Partnering
for the Sea - Every month Trilogy
Excursions and the Surfrider Foundation team up to clean up.
This month's effort was - to say the least - "special.".
Irony
in Promotion -
There is no "tsunami season" but it seems
ironic that "Tsunami Awareness Month" should fall
less than three weeks after Japan's devastating events of
March 11.
'Still'
Judge Loo -
This week Governor Neil Abercrombie named Maui District Judge
Rhonda Loo to the Second Circuit Court. Confused? We'll explain.
GET?
No GET? -
Then-candidate Neil Abercrombie promised that his administration
would not permit a hike in the general excise tax. This week
he - and the Senate - took another look at that promise.
Tree
Safety - Quietly (except for the trucks and
jack hammers) the buckled sidewalk was removed from in front
of a Kihei condo on Monday. Now arborists can plan on replacing
the pavement while keeping the monkeypod trees safe and shady.
Also this
week on Maui TV News:
Ag
is Growing - And the Fourth Annual Maui Ag
Fest showed it with record attendance and inventory flying
out of the ground.
Next
for Ag? -
The owner of the Waikapu Ranch has big plans for the 2,000
acres...and the biggest is keeping it in ag in perpetuity.
March
Dryness -
Only one gage in Maui County got more than "average"
last month. The wet winter seems to have ended right on schedule.
In Sports,
the MIL Baseball looks more and more like it belongs to Baldwin.
And a former MIL star is on the DL in Philly - again.
In Curtain
Call, Complex, a little
confusing and very entertaining. That's how Paul Janes-Brown
describes "Theophilus North."
In Coming
Attractions, Daisy and
Art Maui leave town Sunday. But there are 1,000 cranes on
display at Ruby's Diner. We've got details this week.
Watch
Maui TV News in HD now.