The Maui Fires In Photos: April 2024
King Kamehameha III Elementary School students started class at their new temporary campus in Kapalua. The Maui County Council got to work on next year's budget. The permanent landfill site for the Aug. 8 fire debris hit a snag. Cleanup work continued. And group housing sites are being developed in Lahaina.

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Maui County Council member Yuki Lei Sugimura is leading the long process to review, amend and adopt Mayor Richard Bissen’s proposed $1.7 billion budget for fiscal year 2025, which starts July 1. The council held numerous meetings throughout April as they scrutinized each department’s budget. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)

Maria Zielinski, left, was confirmed as the county’s next finance director. She replaces Scott Teruya, not pictured, who was put on paid leave in February without a public explanation. Steve Tesoro, center, is deputy finance director and Marcy Martin, right, is the real property tax administrator. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)

Randy Dadez and his family, who lost their Lahaina home in the Aug. 8 fires, were still stuck in housing limbo in April, living out of government-funded hotel rooms while waiting on a longer term solution. Here he’s tuning the strings on his 9-year-old son Kobe’s ukulele. (Brittany Lyte/Civil Beat/2024)

The Dadez family’s pet fish Bubbles perished in the Aug. 8 fire, something Marilou Dadez says her kids still blame her for since they had wanted to take the aquarium with them when they evacuated. The family recently acquired a new pet fish, which Kobe Dadez named Boss. (Brittany Lyte/Civil Beat/2024)

Maui Fire Chief Brad Ventura, left, and Assistant Chief Jeff Giesea discussed their department’s after-action report of its performance during the Aug. 8 wildfires at a press conference at the Kula Fire Station. The report made 111 recommendations, detailing a need for more equipment and better land management. (Cammy Clark/Civil Beat/2024)

Duane Sparkman from Treecovery, Bill Countryman, general manager of Marriott’s Maui Open Club, and Matthew Murasco, an entrepreneur and product designer, stood near a cutting from the historic Lahaina banyan tree at the hotel. An effort is underway to grow thousands of trees at several hubs to be planted in the burn zone when it’s ready. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)

Duane Sparkman, chair of the Maui County Arborist Committee, cofounded the nonprofit tree-growing and reforestation organization called Treecovery Hawaii that aims to provide every owner of burned property in Lahaina and Kula with fruit trees free of charge when they are ready to rebuild their homes. (David Croxford/Civil Beat/2024)
