1/2
Swipe or click to see more
Video by Mindy Pennybacker
The fence at the makai boundary of Leahi Beach Park at Diamond Head has been removed, the City and County of Honolulu Department of Parks and Recreation announced today.
2/2
Swipe or click to see more
MINDY PENNYBACKER / MPENNYBACKER@STARADVERTISER.COM
Removal of a metal gate has restored access to and from Leahi Beach Park and a waterfront walkway.
Select an option below to continue reading this premium story.
Already a Honolulu Star-Advertiser subscriber? Log in now to continue reading.
Standing in rain jackets
beneath the dripping trees
of Leahi Beach Park at Diamond Head on a stormy Monday afternoon, Alex Drouin, Charlene Caron and Mark Smith smiled and
gesticulated with joy at the removal of the metal fence that had barred access between the park and a waterfront walkway since Christmas Eve.
The fence was removed sometime Monday morning, and the Honolulu residents declared they were the first three to step from the walkway into the park.
“We walk around Diamond Head nearly every day, and this is the highlight of our walk,” said Caron
of herself and Smith. The popular pedestrian route through Leahi and Makalei beach parks is linked by the walkway along the sea edge.
The Leahi fence and a matching barrier put up at the makai boundary of Makalei Beach Park were erected by the city Department of Parks and Recreation due to public safety concerns, and after settlement of a lawsuit by a Honolulu resident who claimed she was injured while stepping between Leahi Beach Park and the walkway.
On Jan. 10, after fielding public complaints for
17 days, the parks department removed the fence from the Makalei end of the walkway but left the fence standing on the Leahi side until Monday.
“This was really a
whole community effort from beginning to end,” Drouin said, thanking the members of the Diamond Head Neighborhood
Board, city officials and
the residents who pressed officials to reopen the walkway.
“It restores my faith in our civic system,” Drouin said.
To address safety concerns, warning signs will be posted, city parks Director Michele Nekota said.