NEWS
Articles, reports, and KCCF newsletters with information relevant to Hawaiʻi Island workforce development.
West Hawaiʻi Today: Hawaiʻi’s doctor shortage worsens, report finds
The doctor shortage in Hawaii has not only persisted, but worsened, according to the most recent report tracking the numbers.
Hawaiʻi Workforce Funders Collaborative: From Crisis to Coalition: A 2026 Roadmap for Hawaiʻi’s Generational Workforce Commitment
Building on HWFC’s 2025 report, From Crisis to Opportunity: Building Hawaiʻi’s Workforce Resilience, this report reviews progress made to date and introduces the Hawaiʻi Generational Workforce Commitment — a cross-sector shared goal that by 2045, all people of Hawaiʻi will have a path to a career that enables them to learn, work, and thrive in Hawaiʻi and contribute to a vibrant economy grounded in community values. To support immediate action, the report also offers policy recommendations, systemic enablers, immediate next steps by sector, and a five-year roadmap to build towards collective commitments that will set the foundation for Hawaiʻi move to achieve this generational goal.
HPR: More students are going to college. Affordability and workforce training are factors
College enrollment in the U.S. continued to rise last fall, surpassing prepandemic levels, new figures out on Thursday show.
Hawai’i Public Radio: 75% of middle-income households may or will leave Hawaiʻi, affordability survey finds
The results of a new survey show that almost half of middle-income workers are unsure if they will have to leave Hawaiʻi to go to a less expensive state.
Hawaiʻi Business Magazine: Hawai‘i’s Young Pragmatists Are Choosing the Trades
While higher education is always valuable, and often the pathway to a prosperous, fulfilling life, that path can be long, winding and expensive. Quicker, more direct routes are launching many of Hawai‘i’s young adults into rewarding careers, and with fewer financial risks – a big advantage in uncertain times.
Holomua Collective Survey: 2025 Hawaiʻi Affordability Survey
Holomua Collective’s 2025 findings paint a stark picture of a worsening cost-of-living crisis in the state, with more respondents living paycheck to paycheck and spending unsustainable portions of their household income on essentials like housing and transportation.
West Hawaiʻi Today: Hawaiʻi labor force is shrinking as population ages, workers leave
Reposted from West Hawaiʻi Today: Hawaii’s labor force continues to shrink, leading to fears of an even bigger workforce crisis ahead as the population ages, retires and dies and younger employees continue to leave for more affordable states.
Nolan Gasser: Why You Like It
Learn more about the science, psychology, and sociology that explains why humans love music so much and how our brains process music.
An Evening on AI with Steven Johnson and Peter Schwartz
On January 10, 2025 Koi Pond Bridges members gathered for an engaging presentation by acclaimed author and thought leader Steven Johnson, followed by a conversation on AI between Steven and KPB’s own Peter Schwartz.
Civil Beat: Girls Are Losing Out In Hawai‘i’s Push To Train Kids For High-Paying Jobs
From civilbeat.org:
The number of students enrolled in CTE pathways has exploded in Hawaiʻi in recent years, amid debates about how to help students secure high-paying jobs after graduation and combat the state’s high cost of living. Nearly two-thirds of the class of 2023 participated in a high school CTE program.
But the programs aren’t serving boys and girls equally across the state.
Hawaiʻi Workforce Funders Collaborative: From Crisis to Opportunity: Building Hawaiʻi’s Workforce Resilience
From the report:
Of the 170,000 youth entering Hawaiʻi’s workforce over the next decade, nearly 30% will face a lack of viable opportunities to build a sustainable future here. The consequences of inaction are clear: continued loss of local talent, stagnant economic growth, and an inability to meet the evolving needs of Hawaiʻi’s communities.
Civil Beat: Struggling To Survive: Hawaiʻi Residents Take On Debt, Think About Leaving
From civilbeat.org:
The federal poverty level for a family of four in Hawaiʻi is just under $36,000. What Aloha United Way’s ALICE Initiative refers to as the household survival budget — enough to cover basic necessities such as housing, child care, food, transportation, health care, taxes and smartphones — is more than that for a single adult and $107,795 for a family of four.
Civil Beat Report: Home Affordability In Hawaii Is ‘As Bad As It’s Ever Been’
From civilbeat.org:
Only 1 in 5 households in Hawaii can afford to buy a single-family home — a dramatic drop from just three years ago, according to a grim housing report released by the University of Hawaii on Monday.
Civil Beat: Hawaii Island’s Population Drop Signals An Ominous Economic Trend
From civilbeat.org:
Hawaii state economists foresee a time a decade from now when the state’s demographic trends will turn an ominous corner, and there will be more people dying than being born.
But a retired university demographer living in Hilo has found that the future is now, at least for Hawaii Island.
Koi Pond Bridges Fall 2024 Newsletter
Read KPB’s fall 2024 newsletter with updates on our focus, grantees, fundraising, and more.