Yuma Sun

Town hopes lava tourism will bring economic relief

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HONOLULU — Stunning images of Hawaii’s erupting Kilauea volcano have captivated people around the world. But ironically it’s nearly impossible for residents and visitors on the ground to see the lava — a fact that’s squeezing the tourism-dependent local economy.

Big Island businesses are calling for a lava viewing site, but authoritie­s say they’re finding it difficult to set one up while keeping people safe.

The risks posed by the volcano came into sharp focus this week when lava flowing into the ocean triggered an explosion that sent a hot rock the size of a basketball crashing through a tour boat’s roof. One woman broke her leg, while nearly two dozen others suffered minor burns and scrapes.

Diane Ley, Hawaii County’s director of research and developmen­t, said she’s been working on setting up a lava viewing site for nearly two months, consulting with federal scientists and the county’s civil defense administra­tor. The injuries from the tour boat only validate the county’s caution, she said.

“That’s a challenge — to find us a site that is safe from volcanic hazards, emissions and can afford the ability for large numbers to be able to come in and view,” she said.

Still, pressures are mounting from merchants, tour guides and others on the island, where tourism has dropped since Kilauea began erupting in a residentia­l neighborho­od and burning down homes in May.

Downtown Pahoa, which is just a few miles from where the volcano is pumping a river of molten rock into the ocean, has been hit particular­ly hard. The small, rural town serves as a gateway to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, which is normally the state’s most popular tourist attraction but has closed indefinite­ly because of dangers to visitors and staff.

As recently as April, travelers could watch molten

IN THIS MAY 19,

rock in the park’s lava lake and hike to remote spots to see flowing lava.

State Sen. Russell Ruderman said the county needs to urgently set up a lava viewing site to bring visitors back to Pahoa.

“Our town is dying very, very fast and very, very dramatical­ly,” said Ruderman, who owns a natural foods store in Pahoa. “It’s needless because if we could get the word out that our town is open for business, we could still save it.”

Currently, only helicopter and boat-tour passengers — paying about $250 each — are able to see the lava in person.

The area where lava is bursting from the ground is under a mandatory evacuation order. Residents nearby may go to their homes, but the county restricts access for everyone else except scientists, authoritie­s like the National Guard and a handful of escorted media.

Officials have cracked down on violators, issuing citations to more than 80 people for loitering in a restricted disaster area.

Kilauea, which has been erupting continuous­ly for 35 years, has long attracted travelers. About 5,000 people a day descended on an official county lava viewing spot in May 1990 as molten rock slowly consumed the town of Kalapana, the Honolulu Advertiser reported. That’s even though the spot offered views of cooled, not flowing, lava. County workers set aside some newly hardened rocks for tourists to touch as consolatio­n.

Ley noted Kilauea is behaving differentl­y than in the past, when lava flowed from a different spot and through uninhabite­d land. It also is producing more lava — erupting as much as 3,500 cubic feet (100 cubic meters) per second now compared with about 141 cubic feet (4 cubic meters) two years ago.

She doesn’t know when the county will be ready but envisions a viewing site where tour buses could go and not private cars. The county may select several sites and open them as conditions allow, she said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? file photo released by the U.S. Geological Survey, lava flows from fissures near Pahoa, Hawaii.
ASSOCIATED PRESS file photo released by the U.S. Geological Survey, lava flows from fissures near Pahoa, Hawaii.

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