Waking up on the other side of Maui from his home, Matt Kovach was alarmed by the deluge of text messages on his phone inquiring about his safety.
What he saw on a local news website only heightened his fears. Overnight, his neighborhood had burned to the ground. One thought ran through his head.
Weâve got to get home. Iâve got to go get my mom.
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Kovach didnât even know there was a fire when he left his 74-year-old mother the previous afternoon. A self-described compulsive workaholic, he couldnât stand being stranded without internet and cellphone access because of the power outage that hit his neighborhood that morning.
The Hawaiian Islands do see wildfire from time to time, but the catastrophic Maui fires were spawned by a striking mix of factors, including climate change.
It was the sort of small inconvenience that occasionally came with living in this land of wonders. From their seaside home, his family could watch whales leap from the water, feeling the impact of their massive bodies upon splashdown. A bonus for the UCLA alumnus was that his home was so close to the Lahaina Civic Center that he could walk to basketball games at the Maui Invitational whenever his beloved alma mater played there.
By the middle of that August afternoon, still stuck in a communication void, Kovach and his wife decided to take their two young boys to a friendâs home 45 minutes away. The power lines in that area were buried, ensuring internet access. They would stay for a few hours and come back, having seen a tweet from the local electric company saying that power should be restored by that evening, midnight at the latest.
Kovach informed his mother of the plan, leaving her with an assortment of essentials including a lantern, a head lamp, flashlights, several backup batteries and four bottles of water.
âYep, no problem,â Linda Kovach told her son. âCompletely fine.â
As the family headed out, it spotted smoke in the nearby hills. No big deal, they thought. That area was about five miles from their home. Besides, they were familiar with the heroic efforts of the Maui Fire Department, which five years earlier had extinguished blazes that threatened their home on three sides.
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The first sign of trouble came when they found traffic at a crawl along Front Street. Cars moved so slowly that some people got out of their vehicles and walked. Looking back at that smoke, it had thickened considerably.
Should they go back and get mom? They decided against it, reasoning that her part-time caregiver was scheduled to arrive in the morning and in a worst-case scenario they could get in touch with a neighbor who could evacuate her once the power returned.
Having finally reached their friendâs home 3½ hours after they left, they were soon marooned. Roads had closed. No problem, they thought. Mom has stayed overnight by herself before, sheâs going to be fine. They would head home the next morning, probably finding the caregiver there when they arrived.
Then came those text messages and a jolt of panic. Frantic, Kovach woke up his wife.
âIâm just hysterical,â Kovach said, âbecause I think I killed my mom.â
Kovach had first moved to Maui on the eve of another disaster.
It was Sept. 10, 2001, and he was suffering from the burnout of intense hours working in the dot-com industry. He intended to recharge for a year, never expecting that the island would become a ghost town with the dropoff in tourism related to travel fears in the wake of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
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It was a breathtaking place with its clean air, warm water and moonbows that filled the nighttime sky. It was also a little too quiet for someone in his mid-20s seeking some excitement as part of that rejuvenation.
Kovach moved to Newport Beach, keeping in mind that he could always return to Maui once he had a family. In October 2015, having married fiancee Nicole six months earlier in Kaâanapali under a deep purple sky, the couple returned to the island for good.
They eventually purchased a five-bedroom home, big enough to accommodate Kovachâs mother who had been left partially paralyzed by a stroke suffered more than a decade earlier. Son Alex was born in 2016 and Carter in 2020.
Matt worked in website marketing and Nicole was a realtor, developing a deep network of contacts on the island. She used her connections to get center-court seats to the Maui Invitational in 2019 when UCLA played Brigham Young.
âMy cousin sent me a picture of my wife and I about eight rows back behind Bill Walton,â said Matt, who was a senior in 1995 when the Bruins won their last national championship.
Paradise had its perils. The family became accustomed to high winds and hillside fires, especially after Hurricane Olivia caused severe damage in 2018. Surrounded by fires, the Kovach home survived thanks to the courage of tireless firefighters.
âI think that made everybody, including us,â Kovach said, âkind of complacent.â
Five years later, it was also why the family thought mom would be just fine on her own.
(Courtesy of Matt Kovach)The Lahaina neighborhood the Kovach family lived in was almost completely wiped out by the Maui wildfire in August.(Courtesy of Matt Kovach)
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Helplessness overcame them that terrible morning as they made one call after another.
The police, fire department and Red Cross couldnât provide any information about Mattâs mother. They were left to scour social media for any possible clue. Helicopter footage showed smoke hovering above their home, obscuring its fate.
The next day, a friend somehow managed to navigate the closed roads to take a look. All around were ashes. The home was intact.
But what about mom? Matt feared the worst.
âI was like, thereâs no way,â he said. âSheâs disabled, sheâs a cancer survivor, a stroke survivor, she has osteoporosis, thereâs no way that sheâs going to survive this and I still have this incredible guilt and so now itâs like, now we know the house is there, how do we get someone there?â
It wasnât until the following day â two days after the fire started â that cellphone service started to be restored in their neighborhood. They kept reaching out to everyone they knew who might be able to help.
âEverybodyâs like, âOh, I know somebody, I know somebody,â and nothing is happening,â Matt said. âNobodyâs following through.â
Aday Mara scored a career-high 14 points in 24 minutes during UCLAâs 78-58 win over Long Island on Wednesday night at Pauley Pavilion.
A friend offered to hitch a ride on a boat delivering supplies to that part of the island before realizing that police had cordoned off the area and wouldnât let him make the 15-minute walk from the dock to the home.
Finally, two friends who lived nearby offered to check on mom. Matt girded them for the possibility of a gruesome scene.
Entering the home, they found something else â Linda sitting in her wheelchair, completely unharmed.
âItâs about time,â she told the visitors. âIâm tired of eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.â
The family would later learn that someone had died in a car about 30 feet from their home. The fire ran so hot that a neighborâs safe built to withstand temperatures up to 1,800 degrees melted.
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Mom endured, earning the nickname Lucky Linda.
Matt didnât press her on the details of the ordeal, in part because he didnât want her to have to relive it. She did say she breathed through a wet towel to limit smoke inhalation. She lay on the floor for stretches. She yelled when she heard someone outside. She also heard the explosions of car gas tanks and lithium ion batteries ignited by the flames.
âI honestly have no idea how she made it,â Matt said.
Returning to the carnage surrounding his home induced crying spells. Matt felt guilt for leaving his mother. Guilt for his house having stood when many others didnât. Guilt for the unimaginable suffering of those who lost everything amid a fire that reportedly killed nearly 100 people and displaced thousands more.
It remains unknown if the Kovach home will require a full teardown or if it can be restored given the ashy mess coating the interior. Either way, the family is among those fortunate enough to be fully insured.
They have spent the last three months moving from one place to another, recently settling into a three-bedroom townhome in Wailuku. Generous clients have sent clothes, toys and books while covering every cent of a GoFundMe established to cover living expenses.
There will be no walking to the Maui Invitational this week. The premier early season college basketball tournament was moved to Honolulu as part of efforts to raise money and awareness for those impacted by the fire. UCLA is part of whatâs widely considered the best field in tournament history.
âA hundred percent happy theyâre holding it,â Kovach said. âLife has to go on.â
As relieved as he feels for his good fortune, Kovach also remains consumed by incredible anger. Why wasnât there an immediate evacuation order? Why did the electric company install wooden power poles next to the ones that burned five years earlier and expect a different outcome? Why was a teenage girl directing traffic out of town instead of an official from an emergency response team? Whatâs going to happen to the thousands of residents stranded in hotels? Will tourism, the lifeblood of this island, ever return to normal?
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Theyâre important questions, the answers possibly years away. In the meantime, Kovach can comfort himself with two reminders.
Ben Bolch has been a Los Angeles Times staff writer since 1999. He is serving his second stint as the UCLA beat writer, which seems fitting since he has covered almost every sports beat except hockey and horse racing. Bolch is also the author of the recently released book â100 Things UCLA Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die.â He previously covered UCLA basketball from 2010-11 before going on to cover the NBA and the Clippers for five years. He happily traded in gobs of hotel points and airline miles to return to cover UCLA basketball and football in the summer of 2016. Bolch was once selected by NBA TVâs âThe Startersâ as the âWorst of the Weekâ after questioning their celebrity journalism-style questions at an NBA All-Star game and considers it one of his finer moments.