Ahuimanu White Pages Search

Ahuimanu is a small residential community in the Windward foothills of Oahu, just north of Kaneohe. An Ahuimanu White Pages search ties names and addresses back to the records kept by the City and County of Honolulu. Court files sit with the First Circuit. Property data sits with the Real Property Assessment Division. Vital records sit at the state. Use the tool on this page to start a first name or address lookup. Then walk through the sections below for each source and contact you may need.

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Ahuimanu White Pages Snapshot

Honolulu County
First Judicial Circuit
III Council District
96744 Primary Zip

How Ahuimanu White Pages Access Works

Hawaii opens public records by default. The law is the Uniform Information Practices Act, Chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes. The OIP UIPA Q&A page lays out the ten-day response rule and the fee table. That law applies to every record tied to Ahuimanu.

Paper copies are $0.25 per page. Search time past the first hour is $2.50 per fifteen minutes. A fee waiver can apply for records that serve the public interest. Staff must close the file or answer the request within ten business days. If some parts are open and some are not, the open parts go out within five.

Requests should name the agency, the record type, a date range, and the subject if known. Send them in writing for larger files. Small items often clear with a quick phone call too.

Getting Around Ahuimanu and the Bus System

Ahuimanu riders use TheBus on routes tied to Kahekili Highway. The TheBus site lists routes, stop schedules, and fare info. The image below is the main page.

Ahuimanu White Pages Honolulu transit bus routes

Bus records and lost and found reports process like any other city request. Staff pull them through the normal UIPA path.

TheBus is run by the city's Department of Transportation Services. DTS does not hold property data. It just runs the fleet, the routes, and the HANDI-Van paratransit service. Call 808-848-5555 for bus info.

Property and Parks Information

Honolulu's parks program covers fields, beaches, and playgrounds in and near Ahuimanu, including Ahuimanu District Park. The Department of Parks and Recreation site shown below posts permit forms for pavilions, sports, and camping, plus ranger contacts.

Ahuimanu White Pages Honolulu parks recreation

Parks rentals run through the same office. Walk-in reservations are accepted at satellite city halls.

For parcel data, use the Real Property Assessment Division search. Ahuimanu lots sit in TMK zone 4, sections 7 and 8 of Oahu. Search by address, by TMK, or by map. Results list the current owner, assessed value, and tax class.

Deeds and mortgages sit with the state Bureau of Conveyances. The free Hawaii Property Checker merges both views in one page.

Court and Police Records

Ahuimanu cases file in the First Circuit. Most minor cases move to the Kaneohe District Court on Kamehameha Highway. Felony and larger civil cases go to the main First Circuit Court on Punchbowl Street. The state judiciary records page links to eCourt Kokua for free online searches by name, case number, attorney, or ticket.

The Honolulu Police Department covers Ahuimanu through District 4 from the Kaneohe substation. HPD sells report copies through the Records Section at 801 S. Beretania Street. Call (808) 529-3111.

Under Hawaii Revised Statutes section 92F-13, some redactions apply to witness info, juvenile names, and live investigation items. That is standard for any police record in the state.

Note: Kaneohe District Court also serves Waiahole and Waikane, so an Ahuimanu case may share a calendar with filings from those windward areas.

Vital Records and Family Files

Birth, death, marriage, and divorce records for Ahuimanu events sit at the state. The Hawaii Department of Health Vital Records Section is at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103, in Honolulu. Phone (808) 586-4533.

Records stay closed for 75 years. The first certified copy is $10. Each extra of the same record is $4. Order online through VitalChek, by mail, or in person at the Punchbowl office. Military ID, state ID, passport, and driver's license are all fine for the photo ID step.

Older family research before 1909 goes through the Hawaii State Archives. Staff can pull Kingdom-era papers, passenger manifests, and probate files.

Council District III Services

Ahuimanu is part of Honolulu City Council District III. The district spans Kaneohe, Kahaluu, Waiahole, Waikane, and Ahuimanu. The Honolulu City Council site lists the current member. The City Clerk's Office at 530 S. King Street keeps every council record.

District office staff handle local service calls. Common Ahuimanu issues include drainage on the steep slopes, bus pullout safety, and park field upkeep. Email works best for a paper trail.

Planning and Permits

The Department of Planning and Permitting handles zoning maps, building permits, and code enforcement for Ahuimanu. Zoning here is mostly low-density residential, with a large open space zone on the Koolau slopes. Check the LUO before any build.

Permit history is part of the public record. Use it to verify that a home addition cleared the right approvals before a purchase. DPP at 650 S. King Street takes walk-ins with appointments. Phone (808) 768-8000.

  • Zoning maps
  • Permit history
  • Variance filings
  • Code enforcement records

License and Business Data

The DCCA Professional Licensing site runs a free license check. It covers doctors, nurses, contractors, realtors, and other pros who serve Ahuimanu clients. The search shows type, issue date, expiration date, status, and past discipline.

Bulk data dumps and agency logs live at the Hawaii Open Data Portal. The UIPA Record Request Log master file is there too.

Nearby Windward Oahu Cities

Ahuimanu shares boundaries with Kaneohe, Heeia, and Kahaluu. For a deeper tool set, step up to the Honolulu County White Pages.

Mailing a UIPA Request from Ahuimanu

Mail still works for public records in Hawaii. The rules come from the Uniform Information Practices Act. Any state or county office takes a written request. You can use OIP's model form or type your own. A Ahuimanu resident can mail a request to the office that holds the file. State offices sit in Honolulu. County offices sit at the county seat for the island that handles the record.

What goes in the letter? Put your name, address, phone, and a clear list of the records you want. Date it. Sign it. If you want a fee waiver, say so. State why the ask serves the public. Keep a copy. Staff log every request and must send an answer within ten business days. Twenty business days sets the outer limit when more time is needed.

Fees kick in for search and copy work. The first hour of search time is free. After that the rate is $2.50 per fifteen minutes. Paper copies run $0.25 per page. Staff send an itemized notice if the total will top a set cap. You pay before the records go out.

Note: A mail request from Ahuimanu should always give a return address so staff can send records or a status update back to you.

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