Honolulu Star-Advertiser

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Esme Infante

Esme M. Infante is a former education reporter at the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Her beat covered everything related to education in Hawaii: preschool, K-12 and higher education; public and private schools; on all islands. She came with more than three decades’ experience in communications spanning radio, TV, print and digital media, and marketing and public relations.   An award-winning news reporter, editor, columnist and digital manager, Infante has worked for The Honolulu Advertiser, USA Today and other local and national media outlets. Previous to her return to full-time reporting at the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, she worked as newscaster and host on the highly rated “The Rise & Drive Morning Show with Devon & Esme” on 94.7 KUMU. Other prior positions include communications director for the late Congressman Mark Takai; promotions director for Islandwide Crafts & Food Expos; founder, chief executive and editor of Moms In Hawaii LLC; and founder of the broadcast journalism program at Mililani High School.   The education beat is close to Infante’s heart. She covered education in the 1990s for The Honolulu Advertiser. She is a proud graduate of Mililani High School, and the University of Hawaii, where she graduated with distinction. Infante is also a former classroom teacher who hails from a family of educators, and her two grown children are products of Hawaii public schools and the University of Hawaii system.
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Latest Stories by Esme Infante

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Dorm to be UH Manoa’s second housing partnership

A newly approved University of Hawaii student housing project on Dole Street will be a landmark in a couple of ways, becoming the second public-private student housing project on the Manoa campus and housing a child care facility supported by the state’s new preschool initiative. Read more

Schools getting new preschool classrooms

Although some Hawaii lawmakers have grumbled that a new agency in charge of public school construction is moving too slowly, its leader says the first 11 classrooms in the state’s Ready Keiki preschool initiative are on track to welcome students this fall — below budget and a year ahead of schedule — while three Oahu high schools are in advanced discussions to become Hawaii’s first major teacher housing projects. Read more

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