Brushfire threatened Hale'iwa
| Haleakala fire may be heading for park |
By Allison Schaefers and Curtis Lum
Advertiser Staff Writers
A brushfire burned so close to Hale'iwa town yesterday afternoon that businesses shut down and local residents feared for their homes.
The fire also threatened about 10 historic homes that line Kamehameha Highway where sugarcane fields once grew.
Firefighters evacuated the North Shore Market Place about 2 p.m. after flames crept dangerously close, shutting down 25 businesses. Most of the businesses in the Hale'iwa Town Center also closed because of the fire.
The fire took out six utility poles and knocked out power to about 3,700 customers in Waialua and Hale'iwa. It was not known how many businesses in the area closed because of the power failure. Smoke and flames also forced police to shut down the Joseph P. Leong and Kamehameha highways in both directions for about two hours.
The fire was contained by about 2 p.m., said HFD Capt. Kenison Tejada. At sundown, firefighters continued to mop up smoldering brush and utility poles.
The fire was one of eight brushfires that firefighters battled yesterday. Firefighters from Wai'anae and Nanakuli worked from midnight to dawn fighting four brushfires all apparently deliberately set.
Three of the fires were in Ma'ili and the fourth was in Nanakuli. There were two more brushfire calls yesterday in Nanakuli and Makaha, at 8:26 a.m. and 5:36 p.m. respectively, signaling the start of the annual summer brushfire season along the Wai'anae Coast.
Then yesterday afternoon, three more brushfires were reported along the coast, with the largest one along Farrington Highway near Pohakunui Avenue. The fire was reported at 1:54 p.m. and was not extinguished until about 6 p.m.
The fires stretched HFD's manpower, forcing engine companies to move to other areas of the island. Tejada said there were no problems servicing the public, but there was concern.
"That's stretching us where it may take us a few extra minutes to get to a scene, and in a medical emergency sometimes seconds do count," Tejada said.
The North Shore fire was tricky to fight because of high winds and fast-burning grass, Tejada said. A dirt road near the Kamehameha Highway bypass helped provide a natural barrier for the fire. Tejada said the poles also created a problem because they were termite-treated and emitted hazardous smoke.
"It had the potential to be a lot worse than it was," Tejada said. "If the winds had been different, the fire could have gone all the way up the mountain."
The fire was the talk of Hale'iwa, said Christina Espinosa, who lives within 50 feet of where the flames spread.
"People are gonna be talking about this for a month or more," Espinosa said from the living room of her smoke-filled home near the North Shore Market Place shortly after the fire had been extinguished.
Espinosa works at the Outrigger Trading Company in the North Shore Market Place. When her boss closed the store early because of the fire and power failure, she ran two blocks to her house to see if it was still standing.
"We saw a big, black cloud coming out from the bridge portion of the bypass," Espinosa said. "Then suddenly, there was a whole lot of flame and the whole market place was in shadows."
That was about 12:30 p.m. Within minutes the fast-moving fire had picked up and crossed Joseph P. Leong Highway, Espinosa said.
"We could see the fire was above the bypass," she said. "Then the wind picked up and before you knew it the fire was right here."
Restaurant worker Rusty Shackleford said the smoke was so thick, "I couldn't see 2 feet in front of my face."
"We've survived rock slides, economic disasters and Sept.11, but this is the first fire," said Byron Cooper of Mililani, who owns three businesses in the North Shore Market Place: the Aloha General Store, the Britton Gallery and Polynesian Treasures.
"The fire came right to the edge of the marketplace," Cooper said. "It was only about 30 to 40 feet away from my gallery. It came within 10 feet of my office."
Cooper removed about 25 percent of his art gallery inventory because he feared smoke and fire damage.
Many other business owners removed computers and files from their stores, Cooper said.
Nevertheless, Cooper said he feels blessed.
"There was no structural damage and there wasn't any loss of life," he said. "The fire department did a really great job."
Despite yesterday's drama, Cooper said he expects business as usual today.
Tejada said the cause of the Hale'iwa fire appeared suspicious "because there wasn't any obvious signs of ignition."
The fire was under investigation, but Tejada said it would be difficult to link any of the fires to one or more persons.
"You have to actually go in and find physical evidence, and that's the hard part," Tejada said.
He said a fire investigator told him "it's like trying to find a burnt match in about 5 acres of land."
Staff writer Rod Ohira contributed to this report.