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Project aims to map wetlands for restoration and flood prevention

Maui County wetlands are pictured at La Perouse’s anchialine pool. A new public tool will chart existing and identify future wetlands to help mitigate flooding risks and protect the environment. Wesley Crile/UH Sea Grant College Program photos

The Maui News

Maui County’s Department of Planning is creating a public tool that will help reduce flood risk while protecting and restoring important natural wetland ecosystems.

As part of a new county law, planning officials are working on a comprehensive wetlands overlay map that will identify existing and future wetland areas.

Once it is launched on the county website, the map will help property owners, land managers and county planners with important land-use decisions.

“Wetlands are valuable features in the landscape that provide a number of beneficial services, including safeguarding and improving water quality, providing wildlife habitat sanctuaries and reducing coastal storm damage,” Planning Director Kathleen Ross Aoki said in a news release Friday. “Protecting wetlands will also help to mitigate flood hazards and protect life and property in Maui County.”

Birds wander the wetland at Waipuilani.

Consultation work is being done now, and discussions with community groups will start in June and July. The final draft of the map needs to be finished within a year of the passage of the new law, titled Ordinance 5421, which took effect in October. Along the way, review from the public, government agencies and other stakeholders will be required before the map is completed.

The map will chart wetlands throughout the county and include potential future wetland areas by assessing passive flooding data that incorporates the effects of climate change, such as sea level rise. The map will also include environmentally sensitive areas such as isolated wetlands, estuaries, streams and other waterways. South Maui is the first area scheduled for mapping.

Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs and estuarine systems, along with flowing, intermittent or ephemeral streams and their drainages, according to the county. They are areas inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater often enough and long enough to support specialized vegetation.

Aside from providing essential habitat for many native plants and animals, wetlands offer flood prevention, pollution reduction and climate regulation, the county said.

Consultants H.T. Harvey & Associates, who have experts in wetland policy, Hawaiian wetland ecology and mapping, were recently selected to help develop the map. Also, the University of Hawaii Sea Grant Program is providing technical support on the map.

The final map is intended to be a “living document” that can be amended and improved over time.

The wetlands overlay map is part of a larger project led by the UH Sea Grant Program that will eventually guide policy for wetlands restoration and protection, such as considering wetlands for possible acquisition, amending areas to allow for wetland protection and restoration, and updating zoning laws.

For more information, visit www.mauicounty.gov/2724/Wetlands-Restoration-and-Protection-Proj.

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