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X-WR-CALNAME:Maui Nui Marine Resource Council
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.mauireefs.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Maui Nui Marine Resource Council
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DTSTART:20200101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200805T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200805T190000
DTSTAMP:20260420T233841
CREATED:20200725T063823Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200725T101011Z
UID:10000045-1596648600-1596654000@www.mauireefs.org
SUMMARY:Free webinar to focus on the social-psychological side of why some people care about Maui's reefs -- and others don't
DESCRIPTION:KIHEI\, HI — Have you ever wondered why some people care — and others seemingly don’t — about protecting Maui’s coral reefs? Imagine if you could climb into their minds to understand what causes visitors and residents of Maui to be motivated (or not) to care for our reefs through their behaviors and actions. How would that help your community be more effective in protecting its reefs? \nMaui Nui Marine Resource Council invites you to an important free Zoom webinar on Weds.\, Aug. 5 at 5:30 pm to find out more about the social and psychological factors that influence human behavior in our nearshore environments\, based on a recent joint study conducted in West Maui by Polanui Hiu\, The Nature Conservancy\, and Stanford University. \nYou’ll meet Francisca (Kika) Santana\, the leader of the study and a fourth year PhD candidate at Stanford’s Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources. Her team surveyed 300 reef users and learned about their reef-based activities\, perceptions of reef health\, their social-psychological indicators (such as place attachment and self-efficacy)\, and pro-environmental behavioral intentions. Alana Yurkanin\, Maui Marine Project Manager at The Nature Conservancy\, will also share her insights on the survey results. \nDuring the webinar\, you’ll also be transported to Polanui\, a small\, popular beach in Lāhaina\, protected by an offshore reef named Nā Papalimu O Pi‘ilani. For generations\, this reef sustained Hawaiian families with its abundance of fish and edible limu (algae). Sadly\, that abundance has vanished and Polanui now has the lowest fish biomass in Hawai’i\, meaning its fish are smaller and fewer than all other sites surveyed across the state. \nYou’ll meet Ekolu Lindsey and the Polanui Hiu\, a local community group that he co-founded which works to restore the resources and Hawaiian traditions once practiced along this shore. Find out about their work and their results of recent human use and creel surveys conducted at Polanui (surveys of beachgoer and angler activity in the nearshore waters of this area). \nOur guest emcee is Darla Palmer-Ellingson\, local radio show host of the public affairs program\, Island Environment 360\, made possible by H-Hawaii Media. \n“Let’s learn together to find ways to be more effective in bringing about positive change for our reefs\, both now while tourism is largely absent\, and later\, when visitors begin to visit Maui again\,” says Amy Hodges\, Programs and Operations Manager at Maui Nui Marine Resource Council. “This free webinar is offered as part of our Know Your Ocean Speaker Series\, offered online due to Covid-19.” \nSpecial thanks to the County of Maui Mayor’s Office of Economic Development for helping to make this presentation possible. \nTo register for the webinar\, please visit https://bit.ly/reefcare or https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1RIULfUXRhy-6_zrwRGpnQ. After registering\, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining this webinar. \nOur presenters include: \nFrancisca (Kika) Santana is a fourth year PhD candidate in the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources (E-IPER). She studies how individuals and groups respond to environmental change and climate risk. Specifically\, her research investigates how individuals make protective health decisions in response to wildfire smoke\, what motivates coastal users to take pro-environmental action in a declining coral reef environment on Maui\, Hawaiʻi and how communities respond to land loss and restoration efforts in coastal Louisiana. She draws from theories and methods in sociology\, environmental and social psychology\, and decision science. Before pursuing her degree at Stanford\, Francisca worked on energy and marine policy issues in the nonprofit and government sectors. She received a master’s degree in environmental science and management from UC Santa Barbara and a BA in history from Yale University. \nEdwin “Ekolu” Lindsey \nRaised on Maui (where he loved visiting his grandparents’ home in Lahaina to surf\, swim and fish in the waters of Polanui)\, Ekolu graduated from Kamehameha Schools on O‘ahu\, and earned a B.B.A. at University of Hawaiʻi at Mänoa. Ekolu’s parents — Ed Lindsey\, a Native Hawaiian and lifelong schoolteacher\, and Puanani Lindsey — co-founded Maui Cultural Lands in 2002. Ed Lindsey also co-founded Maui Nui Marine Resource Council in 2007 with marine biologist Robin Newbold. After his father passed away in 2009\, Ekolu assumed the role of president of Maui Cultural Lands.  He carries forward his familyʻs legacy of service and their vision of protecting and restoring Hawaiian cultural resources and the marine environment. In July of 2015\, he completed a ten-day\, 500-mile journey aboard the voyaging canoe Hikianalia to the Papahänaumokuäkea Marine National Monument in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands to conduct reef surveys and fish monitoring to help better manage Hawai‘i’s marine resources. Ekolu also cofounded Polanui Hiu\, the first Community Managed Makai Area (CMMA) on Maui. Ekolu is a member of Maui Nui Marine Resource Council’s Board of Directors. \nAlana Yurkanin\nAlana is the Maui Marine Project Manager at The Nature Conservancy and serves on the Steering Committee of Hui O Ka Wai Ola\, a unique community-based ocean water quality monitoring program on Maui. Alana grew up in Hawai’i with a fisherman as a father. From all of her time spent in and around the ocean\, she wanted to protect and continue to understand the environment along and beyond the coast – as well as the people and culture so intrinsically connected to our surroundings. In 2014\, she completed a Master’s degree in Environmental Science and Management with a specialization in Coastal Marine Resource Management and a focus in Strategic Communications at the Bren School\, UC Santa Barbara. During her program at Bren\, she focused her studies on topics relevant to natural resource management\, fisheries management strategies\, storytelling\, communication and media\, coastal ecology\, project management\, and marine science. Additionally\, she has a background in environmental education\, marine science education\, outdoor education\, ecotourism\, seamanship\, team building\, international aid work\, performing arts\, homesteading\, and farming. \nAbout Darla Palmer-Ellingson:\nWith a strong passion for volunteerism on environmental issues\, Darla produces and hosts the public affairs program\, Island Environment 360\, Maui’s only commercially broadcast public affairs show on environmental and related Hawaiian cultural topics. The program is made possible by H-Hawaii Media. Darla is a member of the County of Maui Citizens Advisory Committee on the Climate Crisis and a member of Vice President Al Gore’s Reality Project\, Hawaii chapter. Her company\, 360 Social Business\, LLC provides website design\, content\, social media management\, general business and marketing consulting. \n 
URL:https://www.mauireefs.org/event/free-webinar-focus-social-psychological-side-people-care-mauis-reefs-others-dont/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210707T173000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210707T193000
DTSTAMP:20260420T233841
CREATED:20210702T102705Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210702T102705Z
UID:10000056-1625679000-1625686200@www.mauireefs.org
SUMMARY:Free Presentation by Dr. Craig Downs and Hawaii Senator Mike Gabbard: “Education vs. Enforcement: Next Steps Beyond the Enactment of Hawaii's Sunscreen Law”
DESCRIPTION:Hawaii’s ban on sunscreens containing the reef-harming chemicals oxybenzone and octinoxate went into effect on January 1\, but is the law effective in protecting our local coral reefs and marine animals as intended? Is the ban being enforced? What’s the latest scientific evidence about the chemicals that are replacing these two ingredients in some brands of sunscreen? Are new laws needed? \nGet the answers to these important questions on Wednesday\, July 7 at 5:30 p.m. via a free Zoom presentation featuring special guest speakers: Dr. Craig Downs\, whose groundbreaking research educated the world about sunscreen chemicals and their role in coral reef decline; and Hawaii Senator Mike Gabbard\, who authored the legislation that resulted in Hawaii’s ban on the sale of sunscreens that contain the chemicals oxybenzone and octinoxate. \nThe presentation titled “Education vs. Enforcement: Next Steps Beyond the Enactment of Hawaii’s Sunscreen Law” is sponsored by the County of Maui Mayor’s Office of Economic Development and hosted by Maui Nui Marine Resource Council as part of the organization’s “Know Your Ocean Speaker Series.” \nThis event is free\, but advanced reservations are required. To reserve your spot\, please visit https://bit.ly/SunscreenWebinar. \nDowns graduated from Hiram College with a B.A. in philosophy and biology\, received his M.Sc. from Syracuse University\, and received his Ph.D. from the University of Hawaii in cell and molecular biology. He has published over 50 scientific papers and a number of book chapters in scientific textbooks\, and is the co-editor of the CRC press veterinary book\, Diseases of Corals\, as well as founded a number of companies and nonprofits relating anywhere from animal welfare to environmental conservation and exploration. \nDowns has held positions as research professor at University of Hawaii’s School of Medicine and Sweet Briar College. He is currently an invited professor at Sorbonne University (France) and is the Executive Director of Haereticus Environmental Laboratory\, a non-profit scientific organization dedicated to increasing the scientific\, social and economic knowledge of natural environmental habitats in order to better conserve and restore threatened environmental habitats and resources. \nGabbard\, who has represented District 20 since 2006\, which includes Kapolei\, Makakilo\, and portions of Kalaeloa\, Waipahu\, and Ewa\, has authored 54 bills that became law relating to energy efficiency\, renewable energy\, endangered species protection\, industrial hemp\, the environment\, public safety\, and more. \nOne of those bills that became law in 2018\, SB 2571\, is the ban of sale or distribution in the state of any sunscreen that contains oxybenzone or octinoxate\, or both. Last session\, Gabbard introduced SB 366\, which would ban the sale\, offer of sale\, or distribution in Hawaii of any sunscreen that contains two more chemicals\, avobenzone or octocrylene. \nThe speakers plan to address whether or not sunscreen pollution is a symptom of unsustainable tourism and coastal development\, how we get visitors and residents to comply with the new sunscreen law\, and who is responsible for enforcing it. \nThis panel will also provide information and tips on how you can help to protect the marine environment. \nMaui Nui Marine Resource Council’s “Know Your Ocean Speaker Series” events are held monthly via Zoom. Support for these events is provided by the County of Maui Mayor’s Office of Economic Development. \nThe virtual event’s emcee will be Darla Palmer-Ellingson\, local radio show host of the public affairs program\, Island Environment 360 Maui’s only commercially broadcast public affairs show on environmental and related Hawaiian cultural topics\, aired on the stations of H-Hawaii Media. \nTo reserve your spot at this free Zoom webinar\, please visit https://bit.ly/SunscreenWebinar.
URL:https://www.mauireefs.org/event/free-presentation-dr-craig-downs-hawaii-senator-mike-gabbard-education-vs-enforcement-next-steps-beyond-enactment-hawaiis-sunscreen-law/
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