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Conservation and Resources Enforcement - Kauai

3060 Eiwa Street,, Room 208, Lihue, HI 96766
Enforces laws, rules and regulations relating to the conservation and preservation of land and natural resources. Verifies leases, permits and licenses issued by the DLNR. Enforces laws relating to firearms, ammunition and dangerous weapons. Controls and manages beaches with public access. Participates with search and rescue efforts locally.

Kihei Public Library

35 Waimahaihai Street, Kihei, HI 96753
Maintains information resources, i.e. books, magazines, musical recordings, video and audio tapes, State and County government documents and Hawaiiana materials. Provides fax service to send messages to State legislators. Provides access to wi-fi and telephone reference service.

Living Waters Assembly of God Food Pantry

89 Maikai Street, Hilo, HI 96720
(Food Pantry) Living Waters Assembly of God provides food for those in need.
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Salvation Army - Honokaa -Thrift Store

45-511 Rickard Place, Honokaa, HI 96727
Thrift store selling clothing and other goods. Donations accepted at the table. We do not accept furniture, mattresses, or television donations. Clothing vouchers for emergency clothing filled out at the Honokaa Thrift Store.

Kauai Court Self Help Center

3970 Kaana Street, Lihue, HI 96766
(Kauai Firth Circuit Court Self Help Center) The Kauai Court Self-Help Center will provide legal help to the Garden Island community on a pilot basis. Volunteer attorneys from the Kauai County Bar Association will provide limited legal information by telephone in areas such as landlord-tenant, family, and other district court matters.
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Consulate General of the Philippines

2433 Pali Highway, Honolulu, HI 96817
Issues passports for Filipinos and visas for non-Filipinos traveling to Philippines. Assists in locating relatives. Provides cultural and tourism information. Promotes Philippine exports. Authentication of documents.
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Habitat for Humanity Maui

1162 Lower Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793
Habitat for Humanity Maui follows the principals of Habitat for Humanity International by selling homes to low income families at a no interest and no profit basis. They serve families that are between 25% and 80% of the median income for Maui County. Families are required to attend homeowner education classes, budget counseling and credit counseling. Habitat for Humanity Maui’s ReStore accepts donations of new and slightly used construction/ remodeling materials and resells them to the general public at 50% or below retail. Habitat ReStores are not unique to Hawaii. By donating a car to Habitat's Cars for Homes™ Vehicle Donation Program, you help Habitat for Humanity Maui build and renovate houses in partnership with families in need of a hand up, not a hand out. Call or visit website for more information. Types of vehicles that can be donated: cars, trucks, boats, RV, motorcycles, construction or farm equipment, any other vehicle (in running condition or not). It is quick and easy to recycle your

Forestry and Wildlife Division - Kauai

3060 Eiwa Street, Room 306, Lihue, HI 96766
Issues permits for hiking, camping, hunting, taking of plants from reserve areas. Sells seedlings for Christmas trees, reforestation and wind breaks. Manages public hunting areas, public hiking areas, forest reserves, wildlife sanctuaries, natural area reserves. Accepts reports of forest pests, including new and unusual weeds and certain birds. Pest reports accepted include: wild pigs, snakes, large lizards, ferrets, the banana poka (a weed), the bulbul (a bird) on neighbor islands, and the mongoose on Kauai.

General Immigration Services - Hawaii Island

58 Kinoole Street, 104, Hilo, HI 96720
Provides services to immigrants with low-income to enable them to stabilize their immigration status in the country. The program assists applicants for US Citizenship, relative petition change of status and other family immigration petitions with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Infant and Early Childhood Services

555 Fraser Avenue, Lanai City, HI 96763
Early Childhood Services are provided to children three to six years old with delays in which age appropriate milestones are not yet met. These children typically fall outside the scope of the Department of Education & Special Education Services. The needs of each child are met through professional therapeutic services designed for the child to help them thrive in their home, preschool and community. Our goal is to better prepare the child for kindergarten and beyond by using family engagement techniques and strategies.

Hawaii Home Energy Assistance Program - Energy Crisis Intervention - Maui

99 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793
(Hawaii Home Energy Assistance Program - Energy Crisis Intervention, H-HEAP, Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program - Energy Crisis Intervention, LIHEAP ECI, ECI, Energy Crisis Intervention) Assists households who are at the verge of getting their electricity/utility terminated or electricity/utility has been terminated within 60 days from the date of the application. Disconnection notice required. 48 hours processing time once application is received, $650 maximum amount per client

Hawaii County - Police Department

95-5353 Mamalahoa Highway, Naalehu, HI 96772
Conducts all law enforcement. Receives all public service calls. Administers firearms registration. Handles abandoned vehicle reporting. Provides information regarding traffic services. Also provides information on the Neighborhood Watch Program.

Street Use Permits and Parades

650 South King Street, 3rd floor, Honolulu, HI 96813
Issues permits for use of public streets for parades, blockage for construction purposes and other special uses.

Queen's Medical Center - Emergency

91-2141 Fort Weaver Road, Ewa Beach, HI 96706
(Queens Medical Center - Emergency) Provides medical/surgical emergency services.

Senior Information and Assistance Program

925 Dillingham Boulevard, Honolulu, HI 96817
(Senior Helpline) 1) Senior Helpline for telephone consultation, information and referral to services available to older adults and family caregivers 2) Outreach to provide information to the entire community and locate isolated elders 3) Home visits for individual consultation 4) Follow up on frail elders 5) Speakers, exhibits, newsletter, informational materials such as Senior Handbook, lending library.

Low Income Transit Fare Program for Persons with Supplemental Security Income

925 Dillingham Boulevard, 200, Honolulu, HI 96817
(LITFP SSI) The Low Income Transit Fare Program (LITFP) provides a discounted transit fare for income qualifying individuals. For persons receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) no application necessary. Bring the following documents to the Transit Pass Office at the Kalihi Transit Center: -Supplemental Security Income Benefit Verification Letter from the Social Security Administration. -Official, valid photo identification (ID) such as a Passport, Driver's License, Driver's Permit, State ID, Birth Certificate for individuals 17 years of age or younger.

Ohana Conferencing

1130 North Nimitz Highway, C-210, Honolulu, HI 96817
(Ohana Conferencing) In an ‘Ohana Conference, families work with CWS and use what they know to make the best decisions for the safety of their children and create a plan for strengthening the family. The ‘Ohana Conference is voluntary and is a positive, solution-oriented process. The ‘Ohana Conference is grounded in the core goals and values of child safety, preserving family relationships, and timely permanent placement of children. [email protected]; [email protected]

Hope Chapel Kahuku - Food Pantry

56-565 Kamehameha Highway, Kahuku, HI 96731
(Food Pantry) Hope Chapel Kahuku operates a food pantry distribution service usually 4th Monday of each month, please call ahead. Also offers a distribution of household goods and clothing and accepts donations of small household items and clothing.
Website

American Job Center - Dillingham

1505 Dillingham Boulevard, 110, Honolulu, HI 96817
Formerly known as Oahu WorkLinks. Offers vocational assessment, pre-employment training, occupational skills training and on-the-job training programs, customized training, work experience, remedial education and supportive services. Additional phone numbers: (808) 270-5777 Maui/Molokai/Lanai (808) 935-6527 Hawaii (808) 274-3056 Kauai 488-5630 Aiea 586-8700 Downtown 233-3700 Kaneohe 233-3700 Kapolei 637-6508 Waialua 696-7067 Waianae 675-0010 Waipahu Office Dillingham Office located at: Dillingham Shopping Plaza 1505 Dillingham Boulevard, Room 110. Contracts with Department of Labor and Industrial Relations to provide services to dislocated workers (unemployed due to business or agriculture closing, or unemployed more than fifteen weeks).

Waipahu Processing Center

94-275 Mokuola Street, 303A, Waipahu, HI 96797
The federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) provides crucial food and nutritional support to qualifying low-income and needy households, and those making the transition from welfare to self-sufficiency. The SNAP processing center provides public assistance, food stamps (SNAP) and financial assistance, to eligible individuals and families. They handle new applications and ongoing assistance. A paper copy of the application can be downloaded, printed, signed and submitted via US postal mail or dropped off in the drop box. For a PDF of the paper application, visit the website and click on "SNAP (formerly Food Stamps)" from the menu "Benefit, Employment & Support Services (BESSD) SNAP, Financial, Child Care, General Assistance and more". The click on the link "If you are unable to apply online, you may download and print this paper form application – click here". A Drop box is available on site to drop off documents. For SNAP Interviews, please input your case number found on your notification form when you call the Public Assistance Information Line/Call Center (PAIS) at (855) 643-1643 so the system can confirm your scheduled interview and connect you to the interview. Additional Phone Numbers: (877) 447-5990 or dial 711 - TTY

Na Puuwai

604 Maunaloa Highway, Kaunakakai, HI 96748
(Na Pu'uwai) Culturally-grounded, community-focused clinical services and programs designed to assist with whole health.

4-H Youth Program

962 2nd Street, Pearl City, HI 96782
(Four-H Youth Program) Provides an informal youth program, designed to assist youth in acquiring knowledge life skills, and becoming self-directed, productive and contributing members of society. Through active, experiential learning, youth learn about science, communication, personal management, leadership, citizenship, health, safety, and nutrition. Members participate in citizenship projects, literacy program using television; "GHOSTWRITERS"; "KAMP" (Kindergartners Are Most Precious) designed to promote school readiness, success and parent-child interaction; and a "Youth At Risk" educational theatre project.

Hawaiian Telcom

60 South Church Street, Wailuku, HI 96793
Hawaiian Telcom provides telephone, internet and long distance services. Additional phone numbers: (808) 643-3456 Customer Service (808) 482-2211 Business (808) 643-4411 24-hour Repair (877) 482-2211 Toll-Free (Out of State)

Ulu Ae Learning Center

91-1080 Saratoga Avenue, Kapolei, HI 96707
(UALC) Ulu A‘e was formed in 2014 with the vision to have entire communities knowledgeable and engaged in the place they live. We deliver culture and place-based education for keiki and families of Honouliuli through half day and intersession student days, other cultural community programs and volunteer workdays. Our mission is to empower and enrich lives through programs that develop skills, build confidence and promote healthy relationships based on the values and customs of our kūpuna. No'eau Boxes A box filled with Hawaiian Books, games, and hands-on activities. Delivered to your doorstep for at home and on-the-go learning. Now available to teachers, community organizations, and families. Nene‘e is our intersession program where keiki ages 5–14 are given opportunities to explore their ‘āina from ma uka (mountain) to ma kai (sea). The program’s curriculum is place-based meaning that special focus is made to highlight the history and culture of the students’ community. Students engage in moʻolelo (stories), hana noʻeau (Native Hawaiian art and practices) and kuleana (land stewardship). HANA ‘I‘O is a hands-on, food preparation program for middle school students who want to grow their knowledge, skills and relationship to the animals they eat. Students explore the role their mountain plays in food production. They take part in the respectful and humane process of killing a pig. They participate in animal husbandry and learn safety and sanitation guidelines, knife skills, and about meat production here in Hawaii. By taking part in this program, students begin to think critically about waste and humane animal practices. They gain a deeper understanding of food abundance and begin to evaluate what they put in their bodies. Papa Kuʻi ʻAi & Pōhaku Loan Program If your ‘ohana wants to ku‘i ‘ai for Lā Kūʻokoʻa, but you don’t have a papa kuʻi ʻai, pōhaku or kalo, we can help. We have 2 papa ku‘i ‘ai with pōhaku to loan out to 2 ‘ohana. The Kapu‘uola Hula Festival celebrates Hawaiian storytelling through hula and new mele (compositions) at Pu‘uokapolei. The festival features performances by several hālau hula (hula schools) and live Hawaiian music entertainment. Hana Hei Hana hei (Hawaiian string figures) is a form of Hawaiian storytelling and mnemonic device. Keiki learn hei in each of Ulu A‘e’s programs. Hana hei engages the young minds of our keiki in a way that encourages the use of our native language and the practice of a traditional conginitive form of memorization. After School Program is Now A Full Day Program and includes transportation for students from certain schools in Kapolei, ‘Ewa and Nānākuli. Students are transported from their schools to our learning center in Kalaeloa. Homework help, hana no‘eau enrichment lessons, and stewardship visits are provided. Ulu A‘e Learning Center uses a high touch, personalized approach in growing the hearts and minds of children during the out of school time though storytelling, Native Hawaiian practices and stewardship experiences. Aloha ‘Āina Love for our places Students are taught traditional names of places that exist in their community. They learn history through stories and mele. And they dig their hands deep into the soil, healing, restoring and rejuvenation the ‘āina. It’s through these unique experiences that they gain an appreciation for the place they live and become stewards of our land before entering high school. ‘Ike Ku’una Workshops This community enrichment program is aimed at increasing the cultural knowledge and skills of kūpuna (elders), mākua (adults) and ‘ohana (families). Workshops are held in cultural practices and knowledge like lei making, haku mele (Hawaiian composition), ulana lauhala (weaving), Ni‘ihau shell jewelry assembly, kapa making, Hawaiian history lectures and more. The series allows participants to interact with storytellers and master practitioners like Shad Kane, Dalani Tanahy, and Nalu Andrade. The intent of the program is for community members to develop skills and feel more knowledgeable about the history and traditions of their community.

Leahi District Service Center

1915 Palolo Avenue, Honolulu, HI 96816
Performs community planning and group development. Provides information and referral, personal development aid, emergency and general assistance. Operates special programs including agriculture education and training, employment services, family development and case management, Head Start, and senior community services employment.