Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
UHMC

From Closed Campus to Disaster Relief Food Hub: UH Maui College After the Lahaina Fire

HIwildfireemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On August 8, 2023, the Lahaina wildfire destroyed approximately 80% of the historic Lahaina town, killing at least 102 people. Although UH Maui College's main campus in Kahului was 25 miles away from the fire, the college closed on August 9 and 10 to keep faculty and staff off the roads. Within days, the Pāʻina Building's culinary kitchen was transformed into a disaster-relief food hub, preparing meals for displaced families.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of Hawaiʻi Maui College
Community College · HI
~3,000 studentsUH Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
UH Alert: Due to the active wildfires on Maui and dangerous wind conditions, the University of Hawaiʻi Maui College Kahului campus will be CLOSED on Wednesday, August 9. Faculty and staff are directed to stay off the roads and out of harm's way. Continue to monitor maui.hawaii.edu for updates.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Pushed the evening of August 8, 2023, after the Lahaina fire's afternoon resurgence under hurricane-force gusts from Hurricane Dora's pressure gradient
Critical operational framing: 'stay off the roads' — Maui's road network was at the time clogged with evacuating Lahaina residents and emergency vehicles, and adding Kahului commute traffic would have hindered response
The Kahului campus was 25 miles from Lahaina and faced no direct fire threat — the closure was a road-and-air-quality decision, not a building-safety decision
UPDATEEmail
UH Maui College will remain closed Thursday, August 10. Search and rescue operations continue in Lahaina. Air quality remains poor across Maui due to the active wildfires. Many of our students, faculty, and staff have been displaced. Counseling and emergency support are available. Please check on each other.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Extended the closure to a second day as the scale of the Lahaina disaster became clear — death toll initially reported as 6, then 36, eventually 102
Acknowledgment that 'many students, faculty, and staff have been displaced' is the operational tell that this fire's victims overlapped substantially with the UHMC community
'Please check on each other' is unusually personal language for an official campus alert — appropriate for what was already understood as the deadliest US wildfire in over a century
FOLLOW-UPEmail
UHMC's Pāʻina Building culinary kitchen has been converted into a disaster-relief food preparation hub. Culinary instructors and students are preparing meals for displaced Lahaina families through a special Disaster Relief Food Preparation Experience course. Volunteers are welcome. Donations of food and supplies may be coordinated through Student Life.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Names a specific building (Pāʻina) and a specific instructional innovation: the Disaster Relief Food Preparation Experience course converted academic credit into community service
The culinary team's effort earned a 2024 Governor's Award nomination — the institutional response itself became part of the recovery narrative
Coordinating donations through Student Life centralized community support and prevented duplicate or conflicting drives — a lesson learned from the 2018 Camp Fire community college experience
Context

Background

University of Hawaiʻi Maui College is a community college serving approximately 3,000 students from a main campus in Kahului, with extension centers on Lānaʻi and Molokaʻi. (UHMC's Lahaina Education Center had closed in early 2022, before the fires.) On August 8, 2023, hurricane-force winds from the pressure gradient of Hurricane Dora drove the Lahaina wildfire through the historic town of Lahaina, ultimately killing at least 102 people and destroying approximately 2,200 structures. UHMC's Kahului campus was 25 miles away from the fire but closed on August 9 and 10 to keep faculty and staff off Maui's overburdened roads. Within days, the Pāʻina Building's culinary kitchen was converted into a disaster-relief food hub preparing meals for displaced families through a special Disaster Relief Food Preparation Experience course — work that earned a 2024 Governor's Award nomination. The University of Hawaiʻi System later offered full scholarships to the Lahainaluna High School Class of 2024 and committed $1M from the Stupski Foundation for impacted students. The case illustrates a community college serving as the post-fire institutional anchor of an island community: not a campus-safety closure but a road-and-community decision, immediately followed by repurposing campus infrastructure for disaster relief.
Analysis

Key Findings

UHMC closed August 9-10, 2023 not because of campus fire risk but to keep faculty and staff off Maui's overburdened roads during the Lahaina disaster response
The Pāʻina Building's culinary kitchen was converted into a disaster-relief food hub within days, with a special academic course (Disaster Relief Food Preparation Experience) created for the response
The UHMC culinary team's effort earned a 2024 Governor's Award nomination — institutional response became part of the recovery narrative
UH offered full scholarships to the Lahainaluna High School Class of 2024 and committed $1M from the Stupski Foundation for impacted students
The case illustrates a community college serving as the post-fire institutional anchor of an island community
Outcome
UHMC Kahului campus closed August 9-10, 2023. The Pāʻina Building's culinary kitchen was converted into a disaster-relief food preparation hub serving displaced Lahaina residents. The Lahaina fire ultimately killed at least 102 people and destroyed approximately 2,200 structures. UH later offered full scholarships to Lahainaluna High School Class of 2024.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. Official
  5. Source
  6. Report
  7. News
Tags
wildfirelahaina-firemauihawaiicommunity-collegeuh-maui-collegedisaster-relief-hubculinary-programdisplaced-studentshurricane-dora
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion