Current:Home > My‘Nothing left': Future unclear for Hawaii residents who lost it all in fire -AssetTrainer
‘Nothing left': Future unclear for Hawaii residents who lost it all in fire
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:56:44
WAILUKU, Hawaii (AP) — Retired mailman and Vietnam veteran Thomas Leonard lived in the historic former capital of Hawaii for 44 years until this week, when a rapidly moving wildfire burned down his apartment, melted his Jeep and forced him to spend four terrifying hours hiding from the flames behind a seawall.
“I’ve got nothing left,” Leonard said Thursday as he sat on an inflatable mattress outside a shelter for those who fled the blaze that decimated the town of Lahaina. “I’m a disabled vet, so now I’m a homeless vet,” he added with a small laugh.
The fire that tore across the coastal Maui town and caught many by surprise has already claimed dozens of lives — a toll expected to climb — and burned more than 1,000 buildings. It has turned a centuries-old hamlet beloved by travelers and locals alike into a charred, desolate landscape.
The devastation has resonated worldwide in part because tourists from around the globe flock to Maui to enjoy its white sand beaches, including many who stop to visit the old whaling village and capital of the former Hawaiian kingdom. Thousands fled Maui after the fires rousted them from their resort hotels and sent them scrambling from their sun chairs on Tuesday. But for thousands of people who call Lahaina home, there is no flight to catch and no home to return to. They’ve simply lost everything.
On Front Street, Lahaina’s main thoroughfare, Deborah Leoffler lost a home that has been in her family since 1945. Five generations stayed there, starting with her grandfather, who was a Lahaina police sergeant. Her youngest son had been planning to move home from the mainland to live there.
She evacuated so quickly she left her debit cards on her nightstand and now can’t access her bank account.
“But I still have my family, and that’s what counts,” she said.
Myrna Ah Hee’s home is in one of the few subdivisions in Lahaina spared destruction. But she and her husband, Abraham, haven’t been able to find his brother, a Vietnam veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder who has been living in Lahaina’s homeless shelter.
The Ah Hees spent Thursday scouring evacuation shelters across the island from Lahaina to see if he might have made it out.
Her extended family was hit badly: Her parents lost their home, as did her son, one of her uncles and a cousin. Her son-in-law was staying in a house that had long been in her husband’s family, but that burned down too.
She said those born and raised in Lahaina like her and her husband have to “stand up and make it what it was.”
“Where do you begin?” she asked rhetorically. “It’s town we have to bring back — but also families, classmates, friends.”
Leonard, the retired mailman, said he didn’t know about the fire until he smelled smoke from his apartment on Front Street and went outside to investigate. He had been in an information vacuum all day after the power had gone out early Tuesday morning, leaving him and neighbors without electricity, internet and cellphone service. The county’s emergency sirens — which warn people of the need to evacuate for tsunamis and other natural disasters — didn’t sound.
He grabbed his wallet, keys and credit cards and jumped in his car to leave, only to find a traffic jam. He waited, in hopes the line of vehicles would move, until the cars ahead of him started exploding one by one.
“My Jeep had a soft top, and I knew it was going to go. And I just said, ‘I’m out of here,’” Leonard recalled.
The 74-year-old ran over to the seawall that shields the town from encroachment from the ocean, joining about 70 others. About 20 of them jumped in the water to get away from the flames. Leonard said he felt safter crouched down next the wall on the ocean side, where he could let the wind carry hot ash over him.
Even so, cinder seared holes in his shorts and shirt, and he suffered burns on his legs.
“There were flames coming and sparks everywhere,” he said.
One person at the seawall flashed S.O.S. out to the ocean, which Leonard said alerted the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard contacted Maui firefighters, who then escorted the group on foot through the flames to a supermarket parking lot at about 9:30 p.m.
A propane tank exploded down the block not long after they passed.
“It was just like, boom, a gigantic mushroom at that house,” he said.
As Gov. Josh Green put it in an interview with The Associated Press: “Lahaina, with a few rare exceptions, has been burned down.”
Leonard isn’t sure what he’ll do next. The pharmacy at the evacuation shelter has contacted the Department of Veterans Affairs to help him get his prescriptions. He’s thinking how he’ll have to contact his homeowner’s and car insurance providers. And get in touch with his friends and family. They don’t know where he is — but he’s registered with the Red Cross so they can find him.
Still, he doesn’t know if he will will go back to Lahaina, especially given how long it will probably take to rebuild.
“I have no idea where I’m going to go,” he said.
___
Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher contributed to this report.
___
Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Solar Energy Boom Sets New Records, Shattering Expectations
- An Unlikely Alliance of Farm and Environmental Groups Takes on Climate Change
- Coal Ash Contaminates Groundwater at 91% of U.S. Coal Plants, Tests Show
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Produce to the People
- Going, Going … Gone: Greenland’s Melting Ice Sheet Passed a Point of No Return in the Early 2000s
- Latest Canadian wildfire smoke maps show where air quality is unhealthy now and forecasts for the near future
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Lawmaker pushes bill to shed light on wrongfully detained designation for Americans held abroad
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- What is malaria? What to know as Florida, Texas see first locally acquired infections in 20 years
- TVA Votes to Close 2 Coal Plants, Despite Political Pressure from Trump and Kentucky GOP
- TVA Votes to Close 2 Coal Plants, Despite Political Pressure from Trump and Kentucky GOP
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Delta plane makes smooth emergency landing in Charlotte
- How Amanda Seyfried Is Helping Emmy Rossum With Potty Training After Co-Star Welcomed Baby No. 2
- Angela Bassett and Mel Brooks to receive honorary Oscars
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Amy Schumer Reveals NSFW Reason It's Hard to Have Sex With Your Spouse
Californians Are Keeping Dirty Energy Off the Grid via Text Message
Stitcher shuts down as podcast industry loses luster
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Amtrak train in California partially derails after colliding with truck
Yusef Salaam, exonerated member of Central Park Five, declares victory in New York City Council race
Coal Ash Contaminates Groundwater at 91% of U.S. Coal Plants, Tests Show