HONOLULU: Towering waves on Hawaii’s south shores crashed into homes and businesses, spilled across highways and upended weddings over the weekend.
The large waves — some more than 20 feet (6 meters) high — came from a combination of a strong south swell that peaked Saturday evening, particularly high tides and rising sea levels associated with climate change, the National Weather Service said Monday.
A wedding Saturday evening in Kailua-Kona was interrupted when a set of large waves swamped the event, sending tables and chairs crashing toward guests.
Sara Ackerman, an author who grew up in Hawaii and attended the wedding, filmed the waves as they barreled ashore.
“It just was huge,” she said. ”I was filming it and then it just came over the wall and just completely annihilated all the tables and chairs.”
She said it happened about five minutes before the ceremony was scheduled to begin.
“It wasn’t like a life-threatening situation by any means whatsoever,” she said. “It was just like, ‘Oh my gosh ... what are we going to do? Where are we going to put the tables?’”
She said they went ahead with the ceremony and cleaned up the mess after the newlyweds exchanged vows.
“We had the ceremony and it was beautiful, having all the (sea) spray,” she said. “The ocean was really wild. So it was great for the photos.”
Chris Brenchley, the meteorologist in charge at the National Weather Service office in Honolulu, said several factors came together to create such huge waves.
“Waves over 12 or 15 feet (3.66 or 4.57 meters), those become extremely big and really rare to have,” he said. “It’s the largest it’s been in several decades.”
Brenchley said the swell was produced in the South Pacific, where it’s currently the winter season.
“They had a particularly strong winter storm where the winds were focused directly toward places like Samoa and then further on to the north into Hawaii,” he said.
Remnants of Hurricane Darby passed south of Hawaii but had no major impact on the surf, he said.
While singular events like this hard to pin directly to climate change, Brenchley said the warming planet is playing a role.
“The most direct type of impact that we can use with climate change is the sea level rise. Any time you add just even small amounts of water, you raise that sea level just a little bit,” he said. “And now those impacts will be exacerbated whenever we have a large storm event or a ... high, high tide.”
Most large summer swells that come from the south are no bigger than about 10 feet (3 meters), which would trigger a high surf advisory.
“We had some waves that were reaching 20 feet (6 meters), 20 feet-plus even,” Brenchley said. “That’s getting on the level of historic.”
Hawaii’s north shores, where professional surfers often compete, usually get much larger waves than other parts of the islands. The predominant swell hits the north shores in the winter and the south shores in the summer.
Lifeguards and rescue crews across the state had a busy weekend.
They conducted at least 1,960 rescues on the island of Oahu alone on Saturday and Sunday.
Honolulu officials reported one serious injury when a surfer suffered a laceration to the back of his head.
Hawaii waves swamp homes, weddings during ‘historic’ swell
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Hawaii waves swamp homes, weddings during ‘historic’ swell
- A wedding Saturday evening in Kailua-Kona was interrupted when a set of large waves swamped the event, sending tables and chairs crashing toward guests
US halts some Medicaid payments to Minnesota, alleging fraud
- Human rights advocates and Trump critics say the administration is using fraud allegations as an excuse to target immigrants and political opponents
WASHINGTON: The Trump administration is withholding more than a quarter of a million dollars of Medicaid funding from Minnesota, saying the state allowed the theft of federal funds intended for social-welfare programs in the state.
US Vice President JD Vance and Dr. Mehmet Oz, who oversees the Medicaid health care program for low-income households, announced the temporary halt at a joint press conference on Wednesday, where they criticized Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s administration for not doing enough to combat fraud.
“We are stopping the federal payments that will go to the state government until the state government takes its obligations seriously,” Vance said.
Walz fired back on social media, accusing the administration of attempting to punish Democratic-run states.
“This has nothing to do with fraud,” he said in a post on X. “This is a campaign of retribution. Trump is weaponizing the entirety of the federal government to punish blue states like Minnesota.”
Republican President Donald Trump’s administration has used fraud allegations in Minnesota as part of its justification for a months-long immigration crackdown in the state, during which federal agents shot and killed two US citizens, and for freezing funds meant for social programs.
Administration officials have pointed to a scandal that began during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the Department of Justice indicted 47 people for allegedly defrauding $250 million from a federally funded child nutrition program.
Walz, a Democrat, said the latest withholding of Medicaid funding would be devastating for families, veterans and people with disabilities.
GOVERNMENT WITHHOLDS $259 MILLION IN MEDICAID FUNDS
Oz said the federal government had paused the payment of $259 million of deferred Medicaid payments to Minnesota following an audit, and would hold on to the funds until the state government proposes “a comprehensive corrective action plan.” He added that Walz had 60 days to respond.
Vance and Oz also announced a six-month nationwide moratorium blocking durable medical equipment suppliers — including for prosthesis, orthotics and other items — from enrolling in Medicaid, saying such suppliers had become a source of fraud.
Oz, citing an estimate from the non-profit Kaiser Family Foundation, said $300 billion a year is spent nationwide on health care that is “fraudulent, abusive or wasteful.” Of that, the federal portion is around $100 billion, he said.
The administration will soon announce additional actions targeting other states, he said, citing issues with health care fraud in southern Florida, California and New York.
Trump has tapped Vance to spearhead an administration “war on fraud” and created the new role of assistant attorney general for national fraud enforcement to lead the Justice Department’s investigation and prosecution of fraud that affects the federal government and federally funded programs.
Trump has repeatedly attempted to withhold funding from Democratic-led states, although such cuts have frequently been blocked by federal judges who found the actions potentially retaliatory or legally flawed.
Human rights advocates and Trump critics say the administration is using fraud allegations as an excuse to target immigrants and political opponents.










