Mokulele to provide Waimea Essential Air Service through June 2021

Passengers board a Mokulele Airlines flight at the Waimea-Kohala Airport in April. LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today
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KAILUA-KONA — Mokulele Airlines will provide commercial air service between Waimea and Maui through mid-2021.

The U.S. Department of Transportation re-selected the air carrier earlier this summer to provide essential air service for two years between Waimea-Kohala Airport and Kahului Airport. The airline, which was purchased by Southern Airways earlier this year, has held the subsidized contract since 2013.

“Mokulele has been providing reliable EAS at Kamuela for many years and most of the comments received by the Department are supportive of re-selecting Mokulele for a new term,” the department wrote in the re-selection order. “Mokulele has an established interline ticket and baggage agreement with Alaska Airlines, which allows passengers to connect to other destinations.”

The agreement includes 12 nonstop round trips per week, using nine-seat Cessna Caravan aircraft.

The DOT issued the order after Hawaii County, the federal department and Mokulele Airlines reached a cost-share agreement in April. The county’s share is $19,489 per year — or $16 per flight.

Mokulele Airlines, and Schuman Aviation Co., doing business as Makani Kai Air, each submitted proposals for the two-year contract. Makani Kai Air proposed $200,000 a year while Mokulele proposed $389,783.

In the re-selection order, the department noted that while Mokulele’s proposal was higher, the airline’s proposal “better aligns with more statutory criteria, and Mokulele’s subsidy request is less than the current subsidy.”

The subsidy is the difference between the company’s revenue and expenses incurred by running the service. The last contract held by Mokulele was $397,457.

That difference is made up by the federal government’s Essential Air Service program, designed to guarantee air service to small communities throughout the country, along with Hawaii County and community members. Local sources must account for at least 5% of the subsidy.

The subsidy is intended to help small communities whose closest airport is 40 miles away from the nearest hub airport. A 2019 law requires a local cost-share agreement if an airport is less than 40 miles away. Waimea airport is 39 miles from Ellison Onizuka Kona International Airport.

In 2018, according to the state Department of Transportation, 8,011 passengers passed through the airport, down 8% from 2017. More than 2,000 takeoffs and landings were recorded.

Rob McKinney, president of Pacific operations for Southern Airways, did not respond for comment as of press time on Friday.

West Hawaii Today reporter Nancy Cook Lauer contributed to this report.