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QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka, NEW STRATEGIC PLAN WILL GUIDE OHA’S WORK THROUGH 2035 New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. HONOLULU (April 1, 2021) – With an overall goal of bringing vision and execution together through effective strategy implementation, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs today unveiled “Mana i Mauli Ola (Strength to Wellbeing),” the organization’s 15-year strategicplan.
KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian community HĀLAWA LULUKU INTERPRETIVE DEVELOPMENT (HLID) Hālawa Luluku Interpretive Development (HLID) was created largely to mitigate any adverse impact resulting from the construction of the Interstate H-3 Highway. Behind its creation are the Federal Highways Administration, State Historic Preservation Officer, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Hawaiʻi Department of THE NATIVE HAWAIIAN JUSTICE TASK FORCE REPORT The Native Hawaiian Justice Task Force Report | 5 FoReWoRD We are blessed to call Hawaiʻi home. There is no more special place. Yet, the root culture, Native Hawaiians, in their own THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community. OHA'S EMERGENCY FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Starting June 1, 2021, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is making $1,044,253 available to implement an emergency financial assistance program for Native Hawaiians. OHA’s Ka Wailele Emergency Financial Assistance Program is being administered by Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL), a Native Hawaiian community development financial institution.QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka, NEW STRATEGIC PLAN WILL GUIDE OHA’S WORK THROUGH 2035 New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. HONOLULU (April 1, 2021) – With an overall goal of bringing vision and execution together through effective strategy implementation, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs today unveiled “Mana i Mauli Ola (Strength to Wellbeing),” the organization’s 15-year strategicplan.
KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian community HĀLAWA LULUKU INTERPRETIVE DEVELOPMENT (HLID) Hālawa Luluku Interpretive Development (HLID) was created largely to mitigate any adverse impact resulting from the construction of the Interstate H-3 Highway. Behind its creation are the Federal Highways Administration, State Historic Preservation Officer, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Hawaiʻi Department of THE NATIVE HAWAIIAN JUSTICE TASK FORCE REPORT The Native Hawaiian Justice Task Force Report | 5 FoReWoRD We are blessed to call Hawaiʻi home. There is no more special place. Yet, the root culture, Native Hawaiians, in their ownGRANTS PROGRAM
Grants Program Purpose. The purpose of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs Grants Program is to support Hawaiʻi based nonprofit organizations that have projects, programs, and initiatives to serve our Lāhui in alignment with OHA’s Strategic Foundations, Directions & Outcomes.. Reminder, to be eligible for funding consideration, an applicantshall:
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment. GROUP OF NATIVE HAWAIIANS TO BRING HOME IWI KŪPUNA HOUSED CAMBRIDGE, England (February 29, 2020) – OHA and a hui of cultural practitioners today received 20 iwi k ū puna (ancestral bones) housed for over a century at the University of Cambridge, ending a decade-long effort to return the Native Hawaiian remains to Hawai ʻ i. “The international repatriation of iwi k ū puna, moep ū (funerary possessions) and mea kapu (sacred objects) continues OHA'S NEW STRATEGIC PRIORITIES OHA developing new plan to determine how financial grants awarded, KITV News (May 24, 2019) The new campaign is an effort to reel in input from the Native Hawaiian community to help determine how it’s financial grants are awarded. OHA interview with Maleko McDonnell on KITV Good Morning Hawaiʻi, May 28, 2019WWW.OHA.ORG
www.oha.org
MANA LĀHUI KĀNAKA
Mana Lāhui Kānaka. Understanding mana is critical to understanding the contemporary Native Hawaiian identity and a key element in building stronger, healthier communities. A new book from the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Mana Lāhui Kānaka, is a multidimensional study of mana: what it is, how to articulate it, and how to access andcultivate it.
KAKA‘AKO MAKAI OVERVIEW Kaka‘ako Makai Overview. Kakaʻako Makai consists of approximately 30 acres of largely waterfront property that was conveyed to OHA by the State of Hawai’i as part of a settlement over longstanding claims for past-due revenue owed from the Public Land Trust. The $200 million land value represents Native Hawaiians’ share of revenuesfrom
COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian communityKŌKUA FOR KAUAʻI
Call ahead to make an appointment or drop by: Office of Hawaiian Affairs – Kauaʻi Office. 4405 Kukui Grove St suite 103. Līhue, HI 96766. 808-241-3390. Update: OHA’s Kauaʻi office will begin processing applications for emergency relief on Friday, June 15, not June 12. Download a copy of a COMMITTEE ON RESOURCE MANAGEMENT (RM) The Committee on Resource Management (RM) recommends policies for the management of the agency’s investment portfolio and other fiscal and budgetary matters. It also develops policies and guidelines for OHA’s land acquisitions, dispositions, development and management. Agenda and minutes for RM meetings are posted here as they becomeavailable.
THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community. OHA'S EMERGENCY FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Starting June 1, 2021, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is making $1,044,253 available to implement an emergency financial assistance program for Native Hawaiians. OHA’s Ka Wailele Emergency Financial Assistance Program is being administered by Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL), a Native Hawaiian community development financial institution.QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka, NEW STRATEGIC PLAN WILL GUIDE OHA’S WORK THROUGH 2035 New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. HONOLULU (April 1, 2021) – With an overall goal of bringing vision and execution together through effective strategy implementation, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs today unveiled “Mana i Mauli Ola (Strength to Wellbeing),” the organization’s 15-year strategicplan.
COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian community KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. HĀLAWA LULUKU INTERPRETIVE DEVELOPMENT (HLID) Hālawa Luluku Interpretive Development (HLID) was created largely to mitigate any adverse impact resulting from the construction of the Interstate H-3 Highway. Behind its creation are the Federal Highways Administration, State Historic Preservation Officer, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Hawaiʻi Department of THE NATIVE HAWAIIAN JUSTICE TASK FORCE REPORT The Native Hawaiian Justice Task Force Report | 5 FoReWoRD We are blessed to call Hawaiʻi home. There is no more special place. Yet, the root culture, Native Hawaiians, in their own THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community. OHA'S EMERGENCY FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Starting June 1, 2021, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is making $1,044,253 available to implement an emergency financial assistance program for Native Hawaiians. OHA’s Ka Wailele Emergency Financial Assistance Program is being administered by Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL), a Native Hawaiian community development financial institution.QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka, NEW STRATEGIC PLAN WILL GUIDE OHA’S WORK THROUGH 2035 New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. HONOLULU (April 1, 2021) – With an overall goal of bringing vision and execution together through effective strategy implementation, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs today unveiled “Mana i Mauli Ola (Strength to Wellbeing),” the organization’s 15-year strategicplan.
COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian community KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. HĀLAWA LULUKU INTERPRETIVE DEVELOPMENT (HLID) Hālawa Luluku Interpretive Development (HLID) was created largely to mitigate any adverse impact resulting from the construction of the Interstate H-3 Highway. Behind its creation are the Federal Highways Administration, State Historic Preservation Officer, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, the Hawaiʻi Department of THE NATIVE HAWAIIAN JUSTICE TASK FORCE REPORT The Native Hawaiian Justice Task Force Report | 5 FoReWoRD We are blessed to call Hawaiʻi home. There is no more special place. Yet, the root culture, Native Hawaiians, in their own THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community.GRANTS PROGRAM
Grants Program Purpose. The purpose of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs Grants Program is to support Hawaiʻi based nonprofit organizations that have projects, programs, and initiatives to serve our Lāhui in alignment with OHA’s Strategic Foundations, Directions & Outcomes.. Reminder, to be eligible for funding consideration, an applicantshall:
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment. GROUP OF NATIVE HAWAIIANS TO BRING HOME IWI KŪPUNA HOUSED CAMBRIDGE, England (February 29, 2020) – OHA and a hui of cultural practitioners today received 20 iwi k ū puna (ancestral bones) housed for over a century at the University of Cambridge, ending a decade-long effort to return the Native Hawaiian remains to Hawai ʻ i. “The international repatriation of iwi k ū puna, moep ū (funerary possessions) and mea kapu (sacred objects) continues OHA FY2020-2021 BUDGET FOR COMMUNITY REVIEW In preparation for the upcoming budget cycle that starts on July 1, 2019, OHA is providing the public with the proposed two-year budget for review and comment. Review the Power Point Presentation of the OHA Preliminary Biennium Budget for Community Input (lastMANA LĀHUI KĀNAKA
Mana Lāhui Kānaka. Understanding mana is critical to understanding the contemporary Native Hawaiian identity and a key element in building stronger, healthier communities. A new book from the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Mana Lāhui Kānaka, is a multidimensional study of mana: what it is, how to articulate it, and how to access andcultivate it.
COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT Compliance Enforcement. OHA’s Compliance Enforcement Program is part of OHA’s Advocacy Line of Business. The purpose of the program is to provide legal and policy compliance review, assessment and corrective action services to OHA’s top leadership, allowing the organization to take proactive steps when organizations interpret or implement laws in ways that may harm the Hawaiian community COMMITTEE ON RESOURCE MANAGEMENT (RM) The Committee on Resource Management (RM) recommends policies for the management of the agency’s investment portfolio and other fiscal and budgetary matters. It also develops policies and guidelines for OHA’s land acquisitions, dispositions, development and management. Agenda and minutes for RM meetings are posted here as they becomeavailable.
KŌKUA FOR KAUAʻI
Call ahead to make an appointment or drop by: Office of Hawaiian Affairs – Kauaʻi Office. 4405 Kukui Grove St suite 103. Līhue, HI 96766. 808-241-3390. Update: OHA’s Kauaʻi office will begin processing applications for emergency relief on Friday, June 15, not June 12. Download a copy of a KAKA‘AKO MAKAI OVERVIEW Kaka‘ako Makai Overview. Kakaʻako Makai consists of approximately 30 acres of largely waterfront property that was conveyed to OHA by the State of Hawai’i as part of a settlement over longstanding claims for past-due revenue owed from the Public Land Trust. The $200 million land value represents Native Hawaiians’ share of revenuesfrom
THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community. OHA'S EMERGENCY FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Starting June 1, 2021, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is making $1,044,253 available to implement an emergency financial assistance program for Native Hawaiians. OHA’s Ka Wailele Emergency Financial Assistance Program is being administered by Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL), a Native Hawaiian community development financial institution.QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
GRANTS PROGRAM
Grants Program Purpose. The purpose of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs Grants Program is to support Hawaiʻi based nonprofit organizations that have projects, programs, and initiatives to serve our Lāhui in alignment with OHA’s Strategic Foundations, Directions & Outcomes.. Reminder, to be eligible for funding consideration, an applicantshall:
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment. HAWAIIAN REGISTRY PROGRAM Due to office closures related to the coronavirus pandemic, the Hawaiian Registry program is currently not accepting in-person applicants. The Hawaiian Registry Program (HRP) is the branch of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) which handles Native Hawaiian ancestry verification.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka,BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OHA’s Board of Trustees (BOT) is composed of nine trustees who are elected in public elections open to all State of Hawai‘i voters. Four of the nine positions are designated as at-large seats representing the state as a whole, while the other five trustees represent each of the following districts: Hawai‘i Island, Maui, Moloka‘i and Lāna‘i, O‘ahu, and Kaua‘i and Ni‘ihau. KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. TAX RELIEF FOR KULEANA LAND HOLDERS On Kauaʻi, kuleana land owners may be eligible for a flat $150 tax. Qualified kuleana holders in Hawaiʻi County pay a $100 flat tax rate. In Honolulu, kuleana owners may be eligible to pay the minimum $300 property tax. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs successfully advocated for tax relief to kuleana land owners over the span of a few shortyears.
THE OFFICE OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS (OHA) OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofits statewide. OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community. New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community. OHA'S EMERGENCY FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM Starting June 1, 2021, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) is making $1,044,253 available to implement an emergency financial assistance program for Native Hawaiians. OHA’s Ka Wailele Emergency Financial Assistance Program is being administered by Hawaiʻi Community Lending (HCL), a Native Hawaiian community development financial institution.QUALITY HOUSING
Quality Housing. Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain inHawaiʻi.
GRANTS PROGRAM
Grants Program Purpose. The purpose of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs Grants Program is to support Hawaiʻi based nonprofit organizations that have projects, programs, and initiatives to serve our Lāhui in alignment with OHA’s Strategic Foundations, Directions & Outcomes.. Reminder, to be eligible for funding consideration, an applicantshall:
KAKAʻAKO MAKAI 2021 OHA originally received its Kakaʻako Makai parcels to resolve the $200 million in past due income from the Public Land Trust owed by the State of Hawaiʻi to OHA. Our planning efforts to date have determined that the residential prohibition on our lands prevents us from generating revenues consistent with a $200 million investment. HAWAIIAN REGISTRY PROGRAM Due to office closures related to the coronavirus pandemic, the Hawaiian Registry program is currently not accepting in-person applicants. The Hawaiian Registry Program (HRP) is the branch of the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) which handles Native Hawaiian ancestry verification.FOR THE LĀHUI
My beloved flag waves ever more. in the last year’s heights of the sky. Always and forever more. in peace and tranquility, Hail your name, oh Hawaii my beloved. motherland. To you my nation be bold and fearless, Stand as kānaka,BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OHA’s Board of Trustees (BOT) is composed of nine trustees who are elected in public elections open to all State of Hawai‘i voters. Four of the nine positions are designated as at-large seats representing the state as a whole, while the other five trustees represent each of the following districts: Hawai‘i Island, Maui, Moloka‘i and Lāna‘i, O‘ahu, and Kaua‘i and Ni‘ihau. KŪ HA’AHEO E KU’U HAWAI’I Move forward young ones and drink of the bitter waters. Be fearless, steadfast for there is no turning back. Let’s press onward straight on the path of victory. Alas! Woeful are the heartless foreigners! Be honored always oh beloved descendants of the land. Let us wear the honored ‘a’ali’i of our beloved land. TAX RELIEF FOR KULEANA LAND HOLDERS On Kauaʻi, kuleana land owners may be eligible for a flat $150 tax. Qualified kuleana holders in Hawaiʻi County pay a $100 flat tax rate. In Honolulu, kuleana owners may be eligible to pay the minimum $300 property tax. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs successfully advocated for tax relief to kuleana land owners over the span of a few shortyears.
OHA'S NEW STRATEGIC PRIORITIES OHA developing new plan to determine how financial grants awarded, KITV News (May 24, 2019) The new campaign is an effort to reel in input from the Native Hawaiian community to help determine how it’s financial grants are awarded. OHA interview with Maleko McDonnell on KITV Good Morning Hawaiʻi, May 28, 2019SCHOLARSHIPS
The scholarships are funded through a $1.1-million grant provided by the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) and administered by the UH Mānoa Native Hawaiian Science and Engineering Mentorship Program (NHSEMP). Applications from current and potential students seeking a degree or enrolled in a vocational program will be accepted via the online UH OHA FY2020-2021 BUDGET FOR COMMUNITY REVIEW In preparation for the upcoming budget cycle that starts on July 1, 2019, OHA is providing the public with the proposed two-year budget for review and comment. Review the Power Point Presentation of the OHA Preliminary Biennium Budget for Community Input (lastBOARD OF TRUSTEES
OHA’s Board of Trustees (BOT) is composed of nine trustees who are elected in public elections open to all State of Hawai‘i voters. Four of the nine positions are designated as at-large seats representing the state as a whole, while the other five trustees represent each of the following districts: Hawai‘i Island, Maui, Moloka‘i and Lāna‘i, O‘ahu, and Kaua‘i and Ni‘ihau.MANA LĀHUI KĀNAKA
Mana Lāhui Kānaka. Understanding mana is critical to understanding the contemporary Native Hawaiian identity and a key element in building stronger, healthier communities. A new book from the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Mana Lāhui Kānaka, is a multidimensional study of mana: what it is, how to articulate it, and how to access andcultivate it.
NEW STRATEGIC PLAN WILL GUIDE OHA’S WORK THROUGH 2035 New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s Work Through 2035. HONOLULU (April 1, 2021) – With an overall goal of bringing vision and execution together through effective strategy implementation, the Office of Hawaiian Affairs today unveiled “Mana i Mauli Ola (Strength to Wellbeing),” the organization’s 15-year strategicplan.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Employment Opportunities Employment Benefits. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs is an equal opportunity employer. To apply for any of the posted positions in the jobs listing below, download, complete and submit an application. Submit your completed application and resumeto:
WĀHINE HEALTH REPORT Haumea: Transforming the Health of Native Hawaiian Women and Empowering Wāhine Well-Being This primer explores exemplary assets, strengths, and wisdom of Native Hawaiian females and their mana according to traditional Hawaiian culture. Yet today, wāhine experience various inequities DR. SYLVIA M. HUSSEY Sylvia Hussey, Ed.D is OHA’s Chief Executive Officer (Ka Pouhana). She was appointed to the CEO position on Dec. 1, 2019. Hussey brings more than 30 years of experience in education administration, policy development and implementation, finance, operations, and information TAX RELIEF FOR KULEANA LAND HOLDERS On Kauaʻi, kuleana land owners may be eligible for a flat $150 tax. Qualified kuleana holders in Hawaiʻi County pay a $100 flat tax rate. In Honolulu, kuleana owners may be eligible to pay the minimum $300 property tax. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs successfully advocated for tax relief to kuleana land owners over the span of a few shortyears.
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SPOTLIGHT
View OHA’s 15-Year Strategic Plan Apply here for emergency financial assistance Mana i Mauli Ola Webinars Get easy access to OHA’s Annual Reports going back to 2001 View OHA’s 15-Year Strategic Plan Apply here for emergency financial assistance* 1
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LATEST NEWS
* OHA Board Chair Testifies Before U.S. House Subcommittee on COVID-19 Impacts on Native Hawaiians * OHA Board Chair Carmen “Hulu” Lindsey Media Statement on Kakaʻako Makai * OHA releases $2.92 million in grant solicitations to aid with COVID-19 and support ‘ohana andcommunities
* OHA board chair testifies before Senate Committee on Indian Affairs * OHA releases new $250,000 grant solicitation to support Hawaiian homestead communities * OHA releases grant solicitations for $340,000 to mālama iwi kupuna and support community events * OHA Makes $1 Million Available For Emergency Financial AssistanceProgram
* OHA seeking Development Consultant for commercial properties * OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofitsstatewide
* OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community * New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s WorkThrough 2035
* OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community * OHA Board Chair Testifies Before U.S. House Subcommittee on COVID-19 Impacts on Native Hawaiians * OHA Board Chair Carmen “Hulu” Lindsey Media Statement on Kakaʻako Makai * OHA releases $2.92 million in grant solicitations to aid with COVID-19 and support ‘ohana andcommunities
* OHA board chair testifies before Senate Committee on Indian Affairs * OHA releases new $250,000 grant solicitation to support Hawaiian homestead communities * OHA releases grant solicitations for $340,000 to mālama iwi kupuna and support community events * OHA Makes $1 Million Available For Emergency Financial AssistanceProgram
* OHA seeking Development Consultant for commercial properties * OHA’S new ʻOhana and Community Program Grants provide $1.25 million in awards to 14 nonprofitsstatewide
* OHA awards nearly $600,000 in grants to support the Native Hawaiian community * New Strategic Plan Will Guide OHA’s WorkThrough 2035
* OHA releases grant solicitations for teachers and the Native Hawaiian community* 1
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ECONOMIC STABILITY
Engaging in strategies to enhance the economic development and financial empowerment of the lāhui will ensure that Native Hawaiians progress toward a state of economic stability.More
ECONOMIC STABILITY
Engaging in strategies to enhance the economic development and financial empowerment of the lāhui will ensure that Native Hawaiians progress toward a state of economic stability.More
EDUCATIONAL PATHWAYS Supporting initiatives, leveraging partnerships, engaging in strategies to develop educational pathways that strengthen culture-based education, early education, K-12 and post-secondary education will ensure that Native Hawaiians are grounded in their past while participating in a technologically oriented future.More
EDUCATIONAL PATHWAYS Supporting initiatives, leveraging partnerships, engaging in strategies to develop educational pathways that strengthen culture-based education, early education, K-12 and post-secondary education will ensure that Native Hawaiians are grounded in their past while participating in a technologically oriented future.More
QUALITY HOUSING
Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain in Hawaiʻi.More
QUALITY HOUSING
Leveraging partnerships to ensure Native Hawaiians can obtain affordable rentals as well as homeownership while also engaging in opportunities to affect legislation that support Hawaiian Home Lands, overall housing costs, and housing supply will greatly enhance the ability for Native Hawaiians who so desire to remain in Hawaiʻi.More
HEALTH OUTCOMES
Supporting initiatives, leveraging partnerships, engaging in strategies to promote healthy and strong families.More
HEALTH OUTCOMES
Supporting initiatives, leveraging partnerships, engaging in strategies to promote healthy and strong families.More
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UPCOMING EVENTS
More
Sat 05
NATIVE HAWAIIAN PLANT PROPAGATION June 5 @ 9:00 am - 11:00 amWed 09
WAIWAI FUTURES: ECONOMIC SELF-DETERMINATION SERIES June 9 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmThu 10
FINANCIAL KAI SERIES: BASIC FINANCIAL LITERACY June 10 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmThu 24
FINANCIAL KAI SERIES: BASIC FINANCIAL LITERACY June 24 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmFri 25
REMEMBERING MY KŪPUNA – GIVING ONES BREATH TO THE PAST: INTRODUCTION TO FAMILY HISTORY/GENEALOGY June 25 @ 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm*
UPCOMING EVENTS
Sat 05
NATIVE HAWAIIAN PLANT PROPAGATION June 5 @ 9:00 am - 11:00 amWed 09
WAIWAI FUTURES: ECONOMIC SELF-DETERMINATION SERIES June 9 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmThu 10
FINANCIAL KAI SERIES: BASIC FINANCIAL LITERACY June 10 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmThu 24
FINANCIAL KAI SERIES: BASIC FINANCIAL LITERACY June 24 @ 6:00 pm - 7:30 pmFri 25
REMEMBERING MY KŪPUNA – GIVING ONES BREATH TO THE PAST: INTRODUCTION TO FAMILY HISTORY/GENEALOGY June 25 @ 5:00 pm - 8:00 pmSat 26
REMEMBERING MY KŪPUNA – GIVING ONES BREATH TO THE PAST: INTRODUCTION TO FAMILY HISTORY/GENEALOGY June 26 @ 5:00 pm - 8:00 pmView More…
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