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Hawaii News

Drought, record high temperatures hit Big Isle

One of the nation’s rainiest cities is parched.

Hilo and most of Hawaii island is in a moderate drought, National Weather Service hydrologist Kevin Kodama told the Hawaii Tribune-Herald on Thursday.

Hilo International Airport has had less than 3 inches of rain so far this year. That’s less than one-fifth the normal level of 15.6 inches.

It’s also hot. The temperature hit 87 degrees Thursday — a record high for Feb. 19. The previous high was 86 degrees, set in 1992.

Dry conditions are boosting business for water haulers because many Puna residents rely on rain catchment systems for their household water.

Loke Medeiros, who owns JB Water Hauling with her husband, said her company has been delivering about 200 loads a month. It normally hauls about 40 3,000-gallon truckloads a month this time of year. Business has been "pretty chaotic," she said. 

The company’s biggest problem is not having enough trucks. People who have tanker trucks aren’t leasing or selling them.

"People should check their tanks and don’t wait till they’re empty and then call and yell. It’s a drought," Medei­ros said. Her company is booked through the next week, and other haulers are booked about three weeks in advance.

This winter’s storms have been fast-moving and mainly delivered rain to the western two-thirds of the island chain, Kodama said. When cold fronts have reached Hawaii island, it’s rained primarily on the west side instead of the normally wetter east side.

The driest February on record in Hilo is 0.52 inches in 2000. Only a trace amount of rain has fallen so far this month, but Kodama said tradewinds and showers in the near-term forecast should prevent the city from setting a new February record.

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