High-demand degree
The opening of the new building aligns with one of
UH West Oʻahu’s Creative Media program embraces digital media literacy and storytelling as experienced through video, animation, video games, design, social media, web and app development, virtual and augmented reality, and other new forms of media communication and design through concentrations in communication and new media technologies, design and media, game design and development and general creative media. Creative media was the fastest-growing degree program at
UH West Oʻahu in fall 2020, with 258 majors.
Sharla Hanaoka,
UH West Oʻahu’s Academy for Creative Media director, called the symbiosis between the new building and academic programming paramount to the delivery of course materials and subjects that will prepare students for the industry.
Governor David Ige wrapped up his State of the State address Monday morning, and covered everything from COVID-19 recovery to a statewide broadband network.
IN FULL: Read the text of the governorâs State of the State address
In State of the State address, governor urges collaboration but offers few details on next steps By HNN Staff | January 25, 2021 at 11:36 AM HST - Updated January 25 at 12:18 PM
HONOLULU, Hawaii (HawaiiNewsNow) -
Hereâs the full text of the governorâs 2021 State of the State address, delivered Monday morning at the state Capitol without the typical audience present:
FULL TEXT:
Thank you, Speaker Saiki, President Kouchi, members of the Legislature, and everyone who is joining us virtually today.
Good morning and aloha.
Twelve months ago, we met in the House Chambers planning for what we thought would be a very bright and promising year.
Hawaii Will Collect More Taxes Than Expected, State Panel Says - Honolulu Civil Beat
Hawaii Will Collect More Taxes Than Expected, State Panel Says
The state Council on Revenues says Hawaii will collect $300 million more in taxes this year than previously projected. Reading time: 4 minutes.
Gov. David Ige and state lawmakers received some welcome news Thursday as a panel of experts that projects state tax collections revised one of its most gloomy predictions.
The state Council on Revenues now believes the state general treasury will receive about $300 million more in the next six months than the council had projected last year. That will help with the state budget crunch caused by the COVID-19 recession.
Fewer Cases Means More In-Person Learning on Kauai kitv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kitv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.