This story is part of the HNN Original, “Priced Out of Paradise: Hawaii to Utah.” View our full coverage here.
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Thousands of Hawaii families have relocated to Utah, driven by the state’s high cost of living but maintaining strong cultural connections through businesses, religious networks and community organizations.
Many transplants have found ways to preserve their island heritage while establishing new lives on the mainland, like Pomaikai Gaui, who has been teaching hula though the Kehaulani Halau in West Valley City, Utah, for 32 years.
“I think it’s great because then I get to share my culture,” Gaui said.
Gaui doesn’t just provide hula lessons. He shows his students how to make lei and create costumes.
He is deeply rooted in Utah, now that his children and grandchildren live on the continent.
For many Hawaii transplants in Utah, cultural connections like Gaui’s halau provide a bridge to island traditions while building new lives.

Families seek opportunities, maintain culture
Jazzlynn Chaves’ daughter signed up during the summer. The family moved from Kalihi to Utah 13 years ago for work and financial reasons.
Chaves and her husband can now afford to buy a home for their two children, but the rest of their family remains on Oahu.
Chaves said her daughter gets sad when she thinks about the cousins and others back home.
“It’s just her and her brother up here and so that makes me sad,” Chaves said she is happy they found the halau to give their daughter that experience and that exposure to the culture.
Sherry Arnold left Makakilo two decades ago.
“I can’t support myself there. You know, the cost of living is too high. And now that my grandchildren are here, no, I would never move back to Hawaii,” said Arnold, who previously worked at the Polynesian Cultural Center while attending BYU Hawaii.
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