Green Workforce Development
Kupu Members
“Renewable energy infrastructure should prioritize circular economy solutions.”
Community Quote from Long-Term Planning Recovery Survey
Project Description
This project includes development of an environmentally conscious green workforce and creation of green job opportunities for a sustainable Hawaiʻi and Maui—to provide economic opportunities for local people to stay and live in Maui while also restoring the environment. Key goals of this project include diversification of economy, beyond tourism, towards a circular sustainable economy; return of thriving agriculture industry to Lahaina; increase accessibility and create jobs in conservation, agriculture, environmental science, regenerative tourism, and climate change resilience; create educational programming, career pathways, and mentorship programs for youth to transition from elementary to high school, to college, to careers; create a workforce of local people who can do the natural resources restoration work and maintenance for Lahaina and Maui in the coming years; and create regenerative pono tourism practices through programming, incentives, education and policy.
Purpose
Maui is highly dependent on tourism as its main economic driver. After the 2023 fires and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, Maui and Hawaiʻi’s economic vulnerabilities were clearly shown, as thousands lost their jobs and millions of dollars of daily revenue abruptly halted. Maui must look to alternative economic industries for short, mid and long-term recovery and community well-being. Additionally, younger generations often move away from Maui due to lack of job opportunities and high cost of living. For recovery efforts involving revegetation, landscape restoration and reforestation, for example, Maui lacks sufficient local workforce and capacity for implementation. This recovery project would address the need to train a local workforce for natural resources restoration and maintenance work for recovery, as well as generate long-term job opportunities in alternative economic industries such as agriculture, conservation and natural resources management.
Interdependencies and Roadblocks
Challenges include the current economic dependence on tourism, unclear direction for economic future of Lahaina and Hawai’i, education of new workforce and re-education of current workforce, differences in intentions, purposes, and underlying goals, people (especially younger generation) leaving Maui and Hawai’i due to lack of job opportunities, high cost of living, low wages (typically for service, conservation and ʻāina jobs), and constraints of Hawai’i State Department of Education.
Next Steps
- Creation of ʻāina-based educational opportunities
- Provide equitable access to education, workforce and professional development, programs for P-20
- Innovation and entrepreneurship, mentorship program, and sustainable tourism practices and programming
Project Details
Cost Estimate:
$TBD
Existing Funding Sources:
Project Lead:
- County Department of Agriculture
- University of Hawaiʻi
- State Department of Education
Potential Funding Sources:
- U.S. Department of Agriculture
- Philanthropic
- County
- State
- Other federal grants
- Hawai‘i Community Foundation
Project Partners:
- Farms
- Hawaiʻi Green Growth
- Ulupono Initiative
- Kupu
- County Department of Agriculture
- County Department of Public Works
- County Department of Planning
- The Nature Conservancy
- Watershed Partnerships Living Pono
- U.S. Department of Agriculture -Natural Resources Conservation Service
- State Department of Land and Natural Resources
- State Department of Agriculture
- Hawaiʻi Tourism Authority
- State Department of Business, Economic Development & Tourism
Alignment with West Maui Community Plan (WMCP)
- Goal 2.4 Economic opportunity through innovation and collaboration