Hawaii renews Guard wildfire helicopter response

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Hawaii renewed an emergency order keeping National Guard helicopters ready for wildfire response through Nov. 30.

Why this matters

The proclamation keeps aircraft and other Guard resources available during Hawaii’s highest wildfire-risk months, shortening response times for county and state crews. It also extends funding and activation authority through Nov. 30.

Gov. Josh Green signed an emergency proclamation Thursday to keep Hawaii National Guard helicopters ready for wildfire response during high-risk months for a second straight year.

Green said the order is intended to increase resources for containing and extinguishing fires early. “For the second year, we are taking steps to ensure Hawaii is prepared and the valuable time needed for response is accelerated,” he said in a statement.

Under the proclamation, three Hawaii Army National Guard helicopters — a CH-47F Chinook and an HH-60 Black Hawk on Oahu, and a Black Hawk on Hawaii island — will remain “postured to fly” firefighting missions through Nov. 30 in support of county and state first responders. The effort is called Operation Ho‘opauahi, which means “to extinguish fire.”

Green signed the 2025 wildfire season proclamation July 18. The state expanded the operational window this year in part because multiple wildfires in the first half of July 2024 led to residential evacuations and one fatality.

The proclamation delegates the governor’s authority to activate Hawaii National Guard units to the state adjutant general when needed to assist civilian authorities in averting imminent public danger or providing disaster relief.

It also funds flight operations, refueling, and maintenance support from June 1 to Nov. 30, including August and September, typically among the state’s warmest months, when dry vegetation can increase wildfire risk.

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