News People In Crisis Still Keep Their Guns. Can Hawaiʻi Change That? Lawmakers want to raise awareness about the state’s red flag law, which has been virtually unused in the last six years — despite a significant increase in gun deaths. March 6, 2026 0 People In Crisis Still Keep Their Guns. Can Hawaiʻi Change That? Share this: Share on X (Opens in new window) X Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Like this:Like Loading… What do you feel about this? 0% Love 0% Funny 0% Wow 0% Sad 0% Angry Post navigation Previous: Kohala Obituary 1/20/2026Next: Push To Feed Hawaiʻi Kids More Local Food Is ‘Structural Disaster’ The DOE has not taken the effort seriously and has no real plan for how to meet a legislative mandate to spend 30% of its food budget locally by 2030, according to a state audit. Related Stories News HAWAI‘I DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO CONDUCT AIRFIELD PAVING WORK AT HILO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT JUNE 10 – 11 June 10, 2026 0 News ‘It Makes Their Day’: Boise Seniors Experience the Joy of Bike Rides Again June 10, 2026 0 News If Hawaiʻi Roads Damaged Your Car, Don’t Expect A Payout The Department of Transportation receives and rejects the most claims, data shows. June 10, 2026 0 News Lawsuit challenges Hawaii’s new campaign spending activity law June 10, 2026 0 News UH Hilo tapped to help boost U.S. seafood supply June 10, 2026 0 News Hawaiʻi Police Department continues to conduct high visibility traffic enforcement operations along the Daniel K. Inouye Highway June 9, 2026 0 News Off-Duty Firefighter Punches Through Roof and Saves Woman Running Out of Air June 9, 2026 0 News Empty Shelves: Young Brothers Misses 3 Shipments To Molokaʻi In 21 Days The shipping monopoly has missed its past four shipments to the Friendly Isle, leaving residents frustrated by empty store shelves and costly alternatives. June 9, 2026 0 Leave a Reply Cancel replyYour email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment * Name * Email * Website Δ