The State of Hawaiʻi is using $5 million in federal funding to support a new Green Job Youth Corps with 130 new positions designed to help both the environment and the economy. Applications are due Jan. 7.
HONOLULU Applications are open for 130 new positions designed to help both the environment and the economy as part of Hawaii’s response to the economic im
Hawaii Reboots Depression-Era Conservation Corps Using Pandemic Assistance Funds
Update RequiredTo play audio, update browser or Flash plugin.
A Kupu Aina Corps work crew funded by CARES Act money uses chainsaws to clear invasive mangroves from the area around Pearl Harbor on the island of Oahu.
Courtesy Malama Pu uloa
The whine of chainsaws and rumble of wood chippers are echoing around the shores of Pearl Harbor.
Work crews are clearing an invasive species of mangrove from the shoreline and coastal streams that empty into Hawaii s most famous body of water. Pearl Harbor is being choked out by red mangrove, says Amanda Millin, a field crew manager overseeing a team of five.
3:01
For several weeks, the whine of chainsaws and rumble of woodchippers have been heard around the shores of Pearl Harbor.
Work crews have been clearing invasive mangroves from coastal streams that empty into Hawaii’s most famous body of water.
Amanda Millin, a field crew manager overseeing a team of five, says red mangrove is choking the Pearl Harbor ecosystem.
“Everywhere else in the tropics, all around the world, mangrove sequesters carbon, creates biodiversity, it’s erosion control but here in Hawaii mangrove is invasive and it takes over,” she explains.
Millin and her crew are among the 350 people in Hawaii currently being paid to do this type of conservation work by a CARES Act-funded grant.