The long-delayed opening of the Hawaii County Emergency Call Center has been pushed back once again
because the facility failed a building inspection July 29.
According to Sherise
Kana‘e-Kane, spokeswoman for the county Department of Public Works, a faulty air-conditioning unit is the cause of the inspection failure for the police/fire/emergency medical services call center, which is next to the Mohouli Senior Housing Project in Hilo.
“Parts for the chiller have been delayed,” Kana‘e-Kane said this week in an email. She added that repairs to the unit are ongoing by the Honolulu-based contractor, Hensel Phelps Construction.
“We knew there was going to be delays in the acceptance of the building, which was supposed to be in June,” added Hawaii Police Chief Benjamin Moszkowicz. “And I was told that was because of issues surrounding the air conditioning.”
The facility has been under construction since October 2021. The call center, originally conceived in the early 2000s, broke ground during the early phase of the coronavirus pandemic. Supply chain problems added both time and costs to the project.
The original cost estimate for the call center
was $25.4 million, and it was to have been completed in 2023. According
to Kana‘e-Kane, the construction contract is for
$30 million, although there have been estimates of
$33 million floated publicly.
“This amount does
not include county vendor items,” she said. “A total of $10 million in contract allowance items was deducted from the construction contract and issued to various vendors, such as Hawaiian Tel … Motorola and others.”
Fire dispatchers, especially, have had a tough
go in recent years. They’ve experienced a high rate
of attrition and previously worked in part of the decrepit, 91-year-old Central Fire Station in downtown Hilo, which was potentially dangerous, with pieces of ceiling falling and outdated plumbing and electrical
systems.
That caused authorities to move fire and EMS dispatchers in 2023 from the station at the corner of Kilauea and Ponahawai streets into the current
police dispatch center at 349 Kapiolani St.
Kana‘e-Kane said there was another building inspection Friday, and the anticipated completion date for construction is Sept. 16.
“However, some punch-list tasks may still need to be completed, though these are not required for the operation of the call center,” she said. A punch list is a document that lists remaining work or tasks that need to be done before the project can be considered
completed.
And even if the county accepts the keys to the call center sometime this month, it’s not going to be immediately moving to a brand-new, turnkey operation.
“We anticipate it will take 6-8 weeks for the county’s communication systems to be installed and tested before the facility becomes operational,” Kana‘e-Kane said.