Mari Younger poses for a portrait on the balcony of her converted hotel room March 4 in Kihei, Hawaii, where she lives after being displaced by the Maui fires two years ago.
Mari Younger cherished her life in West Maui. She worked hard at her career in the restaurant industry and was proudly self-sufficient, happily living in the same condo for 11 years, lovingly doting on her cat, Stella.
Then came a health emergency that forced her to leave her physically demanding work. Shortly after, fire destroyed Lahaina and the existence she knew.
Two years later, Younger found herself 30 miles away in a converted hotel room, wondering how she would afford groceries. At 5 feet, 6 inches, she dwindled to 89 pounds after the fires, a result of stress, worsening health and poor access to nutritious food.
Her disability payments couldn’t cover health insurance, car payments and the food she badly needed to gain weight.
“I really needed help,” said Younger, 49. She wasn’t sure how she’d support herself and Stella, adding, “I’d rather starve and have her eat.”
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Dry goods purchased with support from a monthly cash assistance program sit in the converted hotel room where Mari Younger lives in Kihei, Hawaii.
Then a case manager suggested Younger apply for a new cash assistance program for people impacted by the Maui fires. She began receiving $700 monthly on a special Mastercard last December.
The support has been transformative, Younger said. “It’s like the calvary has shown up. The war is not over, but at least there’s more help coming.”
Younger is among 69 households enrolled in an experimental program sending Lahaina fire survivors cash for one year, an effort to stabilize some of the most at-risk during the island’s protracted recovery.
Nicole Huguenin, executive director of Maui Rapid Response, a nonprofit supporting Maui fire survivors with cash assistance, organizes canned food at the organization's warehouse March 4 in Kahului, Hawaii.
Proponents of cash assistance for disasters say it gives people agency over their recovery and flexibility to meet their specific needs. “When we let them choose, it unwinds the trauma and gets them out of survival mode faster,” said Nicole Huguenin, executive director of Maui Rapid Response, the mutual aid nonprofit behind the program.
Younger is in the second of three cohorts of enrollees. High demand underscores a longstanding challenge in disaster recovery: Some survivors still have urgent unmet needs years after attention and funding has waned.
“The need for long-term recovery is there in every disaster, but very seldom is that funded,” said Kirsten Trusko, co-founder of Payments as a Lifeline, a financial technology nonprofit that promotes disaster cash assistance.
Tools to catalyze recovery can be even more important as more frequent extreme weather means multiple emergencies can impact survivors at once: Just this week, Hawaii experienced heavy flooding from a subtropical cyclone that knocked out power for thousands on Maui and damaged homes and businesses.
"It's creating even greater need,” said Huguenin.
Maui Rapid Response launched the Kahua Card program last year as a six-month pilot to see if cash could boost those still struggling to recover from the August 2023 tragedy that killed at least 102 people, destroyed 2,200 structures and displaced 12,000 residents.
Supplies are stored inside the warehouse of Maui Rapid Response, a nonprofit supporting Maui fire survivors, March 4 in Kahului, Hawaii.
While the pace of rebuilding Lahaina is accelerating, Maui's recovery has been hampered by a longstanding housing shortage, the blow to its tourism-propelled economy and its remote location which makes construction slower and more expensive.
Meanwhile, survivors who were homeless, unbanked, or too burdened by compounding challenges like disabilities or caregiving roles to apply for multiple types of assistance were falling through the cracks of public and private disaster programs, Huguenin said.
That was the case for Younger, who didn’t qualify for certain grants because her home didn't burn, but was displaced nonetheless after the devastation drove her landlords to sell the condo she rented just north of Lahaina town. Rents doubled after the fires, leading her to move into a hotel the state bought to house survivors.
Mari Younger pets her cat Stella inside her converted hotel room.
Harnessing donations from thousands of supporters after the fires, Maui Rapid Response sent 18 pilot households up to $1,100 per month, depending on family size.
Spending data showed participants mainly used the money for food, transportation, utilities and personal items.
By the pilot's end, 80% of recipients reported feeling less anxious or stressed, attributing their improvement to an increased sense of control, being able to help others or spend more time with family. For one-third, the financial boost gave them breathing room to seek out better jobs.
“The agency provided a level of mental health that none of us expected,” said Huguenin, adding it enabled survivors to then address other recovery essentials, like moving or finding work.
Damaged property lies scattered in the aftermath of a wildfire Aug. 21, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii.
Cash was not a cure-all — more than half of participants said they still had unmet housing needs at the program's end and less than 20% were able to use the extra income to pay rent. One-third felt anxious about the payments ending.
Those results reflect broader research findings on hundreds of non-disaster cash assistance programs across the U.S., said Dr. Stacia West, co-founder and director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Guaranteed Income Research and an associate professor at the University of Tennessee.
“Largely, what you’re going to see are reductions in food insecurity, and that people are shoring up their finances," said West. "They’re making sure that they have a little bit to fall back on.”
Photos show Lahaina before and after wildfire devastation
This combination of satellite images provided by Maxar Technologies shows an overview of southern Lahaina on Maui, Hawaii, on June 25, left, and an overview of the same area on Wednesday, following a wildfire that tore through the heart of the Hawaiian island. The search of the wildfire wreckage Thursday on Maui revealed a wasteland of burned homes and obliterated communities as firefighters battled the stubborn blaze that has already claimed 53 lives, making it the deadliest in the U.S. in five years.
This combination of satellite images provided by Maxar Technologies shows an overview of Banyan Court in Lahaina on Maui, Hawaii, on June 25, top, and an overview of the same area on Wednesday, following a wildfire that tore through the heart of the Hawaiian island. The flames left some people with mere minutes to act and led some to flee into the ocean.
This combination of satellite images provided by Maxar Technologies shows an overview of Lahaina on Maui, Hawaii, on June 25, left, and an overview of the same area on Wednesday.
This combination of satellite images provided by Maxar Technologies shows an overview of Lahaina Square on Maui, Hawaii, on June 25, left, and an overview of the same area on Wednesday.
Wildfire wreckage is shown Thursday in Lahaina, Hawaii, where a deadly wildfire that killed at least 53 people left a wasteland of burned-out homes and obliterated communities.
Wildfire wreckage is shown Thursday in Lahaina, Hawaii. Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen Jr. said the island had “been tested like never before in our lifetime.” “We are grieving with each other during this inconsolable time,” he said in a recorded statement. “In the days ahead, we will be stronger as a ‘kaiaulu,’ or community, as we rebuild with resilience and aloha.”
Wildfire wreckage is shown Thursday in Lahaina, Hawaii. Mauro Farinelli, of Lahaina, said the winds started blowing hard on Tuesday, and then somehow a fire started up on a hillside. “It just ripped through everything with amazing speed,” he said, adding it was “like a blowtorch.”
Wildfire wreckage is shown Thursday in Lahaina, Hawaii. Fueled by a dry summer and strong winds from a passing hurricane, the deadly fire started Tuesday and took the island by surprise, racing through parched growth and neighborhoods in the historic town of Lahaina, a tourist destination that dates to the 1700s and is the biggest community on the island's west side.

