The Arizona Republic

In Honolulu, eruption seems close yet far away

- Shannon Tangonan

HONOLULU – Two hundred miles separate Oahu from the Big Island, where lava flows and the threat of a massive volcanic explosion have drawn worldwide attention to rural subdivisio­ns on the island’s east side.

For some Oahu residents, following the coverage of Kilauea’s latest eruptive episode is similar to monitoring severe weather across the continenta­l U.S. — both spectacula­r and heartbreak­ing, but still far, far away.

Yet for others, the explosions at Halema’uma’u Crater and multiple fissures and lava flows in Leilani Estates hit close to home — even if ocean and islands separate them.

The eruptions that began May 3 in Leilani Estates, a rural neighborho­od about 35 miles from Hilo, have destroyed 36 structures and forced evacuation­s of nearly 2,000 people. The Hawaiian Volcano Observator­y reported Thursday that an explosive eruption at Kilauea’s summit in the early morning hours spewed ash 30,000 feet high in the air and covered the surroundin­g area. They advised residents to shelter in place and warned of dangerous driving conditions due to poor visibility.

“It’s kind of wild,” said Radji Tolentino, 48, of Ewa Beach in West Oahu. “It’s almost like watching the wildfires in California … it’s Hawaii, but it’s still far away.”

Tolentino monitors eruption updates through news alerts on his phone, on TV and online. He’s concerned ash could drift from the Big Island and affect his asthmatic relatives, including his father, or that earthquake­s from the volcanic activity could trigger a tsunami.

News coverage of the Big Island events have been pretty balanced, Tolentino said, but inaccuraci­es have not helped, especially when a national news outlet reported Oahu residents were forced to evacuate. Tolentino, an attorney, said the devastatio­n on the state’s southernmo­st island is “a spectacula­r event, but it doesn’t affect my life on a daily basis.”

Robyn Jumawan, who runs the nonprofit Pearlside Boxing and Fitness with her husband in West Oahu, lived on the west side of Big Island from 1994 to 2005, far from the active volcano. She has been praying for her friends who still live there while letting her friends on the mainland know she’s not in harm’s way.

“A lot of my friends from the mainland, they have been inundating me with, ‘Are you OK?’ A lot of them think we’re (just) one island,” she said.

Pearlside is organizing three fundraiser­s — a run-a-thon, bake sale and car wash — and a portion of the proceeds will go to relief efforts on Hawaii Island, the official name of the Big Island.

Jumawan said the latest volcanic events have affected so many — “not just the people who have left their homes but the people just living over there and the business owners.”

As tourism slows on the Big Island, Jumawan empathizes with smallbusin­ess owners who are grappling with the economic slowdown. “It’s a trickle-down effect that affects everybody,” she said.

So far, however, the trickle-down has not had a major impact on Oahu, where the majority of the state’s residents live.

 ?? BRUCE OMORI/PARADISE HELICOPTER­S VIA EPA-EFE ?? Lava consumes everything in its path as the remnants of one home burn and it approaches another Saturday in Pahoa.
BRUCE OMORI/PARADISE HELICOPTER­S VIA EPA-EFE Lava consumes everything in its path as the remnants of one home burn and it approaches another Saturday in Pahoa.

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