 
							
					
															
					
					Jan 22, 2014 | Education, Innovation
 Maui Waena Intermediate School media teacher Jennifer Suzuki shows how hard work and support from the Maui Economic Development Board can make a difference in the education of the island’s young people. After graduating in 1988 from Baldwin High School, Suzuki was hired as a rental car sales representative. She learned that work in sales was not her passion. So, she began looking for a new career, knowing in her heart that “I always liked helping people.”
Maui Waena Intermediate School media teacher Jennifer Suzuki shows how hard work and support from the Maui Economic Development Board can make a difference in the education of the island’s young people. After graduating in 1988 from Baldwin High School, Suzuki was hired as a rental car sales representative. She learned that work in sales was not her passion. So, she began looking for a new career, knowing in her heart that “I always liked helping people.”
Suzuki enrolled in college, earning a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Hawaii at Hilo in 1997, followed by a post-baccalaureate education certificate from the University of Hawaii Maui Center. While at the center, she was encouraged by her mentor, Victor Pellegrino, to tutor college students in English. “I just realized I could help people,” she said. She had stints as a teacher for hospitalized, mentally ill students and for those facing family and substance abuse challenges. Eleven years ago, she was hired at Maui Waena where she’s taught 8th-grade Language Arts, and in the last 3-1/2 years taught computer introduction, media and news writing to 6th, 7th and 8th-graders.
Suzuki’s association with MEDB began when she sought to establish a new media lab. She initiated a student newspaper and TV broadcast and built a STEMworks computer lab. “I never want to be considered a teacher of technology,” she said, “more like one who used technology as a way to teach how to communicate and be creative.” Suzuki’s new lab contains a variety of computers, software and cameras with at least half purchased through MEDB and its Women in Technology Project. “MEDB has been phenomenal,” she said. Suzuki and her students have also attended MEDB trainings, and her students have gone on to share their know-how with peers on Lanai and with elementary-aged pupils.
Suzuki’s career exemplifies the Focus Maui Nui value of education and fostering the well-being of young people, enabling them, if they choose, to live on Maui and become valuable, contributing members of the island’s community and good stewards of local treasures.
				
					
			
					
											
								 
							
					
															
					
					Jan 15, 2014 | Community
 Lanai High School sophomore Jayde Fernandez got a taste of a career in law enforcement recently during a tour of the Wailuku Police Station through an event organized by the Maui Economic Development Board’s Youth Alliance. “I learned what it takes to become an officer and what the career entails,” she said. “I also learned what the different departments are and what they do.” The experience has led her to consider a career in police work, specifically forensic science. “The trip to the Maui Police Department made me realize that even though it will be hard work to be a forensic scientist, it will be worth it. I got to see what goes on and now I know for sure that forensics is the career I want to pursue.”
Lanai High School sophomore Jayde Fernandez got a taste of a career in law enforcement recently during a tour of the Wailuku Police Station through an event organized by the Maui Economic Development Board’s Youth Alliance. “I learned what it takes to become an officer and what the career entails,” she said. “I also learned what the different departments are and what they do.” The experience has led her to consider a career in police work, specifically forensic science. “The trip to the Maui Police Department made me realize that even though it will be hard work to be a forensic scientist, it will be worth it. I got to see what goes on and now I know for sure that forensics is the career I want to pursue.”
Maui police officer Edith Quintero said it was an honor to give the students a behind-the-scenes look at law enforcement. “This gave MPD an opportunity to share the different aspects and duties within the department,” she said. The tour featured discussions about the challenges of law enforcement on Maui versus those on Molokai and Lanai. The students also discussed Maui’s crime rate, common crimes on the island, vice matters and sexual assault.
Fernandez, 15, said she was impressed with the Maui Police Department’s commitment to the community. “I feel that police in Maui County truly care about the community and do everything they can to keep it safe,” she said. “I admire them for putting their lives on the line to protect ours and think it’s really cool that they are able to tackle different situations and solve them.” Youth Alliance members attend monthly events during the school year to explore and gain a greater understanding of key components in the Maui community. Their gatherings are coordinated by MEDB.
				
					
			
					
											
								 
							
					
															
					
					Jan 8, 2014 | Community, Education

The new year is an opportune time to embrace the potential for shining a light on our community, a business, a nonprofit or individuals who showcase the values of Focus Maui Nui. Our Maui community is a model of innovation, always striving for sustainable island living with the resources available in the middle of the Pacific. These have helped make Maui an incubator for new energy technology and exploration. Focus Maui Nui strengthens our community by featuring the efforts of individuals and groups who strive to foster and respect the spirit of aloha in everything they say and do. We look forward to 2014 by returning to the Focus Maui Nui vision statement devised a decade ago:
Maui Nui will be an innovative model of sustainable island living and a place where every child can grow to reach his or her potential.
The needs of each individual, the needs of our natural and cultural assets, and the needs of the whole community will be brought into balance to reflect the extremely high value we place on both the land and its people.
The education and well-being of young people will be fostered to ensure that those born on these islands can, if they choose, spend their whole lives here – raising children, owning homes, enjoying rewarding jobs, and taking advantage of opportunities to contribute to this community and to be good stewards of our local treasures.
Maui Nui will be a leader in the creation of responsible, self-sufficient communities and environmentally sound economic development.
That which makes Maui Nui unique in the world will be preserved, celebrated, and protected for generations to come.
We invite you to visit us at www.FocusMauiNui.com; call 875-2300, check us out on Facebook or sign up for a RSS feed. We value your input, and we thank you for all you do to make Maui Nui, no ka oi and unique in all the world.
				
					
			
					
				
															
					
					Jan 1, 2014 | Community
Happy New Year from Focus Maui Nui, a community-driven vision of our islands, spearheaded by Maui Economic Development Board.
				
					
			
					
											
								 
							
					
															
					
					Dec 25, 2013 | Community

In six decades of business, the Lanai family operating Pine Isle Market has learned it must constantly strive to meet and satisfy its customers. “We found it necessary to stock the basic needs of the town,” owner/operator Kerry Honda said. That has meant providing food, drink, dry goods and health and beauty aids. As years have passed, the grocery store has had to stock up on “a little bit of the ordinary” items such as weed whackers, fishing goods, electronics and appliances.
Pine Isle Market Ltd. formed in 1949 and began as a partnership with five original members and the late Isamu Honda taking the lead. Within the first couple of years of business, three partners dropped out and Honda, with his late wife, Marian, ran the business along with the store butcher. For the last 50 years or so, Pine Isle Market has set up shop in the Lanai City Town Square on Eighth Street. The staff maintains the “plantation days” tradition of closing for lunch on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Honda’s son, Kerry, heads up the business today and runs it with 21 employees. “The hard work of my parents, the total support of my wife Cindy and children, employee dedication and customer loyalty have been the factors in the success of Pine Isle Market,” Honda said. “In a small community such as ours, we cherish our family, employees and customers,” Honda said. “We strive to set good examples for our community, stress the importance of conservation and saving for the next generation.”

Pine Isle Market: “We Strive to Satisfy”
The most challenging part of the business has been competing with other businesses. “We strive to offer fair and competitive prices,” Honda said. “Our motto is ‘We Strive to Satisfy.’” Pine Isle Market was honored in 2010 as Hawaii’s Family-Owned Small Business of the Year. Honda said his 22-year-old daughter, Corie Honda, has expressed interest in running the business sometime in the future.