HONOLULU (AP) — Hawaii suffered its worst flooding in additional than 20 years as heavy rains fell on soil already saturated by downpours from a winter storm per week in the past, officers mentioned Friday whereas warning that also extra rain was anticipated in the course of the weekend.
Muddy floodwaters smothered huge stretches of Oahu’s North Shore, a neighborhood world-renowned for its big-wave browsing. Raging waters lifted houses and automobiles and prompted evacuation orders for five,500 individuals north of Honolulu. Authorities cautioned {that a} 120-year-old dam might fail.
Gov. Josh Inexperienced mentioned the price of the storm might high $1 billion, together with harm to airports, colleges, roads, individuals’s houses and a Maui hospital in Kula.
“That is going to have a really severe consequence for us as a state,” Inexperienced mentioned at a information convention.
A lot of the state was underneath a flood watch, with Haleiwa and Waialua in northern Oahu underneath a flash flood warning, in line with the Nationwide Climate Service.
Inexperienced mentioned his chief of workers spoke to the White Home and obtained assurances the islands would have federal help.

Most severe flooding since 2004
No deaths had been reported and nobody was unaccounted for. About 10 individuals had been taken to a hospital with hypothermia, he mentioned.
Crews searched by air and by water for individuals who had been stranded — efforts that had been hampered by individuals flying private drones to get pictures of the flooding, mentioned Ian Scheuring, a spokesperson for Honolulu.
The Nationwide Guard and Honolulu Hearth Division airlifted 72 youngsters and adults who had been attending a spring break youth camp at a retreat on Oahu’s west coast known as Our Woman of Kea’au, in line with metropolis and camp officers. The camp is on excessive floor however authorities didn’t wish to go away them there, the mayor mentioned.
Inexperienced mentioned the flooding was the state’s most severe since 2004 floods in Manoa inundated houses and a College of Hawaii library.
Dozens — if not lots of — of houses had been broken Friday however officers haven’t been capable of absolutely assess the destruction, Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi mentioned. Some 5,500 individuals had been underneath evacuation orders.
“There’s no query that the harm finished so far has been catastrophic,” he mentioned.
Officers blamed among the devastation on the sheer quantity of rain that fell in a brief period of time on saturated land. Components of Oahu obtained 8 to 12 inches (20 to 30 cm) of rain in a single day. Kaala, the island’s highest peak, acquired almost 16 inches (40 cm) up to now day, the Nationwide Climate Service mentioned.
Extra rain was anticipated: Blangiardi mentioned 6 to eight inches (15 to twenty cm) of rain was forecast to fall on Oahu within the subsequent two to 3 days.
Winter storm methods generally known as “Kona lows,” which characteristic southerly or southwesterly winds that usher in moisture-laden air, had been liable for the deluges up to now two weeks. The depth and frequency of heavy rains in Hawaii have elevated amid human-caused world warming, consultants say.
Eyes on an getting old dam
Officers have been intently watching the Wahiawa dam, which has been weak for many years, saying it was “vulnerable to imminent failure.”
Water ranges within the dam receded by late Friday however that might change if extra rain falls. In a single day into Friday, the dam went from 79 toes to 84 toes (24 to 25.6 meters) — simply 6 toes (1.8 meters) shy of what it might deal with, authorities mentioned.
As she ready to evacuate to a good friend’s dwelling on larger floor, Waialua resident Kathleen Pahinui informed The Related Press in a telephone interview that the getting old dam is a priority each time it rains.
“Simply pray for us,” she mentioned. “We perceive there’s extra rain coming.”
The state has mentioned Wahiawa dam has “excessive hazard potential,” and {that a} failure “will lead to possible lack of human life.”


The earthen dam was inbuilt 1906 to extend sugar manufacturing for the Waialua Agricultural Firm, which finally turned a subsidiary of Dole Meals Firm. It was reconstructed following a collapse in 1921.
The state has despatched Dole 4 notices of deficiency in regards to the dam since 2009 and 5 years in the past fined the corporate $20,000 for failing to deal with security deficiencies on time, in line with data.
Afterward, Dole proposed to donate the dam, reservoir and ditch system to the state in trade for the state’s settlement to restore the spillway to satisfy and keep dam security requirements.
The state handed laws in 2023 authorizing the dam’s acquisition. It additionally offered $5 million to purchase the spillway and $21 million to restore and broaden it to adjust to dam security necessities. However the switch has not been accomplished. A state board is because of vote on the acquisition subsequent week.
“The dam continues to function as designed with no indications of injury,” Dole mentioned in an emailed assertion.
The state regulates 132 dams throughout Hawaii, most of them constructed as a part of irrigation methods for the sugar cane trade, in line with a 2019 infrastructure report by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Related Press author Hallie Golden contributed to this report from Seattle.

