Tourists were told to avoid Maui, but many workers want them back

A plunge in tourism after a disastrous fire has already crippled the economy in Maui. Now, some locals who wanted visitors to stay away are urging them back

Annie Mullen working at Flatbread Company in Paia on the Hawaiian island of Maui, says business has come nearly to 'a full stop' since the fire in Lahaina, about a 45-minute drive away. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times
Annie Mullen working at Flatbread Company in Paia on the Hawaiian island of Maui, says business has come nearly to 'a full stop' since the fire in Lahaina, about a 45-minute drive away. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times

In the first few days after an inferno levelled the Hawaiian town of Lahaina, the directive to tourists was emphatic: stay away. And tourists, with a few exceptions, complied.

As it turns out, maybe too well.

Nearly a month after the fire, Maui, a tourism-dependent island with a hotel room for every 7½ households, is hosting fewer visitors than at any point since the coronavirus pandemic. Pristine beaches sit empty, even those that are many miles from Lahaina. Hundreds of unused rental cars are parked in fields near the island’s main airport in Kahului, where planes arrive half full. Beds are made and pillows are fluffed in hotel rooms where no one has laid a head in weeks.

All of it means that the workers who form the backbone of Hawaii’s welcoming aloha spirit are now struggling. In some of Maui’s fanciest resorts, employees are being sent home with no work and no pay.

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“Right now, it’s hard to think about the future and if we’re going to make next month’s rent,” said Owen Wegner, a line cook at the Grand Wailea resort in South Maui, 48km outside the burn zone. He has been called in to work only two shifts in the past two weeks.

Mr Wegner (20) was born and raised in Lahaina and used to play a snare drum during parades down Front Street, the town’s once-idyllic commercial thoroughfare along the ocean. The fire on August 8th turned the street into a graveyard of charred cars and burned buildings, and became the nation’s deadliest wildfire in a century, claiming at least 115 lives. Among them was Mr Wegner’s grandmother, Lynn Manibog, who had helped raise him.

Mr Wegner has had almost no time to grieve. Instead, he has been trying to figure out how to provide for his partner, Sabrina Kaitlyn Cuadro; their one-year-old son; and their daughter, who is due to be born on September 5th. That’s also the last day they can pay their monthly rent before late fees kick in.

“Me and her are under a lot of stress,” Mr Wegner said.

Big Beach on the Hawaiian island of Maui, in late August. The island is hosting fewer visitors than at any point since the coronavirus pandemic. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/The New York Times
Big Beach on the Hawaiian island of Maui, in late August. The island is hosting fewer visitors than at any point since the coronavirus pandemic. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/The New York Times

The implosion of Maui’s economy, of which tourism comprises about 40 per cent, has been swift and severe. State economic officials estimate that the island is seeing about 4,250 fewer visitors each day than normal, representing a loss of $9 million (€8.35 million) a day. In South Maui, seven out of every 10 hotel rooms sit empty, compared with about two in 10 during normal times.

The plummeting numbers follow contradictory pleas from Hawaii’s politicians and residents. The governor and lieutenant governor issued emergency proclamations in the first days after the fire, saying that all non-essential travel to Maui was “strongly discouraged”.

Days later, Governor Josh Green issued a revised order limiting its scope to the region of the fire, West Maui, which makes up only a small portion of the island. But tourism officials fear that prospective visitors may not be familiar with the island’s geography. Now many politicians, workers and industry leaders are making a new plea to tourists: come back.

“We stress that West Maui is not currently the place for people to go, but the rest of Maui is open,” Richard Bissen, the Maui County mayor, said this week.

Jerry Gibson, president of the Hawaii Hotel Alliance, said he had been trying to get the message out that Maui’s south side – home to luxury hotels, condos and restaurants – was eager for the arrival of suitcase-lugging families.

“The south side of Maui is wide open,” Mr Gibson said. “Tragically, right now, because of the earlier message, tourism is not coming in there.”

Maui residents have remained consistent that visitors should avoid all of West Maui, which continues to be a hub for displaced families. Hotels there are housing more than 5,000 people who are not tourists, including families who lost homes, government relief officials, aid organisations and clean-up crews. Locals have also warned people against clogging up the highway in a quest to see the destroyed town of Lahaina. They remind tourists elsewhere on the island to be sensitive to the fact that people they encounter may have lost their own homes or have connections to people who perished.

There has long been tension between Hawaii locals and tourists, and some residents have argued that the sharp drop in revenue Maui now faces is a sign that the state should prioritise residents over tourists and rely on more sustainable industries.

Chris West, president of the local International Longshore and Warehouse Union, which also represents workers in the tourism and pineapple industries, said he and other native Hawaiians had complicated feelings about tourists but that their return was needed to sustain the economy.

“So visit, but be respectful, and we can coexist,” Mr West said.

Becky Dosh, a cofounder of Wings boutique, in Paia on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times
Becky Dosh, a cofounder of Wings boutique, in Paia on the Hawaiian island of Maui. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times

In Paia, a colourful town brimming with stores and restaurants on the North Shore, shops are usually hopping, even on a weekday afternoon. There is typically a long line to order at the Paia Fish Market, a stream of people peering into the window at Mele Ukulele, and tourists finding shade on the front patio of Tobi’s Poke & Shave Ice.

But many of the stores were eerily empty on a recent weekday, and at one local pizzeria, there were so many empty booths that the general manager had plopped himself into one to get some work done. Two men sat alone at the bar.

Annie Mullen, who has worked at Flatbread Company restaurant off and on for the past 12 years, said business had come nearly to “a full stop” since the fire in Lahaina, about a 45-minute drive away. Ms Mullen said she felt guilty for worrying about pay cheques when so many people had died. But she said she feared things would get worse if visitors continued to stay away.

“It’s really hard to navigate the grief and the shock of what horrific event just took place but then also to have to feel selfishly worried about finances at the same time,” she said.

Nick Rodriguez, general manager of Flatbread Company, a pizza restaurant in Paia. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times
Nick Rodriguez, general manager of Flatbread Company, a pizza restaurant in Paia. Photograph: Bailey Rebecca Roberts/New York Times

Nick Rodriguez, the restaurant’s general manager, said that in just a few weeks, he had gone from “begging for people to come work for us” to having to turn people away.

State data shows that more than 5,300 people on Maui filed initial unemployment claims in roughly the first two weeks after the fire. In normal weeks, the number of claims is closer to 120.

Many of the businesses in Paia have donated a portion of their earnings to Lahaina recovery efforts.

Down the block from the pizza shop is Wings, a boutique selling jewellery, clothing, stickers and other beachy trinkets. Becky Dosh, one of the shop’s cofounders, said foot traffic had plunged. One bright spot had been the new stickers the shop was offering to support Lahaina and raise money for relief efforts. Hundreds had been sold online, she said.

Ms Dosh, who moved to Hawaii in 1999, said she thought the initial drop in tourism was helpful to allow people to grieve and begin to regroup. “And now people are all asking how they can help,” Ms Dosh said. “We’ve just been telling people, actually, coming here would be really helpful.” – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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