09-19-2015, 03:16 AM
Recent flooding in Kona suggests poor planning and/or lacking infrastructure.
http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/news...pener-many
The prospect of building flood canals has popped up sporadically at the county level for at least 20 years. But the projects would be expensive and nothing concrete has emerged from the talks.
http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/news...ppen-again
Nat Giesbrecht says he has heard that development up mauka filled in a drainage way some years back, causing flooding to divert in their direction. That could be the source of waters that inundated a bedroom on Sept. 5 and returned with a vengeance on Tuesday and Wednesday. But he is not sure, and the Department of Public Works hasn't provided any answers so far.
Similar to the "diversion wall" built above Hawaiian Acres -- heavy rains now end up at the community center. A few decades later, County did spend $2.1M to build a culvert, so that the flooding doesn't affect 8 Road.
I've heard of similar happenings in Hilo; older mauka areas (Kaumana, etc) have a network of ditches and canals so that heavy rains have somewhere to go. Long-time residents understand this and leave them alone; newcomers sometimes fill in their part of the ditch, and flooding ensues.
This leaves me wondering why these waterways aren't protected by the rules and laws given the public safety and property damage issues, along with the usual questions about spending priorities -- maybe all these shiny new parks can be used as campgrounds for people who get flooded out of their homes?
http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/news...pener-many
The prospect of building flood canals has popped up sporadically at the county level for at least 20 years. But the projects would be expensive and nothing concrete has emerged from the talks.
http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/news...ppen-again
Nat Giesbrecht says he has heard that development up mauka filled in a drainage way some years back, causing flooding to divert in their direction. That could be the source of waters that inundated a bedroom on Sept. 5 and returned with a vengeance on Tuesday and Wednesday. But he is not sure, and the Department of Public Works hasn't provided any answers so far.
Similar to the "diversion wall" built above Hawaiian Acres -- heavy rains now end up at the community center. A few decades later, County did spend $2.1M to build a culvert, so that the flooding doesn't affect 8 Road.
I've heard of similar happenings in Hilo; older mauka areas (Kaumana, etc) have a network of ditches and canals so that heavy rains have somewhere to go. Long-time residents understand this and leave them alone; newcomers sometimes fill in their part of the ditch, and flooding ensues.
This leaves me wondering why these waterways aren't protected by the rules and laws given the public safety and property damage issues, along with the usual questions about spending priorities -- maybe all these shiny new parks can be used as campgrounds for people who get flooded out of their homes?