Thursday, March 31, 2011

Ritz-Carlton Kapalua ~ Update

Lehman Bros. to auction off Ritz-Carlton Kapalua
The giant investment banking firm is owed $268 million on the foreclosed Maui property
By Andrew Gomes
Article From: Star-Advertiser

The Ritz-Carlton Kapalua is headed for auction after a foreclosure lawsuit was filed in September.

The Ritz-Carlton Kapalua hotel is headed for a May auction, potentially giving the 404-unit luxury property a new owner after loans taken out to finance a lavish renovation in 2008 couldn’t be repaid.

Lehman Bros. received approval earlier this month to put the oceanfront property in West Maui up for auction after filing a foreclosure lawsuit in September against owners that include institutional investors and Maui Land & Pineapple Co.

The investment banking firm issued $232 million in loans to finance a $180 million renovation and condominium conversion plan that the hotel’s owners envisioned would be repaid by selling 107 units in one hotel wing as residential condos.

But downturns in the economy and real estate market inhibited sales, and the owners defaulted on the loan in early 2009. As of November, Lehman was owed $268 million including late fees, according to the foreclosure suit.

A new owner, which could include Lehman if no one is willing to pay more than the investment bank is owed, would be in a position to resume condo sales efforts or restructure the existing operating plan.

The original plan was created by a partnership led by Miami-based hotel investment and development firm Gencom Group, which bought the then-548-room hotel on land leased from Maui Land in 2006 for about $200 million.
At that time, Hawaii’s real estate and tourism markets were peaking, with annual visitor arrivals topping 7 million and luxury resort condos selling for eye-popping prices.

Initially, Gencom and partners Highgate Holdings and an investment fund affiliated with Goldman Sachs announced plans for a $45 million renovation. Then in 2007, the Gencom-led partnership said it would spend $95 million on the renovation and convert 107 units in the hotel to condos by reducing the number of hotel rooms.

Maui Land sold the land under the hotel in 2007 to the partnership for $25 million plus what ended up being a 16 percent ownership stake in the project.

The hotel was closed from July to December 2007 for the redevelopment work, which swelled to $180 million as the real estate market was cooling.

Still, the plan appeared on track for success as Gencom announced in early 2008 that it had signed 93 binding condo sales contracts for an average of $1.9 million, or $176 million in total.

Most of those sales, however, failed to close. Ultimately, only 34 sales were completed. Since then, the market has struggled with recovery, as one unit in the project that sold for $1.48 million in 2008 was resold last June for $700,000, according to property records.

Up for auction will be the 73 unsold condo units, 297 hotel units, common areas, commercial space and 21 acres of undeveloped land. The assets are being sold in bulk, not separately. The auction is scheduled for May 5 on Maui.
Local real estate industry executive Chris Lau is serving as foreclosure commissioner handling the auction.
Lau said early interest has been strong. “I’ve had many, many calls,” he said.

Under auction rules, Lehman could assume ownership if no one is willing to bid more than what it is owed, though the investment bank could let a bidder acquire the property for less.

A winning bid is subject to confirmation by a Circuit Court judge.

Joseph Toy, principal of Hospitality Advisors LLC, noted that several other Hawaii hotels that went to foreclosure auction during the economic downturn were retained by lenders, though he said it is too hard to predict whether someone will outbid Lehman for the Ritz-Carlton Kapalua. “You just don’t know,” he said.

If the hotel changes hands at auction, the Ritz-Carlton Kapalua would have its fourth owner since it was built in 1992. Japan-based Nissho Iwai Corp., Ritz-Carlton Co. and Maui Land developed the hotel in 1992 for $206 million. After the hotel struggled financially in the mid-1990s, Nissho bought out its partners in 1996, and in 2001 sold the hotel to Marriott International and investment firm Blackacre Capital Management LLC for $144 million.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Maui Vacation Rentals Becoming a More Popular Option

Islands have always been, and will always be, popular vacation spots. People love the coast. And, well, islands have a lot of it. In years past, however, when people have planned their tropical getaways, they typically look into a few sprawling resorts. Massive hotels with expansive swimming pools and private beaches lined with plastic lounge chairs and tiki huts. But recently, more and more people have been turning to Maui vacation rentals.

Simply put, Maui vacation rentals offer a different experience than Maui resorts. A vacation rental gives you a slice of life on Maui. They break you out of the resort bubble. They place you into your own Maui home or condo for a week, two weeks, or however long you plan to stay. You’ll enjoy more space and more privacy than you would at virtually any resort – and for less money. Inventory is up, and prices are down, making it easy to book a Maui vacation rental for your next getaway.

We should also point out that this is a two-way street. Maui vacation rentals aren’t just becoming more popular with travelers. They’re becoming more popular with second-home owners as well. With the tumultuous economy, many people have found it hard to keep that second home. However, they’re also in no position to sell. What they can do, though, is generate some extra income by renting their home out during the peak of vacation season.

Whether you’re planning an exotic getaway or you want to turn your home into a Maui vacation rental, we can help. Get in contact with us today for a hassle-free consultation.

Travel Feature Look At The Wailea Beach Villas

Expect the personal touch from Wailea Beach Villas

By Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi
Article from: Star-Advertiser

The Wailea Beach Villa’s infinity pool is just steps from Wailea Beach.

Toronto executive Ann Marie Keating checked into Wailea Beach Villas on Jan. 12. She extended her stay at the exclusive residential vacation resort twice — the first time for five days, the second time for a month. She won’t be relinquishing her ocean-view penthouse until April 12.

“I love it here!” Keating said. “Three months is the longest consecutive period I’ve ever been away from my home and office.”

She tips her hat to Wailea Beach Villas’ staff, whose exemplary service has enabled her to enjoy a stress-free Maui escape while running her companies and working on her Ph.D. in clinical psychology.

“The day I arrived, I got a headache and couldn’t think clearly because of the vog,” Keating recalled. “When the concierge heard about it, he brought me a homeopathic remedy. A light bulb burned out, and someone from maintenance was here within five minutes to replace it. When outdoor lights were shining into the bedroom at night, disrupting my sleep, workers came to install blackout blinds. Everyone has bent over backwards to ensure I’m happy and comfortable.”

IF YOU Go …

Wailea Beach Villas
» Address: 3800 Wailea Alanui, Wailea Resort, Maui
» Phone: 891-4500 or toll free 866-901-5207

» Starting nightly rates: Regular, $1,200; Komo Mai, $900, including a car; Kamaaina, $765 (Komo Mai and Kamaaina rates subject to change). Three-night minimum stay for all bookings. Beach Escape package (prices begin at $795 per night) has a seven-night minimum.
» Email: info@waileabeachvillas.com
» Website: http://www.waileabeachvillas.com/

Set on 11 beachfront acres, Wailea Beach Villas caters to a discriminating clientele. Most of the resort’s 98 luxurious villas and penthouses open to spectacular views of Lanai, Kahoolawe, Molokini islet, the West Maui Mountains and, this time of year, pods of breaching whales. Accommodations range between 1,900 and 3,100 square feet in size, with two-bedroom units sleeping up to six people and three-bedroom units sleeping up to eight.

Amenities include a soaking tub, full-size washer and dryer, barbecue grill on the lanai, flat-screen televisions in the living room and all bedrooms, and a fully equipped gourmet kitchen. For an additional fee, the refrigerator and pantry can be stocked with breakfast fixings prior to your arrival (special requests can also be accommodated). Even better, a private chef can be retained to prepare all of your meals, some of them or a menu for a special occasion. Jeff Scheer, chef/owner of Maui Executive Catering, created a memorable evening for a couple from San Francisco who were celebrating their first anniversary at Wailea Beach Villas.

“The gentleman wanted it to be a surprise for his wife,” Scheer said. “He requested a menu of their favorite dishes with a local twist. His wife loved fresh pasta, so I made Molokai sweet potato agno­lotti with sage, brown butter and shaved pro­sciutto. After hearing him talk about a fish-and-chip pub that they often went to, I got the inspiration for another course: crispy-skin opakapaka served with garlic chips. Pale green and white was the color scheme for their wedding, so that’s what we used for the linens and tablecloths. The centerpiece was a beautiful bouquet of white roses and green orchids.”

At the resort’s state-of-the-art fitness facility, cardio machines are linked to individual entertainment devices that include headsets and access to 60 cable television stations. You can arrange private Pilates and yoga classes, and workouts with a personal trainer who can design a program that fits your goals and lifestyle.

Golf, surfing, snorkeling, kayaking, biking, hiking, helicopter tours, horseback rides and more — the concierge can keep your days as busy as you desire. Charlie Fleck, Wailea Beach Villa’s “adventure guide,” specializes in customized eco-conscious excursions.

“I do everything at a leisurely pace so participants feel like they’re on an outing with friends rather than a tour,” Fleck said. “I often bring my dog, Barley Hops, along on hikes. We go to waterfalls visitors wouldn’t otherwise see, and I take pictures throughout the day so they can focus on having fun. I later burn the pictures on a CD as a gift for them.”

Lunch could be fresh fruit; different cheeses and crackers; and sandwiches Fleck makes with deli meats, Kula tomatoes and focaccia at a pretty picnic site.

“For example, we could eat in a rain forest or atop a hill overlooking the ocean,” he said. “That’s something visitors don’t usually get to do at home. Unlike most other tours, we don’t have to keep to a specific schedule. We leave when they’re ready.”

From arrival to departure, a stay at Wailea Beach Villas is marked by extra services and attention to the smallest details. Would an au pair or butler be helpful? That can be arranged. Do you need a playpen and highchair for your baby? Ask and they’ll be delivered to your door. The resort even provides complimentary welcome gifts for keiki, sunblock and chilled water at the pools, and household items right down to the paper towels and laundry detergent.

Businesswoman Keating also appreciates the peace and privacy. “I start my day with meditation and yoga just as I do at home, but on my lanai I have the added benefit of a fantastic ocean view,” she said. “I make my own breakfast and lunch, and eat when I want to without having to dress up to go out, think about restaurants’ hours or deal with crowds. If I need something, I know the staff will come through with flying colors. All this makes it easy to relax on a deeper level and to enjoy the beauty and aloha around me.”

———
Cheryl Chee Tsutsumi is a Honolulu-based freelance writer whose travel features for the Star-Advertiser have won multiple Society of American Travel Writers awards


**If you would like more information on units available for purchase at The Wailea Beach Villas or to check availability of the Hansens rental unit please call (808)879-3667**

Ritz-Carlton Kapalua Heads To Auction

Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua heads to auction
Lenders foreclose on luxury resort

March 26, 2011 – By HARRY EAGAR, Staff Writer
Article from: The Maui News

Lenders have foreclosed on the Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua resort, with the luxury property scheduled to be sold at foreclosure auction in Wailuku on May 5.

Securities filings by minority owner Maui Land & Pineapple Co. have revealed for more than two years that the property was in default on a loan that totaled as much as $300 million with accrued interest. But the owners previously had said little except that they hoped to renegotiate the debt.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and SASCO 2008-C2 foreclosed March 17.

Documents presented to 2nd Circuit Judge Shackley Raffetto showed that in March 2007, very close to the last moments before the sickness that was soon to engulf Wall Street began to show its symptoms, W2005 Kapalua/Gengate Hotel Realty borrowed $232 million against the property.

The money was used for a complete renovation of the hotel – one of Maui’s newest big resorts – which was closed for most of 2007.

The overhaul included converting one wing of rooms to condominiums, and nearly three dozen of those were sold, with the amount of the principal reduced proportionately by those sales.

Meanwhile, much drama was occurring nearby. Lehman Brothers went bankrupt in 2008, and that threatened the financing for construction of the Residences at Kapalua Bay. Maui Land & Pineapple, which had participated in the Ritz loans by providing the land for the hotel, was a partner in the Residences, and lost hundreds of millions of dollars on the project. At the same time, it was being dragged down by the failure of its money-losing pineapple operations.

ML&P’s financial filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission provided limited insight into the woes of the Ritz. Default was entered in April 2009.

The loan was scheduled to have matured in February 2009, but owner W2005 Kapalua/Gengate exercised an option to extend the loan for one year.
As of Nov. 10, the amount owed was $268 million.

Earlier this month, Raffetto appointed Christopher Lau commissioner for the foreclosure sale. Lau was also the commissioner in the record-setting foreclosure auction of Makena Resort last year.

Lau has scheduled the sale for 11 a.m. May 5 at the Wailuku courthouse.

Since the ownership of the giant hotel has been broken up, the sale is for guest rooms that have not already sold as condos, along with other areas including the spa, and common areas – for a total of 262 guest rooms, 34 executive suites and one regular suite, 73 residential suites, the restaurants and lounges, pools, the fitness center, tennis courts and 48 acres of oceanfront land.

The property also comes with the status of a AAA Five-Diamond resort, since despite all its financial troubles, the luxurious hotel has continued to maintain its reputation as a tourist destination.

There will be showings to prospective buyers from 1 to 4:30 p.m. April 21 and 28, through Lau. The hotel management is not involved and should not be contacted with questions about the sale.

For information, contact Christopher Lau, commissioner, 220 S. King St., Suite 960, Honolulu 96813; or (808) 291-3511; or claukapalua@aol.com.

Lau said Friday that he will shortly have an information package available for bidders.
The lender can bid its interest, and any bidder will be required to pay 10 percent down.

As provided for in state law, the foreclosure auction cannot be forestalled by the borrower’s paying off the loan. But the winning bidder on the courthouse steps will have to have its bid confirmed by the court. At that time, any new bidders can reopen the auction by topping the May 5 top number by 5 percent.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Maui County Agricultural Festival On The Way April 2nd

Maui County Agricultural Festival on the way

March 24, 2011
Article from: The Maui News

WAIKAPU – Maui farmers, chefs and locavores will gather next month to celebrate island agriculture at the fourth annual Maui County Agricultural Festival.

The event – which includes keiki activities, food booths, animal and farm exhibits and cooking demonstrations – highlights local farms and produce in an effort to raise awareness about the importance of agriculture on Maui. This year’s festival will feature the “cole” family of vegetables, including cabbages, kale and broccoli, which make up a key crop for local farmers.

The festival will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 2 on the luau grounds of the Maui Tropical Plantation. The Maui County Farm Bureau and the county Office of Economic Development organize the event, which is expected to draw more than 5,000 people, according to a release.
Farm Bureau Executive Director Warren Watanabe said cabbages and other coles are “often overlooked” by local consumers but are an essential crop for Maui farmers.

“Head cabbage in particular thrives on the cool volcanic slopes of Kula,” farmer Ralph Inouye said. “Because it’s a fairly stable and transportable plant, it’s a key crop in Maui’s agricultural viability.”

Cabbage also is an excellent source of vitamins and fiber, a release said. Coles will be featured in the festival’s “Taste Education” segment, which will include cooking demonstrations by local chefs and a tasting of the dishes they prepare. Tickets for “Taste Education” are $25 for adults or $15 for children under 12; tickets will be $30 for adults or $20 for children if purchased after Wednesday.

Home cooks also can compete in contests for banana bread and pickled vegetable recipes.
Other highlights of the festival include:

* A “Victory Farm” display of local crops.

* Farm animal exhibit by Maui Cattle Co.

* “Grown on Maui” farmers market.

* Food booths.

* Keiki activities.

* Healthy cooking demonstrations by Down to Earth, Susan Campbell and kumu hula Kapono’ai Molitau.

* A “Farm Doctor” booth with agricultural experts providing advice to gardeners.

* Storytelling.

* Bookstore.
For more information on the event or the recipe contests, or to order tickets for “Taste Education,” visit http://www.mauicountyfarmbureau.org/.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Maui Planning Commissioners Praise Proposed Wind Farm Idea

Wind farm idea draws praise

Doubts linger on logistics of Upcountry construction

March 23, 2011 – By HARRY EAGAR, Staff Writer
Article from: The Maui News

WAILUKU – Maui planning commissioners Tuesday praised a proposed wind farm as a “wonderful, wonderful project” but raised doubts about getting the massive equipment to the remote location on the southwest flank of Haleakala between two sections of the Auwahi native plant restoration area.
The commission was commenting on a draft environmental impact statement for Sempra Energy’s proposed wind project at Ulupalakua.

Worries about losing the last highway ocean views to what Chairman Jonathan Starr called “pole land” also came up Tuesday. But the wind farm itself was warmly received, with Starr wishing only that it could be bigger than the 21 megawatts proposed.

Pardee Erdman, of Ulupalakua Ranch, which will lease nearly 1,500 acres to Sempra, called the project “a win-win for the ranch.” He said the infrastructure needed to transport heavy turbines and lengthy vanes will “make that land more productive than it is today,” although he added, “We are going to continue raising cattle.”

Maui Electric Co. has contracted to begin purchasing wind electricity from the project a year from now.

But developers still have to obtain many permits before they can proceed, including a special management area permit for parts of the project makai of the road to Kahikinui.

That troubled Commissioner Kent Hiranaga, as well as Starr. As proposed now, the 23,000-volt transmission line would run along the highway through Ulupalakua for a distance makai before crossing mauka. The poles would be 60 feet tall and wooden, but Starr wondered whether the line couldn’t be buried, at least for the portion makai, which he described as some of the finest scenic views in the islands.

Hiranaga wondered whether the mitigative measure shouldn’t be moving the farm itself mauka.

Mitch Dmohowski, Sempra’s project manager, said the developers looked at two potential areas, but ultimately chose the makai site because it had better conditions.

“It’s the best wind site I’ve ever seen,” he said.

Hiranaga suggested that by adding a few more towers, the project could generate the same amount of electricity at the mauka site.

“You have to satisfy us that the loss of the view plane is justified,” he said.

Preliminary estimates call for between eight and 15 wind towers, depending on the size of the turbines installed.

Judith and Richard Michaels, residents of Makena Surf, questioned the developers’ plans for access to the site.

The more direct route would appear to be via Kula Highway, but the developers prefer a more circuitous route down Piilani Highway, along Wailea and Makena alanuis and up a private ranch road, which will have to be considerably improved.

Along the way, medians on the alanuis would have to be torn up, trees cut back and several traffic signals at intersections temporarily removed.

The Michaelses pointed out that, toward the end of that trip, the pavement narrows to a two-lane rural road that, south of the Fairmont Kea Lani hotel, is the only way out. If there were a mishap with one of the 116 “superloads,” Judith Michaels said, “we could not get out.”

An extension of Piilani Highway higher up might prove more practical, they said, particularly if the developer of Honua’ula were persuaded to participate in the improvements in order to get a construction access road to its 670 acres.

There is another ranch road from that area that approaches the wind farm site, but Erdman cautioned that the engineering to make that path usable would be formidable.

In any case, commissioners asked that the study investigate alternatives.

Other areas that commissioners wanted expanded on in the nearly 400-page report included effects on native dryland vegetation and birds, benefits to people living in Kaupo and Kahikinui, demand for water, and who will be responsible for removing the equipment, towers and associated substations at the end of the farm’s useful life.

Dmohowski said the equipment is expected to be good for 25 years, but depending on conditions at that time, Sempra might want to rebuild it rather than abandon it.

Copies of the draft EIS can be found on the website of The Environmental Notice of the Hawaii Office of Environmental Quality Control. Visit hawaii.gov/health/environmental/oeqc/index.html.

Send comments to the applicant, Auwahi Energy LLC, 101 Ash St., HQ 14, San Diego, Calif., 92101, attention, Mitch Dmohowski; to the accepting authority, County of Maui, Planning Commission, 250 S. High St., Wailuku 96793, attention Joe Prutch; or the consultant, Tetra Tech EC Inc., 737 Bishop St., Suite 3020, Honolulu 96813, attention Anna Mallon.

The deadline to comment is April 21.

State of Hawaii Jobless Rate Remains at 6.3%

State jobless rate remains at 6.3%

The hospitality and professional sectors gain, while trade and construction cut jobs

By Alan Yonan Jr.
Article from: Star-Advertiser

Hawaii’s unemployment rate held steady at 6.3 percent in February for the third consecutive month as the state’s lackluster economic recovery failed to spur any significant job growth, the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations reported yesterday.

The jobless rate has inched downward since peaking at 7 percent in mid-2009, when recession-weary businesses were laying off workers to cut costs. Hawaii’s unemployment rate was as low as 2.3 percent in 2006 before the recession hit. Nationally the unemployment rate fell to 8.9 percent in February from 9 percent in January.

The recession officially ended in June 2009, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research.

However, job growth often lags during an economic recovery because businesses that cut payrolls during slow times are reluctant to refill those positions until they are assured that the economic growth is solid.

The University of Hawaii Economic Research Organization is forecasting the state unemployment rate to average 6 percent this year and 5.3 percent in 2012.

The unemployment rate is derived from a telephone survey of Hawaii households conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A separate BLS survey of businesses showed that the number of nonagricultural jobs in Hawaii was unchanged at 595,700 in February.

The professional and businesses serv­ices sector gained 1,000 jobs, according to the DLIR report. Three other categories — leisure and hospitality, financial activities and other serv­ices — each added 100 jobs.

The trade, transportation and utilities sector lost 800 positions, while job losses in the construction industry totaled 100.

The state unemployment rate is adjusted for seasonal variations, like extra hiring by retailers for the holidays. Rates for individual counties are reported on an unadjusted basis. Honolulu had the lowest jobless rate at 5.2 percent, followed by Maui County at 7.9 percent, Kauai County at 8.5 percent and Hawaii County at 9.4 percent.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Kaiwahine Village Affordable Housing Project in Kihei Narrowly Approved

Affordable housing project in Kihei OK’d

March 19, 2011 – By MELISSA TANJI, Staff Writer
Article from: The Maui News

WAILUKU – The Maui County Council on Friday narrowly approved the proposed Kaiwahine Village affordable housing project in Kihei.

After more than an hour of discussion that included the addition of five new conditions to the north Kihei project, the council voted 5-4 to adopt the resolution.
“I feel ecstatic that most of the council agreed (with me). I’m sad that I couldn’t get through to the ones that voted no,” said developer John Sindoni after the meeting.

“I’m going to prove to the county our commitment to affordable housing. I’m excited about it,” he added.

Council members who voted in favor of the project were Gladys Baisa, Robert Carroll, Don Couch, Mike Victorino and Mike White. Elle Cochran, Riki Hokama, Danny Mateo and Joe Pontanilla voted no.

Royal Main Properties LLC proposes to build Kaiwahine Village as a 120-unit multifamily subdivision with a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom units in 15 buildings, off-street parking and other improvements on 9.3 acres at the intersection of Kaiwahine and Hale Kai streets.
The project, which was going through the state’s fast-track approval process, came under fire from area residents citing concerns about more traffic and people in the crowded area. Some council members suggested Friday that Kaiwahine was a market-priced project disguised as an affordable housing project.

Unions and construction workers have come forward to support the project, which they say could result in jobs and affordable housing for working families.

Baisa called the project a “difficult matter” and said it was sad some neighbors opposed the project. She said she would support the project but with reservations, adding, “It’s rare we have a 100 percent housing project put before us.”

Council members pointed out that many affordable housing projects have not been constructed, and Baisa acknowledged that.

“It remains to be seen if this will ever be built,” she said.

Council Member Mike White said, “I’m supporting this project wholeheartedly.”

He said adding conditions for developers, as in this case, hampers construction of affordable housing projects. He felt one condition added Friday should be a county expense because “everybody uses it.”

That condition requires Royal Main to resurface Kaiwahine Street.

Pontanilla, who had voted on the Land Use Committee against the project, offered four project conditions, which were approved, as follows:

* To designate the homes as “affordable” for three years instead of one year before they are eligible to be sold at market rates. (Affordable is defined as within the means of households, whose incomes are from 60 to 80 percent of the area median income, as established by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development or as adjusted by the Department of Housing and Human Concerns for Hana, Lanai and Molokai.)

* After the three-year affordability period, the developer shall forfeit one housing credit for each unit sold at market rates equal to the value assigned for that unit.

* For any unit sold at market rates, the director of Housing and Human Concerns shall assess that unit’s pro-rata portion of the total value of the exemptions listed for the project. Funds would go to the Department of Parks and Recreation or the affordable housing fund, depending on the circumstances.

* During the construction phase, Royal Main Properties cannot have under its control vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 10,000 pounds or more travel on Hale Kai Street. Couch introduced the amendment to make Royal Main repave Hale Kai Street.

After the meeting, Sindoni said he didn’t object to the added conditions and is “more than happy” to accommodate Pontanilla’s modifications.

“I don’t have a problem with any of it,” Sindoni said.

Carroll, who heads the Land Use Committee that wrangled with the project, said the panel did its best to make a decision in the 45-day period allowed under state law.

The state’s fast-track approval process exempts affordable housing developments from certain land use and other governmental requirements.

Friday’s council discussions resembled those usually held at the committee level.

“This wouldn’t have happened if we had additional time,” Carroll said.

He added that Pontanilla’s amendment to extend the project’s affordability timeline also was discussed but turned down during committee review.
Besides the five conditions approved Friday, the Land Use Committee recommended:
* Driver feedback signs that tell motorists how fast they are going, to be installed on Kaiwahine and Hale Kai streets.

* A turnaround area for firetrucks.

* That the developer set maximum values for the 120 housing credits, as follows: $54,000 for one-bedroom units, $67,000 for two-bedroom units, and $75,000 for three-bedroom units. (Housing credits traditionally have been provided under the county’s residential work- force housing ordinance and not for a fast-track affordable housing application.)

* That construction begin within five years and be completed within 10 years. A request for a time extension would have to be filed at least 90 days before the designated construction date to be considered.

* If some units are converted to market prices, the developer would pay the state Department of Education appropriate impact fees for each market unit sold, with the money going to Kihei public schools.

Estimated prices for the units are $180,000 for one-bedroom units, $225,000 for two-bedroom and $250,000 for three-bedroom.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Solar Water Heater Rebate To Double

Solar water heater rebate to double
Hawaii Energy will raise the cash return to $1,500 as a way of promoting sales

By Alan Yonan Jr.
Article from: Star-Advertiser
STAR-ADVERTISER

Hawaiian Electric Co. customers who install solar water heaters will receive a cash rebate of $1,500 for a limited time in an effort to lift sagging sales of the energy-efficient units. Here, Shree Sadagopan of True Green Solar inspects the solar water heating system his company installed on a Circle Drive home in Wahiawa.

A cash rebate for Hawaiian Electric Co. customers who install solar water heaters will double to $1,500 for a limited time in an effort to lift sagging sales of the energy-efficient units.

The rebate, which had been $750, will be available for systems purchased between Monday and May 31, or until program funds run out, said Hawaii Energy, the company that administers the state’s energy conservation program. The company did not say how much money is available for the program.

The enhanced rebate, combined with a 35 percent state tax credit and a 30 percent federal tax credit, will reduce the cost of a typical solar water heating system from $6,600 to $1,785.

Hawaii Energy said it is boosting the rebate to lift sluggish sales of solar water heating systems. Rebates given out for solar water heaters fell to 3,656 in 2010 from 8,770 in 2009, according to Hawaii Energy.

Program officials said a bold move to increase the rebate was needed to get people’s attention.
“We’re glad to be able to offer these bonus rebates to help residents take advantage of the benefits of solar water heating in these tough economic times,” said Ray Starling, program manager for Hawaii Energy. “Solar water heating significantly reduces electricity usage and helps to lessen our state’s dependence on imported oil.”

Solar water heaters, which can cut water heating costs by up to 90 percent over an electric resistance heater, are considered one of the most cost-effective ways to cut a household power bill. Once installed, a system will pay for itself in two to four years depending on electricity rates, according to Hawaii Energy.
The standard $750 rebate is paid for by a fee levied on Hawaiian Electric Co. ratepayers. The increased rebate is funded through a federal stimulus grant.

The offer is available on Oahu, the Big Island and in Maui County.

Homeowners also will have the option of combining the old $750 rebate with a new $1,000-interest-free loan. That program, also funded with federal stimulus money, allows participating financial intuitions to make interest-free loans to homeowners for solar water heaters.

The rebates are not available for solar water heaters installed on new homes. A state law that went into effect Jan. 1, 2010, requires most new homes to be built with solar water heaters.

With about 80,000 solar water heaters installed, Hawaii leads the nation in the number of solar heating systems on a per capita basis, according to the Hawaii Solar Energy Association. Over the past three decades the penetration level for residential single-family homes has grown to about 30 percent, the trade group said.

However, the penetration rate should be even higher given Hawaii’s abundant sunshine and the various incentives available to homeowners, the association said. Growth of new installations has slowed for a variety of reasons, including aesthetic considerations, lack of understanding of the benefits of solar water heating, and the inability to finance the uppoint cost, according to the association.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Governor Abercrombie Visits Islands ~ Aims To Show Its Business As Usual

Gov. Abercrombie visits Maui to assess tsunami damage (video available)
Article from: The Maui News

MAALAEA — Gov. Neil Abercrombie made a brief stop at Maalaea Harbor Tuesday afternoon to talk to those affected by Friday’s tsunami and assess damage to the small-boat harbor.

The stop was one of at least two on Neighbor Islands Tuesday. Earlier, the governor visited the highly impacted Kona area on the Big Island.
At Maalaea Harbor, Abercrombie chatted with people who work on fishing and tour boats as well as visitors.

Donalyn Dela Cruz, the governor’s press secretary, said part of the aim of the trip was to show that it’s business as usual in the islands despite the impacts of the tsunami generated by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake that hit Japan Thursday evening, Hawaii time.
Mayor Alan Arakawa joined Abercrombie on the visit to Maalaea Harbor. Both men said they are trying to obtain federal funds to pay for repairs.

For more details and a full story, see Wednesday’s edition of The Maui News.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

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Monday, March 14, 2011

$5K collected so far for fireworks show

March 13, 2011
Article From: The Maui News
LAHAINA – After a month of fundraising, the Maui Chamber of Commerce has garnered more than $5,000 toward its goal of collecting $50,000 to pay for a Fourth of July fireworks show off Front Street.

Donations came from 14 businesses and individuals, including “major contributors” the Hard Rock Cafe, Expeditions Lahaina Ferry Co., the Wharf Cinema Center, Kimo’s Restaurant and the Pacific Whale Foundation.

Others who helped the chamber raise 12 percent of its goal thus far included The Maui News, Lahaina News, David Paul’s Island Grill, Atlantis Submarines, Maui USA Realty, state Sen. Roz Baker, Realtor Joe Pluta, Lokelani Construction, Lahaina Inn and Maui Communicators.

Businesses or individuals who want to contribute should contact the chamber at 244-0081.

* * *
Developer to speak at Waikapu meeting

WAIKAPU – Developer Mike Atherton will speak at a Waikapu Community Association meeting at 7 p.m. Monday at the Waikapu Community Center.

He will discuss Waikapu Country Town project conceptual plans involving the area around his Maui Tropical Plantation and makai of Honoapiilani Highway.

Atherton’s commentary “relates directly to the ongoing review of the Maui Island Plan now before the Maui County Council,” a news release said.

For more information, contact Waikapu Community Association officials by sending e-mail to waikapuca@hawaii.rr.com.

* * *
Mayor to speak at Rotary Club lunch

KAHULUI – Mayor Alan Arakawa will speak to the Rotary Club of Kahului at noon Monday in the Class Act restaurant at the University of Hawaii Maui College.

Club members will get an update on the state of the county.

The club meets from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondays in the college’s Pa’ina Building, second floor. Lunch costs $20, or there’s a $5 program fee.

For more information, call 875-0500 or send e-mail to club President Leslie Mullens at lmullens@yahoo.com.

* * *
Work force issues highlight of forum

KAHULUI – Work force development issues and initiatives will take center stage Wednesday at a community forum sponsored by the Aging with Aloha Coalition.

The event is set for 4 to 6 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Cultural Hall, 125 W. Kamehameha Ave. in Kahului. The coalition will share information about initiatives its partners have designed and implemented to support growth in Maui’s work force.

Speakers include Teisha Zablan, Coalition Workforce Education Committee chairwoman; Dr. Alfred Arensdorf, president of the Maui County Medical Society and Coalition co-chairman of its Policy and Advocacy Committee; and Coalition Director Rita Barreras.

For more information about the forum and to volunteer, call 871-7749.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

After Tense Night ~ Damage Light

After tense night, damage light

Officials assess losses from early-morning tsunami

March 12, 2011 – By BRIAN PERRY, City Editor
Article from: The Maui News

WAILUKU – After a night of suspense, preparation and, for some, seeking higher ground, Mauians saw in the first light of day Friday how an earthquake-generated tsunami had washed in to low-lying areas, damaging homes, boats and harbors and disrupting lives.

There were no reports of injuries or loss of life, said Rod Antone, the county communications director. But flood damage was reported in at least three homes in Kihei and one in Kahului, he said. The Red Cross was responding to provide assistance.

Roads and schools were closed, although most public schools already had been scheduled to be shut for furloughs. Kahului Airport remained open, although roads leading to it were closed, along with most roads near the ocean while there was a risk of tsunami inundation. Most roads were reopened by noon.

An 8.9-magnitude earthquake off the east coast of northern Japan triggered Pacific-wide tsunami warnings. The tsunami advisory for Hawaii was lifted as of 11:26 a.m. Friday.

At Maalaea Harbor, Antone said, four boats sustained major damage. Substantial damage also was seen at Manele Harbor on Lanai.

Mayor Alan Arakawa took a helicopter flight Friday morning to assess damage. He said he saw substantial damage to Maalaea Harbor and numerous areas where the tidal surge made its way at least 100 yards onshore. In places, highway jersey barriers were pushed aside by the surge of water, he reported.
Near Kanaha Beach Park, Arakawa said, he could see where vegetation had been devastated by the tsunami.

“The wave just ripped a lot of vegetation out of the ground and moved inland,” he said.

Arakawa said he and others aboard the helicopter saw homeless people near the mouth of Iao Stream and dispatched authorities to move them out of harm’s way.

Department of Water Supply Director Dave Taylor and Department of Public Works Director David Goode took separate helicopter flights to assess damage, the mayor said.

Damage assessments were ongoing Friday, Arakawa said.

A Maui Fire Department crew also did an aerial reconnaissance at 6 a.m., but firefighters saw no evidence of residents in distress from the tsunami, Antone said.

He said he was on Puunene Avenue with county Managing Director Keith Regan and Deputy Communications Director Ryan Piros when the tsunami hit and brought ocean water as far inland as Walgreens at the intersection of Puunene and Kamehameha avenues.

“It was really amazing,” he said, adding that they could see the wave surge approaching them. “Before we knew it, it was at our car. We had to jump in and take off.”

Antone said officials from the Water Supply and Environmental Management departments took steps to protect electrical facilities at water pump stations and at island wastewater reclamation sites. As of 10 a.m., all those facilities had been returned to normal operation.

The county reported two wastewater overflows discovered around 7:30 a.m. Friday – one in Paukukalo and another in Napili. The Paukukalo spill was of about 40 gallons from a Waiehu Beach Road manhole fronting a pump station and a storm drain, and the other was of an unknown amount from a Lower Honoapiilani Highway manhole fronting a Napili sewage pump station. In both cases, the standing water was removed, and the area of the spill was disinfected.
County officials also received reports of marine life washing ashore in the Kanaha Beach Park area, Antone said.

People were picking up fish and octopuses from the road, he said. A fire crew was dispatched to pick up a 40- to 50-pound sea turtle and return it to the ocean.
Arakawa said he was pleased overall with the county’s tsunami response, which included providing shelter to hundreds of residents seeking higher ground.

“We were able to evacuate people literally in the middle of the night,” he said.

****We will be posting videos later today taken from around the island yesterday****

Friday, March 11, 2011

Condition Updates For Maui and The Big Island

Waves bring flooding on Maui, damage in Kailua-Kona

By Michael Tsai
Article from: Star-Advertiser

On the Neighbor Islands, damage was reported in Kailua-Kona and flooding was reported in Kahului, where the surge reached a third of a mile inland.

Big Island Mayor Billy Kenoi’s office confirmed that “damaging waves” hit Kailua-Kona around 5:30 a.m., roughly two hours after the first surge was expected. The waves caused relatively minor but widespread damage in the area.

According to Hawaii County Civil Defense official John Drummond, a foot of water rushed into the lobby of the King Kamehameha Kona Beach Hotel; the water also destroyed several canoes stored in front of the hotel.

Water also entered the interior of Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. and several other businesses fronting Kailua Bay. While wave heights have not yet been determined, Kenoi’s office received reports that some of the surges reached the tops of portable toilet booths in the area.

The damage was discovered this morning when police officers and other county workers returned to the inundation zone.

County spokesperson Hunter Bishop said that surges were still being reported as of 8 a.m. this morning. He stressed that the Big Island is still observing tsunami warning precautions and that residents should continue to stay away from coastal areas until the county makes an “all clear” declaration.

Big Island Civil Defense is also looking into reports that a house in Kealakekua was swept away by the rising waters.
According to multiple reports out of Maui, waves crossed Kaahumanu Street in Kahului, reaching six to eight inches on the roadway at one point.

Unconfirmed reports also indicated water climbing the seawall and cross Front Street in Lahaina.

Waves reached as high as 9 feet in Kahului, according to Maui civil defense.

Maui County spokesperson Rod Antone said county officials tracked the progress of the waves overnight from atop a nearby building.

This morning, Mayor Alan Arakawa joined directors from Public Works, Wastewater Management and the Department of Water Supply in a helicopter fly-over of the island to assess the damage.

Two initial surges of six to seven feet hit Kahului in the first hours of the tsunami. A third, more powerful surge, which included waves estimated at 9 feet, followed just before daybreak and advanced as much as a block inland.

Gerard Fryer, scientist with the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, said the water reached a third of mile inland.

South Kihei Road was also reported to be flooded.

Arakawa confirmed that some low-lying areas had been flooded and that businesses near Kahului Harbor were damaged by water.

While most roads and streets in the inundation zone remain closed, Maui police did reopen two high-traffic intersections: Hana and Haleakala Highways and Hana Highway and Baldwin Avenue.

Antone said the island’s 14 evacuation centers were filled, with as many as 500 people in some facilities.

There were no immediate reports of damage on Kauai, which was the first island to have the tsunami warning lifted at about 7:30 a.m.

On the Big Island, an estimate 1,000 people took shelter in 15 evacuation centers set up around the island, according to Kenoi’s office.

About 100 guests from the Hilo Hawaiian Hotel, on Banyan Drive next to Hilo Bay, accepted an invitation from Prince Kuhio Plaza mall manager Kimberley Shimabuku to spend the night at the mall. Other guests of the hotel were relocated to hotels and residences located further from the bay.

Neighbor Island civil defense departments reacted swiftly once yesterday’s tsunami watch was upgraded to a warning.

Big Island, Maui and Kauai officials all initiated evacuations of low-lying areas around 10 p.m. and posted warnings and advice via their websites and phone message lines.

The warning center provided continually updated predictions on when different coastal areas could expect to be hit, starting with Nawiliwili on Kauai and continuing through Honolulu, Kahului and Hilo.

“We had good leeway time,” said Big Island civil defense officer Duane Hosaka.

By 2 a.m. all neighbor island airports had been closed in anticipation of the tidal wave. Lihue Airport on Kauai was open by 7:45 a.m.
At 2:30 a.m., inundation zones along the north shore of Kauai from Hanalei to Kee had been cleared by police, according to resident Tom Finnegan. County officials had announced they were concentrating on securing the Poipu and North Shore resort communities. Traffic into those areas was shut down at 2:15 a.m., he said.

“It’s eerily quiet,” Finnegan said. “Everybody panicked between 10 and 12, and now people have hunkered down in front of their TVs.”
The parking lot at the Princeville Shopping Center was full, even though no stores were open. Finnegan said about 150 vehicles were parked there with people asleep inside. “It looks like the middle of the day in a busy shopping center except not one store is open,” he said.

Although Kauai is still under a tsunami warning, the County of Kauai plans to proceed with business as usual. Employees are advised to monitor the media for road closures and other information, and to report to work as they are able.

The County’s Ocean Safety Bureau advises all persons to stay out of the ocean for the remainder of the day today, even after the tsunami warning is lifted.
———
Rod Thompson on the Big Island contributed to this report.

Following are the Maui February 2011 Sales Statistics

Brief Maui Statistics Overview:

February’s Sales Volume –February’s Residential Sales held steady at 57 homes sold, while Condo Sales rose to 95 units sold. Land sales came in at 7 lots sold.

February’s Median SALES prices – Home median prices declined from January’s $495,415 to $440,000 while Condo median prices rose substantially to $376,000. Land median price was $282,500.

Days on Market for Residential homes = 149 DOM, Condos = 196 DOM, Land = 180 DOM.

(General DOM Note: this is the average DOM for the properties that SOLD. If predominantly OLD inventory sells, it can move this indicator upward, and vice versa. RAM’s Days on Market are calculated from List Date to Closing Date [not contract date]. As such, it includes approximately 60 days of escrow time.) Also – Short Sales transactions can often take 4-6 months to close thereby extending the

marketplace’s average DOM.

“Year to Date Sales” numbers only compare January-February 2011 to January-February 2010. Short timeframe (monthly) views do not necessarily reflect the longer timeframe trends.

Year to Date: Comparing January 2011 to January 2010 Residential unit sales rose (+9%), average sold price = $706,134 (-1%), median price = $450,000 (-7%) and total dollar volume sold = $78,380,919 (+7%).
Condo unit sales increased (+7%), average sold price = $513,007 (-24%), median price = $332,500 (-19%). Total Condo dollar volume sold = $93,367,305 (-19%).

Land – NOTE: Land Lot sales are such a small sampling that statistics in this property class are not necessarily reliable indicators. Land lot sales increased (-16%), average sold price = $814,739 (+73%), median price = $291,250 (-35%), Total dollar volume = $13,035,826 (+46%).

Also, total sales for immediately past 12 months: Residential = 821, Condo = 1,161, Land = 124.

March 10, 2011 – Active/Pending/Contingent status inventory:

Mar. Feb. Jan. Dec. Nov. Oct. Sept. Aug. July June May April Mar.

Homes 964 953 963 974 976 1,001 981 994 1,008 1,007 1,040 1,059 1,043

Condos 1,331 1,379 1,383 1,371 1,347 1,394 1,455 1,503 1,412 1,423 1,449 1,494 1,567

Land 557 566 569 601 596 601 620 604 601 591 579 585 568



Statistics provided by the Realtors Association of Maui (RAM)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Real Property Tax Assessment Notices for 2011 Will Be Mailed Tuesday

Tax notices going out

March 10, 2011
Article from: The Maui News

WAILUKU – Real property tax assessment notices for 2011 will be mailed to property owners by Tuesday, the county Department of Finance’s Real Property Tax Division announced this week.

The notices will show the net taxable value of land, any improvements on it, the amount of allowed exemptions, the person who received the exemption and the property’s classification.
Property owners should carefully review the document. If they disagree with property tax assessments in their notice, they may file an appeal with the Board of Review or the Tax Appeal Court.

Because the usual April 9 deadline is on a Saturday this year, the deadline for filing an appeal is the next Monday, April 11.

The assessment notice is not a bill. The first half installment for the 2011-2012 fiscal year will be mailed by July 20.

Property owners who do not receive assessment notice or have questions should contact the Real Property Tax Division at (808) 270-7297 or view assessment information at www.mauipropertytax.com.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Maui Makes Barrons List of Best Places for Second Homes Again

Best Places for Second Homes

By STEVEN M. SEARS AND MARK VEVERKA
Article from: Barrons.com

As prices of luxury homes rebound, we rank 15 stunning settings. A new No. 1

When Barron’s called the bottom of the market for expensive second homes just about a year ago, some folks wondered what kind of caviar we’d been eating.

Prices of high-end homes had sunk 20% from their 2007 peak, and vacation homes were doing even worse, with some markets off 40%. America’s mainstream housing scene was getting pounded by foreclosures, and anxious pundits were warning of a double-dip recession.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but we were right.

Home prices in moneyed enclaves from Beverly Hills to Aspen to Greenwich climbed more than 10% last year, according to data from realty brokers and other experts and conversations with local residents. Though the rebound has been lumpy, the general uptrend looks to be firmly in place.

Two years after the worst of the financial crisis, the rich have dusted themselves off and resumed some serious discretionary spending. Both sales volume and prices are clearly on the rise for luxury vacation homes, one of the greatest indulgences of all. Prices for the majority of the 15 locales in our annual ranking of best places for second homes climbed in 2010, sometimes dramatically.

In seeking out and ranking these havens, we looked for beauty, comfort, convenience, a range of lifestyles and — always the paramount criterion at Barron’s — value. We wanted prices that had clearly hit bottom and were either rising or ready to rise. When it comes to good value, our new No. 1, Sea Island, Ga., is an excellent case in point. Its prices plunged by a third last year as the resort’s parent company buckled from the weight of debt and filed for bankruptcy. But new owners, a group of heavy-hitting investors, are putting the 83-year-old idyll back on solid footing. That means that now could be the opportunity of a lifetime for buying into this resort island along Georgia’s coastline.

It’s breathtakingly beautiful — both the seaside landscape and the classically designed homes. And anyone with lingering concerns about the resort’s financials can take comfort in knowing that a pretty decent financial handyman lives just down the road — former Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson.
Across the board in luxury homes, sales and prices got an additional lift toward the end of last year, as political uncertainty eased and the Bush-era tax breaks were extended. “In three of our major recent sales, the buyers had properties under contracts last summer, then bailed out, but then came back,” says Brian Hazen, vice president of Mason Morse in Aspen.

The time may well have come for you to jump into the market. With that in mind, we went out and took the pulse of the very best places for second homes. For our notes from the field, please read on.
1. Sea Island, Ga.

Launched amid much fanfare in 1928, the Cloister Hotel on this coastal island survived the Great Depression and then spawned a vibrant resort community. The Great Recession, however, proved to be too much. After loading up on debt for an ambitious expansion, Sea Island Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection last summer and was rescued by a group of big investors, including Oaktree Capital, Starwood Capital, Avenue Capital and billionaire Philip Anschutz.

Sea Island is now ready to reclaim its old splendor and then some. It’s as beautiful as ever, surrounded by tranquil salt marshes and sweeping views of the ocean. The architecture includes some of Addison Mizner’s finest Mediterranean-style designs. As a homeowner, you gain access to the resort’s 65,000-square-foot spa, two championship golf courses, several fine yachts, acclaimed shooting school and five miles of private beaches.

You wouldn’t know any of that from the prices. They plunged by a third last year, even as the broader luxe housing market rebounded. But sales volume has picked up lately and prices are apt to follow.

Located midway between Jacksonville and Savannah, Sea Island already is something of a power alley. Residents include Don Keough, former president of Coca-Cola; software billionaire Tom Siebel and former Senator Sam Nunn. Former Treasury Secretary and Goldman Sachs chief Henry Paulson owns most of nearby Little St. Simons Island.

Median Home Price 2009: $3.3 million

Median Home Price 2010: $2.3 million

2. Maui, Hawaii

The price of paradise is about to go up. After two down years, sales are gaining strength in the serene and lovely towns of Wailea and Makena. Sales volumes in these adjacent locales rose 35% last year, and total dollar volume vaulted 135%. While the median home price is $1.7 million, the asking prices for the several oceanfront homes listed for sale in Wailea and Makena range from $5.7 million to $22 million. In all, there are 53 homes on the market. One of the best values is Makena Place, a gated community of just 10 homes on five acres at the ocean’s edge. You’ll get outstanding views of the Pacific Getting to truly sandy beaches requires a five-minute walk, so remember to pack the flip-flops.

Median 2009: $1.5 million

Median 2010: $1.7 million
3. Hamptons, N.Y.

The famed beaches, fine houses and exclusive restaurants of the Hamptons are all the more enjoyable if you can spring for a helicopter to get there. The flight from Wall Street is just 40 minutes, high above the epic traffic jams.

Plan on spending at least $10 million for a waterfront manse with a pool; small but serviceable inland homes can be had for $1 million. Realty firm Corcoran’s sales data suggest prices are steadying and sales are increasing. Some locals aren’t so sure and, as always, the market depends on Wall Street bonuses. Everyone does agree on this: The value of Hamptons property is unlikely to decrease over time, and it pays enormous dividends every summer.

Median 2009: $1.5 million

Median 2010: $1.6 million

4. Aspen, Colo.

If you’ve got $5 million or more, it’s nearly impossible to find a bad place to live in Aspen, where Victoria and David Beckham, Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, and many other such couples come to relax. Among the most exclusive digs are the 162 homes on Red Mountain, many of them ranch-size estates in a mosaic of uber-private subdevelopments.

With majestic views of Aspen Mountain and close proximity to the slopes, Red Mountain is the ski-town equivalent to beachfront property. For some, price is no object: A 21,477-square-foot home here on a mere 4.5 acres of land sold for $43 million in 2009. That said, the overall Aspen market is more affordable than during its peak in 2008. Don’t expect the deals to last for long: Red Mountain sales volumes doubled last year, and prices rose 14%.
Median 2009: $9.5 million

Median 2010: $10.8 million

5. Martha’s Vineyard, Mass.

Seven miles off the coast of Massachusetts, Martha’s Vineyard entered the popular imagination around 1993 when then-President Clinton and family vacationed at the home of his friend Vernon Jordan. President Obama has twice vacationed on the island since he took office. The vineyard is now a full-fledged international destination. Modest summer homes have been replaced by massive luxury manses, but local officials have wisely decreed that 2% of every real estate sale go to a land bank that buys up and preserves open spaces. You can’t go wrong buying into Chilmark or Edgartown. Chilmark prices:

Median 2009: $1.34 million

Median 2010: $1.35 million

6. Deer Valley, Utah

It couldn’t be easier to fly into this world-class ski haven. Abundant nonstop flights to Salt Lake City, which is less than an hour’s drive away, give the area a clear edge over other Rocky Mountain snow spots. Park City is the main commercial attraction, but the place to go for your hideaway is the gated community of Tuhaye. Built by Canadian-based Talisker, which developed much of Deer Valley and now owns the local Waldorf-Astoria hotel and Canyons ski resort, Tuhaye offers top-notch golf, great dining and the opportunity to custom-build the house of your dreams. Tuhaye prices:
2009 Median: No Sales

2010 Median: $1.3 million

7. Lake Tahoe, Calif.

Just a three- or four-hour drive from San Francisco, Tahoe has long been a favorite alpine retreat for Northern Californians. But it is about as fragmented — both in geography and demography — as any vacation area can get. The best place for a vacation home is Martis Camp in the northern reaches. It’s a five-year-old 2,177-acre master-planned development that has skiing, championship golf, a competition pool, fine dining and a great fishing hole. It will serve you well in summer, and even better in winter — an exclusive chair lift connects the village to the Northstar-at-Lake Tahoe slopes, offering rare ski-in/ski-out convenience. Twenty-five homes have been built, 54 are under construction and there will eventually be 653.

Median 2009: $1.9 million

Median 2010: $2.2 million

8. Kiawah Island, S.C.

This is a captivating barrier island off Charleston’s coast. It has 10 miles of beaches, five world-class golf courses, a spa, tennis and 4,100 homes stitched into the landscaping. Developers of gorgeous areas often succumb to the temptation of selling everything to the highest bidder, and cramming as many houses as possible onto the land, but Kiawah’s developers have protected the beauty of the place, creating a national treasure in the low country of South Carolina. Even when the national economy soured, and other luxury resorts were forced to sell property at discounted prices, Kiawah held firm and did not cut prices on any sites. In a clear sign of bullishness, the developers are now planning on bringing more land to market.

Median 2009: $1.2 million

Median 2010: $1.4 million

9. Palm Beach, Fla.

Palm Beach is part of the Iron Triangle of America’s high society: People live in New York, winter in Palm Beach and summer in the Hamptons. This pedigreed place — the Kennedys and the Vanderbilts had oceanfront homes here for decades — got its groove back in 2010, as residents recovered from the Bernie Madoff scandal and the ravages of the credit crisis.

Real estate — think red tile roofs, stucco the color of sand and beautiful archways — is firmly on the rebound. Recent sales on North Ocean Boulevard, which overlooks the Atlantic Ocean, include a $22.5 million classic Palm Beach manse with seven bedrooms and more than 10,000 square feet. The house you can see on page 14 was built on spec and is now listed for $84 million. When that one goes, Palm Beach will have fully returned to its glory days.

Median 2009: $2.6 million

Median 2010: $2.7 million

10. Pebble Beach, Calif.

Hell has frozen over, and Pebble Beach will never be the same. To nearly everyone’s surprise, funny man and amateur linkster Bill Murray recently won the legendary pro-am golf tournament at America’s most famous links. But Pebble Beach is no Caddyshack. In addition to the namesake golf course, Pebble is a community of some 2,500 high-end homes. tucked in the Del Monte Forest on the Monterey Peninsula. Sales are regaining their health, with two homes going for more than $7 million within a month. The big draw is no mystery: Pebble Beach is all about striking — and we’re not talking pickets.

Median 2009: $1.1 million

Median 2010: $1.1 million
Bob Hope and Dinah Shore would hardly recognize the old place. Late 20th century development spawned the local golf and tennis meccas of Palm Desert, La Quinta and Indian Wells, home of the Vintage Club, the most exclusive golf and tennis community around. Its award-winning Tom Fazio-designed links are surrounded by pristine lakes on 712 acres of plush oasis. Privacy and seclusion are the big differentiators at the Vintage Club, which boasts security systems designed specifically to keep the paparazzi at bay. Residents are said to include Bill Gates and Denzel Washington.
Median 2009: $2.6 million

Median 2010: $3.3 million

12. Brays Island Plantation, S.C.

This isn’t the kind of plantation where you pass the afternoon sipping mint juleps. Far from it. The 5,500-acre development wants to make you — and the kids — break a real sweat. Located halfway between Charleston and Savannah, Brays Island gives you fingertip access to golf, fishing, horseback riding, shotgun sports, wing shooting and boating. A full-time staff of about 110, including a naturalist, makes sure you get the most out of it all. The grown-ups don’t have all the fun; kids can be kids too. The children, often grandchildren, get to ride bikes on miles of hard sand roads with nary a care in the world. All of the sporting pursuits that would normally require country clubs, stables, marinas and the like are available in one place — making it all the easier to keep an eye on the young ones. Buying into the place is a great way to make sure they keep coming back.

Brays’ unpretentious low-country houses blend into the landscape. Your neighbors will include the heads of major companies and members of some of America’s leading families, but you won’t hear them boasting about it. That’s just not the Brays way.

Median 2009: $625,000

Median 2010: $1.8 million

13. Sun Valley, Idaho

If you happen to be a media mogul, you already know all about this place, thanks to the annual high-octane confabs put on by Allen & Co. The skiing, of course, is world-renowned; the resort is even credited with introducing the first chairlift. The homes are another matter — they’re famously private.The area has long been a sparsely populated haven for celebrities and titans of industry. Tom Hanks and Demi Moore are just two of the stars who hide out in the valley and nearby Ketchum. Many stay away because it’s difficult to reach. It helps to have a private jet and up to $15 million for a roof over your head.

Now, after more than 30 years, the owners of the ski resort are finally developing a near-mountain luxury community, White Clouds, replete with golf, hiking and a cross-country ski center. No homes have been built yet, but 29 lots are on sale for roughly $1.5 million to $3 million. Prices for Ketchum:

Median 2009: $4.6 million

Median 2010: $3.4 million

14. Lake Geneva, Wis.

Wealthy Chicago families have long gravitated to the shores of Lake Geneva for summer and, increasingly, winter fun. A two-hour drive from LaSalle Street, the lake boasts 26 miles of shoreline and a reputation as the “Newport of the West.” The Wrigleys, the Mortons (of salt fame) and the toilet-making Crane family all built mansions along the shore. Lake Geneva is now the preserve of the Pritzkers, AON founder Pat Ryan and noted investment manager Richard Driehaus
Some 35 lakefront properties are now on the market with more coming this spring. Good bargains pop up from time to time: A foreclosure sale of a home with “lake access” garnered $1.5 million. In all, 17 homes changed hands last year.

Median 2009: $2.82 million

Median 2010: $3.55 million

15. Asheville, N.C.

Asheville is a funky town nestled in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge mountains. It has a thriving art and music scene, and a burgeoning reputation for micro-breweries. A University of North Carolina campus keeps the town young and vibrant.

It’s an easy place to live in, with enough culture and outdoor activities to keep even the most demanding resident satisfied. The Biltmore Forest development behind the world-famous Biltmore House is especially inviting. The tree-lined streets of Biltmore Forest, developed in the 1920s, reflect the vision of Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape master who designed New York’s Central Park. The houses have an English country feel, plus access to a Donald Ross-designed golf course.

To some extent, Asheville is still in transition from Southern mountain town to major destination. But it already has come a long way. Think of it as the value buy for patient homeowners.

Median 2009: $635.000

Median 2010: $982,000

Unemployment Rate Lower in Maui County

Unemployment rate lower in county

March 8, 2011
Article from: The Maui News

The unemployment rate for Maui County fell one percentage point in January from the same month a year ago to 7.9 percent, the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations reported Monday.

That jobless rate for January was higher than the state’s 6.4 percent (not seasonally adjusted) but the best for the Neighbor Islands. Kauai logged an unemployment rate of 8.5 percent and the Big Island 9.3 percent. Oahu’s jobless rate was 5.4 percent.

The national unemployment rate for January (not seasonally adjusted) was 9.8 percent.

By island in the county, Lanai had the lowest rate of joblessness, at 5.3 percent, down from 8.7 percent in January 2010, followed by Maui island at 7.9 percent, down from 8.6 percent, and Molokai at 12 percent, down from 15.5 percent.

Unemployment rates in December were higher on Lanai (6 percent) and Molokai (12.7 percent) but lower on Maui island (7.3 percent). The Maui increase was likely due to an end in holiday employment, said Kevin Kimizuka, Maui County branch manager of the labor department’s Workforce Development Division, on Monday morning.
Anecdotally, Kimizuka said that his division has seen more jobs for part-time work and at the entry level, such as salesclerks, receptionists and warehouse laborers. However, the more career-oriented and managerial-level jobs are not opening up. Most opportunities are temporary in this sector, he said.

He added that his division is seeing fewer people seeking unemployment claims.

Looking at the different sectors statewide, the biggest gain came in trade, transportation and utilities, which was up 2,100 jobs, the Labor Department reported. This comes on the heels of two straight months of declines. Retail trade posted a 2,300-job gain in the month.

Government (1,500) and leisure and hospitality (1,300) sectors also showed gains in the labor department report.

On the other side of the ledger, construction shed 1,000 jobs in January, after seeing three months of growth. All sectors fell, including residential construction and work for trade and framing contractors. From January 2010 to this January, 1,700 jobs were lost in construction.

There were 590,800 employed and 39,650 unemployed people in January, for a seasonally adjusted labor force of 630,450, the report said. Last January, the seasonally adjusted work force was 628,650.

Maui Search Updated to a NEW System

• We now have our own complete copy of the Maui MLS on our web server.
• It’s fast. Real Fast! No more waiting.
• Although our website looks like it did yesterday, the entire site has been re-programmed to work with the new system.

Other updates:
• You can now search by Neighborhood
            • You can search by neighborhood via a selection box or the type ahead/autocompletion method

• You can now search for vacation rentable condos via a simple checkbox
• You can search for condos via a selection box or the type ahead/autocompletion method
• Created a “Popular Subdivisions” section in main navigation menu
• Included several dozen new small features and design improvements
• We still have a few images that are not showing up. We expect to have this resolved within 24 hours.
• The
Beach Cam page now has a map that shows the locations of everyone currently on our website.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Rare Improved Kihei Commercial Lot Opportunity

HARD TO FIND IMPROVED KIHEI COMMERCIAL LOT

***MLS #343898***

132 KIO LOOP

-11000+ sf fully graded, level, and fenced with ornate stainless steel entry gate commercial lot

-Utilities to site include telephone, tv cable, underground 220 electricity and County water

-B-2 Zoning





Priced to sell at $450,000

Call Clint Hansen at (808)280-2764 for more information or for a showing.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Hawaii Commercial Property Sales Surge

Commercial property sales surge

Investors spent about $1.5 billion last year on real estate ranging from retail to hotels

By Andrew Gomes

Article from: Star-Advertiser

Commercial real estate investors returned to Hawaii in a strong way last year, spending more than twice as much money buying property such as hotels and shopping centers compared with the year before, a new report shows.

Investors acquired about $1.5 billion in commercial property statewide last year, up from $630 million in 2009, according to the report by local commercial real estate firm Colliers Monroe Friedlander that tracks sales of more than $1 million.

The rebound occurred after four consecutive years of declines but still represents a relatively nascent recovery compared with transaction volume that varied from $2 billion to $4 billion between 2003 and 2007.

Colliers said last year’s pickup was driven by the availability of more financing and a relatively healthy commercial property market in Hawaii where not much overdevelopment happened during the economic boom years.

Colliers expects the positive trend to continue this year, with close to $2 billion in commercial property sales.

“Optimism seems to be the prevailing investment market attitude heading into 2011,” Colliers said in the report released yesterday. “As the economy gains firmer footing and there is a corresponding rise in business and consumer confidence, commercial real estate investment activity should benefit from both property appreciation and improved tenant demand.”

Last year, purchases were fairly diversified among property types — retail, office, resort, industrial, multifamily apartments and undeveloped land.
The bulk of the sales involved retail property, which accounted for 40 transactions totaling $441 million. This category had the largest single sale, Pearlridge Center, which was bought by a mainland investment partnership for $245 million.

Office property was the second-biggest category, representing 17 transactions for a combined $314 million, including the second-biggest single sale, Bishop Square, which sold for $230 million to a mainland firm.

Ten hotels sold for a combined $262 million. There also were 41 industrial property sales for $197 million, 22 land parcel transactions for $190 million and 27 apartment sales for $79 million.
The total number of sales last year was 157, which was more than the 113 a year earlier but less than 166 in 2008 when transaction value reached only $788 million.

The average sale price last year was $9.4 million, up from $5.6 million the year before.

Colliers said it had anticipated that more distressed property would be among sales last year, but in several cases lenders have been holding onto foreclosed property to wait for more improvement in the market.

Mark Bratton, a Colliers agent, said in the report that lenders foreclosed on six Hawaii hotels, but only two of those are for sale: the Sheraton Keauhou and Kauai Sands. At the same time, investor demand for hotels is high, Bratton said. “We receive a call a day from someone interested in acquiring a 100-room fee-simple beachfront hotel,” he said.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Airline Has Taken Next Step Forward in Plans to Offer Regular Nonstop Service Between China and Hawaii

Airline maps out China-Hawaii runs

The carrier that flew the first direct charters to the isles hopes to add scheduled flights

By Allison Schaefers
Article from: Star-Advertiser

China Eastern Airlines, the carrier that brought the first direct charter flights from China to Hawaii last month, has taken the next step toward offering regularly scheduled nonstop service between the destinations.

China’s second largest carrier has applied with the administrative body of the People’s Republic of China for permission to operate direct flights between China and Hawaii, Michael Merner, managing director for Hawaii Tourism Asia, told members of the visitor industry yesterday.

The Shanghai-based carrier took the step after successfully partnering with China CYTS Tour Holding Co., one of China’s leading tour operators, to bring about 777 visitors here on three inaugural charter flights during the Chinese New Year holiday, Merner said.

“They sold out these flights in just 14 days,” said David Uchiyama, the Hawaii Tourism Authority’s vice president of brand management. “They would definitely like to come back.”

The carrier would still need to obtain permission from the U.S. Department of Transportation to begin the service. Merner said the airline also plans additional charters this year.

Members of Hawaii’s visitor industry and business community who heard the news at a spring marketing update at the Hawaii Convention Center were pleased. They have been trying to expand Chinese air service since 2007 when the U.S.-China Memorandum of Understanding made leisure travel from China possible.

“There are over 170 cities in China with over 1 million visitors,” said Keith Vieira, senior vice president and director of operations for Starwood Hotels & Resorts in Hawaii and French Polynesia. Vieira said he is looking forward to welcoming President Hu Jintao at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in November. “We are looking at it (China) as a market with huge potential based on sheer volume.”

While there is a lot of interest in Hawaii from Chinese tourists, a lack of direct flights and a difficult visa process have tempered demand.

Arrivals from China would grow if leisure travelers who wanted to visit the islands could fly nonstop, said Benny Wang, director of Xinhua Travel’s international department in Beijing.

Even with these impediments, Merner said that China’s outbound travel to Hawaii grew 57 percent last year to 66,047 arrivals. This year, arrivals are expected to grow another 16 percent, he said.

“Hawaii is outperforming all other major overseas destinations in the China market,” Merner said. “Visas are getting more predictable.”

Direct air service will only make the market stronger, he said.

However, Uchiyama said its hard to determine whether China Eastern’s plan will take off.
“We’ve been here before,” he said.

Hainan Airlines, China’s largest private carrier, was expected to begin direct service between Honolulu and Beijing in 2009, but postponed plans.

The state then began eyeing new prospects.

“We’ve been talking to China Eastern for some time,” Uchiyama said, adding that the carrier’s dominance in the market and its connections with the Chinese government, a majority owner, could help it overcome challenges. State tourism officials have also discussed direct routes with China Southern and have continued to seek a start date from Hainan Airlines, he said.

Joel Chusid, general manager for North America for Hainan Airlines, has said that “visa issues” and “tour operators who were hesitant to guarantee enough business to make the route profitable” were among the chief reasons for the delay.

The success of the charters may help bridge that hurdle, Vieira said.

“China is heavily wholesaler dominated,” he said. “If they have confidence that they can book the business, the airlines will be confident.”

Hawaii Hotel Occupancy Continues to Rise

State hotel occupancy continues to rise

Article from: Maui Weekly

Pacific Business News – According to a weekly report by Smith Travel Research and Hospitality Advisors, eight out of 10 hotel rooms in Hawai‘i were occupied during the week ending Saturday, Feb. 12, and most islands’ average room rates were higher than during the same week last year. The weekly report is based on a daily hotel survey of about 100 properties, representing 40,744 rooms, which represent 71.5 percent of the state’s total hotel rooms for properties with 20 units or more.

The average statewide hotel occupancy rate was 81 percent, a 2.7 percent increase from the same week a year ago. O‘ahu recorded the state’s top occupancy rate at 87 percent—4.2 percentage points higher than the same week in 2010. Maui’s occupancy rate of 82.9 percent was 1.7 percentage points higher than last year, and Hawai‘i Island’s 67.9 percent occupancy rate was 3.7 percentage points higher than the same week last year. Kaua‘i’s occupancy rate of 63.5 percent was 4.9 percentage points lower than the same week last year.

Room rates averaged in at $187.12 across the state, which is a 3.9 percent increase compared to the same week a year ago. O‘ahu saw the largest increase with an average room rate of $162.38—7.7 percent higher than the same week a year ago. Maui’s average rate was $236.68—0.7 percent lower than the same week in 2010.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

March 2011 eNews Update & Market Report

March 2011 eNews
Compliments of Anne Diola at Old Republic Title & Escrow

THE BUZZ
The word for spring may be “Buy Now.” Favorable housing affordability conditions are having a positive effect on the real estate market. Statistics released last month show that existing-home sales increased 2.7% from December to January of this year. Even more impressive is the fact that real estate sales activity rose 5.3% from January 2010 levels. A recent NAR survey for January 2011 gives more insight into the market:

29% of purchases were made by first-time home buyers

23% were made by investors

48% were made by repeat buyers

Cash sales rose to 32% of all transactions

The Western region of the U.S. led real estate gains:

In the West, sales rose 7.9%

In the South, sales rose 3.6%

In the Midwest, sales rose 1.8%

In the Northeast, sales fell 4.6%

Historically, real estate enjoys a positive spurt in the spring. One thing buyers face now are more stringent lending standards. Lawrence Yun, Chief Economist for the National Association of Realtors, said, “There are abnormally high levels of all-cash purchases due to unnecessarily tight credit.” It is important to get pre-qualified to take advantage of the deals available. There may never be a better time to buy.

JUST ASK

Q: What is this trend of “man-caves” and “mom-caves”?

A: Most men have a designated space at home for their manly pursuits. They claim that space as their “man-cave.” It could be a workshop in the garage, a basement game room, or a book-filled den. Women are starting to follow suit by staking out a space of their own. Elaine Griffin, a designer with Home Goods, calls it a “functional, restorative place where the mom nurtures herself.”

This space could be an extra bedroom used for scrapbooking, sewing, blogging, or reading. Kim Mules, an HGTV designer, says it can also be as simple as a corner in a room designated as a woman’s personal area, furnished with a comfortable chair, a side table and a reading lamp.

When I show potential buyers a home, they are trying to envision how they would live there. Finding extra spaces for the “man and the mom” makes a home more desirable.

MY TOWN

On March 17th, thousands of people flock to church, a local pub or the family dining room to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. The origins of St. Patrick’s Day hail back to the 4th century when a 16-year-old man named Patrick from a wealthy British family was kidnapped by Irish pirates and taken to Ireland as a slave. He escaped, claiming later in confession that he was told in a vision by God to flee captivity to the coast where he’d find a boat to take him back to Britain. After returning to England he began his pursuit to become a priest.

In 432, Patrick returned to Ireland as a bishop to share Christianity with the Irish people who were mostly polytheistic at the time. According to Irish legend, he used the three-leaf shamrock to explain the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. He spent the balance of his adulthood alongside chieftains and tribes in Ireland until his death in 461. By the ninth and tenth centuries, St. Patrick’s Feast Day was being celebrated by the Irish throughout Europe on the anniversary of his death and was later put on the Catholic liturgical calendar. St. Paddy’s Day celebrations have included festivities and parades in the United States since 1737.

FYI

DIY is short for “do-it-yourself” – a term used to identify projects done without the help of a professional. If you’re a DIYer, painting (especially interiors) is something you can tackle without a professional’s help. But to start, you’ll need a good knowledge of the products out there.

Water-based latex paints are by far the most popular on the market. They’re less likely than oil-based paints to yellow or fade, they dry much quicker, clean up with soap and water and are low in VOCs (volatile organic compounds – the bad stuff that’s in paint fumes). Manufacturers are now making eco-friendly latex paints with zero VOCs – better for you, better for the environment.

Alkyd or oil-based paints are still revered by purists for their superior finish in a glossy sheen. These paints aren’t as prone to flake or peel and are more durable than latex. They may be preferable for areas that receive a lot of wear and tear, such as the exterior and floors of your home. But their fumes are noxious, requiring the use of a breathing mask when applying in closed-in areas, and you need a solvent, such as turpentine, to clean the paint from brushes and pails. Furthermore, environmental regulations are making them harder to purchase in many states. Paint manufacturers are reformulating them to keep in step with new laws, which can compromise the qualities that customers most appreciate about oil-based paints, or phasing them out altogether.

Next month we’ll cover the different kinds of paint sheens and their uses.

Contact Info:

Anne Diola
Real Estate Marketing Specialist
Old Republic Title & Escrow of Hawaii
33 Lono Ave, Ste 195
Kahului, HI 96732
W: (808) 281-8430
M: (808) 281-8430
adiola@ortc.com

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Volunteers and Researchers on Maui Tallied 1,607 Humpback Whale Sightings on Saturday

1,607 whales sighted

Article from: The Maui News

MAALAEA – Volunteers and researchers on Maui tallied 1,607 sightings of humpback whales Saturday, a 33 percent increase from last year, the Pacific Whale Foundation reported.

Last year’s total was 1,208 humpbacks. There were 12 counting stations in the Great Maui Whale Count.

Greg Kaufman, founder and president of PWF, which organized the count, said the sighting conditions were “fantastic,” with calm seas and light winds.

“Because we have conducted the count systematically at the same time each year, it provides a valuable look at Hawaii’s winter whale population. In general, we are seeing evidence of a growing number of whale sightings in recent years,” Kaufman said in a news release.

He said the increase in sightings correlates to research that shows the humpback whale population in the North Pacific increasing at a rate of 7 percent or 8 percent each year.

An estimated 20,000 humpback whales live in the North Pacific, and about 60 percent of that population is believed to come to Hawaii each year to mate, give birth and care for their young, a release said.

The counting stations were positioned along Maui’s south and western shores, in an area extending from Makena to Kapalua. There also was a station at Hookipa Beach Park on Maui’s north shore.

Last year’s count took place a week later than usual because of a tsunami warning on the originally scheduled day. In 2009, 1,010 whale sightings were recorded. In 2008, 1,726 were tallied on a day with ideal conditions such as Saturday’s.

Of Saturday’s sightings, 154 were calves, compared to 149 sighted last year.

Puu Olai in Makena recorded the most whale sightings with 311 during the counting window, which was open from 8:30 to 11:55 a.m.

The count was conducted by 100 volunteers who worked alongside Pacific Whale Foundation researchers and staff and was done along lookout posts from the shorelines.

The count is part of the Maui Whale Festival, a series of whale-related events taking place from November through mid-May.