FOCUS MAUI NUI

Our Islands, Our Future
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Perpetuating Cultural Heritage

Photo by Caitlyn Panis

Ten Things Your Family Can Do To Perpetuate Your Cultural Heritage:

  1. Trace your family tree
  2. Attend cultural events, festivals and gatherings
  3. Collect the memories of your grandparents and elders in your cultural community
  4. Share old family photographs
  5. Maintain your cultural traditions
  6. Teach your children about the language of your heritage
  7. Join a group that celebrates your culture
  8. Learn about the history, art, and music of your cultural heritage
  9. Cook traditional foods and share family recipes
  10. Encourage your children to take lessons in the dances of your cultural heritage

How does your family perpetuate your cultural heritage?

Meet Department Director Kyle Ginoza, Environmental Management

Continuing our series on newly appointed County Department Directors, reflecting the role of government in responding to community values and needs.

The priorities for Kyle Ginoza, Director of the County Department of Environmental Management, are directly aligned with two of the community values identified through the Focus Maui Nui process: Protecting the environment, through solid waste management and wastewater reclamation, and addressing related infrastructure challenges to improve capacity and ensure reliability of service. At the same time, Ginoza is responsible for ensuring the County is in compliance with EPA and other Federal and State regulatory mandates. His immediate challenges are launching a pilot curbside recycling program in South Maui, and expanding the recycled water capacity of the Lahaina wastewater treatment plant.

Ginoza was born and raised on Maui and graduated from Maui High School. He earned degrees in mechanical engineering from Stanford University and a Masters in Business Administration (MBA)from UCLA before beginning his career as a Project Manager for Honeywell in the field of commercial jet air conditioning. He returned with his wife, Kim, who is also from Maui, to raise their young family. He was Director of Transportation during Mayor Arakawa’s first term (2003-06), overseeing the early days of the Maui Bus system. More recently, he worked as a project manager for Munekiyo and Hiraga Inc., and for the County as a project engineer in their wastewater division.

“My family is my priority outside of my work for the County,” says Ginoza. “I’m proud to be my daughters’ soccer “Team Dad” and go to their swimming practices. I’m also involved in education as a volunteer Board Member for the Wailuku Hongwanji Mission Japanese School.” Ginoza’s family-oriented values are enhanced by an unexpected talent – as a recreational magician. “I’m the free entertainment at birthday parties for my daughters and their friends. I have a bevy of tricks. I really enjoy that,” Ginoza adds with a warm smile.

Ke Alahele: Fund The Journey!

Ke Alahele: Fund The Journey!

Mark your calendars for Saturday, August 27, 2011 for the MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund! Held at the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa, featuring Distinguished Educators U.S. Senator Daniel K. Inouye, his wife Ms. Irene Hirano, and Mayor Alan Arakawa and his wife Ann headline the event.

Sponsorships are now available. For more information, contact Maui Economic Development Board, Inc. at 808-875-2300 or visit the MEDB website.

Download the 2011 Ke Alahele Donor Kit

Empowering over 30,300 students to date…

The MEDB Ke Alahele Education Fund stimulates community investment in broadening career pathways for Maui County residents. Grants awarded from the Fund support needs and opportunities in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math that enhance our education system and activities.

Make a difference by continuing to empower our students by support the Ke Alahele Education Fund. When they succeed, we all succeed.

Fund the journey!

Making a Difference in Hana

Lehua Park Cosma is one community volunteer dedicated to meeting human needs, a priority value expressed by our community through the Focus Maui Nui process. Through her tireless efforts and leadership, the Hana community benefited from the nation’s first communal home dialysis center, Hale Pomaika’i, which opened in 2009. The facility means that diabetes patients no longer have to make the arduous journey to the dialysis center in Wailuku up to three times a week. “The trip meant leaving home at 2 a.m.,” says Cosma. “My initial motivation was my Mom, who was a dialysis patient and my best friend who instilled in me everything I needed to succeed,” she explains.

Cosma founded a grassroots organization, Hui Laulima O Hana, to spearhead the campaign for the treatment center. There were plenty of doubters that the facility would ever become a reality, but Cosma persisted. “When you live in a rural area, you have to work hard to make things happen—opportunities don’t just come to you,” says Cosma. “I realized that if I didn’t volunteer to make Hale Pomaika’i a reality, no one else would. That kept me going. Now, medical experts come from all over the world to visit our facility in Hana – it’s a successful model for isolated, rural communities.”

Cosma’s priorities as a volunteer go beyond improving community healthcare. “Preserving our culture and lifestyle are very important to me,” she notes. “It’s also about looking out for each other and setting an example for the next generation.” It meant a lot to Cosma that students from Rick Rutiz’s Hana School Building Program, Ma Ka Hana Ka ‘Ike, helped renovate the plantation-style residence that houses Hale Pomaika’i. “County and State officials also played important supporting roles in making it a reality. Now, the State owns the property and the County manages it,” she observes. Cosma’s volunteer work also extends to supporting youth, through her fundraising efforts with Hana’s Spring Festival, which helps support students in need.