AKAKA FOUNDATION FOR TROPICAL FORESTS
60 Nowelo Street, Hilo, HI 96720

Total Revenue
$265,275
Total Expenses
$207,526
Net Assets
$75,538

Organizations Filed Purposes: Our mission is to enhance and promote a forest stewardship ethic that embraces restoration and conservation strategies through integration of traditional and western knowledge, and through strategic cooperation among private and public organizations. We support three initiatives that promote thriving ecosystems, cultural practice, and sustainable livelihoods.

Ulu Lehulehu - The goal of Ulu Lehulehu is to honor the biocultural importance of ohia in Hawaii by connecting people to, and creating landscapes abundant in ohia. Our hope is that all people of Hawaii will gain and maintain a personal connection with ohia, whether through planting an ohia in a backyard, a community park or in a natural area. We hope that through this cultivated relationship with ohia, participants are inspired and empowered to make ohia a dominant landscape feature in our residential and commercially developed urban spaces. By helping to support the planting of one million ohia trees across the islands, we will ensure the perpetuation of this species for future generations.Ulu Lehulehu has reached over 1700 Hawaii Island students through classroom visits, raised and distributed 1,200 ohia seedlings to schools and community groups, and reached tens of thousands of citizens through presentations and social media. We have established an ohia forest of 800 trees in the Kupuae ohia Common Garden, an effort to restore pasture lands at the Hawaii Experimental Tropical Forest (HETF) in Laupahoehoe.

The Puuwaawaa Community Forestry Program (PCFP) is a growing partnership of multi-generational community leaders, nonprofit organizations, and agencies working to: transform 84 acres of invasive grassland into native dryland and mesic forest in Puuwaawaa; foster biocultural education for K-12 students; and enhance community wellbeing. The PCFP will provide a model of community-based collaborative stewardship and restoration that engages traditional ecological knowledge and emerging science, addressing the threats of climate change, invasive species and wildfire.

Teaching Change is a collaborative program whose mission is to inspire local youth to be environmental stewards and to pursue post-secondary educations and careers in Hawaii in natural resource management. Teaching Change outreach includesmonthly field courses at Hakalau Forest, Puuwaawaa, and local Kipuka and bi-annual teacher training workshops. Annually the program participates in a Conservation Career Day and the Bio-cultural Blitz Event at Puuwaawaa.

Executives Listed on Filing

Total Salary includes financial earnings, benefits, and all related organization earnings listed on tax filing

NameTitleHours Per WeekTotal Salary
Robert WagnerDirector0$0
Douglas JacobsDirector0$0
Ernest ClaytonDirector0$0
Gerald AkakaDirector0$0
Hannah K SpringerVice President0$0
Michael J ChunVice President0$0
Daniel K AkakaVice President0$0
Paul NakayamaPresident0$0

Data for this page was sourced from XML published by IRS (public 990 form dataset) from: https://s3.amazonaws.com/irs-form-990/202013219349324106_public.xml