Throughout 2019, Hawaiian Airlines will be engaging in a company-matched employee giving program celebrating the airline’s 90th year of service in the Hawaiian Islands.

The airline, which introduced commercial air service to Hawai’i in 1929, recognized the milestone by

commencing the company-wide pledge program on November 12, the day after its 89th birthday.

When employees donate to any Aloha United Way affiliated charity, as well as the Polynesian Voyaging Society, the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, and the Hawaiian Islands Land Trust, Hawaiian Airlines will match the first $90,000 raised.

After one week, employees and members of the company’s Board of Directors have already pledged $59,000, or $118,000 when matched by the airline.

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The special anniversary drive is being held throughout the year. Donations and the corresponding

company match will be provided to the charities monthly beginning in February 2019.

“We are very proud of our legacy as Hawaiʻi’s first airline, and I am extremely proud of the generosity and aloha our 7,200-strong employee ‘ohana demonstrates on a regular basis and particularly during the inaugural week of our charity drive,” said Peter Ingram, Hawaiian Airlines president and CEO. “Pledges came from every department across our company. I am certain we will reach our goal, and I look forward to it.”

The 90th year of service fundraiser is in addition to the $300,000 in sponsorships and grants Hawaiian Airlines provides annually through the company’s Team Kōkua giving program and another $100,000 distributed by the Hawaiian Airlines Foundation. So far this year, the company has provided 4.5 million miles in matching donations to 12 Hawai‘i non-profits participating in the Hawaiian Miles Charities program, while Team Kōkua volunteers have logged more than 8,000 hours helping non-profits throughout Hawaiian’s route network.

The selected charities align with Hawaiian’s four giving pillars: education, health and human services, environment and culture, and each of the charities are recognized stewards in their fields. “We are honored to partner with Hawaiian Airlines as they commence their 90th year of service here in Hawaiʻi and truly appreciate their commitment to the preservation and perpetuation of the unique natural and cultural heritage of our islands,” said Kawika Burgess, CEO of the Hawaiian Islands Land Trust, which protects more than 18,000 acres of Hawai‘i’s most precious land and natural resources from Ka‘ū on the Island of Hawai‘i to Hanalei on Kaua‘i. “With Hawaiian Airlines’ continued support, we look forward to ensuring that our most precious resources in each district on each island are there for future generations!”

“We are humbled to be part of this partnership where Hawaiian Airlines employees have the opportunity to donate directly to any of AUW’s 338 Partner Agencies that help families, coworkers and neighbors,” said Aloha United Way President and CEO Cindy Adams, whose organization has helped address Hawai‘i’s most pressing community needs for nearly 100 years. “It is especially meaningful in their 90th year of service that Hawaiian wants to give back to the community that has supported them.”

The Bishop Museum, the state’s largest museum, said funds will be used to help “preserve, protect, and perpetuate the rich cultural and natural legacy of our islands today and for generations to come,” said Melanie Ide, Bishop Museum president and CEO. “Mahalo to our longstanding partner and supporter Hawaiian Airlines – we are thrilled to be a part of this special milestone and are honored to be amongst an important group of joint beneficiaries dedicated to our islands’ economic, social and environmental sustainability,” Ide said. “Bishop Museum is the home to over 25 million objects and specimens representing Hawai‘i and the Pacific — each with its own story of evolution and extinction, of sustainability and heritage, of the wisdom of our kūpuna and the legacies of our ali‘i.”

Hawaiian is once again joining hands with the Polynesian Voyaging Society after sponsoring its

historic Mālama Honua (to care for our Island Earth) Worldwide Voyage. Last year, PVS concluded a four year journey around the planet with the voyaging canoe Hōkūle‘a, whose crew sailed over 50,000 nautical miles to 28 countries to spread a message of sustainability.

“On behalf of the Polynesian Voyaging Society’s crew and staff, I want to congratulate Hawaiian Airlines on 90 years of service and giving. We are proud and honored to partner with a company with such a strong commitment to Hawaiʻi’s culture, place and people,” said Nainoa Thompson, president of the Polynesian Voyaging Society. “We are extremely grateful for the support that Hawaiian Airlines has given PVS over the years as a major sponsor of the Mālama Honua Worldwide Voyage and now for selecting PVS as a recipient of the ‘90 Years of Giving’ campaign. Mahalo to all of the Hawaiian Airlines employees for believing in the mission of voyaging and mālama honua.”

Hawaiian’s giving campaign is only the beginning of a year of celebratory activities as the airline counts

down to its 90th birthday and commemorates the legacy of its visionary founder, Stanley C. Kennedy.

A World War I Navy pilot, Kennedy believed air travel would one day overtake the family’s ships as the

primary mode of transportation between the Hawaiian Islands. In the spring of 1928, he convinced the

board of Inter-Island Steam Navigation to purchase a five-passenger Bellanca CH-300 Pacemaker monoplane and, on October 6, 1929, began offering sightseeing tours of O‘ahu to familiarize residents with flying.

Within a month, on Nov. 11, 1929, the first scheduled Inter-Island Airways Sikorsky S-38 aircraft departed then John Rodgers Airport in Honolulu for a flight to Maui and then Hilo – officially marking the beginning of commercial aviation in Hawaiʻi.

“It is gratifying to report that our efforts to give the public a better service has been appreciated,” Kennedy wrote in the company’s first annual report, when the airline transported 13,043 guests, including 2,676 who enjoyed the Bellanca tours. “The large number of passengers that we have carried between the various islands clearly shows the public’s response to our endeavors.”

Today, Hawaiian welcomes an average of 32,000 passengers on a single day – over 11.5 million residents and visitors annually – with a modern fleet of 65 aircraft operating in a robust network of neighbor island, U.S. mainland and international flights connecting the Hawaiian Islands to destinations stretching from New Zealand, Japan, New York, and soon Boston. Over the course of its history, Hawaiian has carried nearly 279 million passengers to, from and between the Hawaiian Islands.