A Different Model For Hawaii Tourism Based On Community
The Hawaii Tourism Authority’s new leadership team, led by John De Fries, has dramatically raised the bar in addressing the public pushback to Hawaii’s long-standing visitor industry model.
The dramatic decline in visitor arrivals in 2020-2021 caused by the Covid-19 crisis provided an opportunity for HTA to hit the reset button on what more than a few residents feel has become a stifling, wallet-driven industry, from which there seems to be no relief for Hawaii’s people.
Recently, HTA hosted its first online public review of progress being made in developing Destination Management Action Plans (DMAPS) for Kauai, Oahu, Hawaii island and Maui Nui (Maui, Molokai, Lanai). HTA’s planning model reaches out to each of Hawaii’s counties and their respective visitor bureaus in a partnership that provides opportunity for each island to shape its own tourism destiny.
I assume that an important HTA objective is to allow each destination the opportunity to create its own DMAP from bottom up rather than top down.
HTA’s Strategic Plan 2020-2025 states that “destination management includes attracting and educating responsible visitors; advocating for solutions to overcrowded attractions, overtaxed infrastructure, and other tourism-related problems; and working with other responsible agencies to improve natural and cultural assets valued by both Hawai‘i residents and visitors.”
I believe HTA is on the right track with the DMAP initiative specific to each island – and hopefully it will eventually evolve to a level of sophistication that can be applied to each island’s individual communities.
Defining Community-Based Tourism
The HTA website labels the Destination Management Action Planning initiative as a Community-Based Tourism Program. It’s important to note that the word “community” can be invoked to refer to a whole island, a geopolitical subdistrict of the island, or a town somewhere on the island. I would define community as towns such as Waianae, Kailua, Kapolei, Kaneohe, Haleiwa, Lahaina, Hanalei, Wailuku, and so forth.
Community-based tourism is on a smaller scale that springs directly out of a community deciding first, the degree to which it is willing to share itself with tourists — if at all — and secondly, on what terms.
Community-based tourism should not be imposed from outside. Hawaii has a love-hate relationship with tourism because the business model that hovers over the islands like a long shadow too often succeeds at the expense of the places and people it touches in what seems like an unequal exchange of value.
Community-based tourism is a mix of experiences created and operated by local, traditional, or indigenous populations to enhance their quality of life. It also seeks to protect and restore their environmental and cultural assets and engage visitors on terms defined by the community.
The business model often includes walking tours, cultural performances, food, storefront museums, recreation programs, craft cooperatives, nature and wildlife treks, lectures on local culture and history, storytelling and healing, and health services. It includes just about any aspect of community-driven experiences carried out by people who live there, which is what gives the experience value.
The very nature of community-based tourism places boundaries and limitations on how many visitors can be accommodated so that the sense of place is not overwhelmed and the ratio between the local population and the visitor count remains in balance.
For Hawaii, community-based tourism would be a more sustainable business model. Large-scale tourism models, driven mostly from outside the target community by third-party purveyors of the industry, often result in creating more problems for a community than they solve.
Some of Hawaii’s experiences have been particularly damaging to the culture, traditions, and customs of a community and its sense of place. Community-based tourism is about forging a more direct connection between the place, the people who live there, and the visitor.
Community tourism invites far more intimacy between host and guest than afforded by other tourism business models. It features far more authentic activity for the guest because it is the activity that exists for its own sake and is not constructed specifically to entertain a stranger. It is more about a community sharing its real culture than third-party entertainment.
The Ho’okaulike Triangle
George Kanahele was a great Hawaiian visionary and mentor of mine. He and another Hawaiian visionary, Kenny Brown, founded the Native Hawaiian Hospitality Association (NaHHA) before there was an HTA.
NaHHA is playing a pivotal role in today’s tourism dialogue. While leading NaHHA, George put forth a tourism management concept he defined as the Guest-Host-Place model. The guest means the visitor. The host is the people who live in the place. The place is the destination.
Community-based tourism is about forging a more direct connection between the place, the people who live there, and the visitor.
George expressed his Guest-Host-Place model graphically as an even-sided triangle. The three points are alternately marked Guest, Host, and Place. In the center of the triangle the word Ho’okaulike, which means “to balance evenly,” is boldly printed.
His model prescribes that “benefits” of the tourism experience need to be evenly distributed to each point of the triangle – the visitor, the people who live there, and the place being visited.
By the way, the word “benefits” is not limited to the almighty dollar. Visitor behavior is among a number of important variables that can be played out as a benefit or a curse – same for impact on the environment. HTA already has a long list. It would be interesting to see if a benefits distribution chart could actually be designed to bring life to George’s Ho’okaulike model.
Connecting The Past To The Future
Community-based tourism is a community celebrating its own greatness and inviting strangers to join the celebration. While it is about preserving heritage, it is also about the evolution of a heritage.
It need not freeze landscapes or cultural practices and traditions. It is about honoring the past and connecting it to the future in a dynamic evolution of the living culture of the local population — celebrating where they came from, defining who they are and crafting new dreams that bring them into the future.
In the end, community tourism is about preserving the dignity of a people willing to open their hearts to strangers from other places. Imua.