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Expand height-limit exemption to all buildings destroyed in Lahaina fires

The following testimony was submitted by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for consideration by the Maui County Council on Jan. 7, 2026.
_____________

Jan. 7, 2026, 9 a.m.
Kalana O Maui Building

To: Maui County Council
       Alice Lee, Chair
       Yuki Lei Sugimura, Vice Chair

From: Grassroot Institute of Hawaii
            Jonathan Helton, Policy Analyst

RE: Bill 183 (2025) — RELATING TO BUILDING HEIGHTS FOR NEW CONSTRUCTION IN THE LAHAINA NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK DISTRICT

Aloha Chair Lee, Vice Chair Lee and other members of the Council,

The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii supports — and offers an amendment to —Bill 183 (2025), which would amend the West Maui Community Plan to allow public or quasi-public buildings destroyed or damaged by the Aug. 8, 2023, wildfires to be rebuilt to their previous heights and buildings in the Lahaina National Historic Landmark District to be 35 feet tall.

According to the 2022 West Maui Community Plan, the current height limit for buildings within the Lahaina NHLD is 30 feet.

Bill 105 (2024), approved by the Maui County Council and Mayor Richard Bissen in March 2025, waived typical zoning rules for nonconforming structures and uses after disasters. But because this 30-foot height limit is in a community plan and not the zoning code, Bill 105 (2024) does not address this rule.

The owners of buildings that were taller than the 35-feet limit proposed by the bill — such as the Wharf Cinema Center —currently face the prospect of going through a complicated community plan amendment process to be rebuilt as before.

As such, Grassroot requests that Bill 183 (2025) be amended to read as follows:

This would remove the language limiting the bill to structures used for “public and quasi-public purposes.”

Grassroot believes this would be the fairest way to treat rebuilding within the Lahaina National Historic Landmark District, but welcomes further dialogue about how to encourage Lahaina’s recovery if anyone has any other helpful suggestions.

Grassroot’s recent policy brief “Four more ways to speed up Lahaina’s wildfire recovery” lists other regulations that county lawmakers could waive to help Lahaina residents recover what they had before the 2023 fires.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify.

Jonathan Helton
Policy Analyst
Grassroot Institute of Hawaii

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