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Senator Hirono crouching and touching the ulu sapling
Sen. Hirono planted an ʻulu (breadfruit) tree during her January 12 visit

U.S. Sen. Mazie K. Hirono visited the on January 12, and spoke with students, alumni, faculty, staff and administrators about initiatives in sustainable food and agriculture, food security, digital media, labor education and research, and more.

As part of her visit, Hirono toured , , and the new .

“For the last decade, UH West Oʻahu has steadily worked to expand the programs, resources, and support available to its students,” Hirono said in a release. “They have demonstrated their commitment to creating opportunities to enable all students—particularly underrepresented students—to receive a quality post-secondary education.”

During Hirono¡¯s tour of the m¨¡la (garden), she met with Albie Miles, assistant professor of , and discussed the program, which prepares students for jobs in the sustainable food and agriculture sector. Hirono also spoke to Manulani Aluli Meyer, Konohiki of K¨±lana o Kapolei (director of Indigenous education), and Indrajit Gunasekara, financial aid officer, about their NiU NOW!/Uluniu Project movement, and planted an ʻulu (breadfruit) tree in the Uluniu Grove beside the m¨¡la.

Her next meeting was with William Puette, director of the (CLEAR), which is designed to provide labor education, research and labor-related programs to workers, their organizations and the general public. CLEAR recently established a .

Hirono then visited ʻUluʻulu, the state¡¯s official archive for moving images, where she spoke with staff about the digital preservation work they do with audiovisual materials sharing Âé¶¹´«Ã½¡¯s culture, traditions and collective memory.

Finally, Hirono toured the new ACM Student Production Center with Chris Lee, founder and director of the ACM System; Sharla Hanaoka, director of ; and students and alumni, who shared the work they are doing within the hub for creative media education throughout the ACM System.

Hirono also stopped by and briefly spoke at two events on campus: a board meeting for Pacific Islanders in Communications, a national nonprofit media arts organization whose board of directors represent Âé¶¹´«Ã½, Guam, American Samoa and public television entities; and the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ Food Systems Summit, where participants brainstormed ideas for food system transformation and policy ideas for implementation during the 2023 state legislative session.

UH West Oʻahu offers diverse programs in promising fields that can contribute to Âé¶¹´«Ã½¡¯s economy, such as creative media and agriculture, and I enjoyed learning more about these initiatives,” Hirono said. “I will continue working to support Âé¶¹´«Ã½¡¯s colleges and universities, as well as the students they serve.”

For more, go to .
—By Zenaida Serrano Arvman

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