advertiser)—Darren Strand, president of Maui Gold Pineapple Co., sells fresh and frozen pineapple to customers as far away as Japan, but getting Hawaii’s emblematic fruit into local public school cafeterias is a tougher order.
“It’s really frustrating to see how much pineapple they eat in the schools and none of it’s from Hawaii,” said Strand, whose company has 1,000 acres in cultivation. “So we’d like to fix that.”
» Read more
Farmers, backyard gardeners share seeds and more
/in HISGN News, HPSI News, Kū I Ka Māna News, Laulima News /by liamApril 11, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—Some brought leafy cuttings in gallon buckets, while others laid out baggies of tiny hot peppers and boxes of roots and tubers. Most brought seeds: squash seeds, pepper seeds, carrot seeds, herb seeds, and beans of all sorts, to name a few.
» Read more
New nonprofit initiative restores donated lands to original Hawaiian crop purposes
/in News /by liamMarch 26, 2016 (West Hawaii Today)—NORTH KOHALA — A $6 million trophy property on Kohala Mountain Road — plus a sweeping expanse of cliffside land near Keokea Beach Park in North Kohala — will be protected under a new initiative of The Kohala Center designed not only to safeguard lands but bring them back to production of traditional crops.
» Read more