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Ghost Town
Lahaina’s all set for this year’s big Halloween celebration, but is there a deeper move to shut it down?

by By Jen Russo

October 19, 2006

For the last couple weeks vicious rumors have swirled through my

email, saying Halloween in Lahaina was cancelled or was about to be

cancelled. Later I began hearing from people that there were going to

be serious cutbacks and new rules: no sexy costumes, no entertainment

and/or no adults in the big parade.

Naturally, I was skeptical. Halloween has been an institution in

Lahaina for many years. It's the largest Oct. 31 block party in the

state, with 20,000 to 30,000 people in annual attendance. But on Oct.

12 the buzz really got going after The Maui News ran a front-page story reporting a "hitch" in Halloween but offering only vague details.



Yet for all the concern and drama created by this news, it looks

like there really is no big threat to Halloween this year. According to

Sergeant Ricky Uedoi of Maui Police Department (MPD), this year's rules

of conduct are exactly the same as last year's.

"Same rules apply," Sergeant Uedoi said. "Nothing perverted, no

alcohol, no weapons, no replica swords. Dancing is fine. People do

their little skits and such and then they move on down the street."

A press release recently sent out by the LahainaTown Action

Committee (LAC)—the Westside merchant group responsible for working

with the County to get event permits—reports that the Keiki Parade

sponsored by the Soroptomists will begin at 4:30 p.m. on Papalaua

Street, with Front Street closing at 3 p.m. Maui Tacos is also

sponsoring the costume contest with a $1000 prize on the main stage

under the Banyan Tree.

So what was this "hitch" mentioned in The Maui News?

According to Sergeant Uedoi, the Lahaina Town Action Committee's new

staff may have been a factor. "The permit process with the Cultural

Resources Commission is complex," he said. "They might have needed to

submit something earlier."

Karee Carlucci, who took over as LAC executive director in January,

had a completely different reason. "Repeated play of video footage from

years past on Akaku caught the eye of a reverend," she said, though she

didn't name the reverend. "And some families believing the video

footage to be what the Halloween event is all about. This caused some

protest to the permits."

And according to Don Couch, Deputy Planning Director at the County's

Department of Planning, there was "concern from Native Hawaiians that

the event is too risque."

All these reasons may have affected LahainaTown Action Committee's

request for permits for the Halloween event. Permits need to be filed

and approved with the Planning Department because the event takes place

in Lahaina's historic district. It's the responsibility of the Maui

County Cultural Resource Commission to review various events and

developments to make sure they observe local cultural significance.

"Departments in the County were questioning why this event was in a

cultural place," said Carlucci. "They were seeing it as a barhopping

event. But the Maui Police Department came out as the event's

defenders."

Indeed, Sergeant Uedoi actually wrote a letter to the County

supporting the event. "The thing is it [the event] is going to happen

whether LAC gets the permits or not," Uedoi said. "With MPD and LAC

working together we make it safest for everybody. Our main thing is the

safety. There is the assumption that there is always nudity, always

drugs. Those people try to sneak it but they do get arrested."

Despite careful planning for safety by LahainaTown Action Committee

and the Maui Police Department for the past 17 years, the County did

ultimately insist on some changes to Halloween.

"It was nothing specific, but we are asked to avoid a 'Carnivale' or

a 'Mardi Gras' element or atmosphere," Carlucci said. In previous years

the LAC had billed the LahainaTown Halloween celebration as the "Mardi

Gras of the Pacific," but Carlucci said that wouldn't happen this year.



As a result, Carlucci cancelled appearances by the marimba band

Mapenzi, the Brazilian band Banda Dende, a belly dance troupe and has

excluded Samba Maui from the parade. All these artists and musicians

were understandably disappointed, and the whole thing contained a

bitter irony. In the concern over lewd behavior, the County has turned

on these professional performers and artists who suddenly didn't seem

to fit the bill of approved historic district performers for Halloween.



Couch also mentioned a concern over a commemorative T-shirt from a

couple years back. LahainaTown Action Committee generates funds for the

event by designing a collectable T-shirt that sells out every year.

"We listened to the concern," said Couch. "It had a headless

horseman with a Hawaiian physique, with a cape, holding a pineapple for

its head. There are two main aspects of the cultural sensitivity of the

area. There is Lahaina as the old Hawaiian capital, and there is the

whaling history. We want to make sure everyone is sensitive."

This year's official LAC T-shirt features the Bride of Frankenstein and classic movie lore.



Ironically, many of the local church leaders I contacted for this

story said they saw no need to get rid of Lahaina's Halloween

celebration. "I have a personal problem with some of the costumes being

sexist," Waiola Church's Kahu Donald Schmidt said. "But the church uses

the event as a fundraiser. We have a food booth and we sell parking.

Churches that have a problem with Halloween are being petty. They have

no idea what they are talking about."

Pastor Brad Hall of Calvary Chapel agreed. "Halloween accentuates a

lifestyle that I do not condone, but I don't stand in protest against

the event," he said. "Because of its Pagan origin we don't participate,

but for the sake of the kids we offer some alternatives."

The college town of Chico, California stands as a warning for

Lahaina. Through the years they saw their Halloween celebration grow to

include more than 20,000 people, but some residents didn't like it. In

2002 they began an extensive media campaign against the event, buying

print and television advertising that warned young people to stay out

of downtown on Halloween night. The next year, downtown Chico and the

college campus area were a literal ghost town on Halloween.

While it would take new laws to shut down Lahaina on Halloween, an

action like this could devastate the many Lahaina businesses that have

grown to depend on the money that they get from the street festival.

For some restaurants and centers this is one of their highest revenue

generating nights.

"It's one of our biggest nights of the year,"Hard Rock Cafe sales

and marketing manager Natalie Capitano said. "You can't even compare it

to our regular evenings. The event is fun and creative and we don't

have any problems at all."

As expected, the calls to the County Planning Department on

Halloween have initiated a review of the whole event. Next March or

April, the CRC will hold a hearing on it. It's been 10 years since the

Commission took a look at Lahaina's Halloween.

But even if the CRC review comes up with new rules for the event or

asks for a toned-down celebration, it will be nearly impossible to stop

it. "One thing we know, it would be difficult to shut it down," Couch

said.

One key reason is that if the Planning Department does not approve

the usual Halloween permits, the usual 80 police officers that patrol

the event—pulled from all parts of the island—would dwindle down to

just the five that work the Lahaina beat. Five officers for 20 to 30

thousand revelers translates into complete anarchy, the police say,

which they add would be far worse than the alleged lewdness and

inappropriate behavior that spurred the initial complaints. MTW