Low rents drew residents to take risk of
living under Hawaii volcano
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[May 07, 2018]
By Terray Sylvester
PAHOA, Hawaii (Reuters) - Jeremy Wilson
knew it was risky renting a home in an area with the highest hazard
level for lava flows in Hawaii, but it was all he could afford for his
family of six.
Now, with magma spewing from cracks in the earth above and below his
3-bedroom home, he fears it could join the 26 other houses destroyed
since the eruption of the nearby Kilauea volcano on Thursday, according
to Hawaii County Civil Defense.
"I'm a renter but everything we own is in that house," said Wilson, a
36-year-old social worker, who moved to the Leilani Estates subdivision
four years ago and is among 1,700 residents who have evacuated since the
eruption.
The semi-rural wooded area, with dirt roads and many homemade "off the
grid" houses, is a landing pad for newcomers to Hawaii's Big Island who
cannot afford real-estate prices elsewhere.
"If you want to live in Hawaii, it's really your only option," said
Wilson, who has been staying with friends along with his two children,
wife, mother-in-law and uncle since they were forced to flee.
Keeping prices low in Leilani Estates is the "Zone 1" (out of nine)
hazard rating for lava-flows the U.S. Geological Survey gives the area
due to "vents that have been repeatedly active in historical time."
Geologists say this week's activity is beginning to look like an event
in 1955 in which eruptions continued for 88 days in the area and covered
around 4,000 acres with lava, though few people lived there back then.
More recently in 2014, lava threatened the nearby Puna district and the
town of Pahoa.
Jessica Gauthier, 47, a realtor in Leilani Estates, said the eruption of
Kilauea, about 12 miles (19 km) distant, was a reality check for new
residents.
"People move here thinking it's paradise, and what they learn is that
it's something different," said Gauthier.
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Lava advances along a street near a fissure in Leilani Estates, on
Kilauea Volcano's lower East Rift Zone, Hawaii, the U.S., May 5,
2018. U.S. Geological Survey/Handout via REUTERS
Eruptions of lava and toxic sulfur dioxide gas continued within the
subdivision, and larger aftershocks from Friday's 6.9 magnitude
earthquake were expected, the observatory said.
A lava flow advanced about a mile from one of ten vents that have
opened. As the lava finds a preferred route, some vents are expected
to close, putting pressure on others and shooting magma up to 1,000
feet (305 m) into the air. On Saturday it reached heights of 230
feet.
Some residents saw eruptions as inevitable and said if Pele, the
Hawaiian volcano goddess, wanted the land back, then she would take
it.
Wilson, who grew up in Springfield, Missouri, was less
philosophical. He has been trying to rescue his possessions before
they are torched.
He was forced back on Sunday when he saw smoke coming from cracks in
the road on the approach to his house.
"I'm from Tornado Alley. So I'm no stranger to disasters, but this
is something else," said Wilson. "This is crazy."
(Reporting by Terray Sylvester; Writing by Andrew Hay in New Mexico;
Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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