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Hawaii County to Receive Nearly $1.5 Million for Repairs at Isaac Hale Beach Park Following Kilauea Eruption

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Senator Mazie K. Hirono announced that Hawaii County will receive $1,494,360 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as part of a grant agreement based on losses at Isaac Hale Beach Park due to the 2018 Kilauea eruption. The funding will utilized for park related infrastructure to assist with Puna’s recovery.

“We have come to realize and value the importance of our parks and outdoor spaces during this coronavirus pandemic, particularly when our activities were restricted. This funding will go towards park related infrastructure to assist with Puna’s recovery, so that residents and visitors can safely enjoy the park,” Senator Hirono said. 

Senator Hirono has called for continued federal investment in Hawaii Island’s recovery following the 2018 Kilauea eruption. Last week, the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee passeda provision based on Senator Hirono’s legislation to help VA home loan recipients rebuild after natural disasters, responding to concerns from a Hawaii Island Army veteran who lost his home in the Kilauea eruption. In April, Senator Hirono announced that Hawaii Island would receive$30 million to rebuild water systems and $61 million to repair roads damaged in the eruption. 

In March 2019, Senator Hirono pushed then-Acting Department of the Interior Secretary Bernhardt to commit to listening to community and Congressional input on where to rebuild the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO). In May 2019, the Senator announced that USGS Director Jim Reilly committed to rebuilding the observatory on Hawaii Island, and that she had successfully secured $72.3 million in the 2019 Disaster Supplemental Bill to continue USGS operations at a temporary site while constructing the new HVO facility. In December 2019, Senator Hirono also secured $21 million to construct a HVO field station in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.

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