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Maui County


BREAKING NEWS: posted Sept. 18, 12:30 p.m.


Work on Kealia Boardwalk finally scheduled to resume


September 14, 2006
Work may finally start again this week on the scenic boardwalk through

the Kealia Pond National Wildlife Refuge. According to a refuge

spokesperson, on Tuesday, Sept. 19 construction work should begin again

on the 2,200-foot boardwalk.

The coastal boardwalk has been empty for more than a year—even the bright

orange plastic netting strung around to keep people away is falling

apart. But now workers from Kahului-based Central Construction—the same

outfit that built the boardwalk in the first place—will hopefully soon

be tearing out the plastic boards to make way for new decking made by

Trex. That material, a composite made from "recycled plastic grocery

bags, reclaimed pallet wrap and waste wood," is guaranteed for at least

25 years and is supposed to resist moisture, sunlight and insects,

according to the company's website.

Kahului firm Aloha Plastic Recyling was originally supposed to

manufacture the planking from 1.5 million milk jugs, but nowhere near

that number ever materialized That forced the company to draw 90

percent of its recycled plastic from the mainland.

The project was also supposed to cost $2.2 million—provided by a grant

from the Federal Highway Administration (FHA)—but the new job of

tearing apart and rebuilding the as-yet unused boardwalk will add at

least $600,000 to $700,000 to the budget, said Central Construction

manager Stanley Matsumoto. He added that the funds will come from a

"cost-sharing arrangement" between FHA and his firm.

This new work couldn't come at a better time—with summer ending this

weekend, that big orange sign by the makai side of North Kihei Road is

threatening to become a really pathetic joke.

"Boardwalk scheduled to open summer 2006 pending parking lot

completion," it taunts passing drivers as it stands over a couple piles

of gravel, conex container and a conspicuous lack of any paved parking

lot. But then again, the seemingly endless delays in the opening of the

2,200-foot scenic boardwalk through the Kealia refuge never had much to

do with the proposed parking lot.

After four months of construction—which itself was delayed a couple

months because of rain and to accommodate "nesting season"—it was

during final inspection in January 2005 when construction officials

noticed severe cracking in many of the recycled plastic lumber used for

the boardwalk's decking. Officials said the problem was partly due to

the material itself not taking to the intense Kihei sun but also a

result of the absurd order to nail—rather than screw—the plastic planks

to their wooden supports.

"We had found that the plastic material was not [made] according to

specifications," says Kealia refuge manager Glynnis Nakai. "Nailing was

one of the problems, but it's a moot point now because we have to

replace all the plastic material."

If it ever opens, the boardwalk will provide an unparalleled hike

(6/10ths of a mile) through some of the state's last natural wildlife

habitat. The mudflats and wetlands of the refuge—used by U.S. Marines

for amphibious warfare training in World War II—is home to rare and

endangered Hawaiian stilts, coots, Hawaiian ducks, black-crowned night

herons, pacific golden plovers, sanderlings, wandering tattlers and

ruddy turnstones.

How long this new work will take is, as is typical for Maui

construction jobs, anybody's guess. After all, a Kealia news release

dated Aug. 4, 2004 mentioned that boardwalk planning had been ongoing

since 1996. Matsumoto said about three months, but Nakai laughed when I

asked her for an estimate.

"A few months?" she said. "Anything can happen." MTW



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