WEST HAWAII TODAY | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015 - page 8

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Sends us your Halloween events
West Hawaii Today is compiling a list of
Halloween activities and events for all ages in West
Hawaii. The deadline for submissions is noon (12
p.m.) Thursday, Oct. 15.
Submissions should be kept as brief as possi-
ble and include pertinent information such as
who is offering the activity, where it will be held,
cost and contact information. The newspaper will
edit as needed. High-resolution photos are also
appreciated.
Send information no later than noon Oct. 15 to
Chelsea Jensen, entertainment editor, at enter-
. Please include
“Halloween” in the subject line.
Have a question? Call Chelsea at 930-8618 for
more information. She can also be reached via
email to
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2015 | WEST HAWAII TODAY
WEATHER
8A
City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W City
Hi/Lo/W
Weather(W): s-
sunny,
pc-
partly cloudy,
c-
cloudy,
sh-
showers,
t-
thunderstorms,
r-
rain,
sf-
snow flurries,
sn-
snow,
i-
ice.
TODAY’SWEATHER KONA TIDES TODAY SUN ANDMOON
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY
Shown is today’s weather.
Temperatures are today’s
highs and tonight’s lows.
NATIONAL CITIES TODAY
SATELLITE VIEW
First
Time
Height
Second
Time
Height
Hanalei
Kapaa
Waialua Laie
Lanai
Hana
Kapaau
Honokaa
Hilo
Naalehu
Captain Cook
Kailua-Kona
Mountain View
Kihei
Wailuku
Mokapu
Honolulu
Kaunakakai
Ewa Beach
Kalaheo
Kekaha
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
As of 3 p.m. yesterday.
Moon
Rise
Set
Sun
Rise
Set
Oct 12 Oct 20 Oct 27 Nov 3
New First
Full
Last
Albany, NY
69/50/pc
Albuquerque
73/53/t
Amarillo
79/55/s
Anchorage
48/39/c
Atlanta
76/61/pc
Austin
89/61/s
Baltimore
72/55/s
Billings
70/49/pc
Birmingham
82/63/pc
Bismarck
65/41/pc
Boise
79/51/s
Boston
66/52/s
Buffalo
65/52/c
Charleston, SC
72/57/pc
Charleston, WV
76/53/pc
Charlotte, NC
72/51/pc
Cheyenne
62/46/t
Chicago
70/55/pc
Cincinnati
77/58/pc
Cleveland
71/56/pc
Columbia, SC
74/53/pc
Dallas
86/64/s
Denver
70/49/t
Des Moines
74/56/pc
Detroit
72/54/pc
Duluth
62/36/s
El Paso
80/60/pc
Fairbanks
43/28/pc
Fargo
65/38/s
Grand Rapids
70/51/pc
Green Bay
69/46/pc
Honolulu
85/75/pc
Houston
88/66/s
Indianapolis
76/54/pc
Jackson, MS
88/64/s
Jacksonville
77/64/pc
Juneau
50/35/pc
Kansas City
74/54/pc
Key West
85/77/pc
Lansing
69/49/pc
Las Vegas
75/63/t
Little Rock
85/65/pc
Los Angeles
79/63/s
Louisville
81/60/pc
Madison
69/48/pc
Memphis
84/66/pc
Miami
85/73/c
Milwaukee
68/52/pc
Minneapolis
69/47/pc
Nashville
84/58/pc
New Orleans
85/70/s
New York City
71/59/s
Norfolk
69/59/pc
Oklahoma City
81/58/s
Omaha
75/56/pc
Orlando
85/71/pc
Philadelphia
73/59/s
Phoenix
79/65/t
Pittsburgh
75/56/pc
Portland, ME
66/46/s
Portland, OR
74/56/pc
Providence
69/49/s
Raleigh
72/52/pc
Reno
78/49/s
Sacramento
83/55/s
St. Louis
77/60/pc
Salt Lake City
69/49/pc
San Antonio
90/67/s
San Diego
76/66/pc
San Francisco
72/56/pc
San Juan, PR
92/81/sh
Santa Fe
71/44/pc
Seattle
69/56/pc
Spokane
73/50/pc
Syracuse
66/51/c
Tampa
85/71/pc
Tucson
77/58/t
Tulsa
79/57/s
Washington, DC
73/59/pc
Wichita
79/59/s
Wichita Falls
84/58/s
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc.
©2015
High
12:05 p.m.
1.8’
Low
4:56 a.m.
0.4’
High
---
Low
6:59 p.m.
0.4’
83/72
81/74
82/70
82/74
79/68
81/73
82/73
81/69
85/71
84/68
90/75
80/67
84/70
83/69
81/75
85/75
81/72
83/72
81/70
84/71
82/70
Today
6:16 a.m.
6:09 p.m.
Wednesday 6:17 a.m.
6:08 p.m.
Today
1:13 a.m.
2:21 p.m.
Wednesday 2:04 a.m.
3:02 p.m.
NATIONAL SUMMARY:
Rain will retreat and seas will ease along the Atlantic coast today.
However, river flooding is forecast to continue in the Carolinas. People from the Gulf
Coast to northern New England can expect a sunny day with only very spotty showers
over the North Central states. Showers and storms will riddle areas from Wyoming to
Arizona.
Council to review HPP
community plan
Creating town or
neighborhood centers,
adding recreation facili-
ties and paving roads are
among the goals listed in
a new Hawaiian Paradise
Park Community Master
Plan.
Developed by a com-
mittee of HPP residents,
the planning document
is intended to improve
services in the massive
Puna subdivision and
address issues that long
have plagued its resi-
dents, including substan-
dard roads.
It updates the private
community’s first plan
Hawaii County adopted
in 1997.
The Hawaiian Paradise
Park Owners Association
approved the new plan
in May. The County
Council’s Committee on
Planning will review the
document today during
its meeting in Hilo.
Once approved by the
full council, the HPP
Community
Action
Committee will form
groups to implement the
plan’s main objectives,
the document says. It will
be reviewed annually for
amendments.
The subdivision had a
population of 11,404 res-
idents in 2010, according
to the plan, which esti-
mates a 10 percent annu-
al population growth.
The 15-member HPP
planning
committee
drafted the document
with feedback from sur-
veys and community
meetings, the document
says. It received 457
completed surveys from
association members.
The top priorities from
those residents were for
regional town or com-
munity village centers
to provide commercial
services for the nearly
10,000-acre neighbor-
hood. Recreation and
infrastructure also were
listed.
HPP is the second larg-
est private subdivision in
the United States and its
131-mile road network is
only partially paved.
The top requests from
surveyed residents were
for a minimarket, post
office, urgent care facil-
ity, gas station, coffee
shop, hardware store and
beauty shop.
A regional town cen-
ter would serve 20,000
to 50,000 residents and
cover more than 30 acres,
according to the plan. A
community village cen-
ter would serve 7,000 to
15,000 residents, cover-
ing 10 to 30 acres, and
a neighborhood village
center would support
3,000 to 6,000 residents
on up to 10 acres.
The neighborhood’s
8,835 lots could accom-
modate a maximum pop-
ulation of about 30,000
residents, according to
the document.
The council committee
meeting begins at 10:15
a.m. in the council cham-
bers at 25 Aupuni St.
The plan can be
viewed
by
visiting
/
hppcommunityplan.
Email Tom Callis at tcallis@
hawaiitribune-herald.com.
BY TOM CALLIS
HAWAII TRIBUNE-HERALD
PTA trial on lease
issues ends
Trial ended Friday for a
lawsuit alleging the state
failed to ensure the U.S.
Army complies with its
Pohakuloa Training Area
lease.
David
Frankel,
attorney for plaintiffs
Clarence Ching and Mary
Kahaulelio, said both
parties have until Oct. 16
to submit their findings
of fact and conclusions of
law to Oahu Circuit Court
Judge Gary Chang.
Chang will later make
a ruling.
The trial started Sept.
29 and lasted four days in
Honolulu.
Frankel, who works
for the Native Hawaiian
Legal Corp., said eight
witnesses took the stand.
The Army’s lease cover-
ing 22,836 acres of state
land between Mauna Kea
and Mauna Loa requires
it to make every reason-
able effort to clean up
debris following training
exercises, according to
the lawsuit.
BY TOM CALLIS
HAWAII TRIBUNE-HERALD
The plaintiffs, who
cite the presence of
empty casings and other
debris, allege the state
Department of Land and
Natural Resources failed
to ensure compliance
with this requirement.
The Army’s PTA web-
site says it is a “vanguard
of environmental and
cultural protection,” with
50 employees involved in
protecting endangered
species and cultural
resources.
The plaintiffs are ask-
ing Chang to require the
state to fulfill its trust
duties and prevent the
Army from receiving a
new lease until it satis-
factorily fulfills the terms
of the existing agreement.
The existing lease
expires in 2029.
Email Tom Callis at tcallis@
hawaiitribune-herald.com.
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