About the Authors

Kealii Lopez

Kealii Lopez is the state director of AARP Hawaii, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering Americans 50 and older to choose how they live as they age. Her career spans more than three decades and includes executive and leadership positions in government, nonprofit and business organizations.

Sterling Higa

Sterling Higa serves as executive director of Housing Hawaii’s Future, a movement creating opportunities for Hawaii’s next generation by ending the workforce housing shortage. He lives in Haiku with his wife and four children.

It provides options that are lacking for young professionals, families and kupuna.

When Hawaii families talk, older and younger generations often have different perspectives. But they unfortunately agree on one topic: despair and desperation about finding decent, affordable housing in Hawaii.

Hawaii’s housing shortage is splitting families — younger residents are leaving the islands because they can’t afford to buy or rent homes and kupuna are finding it harder to age in place in communities where they feel at home.

We can blame our lack of options on outdated planning and permitting systems, which favor either sprawling, low-density single-detached houses or tall high-rises.

Under the status quo, one of the best options for young families and downsizing seniors — backyard accessory dwelling units, small neighborhood duplexes, or modest fourplexes, are either too difficult to get permitted or banned outright. This “missing middle housing” is compatible with single-family homes and affordable, so it is baffling that regulations ban these vital housing options.

With Hawaii’s median home price among the highest in the nation and limited land on which to build new housing, we need diverse and affordable housing options.

For Future Generations

Missing middle housing provides options that are lacking for young professionals, families, and kupuna. Duplexes, triplexes, townhomes and accessory dwelling units offer a middle ground between single-family homes and large apartment buildings. But to build them, we need to allow and permit them.

At Housing Hawaii’s Future, advocating for missing middle housing is an important step in ensuring that future generations can call Hawaii home. As long as housing costs continue to outpace income, young people will be priced out of the communities they grew up in.

Housing like triplexes and townhomes allow our diverse and often multi-generational families to live close to each other and give all residents more pathways to affordable homeownership and rentals. Allowing homeowners to build additional housing helps them cover the costs of their mortgages while creating much needed rental stock.

Housing options like accessory dwelling units and small complexes can accommodate the changing needs of kupuna who may want to downsize from a larger home but still remain in the neighborhoods they know and feel comfortable in. It would allow kupuna to build multigenerational homes, so they can live with their children and grandchildren. It would also allow them to build a unit for a caregiver.

This legislative session, our legislators can pass “Missing Middle Housing” legislation, House Bill 1630 and its Senate companion Senate Bill 3202. The bills allow smaller, more affordable homes in our neighborhoods where they fit in, preserving all existing county regulations on building size and infrastructure capacity.

To build them, we need to allow and permit them.

The bill is limited to the urban land use district, reducing the pressure to sprawl into agricultural and conservation land. As Daniel Orodenker, the head of the Land Use Commission, said in his supportive testimony, these bills will “protect agricultural lands by removing some of the development pressures on those areas.”

By allowing homes on smaller plots of land and allowing several homes to a lot, SB 3202 and HB 1630 lower the cost of buying a home in our neighborhoods and empower multiple generations to remain together, keeping our local families in Hawaii.

This affordable housing solution doesn’t require hundreds of millions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies. Families can create their own affordable housing with their own money. But government has to get out of the way and allow it to happen.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It’s kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Authors

Kealii Lopez

Kealii Lopez is the state director of AARP Hawaii, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering Americans 50 and older to choose how they live as they age. Her career spans more than three decades and includes executive and leadership positions in government, nonprofit and business organizations.

Sterling Higa

Sterling Higa serves as executive director of Housing Hawaii’s Future, a movement creating opportunities for Hawaii’s next generation by ending the workforce housing shortage. He lives in Haiku with his wife and four children.


Latest Comments (0)

When you want to decrease the size to 1,200 to 2,000 square feet, it’s way too small for build for a growing family to build their dream home on. You’ll have cottages with possible renters in them who don’t listen to rules of apartment living, have parties at all hours of the night, do drugs as well as sell drugs, hear mopeds going in and out of the properties, etc. We should keep single family living in Honolulu for single families, so we have peace and quiet for those who want to live in single family homes. Perhaps the neighbor island might want them but here in Honolulu, when we are finished working in town, we want to go home to have peace and quiet and enjoy our families and not deal with stress from others living an arm's length away from our windows. So can you please explain to me why you think your idea is a good one in passing these bills and can you have an architect draw a block of these 1,200 /2,000 square feet lots and another block next to it so we can see of how the two neighborhoods would look like in comparison and let’s see what the pros and cons are between them. My name is Wilfred Motosue at 808-351-1553. Perhaps we can talk face to face one day soon.

wymotosue · 1 month ago

Hi Sterling and Kealii,I’ve heard that you are for these bills. I am not for these bills, so I’d like to hear why this bill is good. I’ve lived in the Kaimuki area all my life. I am a realtor, small developer for 40+ years so I’ve built several small projects of 2 to 3 duplexes in the McCully, Makiki/Ala Moana and Kapahulu area, a single-family home, subdivisions etc. I’ve just completed and sold a 13-lot subdivision in Manoa. I am 75 years old. As I drive around all these neighborhoods, I really love how we homeowners have built their homes having side, back and front yards, garages sometimes enclosed, grown trees and grass in their yards. They look balanced, nice, and serene. I feel we should keep the size of our lots in Honolulu this way, so we have space in our properties for our families to enjoy every day. 5,000 square feet is not big but just right for a family to build their dream home and start raising their children in their new home.

wymotosue · 1 month ago

So allow investors to buy properties to put multiple homes now? That seems like a sure-fire way to increase the prices even further.

Halapepe · 1 month ago

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