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Hawaii Route 3000, also known as the Lahaina Bypass, is a highway that bypasses the town of Lahaina.The Section 2 of the highway opened on December 17, 2013. [5] Hawaii DOT plans call for a much longer bypass to be constructed in the near future, with the possibility of moving the Route 30 designation to the bypass highway.
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The average household size was 3.28 and the average family size was 3.64. In the CDP the population was spread out, with 23.4% under the age of 18, 9.9% from 18 to 24, 28.3% from 25 to 44, 22.6% from 45 to 64, and 15.8% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females there were 98.8 males.
Haleʻiwa is located at 21°35'24" North, 158°6'50" West (21.590050, -158.113928), [3] southwest along Kamehameha Highway (State route 83) from Pūpūkea. At Haleʻiwa, Kamehameha Highway becomes state route 99 (at the traffic circle known as "Weed Circle"), which runs eastward up across the Oʻahu central plateau to Wahiawā .
In March 2006, heavy thunderstorms and rains caused a pressurized sewage line near Ala Wai Canal to break. Days later, and after the spill was made public, then Mayor Mufi Hannemann decided to divert nearly 48 million US gallons (180,000 m 3 ) of untreated sewage into the canal in an attempt to avoid having the sewage back up into hotels and ...
The site was added to the state register of historic places on November 26, 1986, as site 10-37-7234, [4] and the national register on June 5, 1987, as site 87000794. [5] The Holualoa Bay Congregational Church reconstructed the building in the early 1990s [3] under the direction of Norman Kenneth Smith. [6]
Kāneʻohe Ranch reported 247 straight days of rain from August 27, 1993, to April 30, 1994. The average temperature in Oʻahu is around 70–85 °F (21–29 °C). The island is the warmest from June through October. The winter is cooler, but still warm, with an average temperature of 68–78 °F (20–26 °C).
An environmental impact statement was filed in 1995, and an additional 16 acres (65,000 m 2) in the Hōlualoa 4 area on the East of Aliʻi Drive was donated in 1998. [3] The property had been foreclosed upon by First Hawaiian Bank , when it was realized a Senior Vice President of the Bank was a descendant of Keakealaniwahine. [ 17 ]